Title: Jandreau v. LaChance

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2015 ME 66 
Docket: 
Ken-14-398 
Submitted 
On Briefs: February 26, 2015 
Decided: 
May 14, 2015 
Corrected: 
May 28, 2015 
 
Panel: 
ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HJELM, JJ. 
 
 
MOLLY G. (LACHANCE) JANDREAU 
 
v. 
 
DANIEL L. LACHANCE 
 
 
JABAR, J. 
[¶1]  Molly G. (LaChance) Jandreau appeals from a divorce judgment 
entered in the District Court (Waterville, Dow, J.) dissolving her marriage to 
Daniel L. LaChance.  Because we agree with Jandreau’s contention that the court 
abused its discretion in denying her request for spousal support and attorney fees, 
we vacate and remand for reconsideration.   
I.  BACKGROUND 
 
[¶2]  Jandreau and LaChance married in February 1999, and their daughter 
was born in June 2000.  In March 2013, Jandreau filed a complaint for divorce.  
The court found that Jandreau has an annual income of $14,212, which consists 
entirely of Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits.  It found that 
LaChance has an annual income of $87,896.   
 
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[¶3]  In April 2013, the parties consented to the entry of an interim order 
requiring LaChance to pay Jandreau $192 per week in child support.  After 
participating in mediation, the parties agreed that LaChance would also pay 
Jandreau interim spousal support of $1,600 per month, commencing June 13, 2013.  
On May 29, 2013, the court entered an order reflecting the parties’ agreement. 
[¶4]  LaChance paid the June spousal support payment in full and paid 
$50 in July.  He then ceased making spousal support payments and fell behind in 
his child support payments.  At trial, Jandreau testified that LaChance’s failure to 
pay the ordered support payments rendered her unable to meet her daily living 
expenses, causing her to incur overdraft fees and to borrow from payday lenders 
and family.   
[¶5]  In October 2013, Jandreau filed a motion for contempt based upon 
LaChance’s nonpayment of his interim support obligations.  See M.R. Civ. P. 
66(d).  On November 15, 2013, the court held a consolidated trial on the contempt 
motion and the issues that had not been resolved through mediation in the divorce 
proceeding.  Jandreau filed an updated child support affidavit and financial 
statement in advance of the trial as required by M.R. Civ. P. 108(d)(4).  LaChance 
did not. 
[¶6]  At trial, the parties testified to the following facts.  Jandreau is disabled 
due to anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder, has multiple medical conditions, 
 
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takes ten prescription medications, and sees both a counselor and a psychiatrist.  
She was forced to leave her most recent job because of her anxiety.  At the time of 
trial, she had not worked for a full year or earned more than $10,000 through 
employment in any of the previous ten years.  
[¶7]  In addition to her own SSDI benefits, Jandreau receives $592 in 
monthly dependent SSDI benefits for the parties’ daughter and $70 each month in 
food stamps.  During the marriage, Jandreau was covered under LaChance’s 
employer’s health insurance policy, received MaineCare, and spent $104 per 
month on a supplemental Medicare plan.  She did not incur out-of-pocket expenses 
for visits with her counselor or psychiatrist.  After the divorce, Jandreau will no 
longer be covered by LaChance’s health insurance and will be rendered ineligible 
for MaineCare by the child support order.  Because of her disability, she will 
remain entitled to Medicare, but will have to purchase increased Medicare 
coverage at an additional monthly cost of $130.  She may also incur out-of-pocket 
expenses for visits with her counselor and psychiatrist.  Even without including 
these additional outlays, the evidence indicates that Jandreau’s expenses exceed 
her income by about $1,000 every month.   
[¶8]  LaChance is a trained machinist and has been operating in that capacity 
since 1986.  Based on LaChance’s paystub for the week ending June 2, 2013, the 
court found that he had “a weekly gross income of $1,623.21,” not including 
 
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bonuses.  Extrapolating this weekly income to an annual amount and including a 
bonus of $3,489, the court found that LaChance’s annual income is $87,896.  
[¶9]  Jandreau requested an award of $1,200 in monthly spousal support.  
She also asked the court to award her attorney fees, arguing that the award was 
justified (1) by her inability to pay the fees herself, (2) by LaChance’s failure to 
file an updated financial statement, and (3) as a remedial contempt sanction for 
LaChance’s refusal to comply with the court’s interim spousal support order.  At 
the time of trial, Jandreau’s attorney fees totaled $9,410.54.  
[¶10]  In its judgment, entered in August 2014, the court ordered LaChance 
to pay Jandreau $230 in weekly child support pursuant to the 19-A M.R.S. § 2006 
(2014) support guidelines.  The judgment gave Jandreau the right to claim the 
parties’ daughter as a dependent for tax purposes, but allowed LaChance to buy the 
dependency exemption from her at a price equal to the amount by which 
Jandreau’s tax liability would be decreased if she claimed the exemption.  The 
judgment allocated the marital home and its mortgage to LaChance, providing him 
with equity of approximately $25,500.  The judgment allocated to LaChance 
marital personal property worth more than $7,500, and allocated to Jandreau 
marital personal property valued at $300.  The judgment assigned LaChance 
responsibility for nearly $10,000 of the parties’ non-mortgage marital debts, and 
assigned Jandreau responsibility for marital debts in excess of $14,500.  To 
 
