¶ 1. Mark Pope has appealed the ruling of the Chancery Court of Jackson County relating to several post-divorce matters litigated after his former wife, Jamie Pope, filed a petition to cite him for contempt and he filed a counterclaim seeking certain relief. Mr. Pope presents the following issues as to which he contends the chancellor erred:
(1) The chancellor erred in adjudicating him to be in contempt for nonpayment of alimony as ordered in the original judgment of divorce.
(2) The chancellor abused his discretion in resolving a dispute over whether Mr. Pope had complied with the divorce judgment’s provisions relating to the provision of health insurance to Mrs. Pope under the provisions of federal law commonly referred to as COBRA.
(3) The chancellor erred when he refused to end Mr. Pope’s alimony obligation after evidence was presented establishing that Mrs. Pope had entered into a cohabitation аrrangement with another man that included the provision to her of regular financial support.
¶ 2. We find these issues to be without merit and affirm the chancellor.
I.
Contempt for Nonpayment of Alimony
¶ 3. The parties were divorced in March 1998, and a judgment- concerning their property аnd child custody was entered in April 1998. Under the terms of that judgment, Mr. Pope was ordered to pay his former wife the sum of $600 per month in alimony. He was further obligated to convey to Mrs. Pope his interest in the former marital dwelling in Pasca-goula and to “prоmptly pay and satisfy in full the outstanding balance on the existing mortgage or first deed of trust securing the debt on said property.”
¶ 4. Upon Mr. Pope’s failure to pay the periodic alimony payments, Mrs. Pope sought a contempt citation. Mr. Pоpe defended on the ground of impossibility, a defense to a contempt citation recognized in such cases as McHenry v. State,
¶ 6. It should be noted that, as a part of the ultimate decision in the case, the chancellor did, in fact, afford Mr. Pope some prosрective relief based on changed circumstances by temporarily reducing his monthly alimony obligation from $600 to $500. We also note that, beyond reducing the prior accrued and unpaid alimony to judgment and setting up a seemingly-reasonablе schedule for Mr. Pope to retire this arrearage, the chancellor did not impose any actual punishment for his alleged contempt. Even were we to conclude that Mr. Pope’s post-divorce financial reverses rendered him at least temporarily unable to meet his recurring alimony obligation such that his failure to pay was not wilful and thereby absolve him from a finding of contempt, that would not absolve him from continuing liability for the underlying debt which could nevertheless be reduced to judgment to await the day when financial resources might be available to satisfy the judgment. Wright v. Wright,
II.
Health Insurance under COBRA
¶ 7. Mr. Pope was ordered to provide health insurance coverage for Mrs. Pope for a period of thirty-six months following the divorce by obtaining such coverage through his health insurance coverаge at his place of employment under the provisions of the federally-enacted Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA). There is no dispute that Mrs. Pope had not been provided that coverage at the time of the hearing, and that the statutory time to convert Mrs. Pope’s prior family coverage under her husband’s policy to individual coverage pursuant to the provisions of COBRA had expired. Mrs. Pope alleged that she had been prejudiced by her formеr husband’s failure to provide that insurance by virtue of the fact that she had suffered an accidental injury for which she incurred substantial medical bills with no insurance to cover the expenses. The chancellor, after hearing extensive evidence on the matter, going both to issues of fact and the law pertaining to provision of such coverage,
¶ 8. Mr. Pope, citing such cases as Overstreet v. Overstreet,
¶ 9. We find this case distinguishable. There is no doubt that the issue of the competing rights and obligations of the parties under the divorce judgment provisions relating to COBRA were properly before the chancellor and the parties’ competing positions on the issue were vigorously asserted. In these circumstances, we do not think the chancellor is limited to granting only that relief prayed for by the movant. Rather, we find this case to be covеred by the provisions of Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 54(c), which provides as follows:
Except as to a party against whom a judgment is entered by default, every final judgment shall grant the relief to which the party in whose favor it is rendered is entitled by the рroof and which is within the jurisdiction of the court to grant, even if the party has not demanded such relief in his pleadings .... ”
M.R.C.P. 54(c).
¶ 10. In light of the broad discretionary powers granted to the chancellor to fashion appropriate relief in resolving the finаncial aspects of a dissolving marriage, we find that the pleadings were sufficient to fairly put the parties on notice that the chancellor would be asked to make an appropriate ruling on the parties’ competing rights аnd obligations concerning COBRA coverage for Mrs. Pope. We are also unconvinced that the relief actually granted to resolve the dispute, though not envisioned in advance by either party, was so inappropriate, based on the chancellor’s findings of fact, as to constitute an abuse of the broad discretion given the chancellor in such matters. Tillman v. Tillman,
Termination of Alimony for Cohabitation
¶ 11. The proof in this regard by Mr. Pope, viewed in the light most favorable to his position, was that Mrs. Pope had become romantically involved with another man after the divorce and she had spent a number of weekends in his company, that the man had defrayed the expenses of these weekend encounters, that he had on five or six occasions stayed overnight in her home, and that he had helped her buy groceries on the occasions of his visits to Mrs. Pope’s residence. There was also proof that he had loaned her the sum of $4,000, but Mrs. Pope testified that this loan had been paid back. The chancellor concluded that this proof was insufficient to establish that Mrs. Pope had entered into a cohabitation arrangemеnt that would relieve Mr. Pope of his obligation to continue to pay periodic alimony. Mr. Pope, dissatisfied with that determination, has appealed the decision to this Court, claiming that it was so against the weight of the evidence as tо constitute an abuse of discretion. We do not agree.
¶ 12. The law on the subject in this State is that the alimony recipient must have entered into a cohabitation arrangement to the extent that it includes mutual financial support. Ellis v. Ellis,
¶ 13. The chancellor’s findings of fact are entitled to substantial deferencе when reviewed on appeal. Magee v. Magee,
¶ 14. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CHANCERY COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY IS AFFIRMED. COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE APPELLANT.