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equalize the division of marital assets and liabilities, the court ordered LaChance to 
pay Jandreau $18,837.  With this payment included, the property division left each 
party with a positive net worth of approximately $4,400. 
[¶11]  The judgment provided that “in light of the child support ordered 
herein,” “the tax consequences of the award of the [dependency] exemption to 
[Jandreau],” “the property distribution,” and “the incomes of the parties,” “no 
spousal support shall be paid now or in the future.”  It also stated, without 
explanation, that the parties would be responsible for their own attorney fees.   
[¶12]  In addressing the contempt issue, the court found by clear and 
convincing evidence that LaChance “violated the order to pay spousal support 
when he at all times had the power to comply.”  As a “sanction,” the court ordered 
that LaChance’s obligation to pay the interim spousal support would remain in 
effect.1  The court found that LaChance owed Jandreau thirteen months of support 
at $1,600 per month ($20,800), less his $50 payment to her in July 2013, and 
issued a writ of execution against LaChance in Jandreau’s favor in the amount of 
$20,750. 
                                         
1  However, the court also noted that it could not “adjust the amount of spousal support subject to the 
contempt motion.”  
 
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II.  DISCUSSION 
[¶13]  On appeal, Jandreau contends that the court abused its discretion by 
denying her requests for spousal support and attorney fees.  LaChance elected not 
to participate in this appeal and did not file a brief.   
A. 
Spousal Support 
 
[¶14]  We review a divorce court’s decision regarding spousal support for an 
abuse of discretion.  Buck v. Buck, 2015 ME 33, ¶ 6, --- A.3d --- (per curiam).  In 
so doing, we consider whether competent evidence supports the court’s factual 
findings, viewing the record and any reasonable inferences that may be drawn 
therefrom in the light most favorable to the court’s judgment.  Id. ¶ 5.   
[¶15]  Although the trial court has considerable discretion in deciding 
whether and in what amount to award spousal support, and we review its decision 
with deference, we will vacate a decision that exceeds the bounds of the court’s 
discretion.  Potter v. Potter, 2007 ME 95, ¶ 7, 926 A.2d 1193; see Payne v. Payne, 
2006 ME 73, ¶ 11, 899 A.2d 793.  The court’s discretion regarding an award of 
spousal support is defined by the factors set forth in 19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5) 
(2014).  Levy, Maine Family Law § 8.2[1] at 8-11 (8th ed. 2013).  These factors 
include the length of the marriage; the ability of each party to pay; the parties’ 
income and employment history and potential; the parties’ provisions for health 
insurance; the parties’ health and disability status; the contributions of either party 
 
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as homemaker; the ability of the party requesting support to become 
self-supporting within a reasonable period of time; the effect of a child support 
order on the payee’s need for spousal support and the payor’s ability to pay spousal 
support; and a catchall consideration: “[a]ny other factors the court considers 
appropriate.”  19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5). 
[¶16]  In determining an award of spousal support, the trial court must 
consider all of the statutory factors, but may rely on some factors to the exclusion 
of others.  Carter v. Carter, 2006 ME 68, ¶ 20, 900 A.2d 200.  If the court denies 
spousal support after a contested hearing, it must issue an order stating the factors 
on which it relied in reaching its decision.  19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(1)(D) (2014). 
[¶17]  Here, the court’s judgment cites four factors on which it relied in 
reaching its decision to deny Jandreau’s request for support: (1) its award to 
Jandreau of $230 in weekly child support, (2) its allocation of the dependency tax 
exemption for the parties’ daughter, (3) the parties’ incomes, and (4) its 
distribution of the parties’ marital assets and liabilities.  As discussed below, 
neither these factors nor the record itself support a complete denial of Jandreau’s 
request for spousal support.   
1. 
Factors Cited in the Judgment 
[¶18]  The first factor that the court relied upon—ordered child support—is 
relevant to Jandreau’s need for spousal support and to LaChance’s ability to pay 
 
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that support, and was thus appropriately considered in determining spousal 
support.  See 19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5)(P)(2); Fitzpatrick v. Fitzpatrick, 
2006 ME 140, ¶ 11 n.2, 910 A.2d 396.  The court did not make findings regarding 
the effect of the child support order on LaChance’s ability to pay spousal support, 
but did find that, during the five months preceding the trial, LaChance had the 
ability to pay spousal support of $1,600 per month.  The judgment is likewise 
devoid of findings regarding the effect of the child support order on Jandreau’s 
need for spousal support.  However, the only evidence of Jandreau’s financial 
condition demonstrates that her income will be not be sufficient to meet her living 
expenses even during the three years that the child support order remains in effect.2  
[¶19]  The second factor that the court relied upon—allocation of the income 
tax dependency exemption—is relevant to an award of spousal support insofar as it 
affects the parties’ finances.  Due to the progressivity of the income tax, income 
tax exemptions increase in value, up to a certain point, as income increases.  See 
Cross v. Cross, 363 S.E.2d 449, 459 (W. Va. 1987); see also Stevens v. State Tax 
Assessor, 571 A.2d 1195, 1196 (Me. 1990).  Jandreau, with an annual income of 
$14,212, receives a minor benefit from the dependent tax exemption; LaChance, 
with an annual income of nearly $88,000, would benefit significantly from the 
                                         
2  The child support order will automatically terminate in June 2018, when the parties’ daughter turns 
eighteen, unless she has not graduated, withdrawn, or been expelled from high school, in which case it 
will terminate when she turns nineteen.  See 19-A M.R.S. § 1653(12) (2014).   
 
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exemption, even after purchasing it from Jandreau.3  The dependency exemption 
allocation thus improves LaChance’s financial position vis-à-vis Jandreau.  
[¶20]  The third factor that the court relied upon was the parties’ incomes.  
See 19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5)(E).  LaChance earns nearly $88,000 annually–more 
than six times the $14,212 per year that Jandreau receives in personal SSDI 
benefits.  Though the parties’ incomes alone are not dispositive of the need for 
spousal support, a difference of this magnitude provides no support for the court’s 
decision to deny Jandreau’s request for spousal support. 
[¶21]  The fourth and final factor that the court relied upon was the division 
of the parties’ marital assets and liabilities.4  Pursuant to that division, each party 
received an equal share of the property accumulated during the marriage.  
[¶22]  In Bonnevie v. Bonnevie, we concluded that an award of temporary 
spousal support to the wife was inadequate when the husband earned almost four 
times as much as the wife, the court had equally distributed the parties’ marital 
property, and the wife would be forced upon termination of spousal support to 
consume her share of the marital property in order to maintain her standard of 
                                         
3  The court’s allocation of the exemption allows LaChance to “buy” the exemption from Jandreau at a 
price equal to the amount by which her tax liability would be decreased if she claimed the exemption. 
 
4  The court’s division of the parties’ marital property may well be a consideration that falls into the 
19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5)(Q) (2014) catchall factor, because spousal support and the distribution of marital 
property are related components of an equitable divorce judgment.  See Ketchum v. Ketchum, 
1998 ME 62, ¶ 6, 707 A.2d 803.   
 
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living.  611 A.2d 94, 94-95 (Me. 1992).  In Sewall v. Snook, we vacated a 
judgment denying the wife spousal support when the husband earned more than 
three times as much as she did, the court had awarded the wife a larger share of the 
marital assets, and the record indicated that the wife’s ordinary living expenses 
would exceed her income from employment and child support payments.  
687 A.2d 234, 235-36 (Me. 1996).  
[¶23]  Here, the court’s equal property distribution did nothing to ameliorate 
the inequality in the parties’ economic positions.  An equal property division 
simply does not provide a basis for denying spousal support when, as here, the 
parties have very disparate earning power and there is a significant disparity 
between one party’s income and expenses.  In such cases, an equal property 
distribution, and even a distribution that favors the spouse with less income, is not 
alone sufficient “to ensure that the overall financial result of the divorce is 
equitable.”  Id. at 236.   
[¶24]  Jandreau did not move for further findings pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 
52(b).  Under these circumstances, we would ordinarily assume that the court 
found that Jandreau was able to meet her needs without spousal support.  See 
Sorey v. Sorey, 1998 ME 217, ¶ 12 n.5, 718 A.2d 568.  In this case, however, under 
any standard of review, no matter how deferential, the evidence provides no 
 
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support for a determination that Jandreau’s income will be sufficient to meet her 
living expenses.   
2. 
Factors Not Cited in the Judgment 
[¶25]  Because the four factors on which the court explicitly relied to deny 
spousal support do not provide an adequate foundation for that denial, we search 
the record to determine whether any competent evidence otherwise supports the 
court’s judgment.  See Buck, 2015 ME 33, ¶ 5, --- A.3d ---.  Even when viewed in 
the light most favorable to the court’s judgment, the fully developed record before 
us contains no evidence regarding any of the remaining statutory factors that would 
support the court’s denial of Jandreau’s request for spousal support.  Cf. id. ¶¶ 5, 
7-8 (affirming an award of spousal support when the record, though incomplete, 
contained some support for the court’s judgment).  
[¶26]  To the contrary, the record suggests that the court’s denial of spousal 
support resulted from a failure to adequately consider all of the parties’ 
circumstances and all relevant statutory factors.  See Nixon v. Nixon, 2008 ME 157, 
¶ 15, 957 A.2d 101.  For example, the judgment does not discuss Jandreau’s 
(1) contributions as homemaker during the parties’ fourteen-year marriage, 
(2) health and disability, (3) provisions for health insurance, (4) income and 
employment potential, or (5) ability to become self-supporting within a reasonable 
period of time.  See 19-A M.R.S. § 951-A(5)(A), (D)-(E), (G), (I), (K), (O).  Each 
 
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of these factors indicates that Jandreau was entitled to some amount of spousal 
support. 
B. 
Attorney Fees 
[¶27]  At trial, Jandreau requested attorney fees (1) in the nature of spousal 
support; (2) as a sanction for LaChance’s failure to file an updated financial 
statement; and (3) pursuant to her contempt motion, as a sanction for LaChance’s 
failure to comply with the interim spousal support order.  
[¶28]  The court’s authority to award attorney fees derives from statutes and 
court rules.  Levy, Maine Family Law § 9.1 at 9-1 (citing Strater v. Strater, 
159 Me. 508, 511, 196 A.2d 94 (1963)).  The court may order one party to pay 
another party’s reasonable attorney fees for participation in any family proceeding, 
19-A M.R.S. § 105(1) (2014), and may in a divorce proceeding award attorney fees 
“in the nature of support,” 19-A M.R.S. § 952(3) (2014).  In a family proceeding, 
the court may award attorney fees as a sanction for a party’s failure to file a child 
support affidavit without good cause.  M.R. Civ. P. 108(f)(2)(C).  Further, in a 
plenary remedial contempt proceeding, the court may award reasonable attorney 
fees if it finds that one party’s contempt has injured the other party.  M.R. Civ. P. 
66(d)(3)(C).  
 
[¶29]  We review the court’s decision not to award attorney fees for an abuse 
of discretion.  See Bond v. Bond, 2011 ME 54, ¶ 9, 17 A.3d 1219.  In deciding 
 
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whether to award attorney fees, the court “has discretion to consider all factors that 
reasonably bear on the fairness and justness of the award.”  Smith v. Padolko, 
2008 ME 56, ¶ 17, 955 A.2d 740 (quotation marks omitted).  Relevant factors 
include the parties’ relative capacity to absorb the costs of the litigation and 
conduct by one party that increases the costs of the litigation.  See Miele v. Miele, 
2003 ME 113, ¶¶ 15-16, 832 A.2d 760.  
[¶30]  Here, LaChance makes significantly more than Jandreau, was found 
to be in contempt of court for failing to pay interim spousal support, and failed to 
file an updated child support affidavit without good cause.  It was an abuse of 
discretion for the court to deny Jandreau’s request for attorney fees. 
III.  CONCLUSION 
[¶31]  The record reflects a great disparity in the parties’ earning power and 
reveals that Jandreau’s income without spousal support will be inadequate to meet 
her ordinary living expenses even while she is receiving child support.  Because 
the court’s decision to deny spousal support is not supported by the factors on 
which the court explicitly relied and the record does not provide support for 
findings capable of otherwise sustaining that decision, we vacate the portion of the 
judgment denying spousal support and remand for reconsideration.  On remand, 
the court should also reconsider Jandreau’s request for attorney fees. 
 
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The entry is: 
The portions of the judgment denying spousal 
support and attorney fees are vacated.  The 
remainder of the divorce judgment is affirmed.  
Remanded for further proceedings consistent with 
this opinion. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On the briefs: 
 
Daniel W. Marra, Esq., Marden, Dubord, Bernier & Stevens, 
Waterville, for appellant Molly G. (LaChance) Jandreau 
 
Daniel L. LaChance did not file a brief 
 
 
 
Waterville District Court docket number FM-2013-74 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY