Court Opinion

ID: 2810892
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-06-23 18:06:47.354339+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:15:54.625588
License: Public Domain

Jun 23 2015, 1:30 pm

      ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                                    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
      Deborah M. Agard                                           Scott P. Wyatt
      Daniel W. Kiehl                                            Campbell Kyle Proffitt LLP
      Law Office of Deborah M. Agard                             Carmel, Indiana
      Indianapolis, Indiana

                                                  IN THE
          COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

      Stanley Kahn,                                             June 23, 2015

      Appellant-Defendant,                                      Court of Appeals Case No.
                                                                29A02-1409-DR-663
              v.                                                Appeal from the Hamilton Superior
                                                                Court

      Beverly (Kahn) Baker,                                     The Honorable Daniel J. Pfleging,
                                                                Judge
      Appellee-Plaintiff
                                                                Case No. 29D02-1003-DR-010248

      Vaidik, Chief Judge.

                                           Case Summary
[1]   Father, following divorce, was ordered to pay the remainder of his college-aged

      daughter’s post-secondary educational expenses—including tuition and room

      and board—and medical expenses. The father and daughter had a serious

      dispute the month before the court’s order, however, and thereafter the

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015                 Page 1 of 27
      daughter engaged in limited contact with her father—she sent him text and e-

      mail messages but did not speak to him on the telephone or meet with him in

      person for over a year. The father stopped paying his daughter’s expenses.

      Mother filed a motion for rule to show cause in an effort to get the father to

      comply with the court order, and the father filed a petition to modify the court

      order, alleging change in circumstances—specifically, that he was relieved from

      paying his daughter’s expenses because she had repudiated him. Following a

      hearing, the trial court found that the daughter had not repudiated her father,

      found him in contempt for failing to pay the daughter’s educational and

      medical expenses, and awarded attorney fees to the mother. The trial court also

      found, however, that under the “doctrine of unclean hands” the mother was to

      be held liable for her daughter’s room and board.

[2]   On appeal, we consolidate the father’s issues into the following: (1) whether

      the trial court erred in finding that the daughter did not repudiate her father,

      and that he was not, therefore, relieved of his obligation to pay the expenses

      specified in the Agreed Entry; (2) whether the trial court erred by holding the

      father in contempt for failing to pay the daughter’s post-secondary educational

      and medical expenses; and (3) whether the trial court erred in awarding the

      mother attorney fees. Mother cross-appeals, presenting one issue for our

      review: whether the trial court erred in ordering her to pay the daughter’s room

      and board expenses. Ultimately, we affirm the trial court’s order on all of the

      issues challenged by the father, and reverse on the issue raised by the mother.

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 2 of 27
                                Facts and Procedural History
[3]   Madeline, the eldest child of Stanley Kahn (“Father”) and Beverly (Kahn)

      Baker (“Mother”), began attending Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, in

      the fall of 2009, intending to graduate with honors in December 2012. 1 In 2010,

      after twenty-one years of marriage, Father and Mother—who both reside in

      central Indiana—divorced and reached a settlement agreement (“the Settlement

      Agreement”), approved by the trial court on June 10, 2010. This Settlement

      Agreement required Father to pay Madeline’s tuition for the 2010-11 school

      year at Emory. The Settlement Agreement also provided that Father would pay

      for health insurance for the parties’ two children, and that all uninsured medical

      costs and expenses of the children were to be divided equally between the

      parties.

[4]   In December 2011, when Madeline was home in Indianapolis for Christmas

      break, she and Father had a heated dispute over whether Madeline could take

      her car back to Atlanta. 2 Thereafter, Father went to Mother’s house, where

      Madeline was staying, and took away the car. Madeline then went to the bank

      where she and Father had a joint account to withdraw funds so she could buy a

      new car. 3 While Madeline was at the bank, Father suddenly arrived, and

      1
          Although the parties have two children, the expenses of the younger child are not at issue in this appeal.
      2
       Madeline testified that the car was a present to her for her sixteenth birthday. See Tr. p. 325. But Father
      held title, paid insurance, and maintained the car. See id. at 94.
      3
        The money in this joint bank account was Madeline’s money from past employment, gifts, and a lawsuit
      settlement. See Tr. p. 328.

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      Madeline, who was “terrified,” quickly left the bank to evade Father. Tr. p.

      278.

[5]   The next month, in January 2012, the parties entered into an agreed entry (“the

      Agreed Entry”), approved by the trial court, which modified Father’s

      obligations for Madeline’s post-secondary education expenses. Specifically, the

      Agreed Entry provided in pertinent part as follows:

              3.     For the remainder of Madeline’s undergraduate education at
              Emory University, which education shall be completed by December
              31, 2012, . . . Father shall pay and be responsible for the following:
                       a.       Tuition at the institution the child attends;
                       b.       Room and board at the institution the child attends;
                       c.       Reasonably necessary books, fees and supplies; and
                     d.      Transportation to and from school at the beginning and
              the end of the school year or as otherwise agreed by the parties;
              provided, however, that in the event Mother agrees to provide
              transportation to and/or from school for a child (which Mother is not
              obligated to do), then Mother shall pay the expenses of providing the
              transportation.
                      Mother shall not have an obligation to contribute to each
              child’s undergraduate educational expenses.
              4.       Neither party shall have a child support obligation to the other.
              ...
                                                     *****
                    d.     The children spend approximately half their time at the
              home of each parent when they are not at school.
                                                     *****
                     f.     Father is responsible for the children’s uninsured health
              care expenses.

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                      g.    Each parent shall pay for the care and maintenance of
              the children during any periods of time that the children shall be with
              that parent.
      Appellant’s App. p. 55-56.

[6]   Following the dispute over the car, Madeline and Father did not speak in

      person or on the telephone for all of 2012—Madeline had made a “conscious

      decision” that she could not see or talk to Father for the time being. Tr. p. 329.

      As she explained:

              It was really about his presence and his voice. I was just really scared
              to hear him or see him because it just brought up too much, and I had
              physical reactions to it. I would shake and cry when I would listen to
              him because it would just kind of – I know it sounds cliché, but just
              take me back. And I still wanted to talk to him and I miss him all the
              time. So, I would e-mail him or, you know, send him a paper that I
              was working on because I really wished that he could be included in
              some of the stuff that was going on with me, but I just couldn’t hear
              him or see him. It just hurt me too much and it scared me too much.
      Id. at 330.

[7]   Madeline came home to Indianapolis on multiple occasions in 2012 but did not

      see or contact Father during these visits. She did, however, send Father

      numerous e-cards, and e-mail and text messages. In these, she told Father that

      she loved him and missed him, wished him a happy birthday, shared the first

      paper she had ever written on a legal case, sent photos of her new apartment,

      and sent news about her induction into a philosophy honors society, her

      involvement in a play, and a new job. She also asked Father about a wedding

      he had attended, his new apartment, and his eye surgery. According to Father,

      however, “[s]ending an occasional text message or an e-mail is not a

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015            Page 5 of 27
      relationship.” Id. at 144. Regarding a February 2012 e-mail in which Madeline

      wrote “I really love you[,]” Father testified that those were “hollow words

      because there’s nothing behind it. There’s no action behind it.” Id. at 186.

[8]   Father, Mother, and Madeline all intended for her to graduate with honors,

      which required her to take part in a two-semester honors course. Madeline’s

      original plan was to take the first part of this course in the spring semester of her

      junior year and the second part in the fall semester of her senior year. To that

      end, in the spring semester—early 2012—Madeline was attending meetings

      with her professor in the belief that she was working toward her honors credit,

      but “there was a problem with [her] registration in the spring that [she] was

      unaware of, and [she] didn’t receive credit for it.” Id. at 58. Therefore, she

      decided to take the first part of the course in the summer of 2012 and the second

      part, as originally planned, during the fall semester.

[9]   But Father, who had paid Madeline’s tuition, room and board, and other

      required fees through the spring 2012 semester, simply did not pay for any of

      Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses thereafter—including, most

      significantly, any costs associated with the summer 2012 semester. And

      because Madeline was not able to register for the summer semester, she needed

      to take the two-semester honors course in the fall 2012 semester and the spring

      2013 semester in order to fulfill her plan of graduating with honors—meaning,

      she had to attend school beyond the December 2012 endpoint specified in the

      Agreed Entry. In spring 2012, Madeline also withdrew from an Introduction to

      Astronomy class because it appeared that she was going to receive a lower

      Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015    Page 6 of 27
       grade in the class than she would have liked; she then took Meteorology in the

       fall 2012 semester in order to fulfill her science requirement. So, in spring 2013,

       Madeline was registered for the second part of her honors requirement and a

       P.E. class; but if she had been able to register for summer classes, she would

       have taken both of these during the fall 2012 semester and could still have

       graduated in December 2012.

[10]   In terms of room and board expenses, Father had paid for Madeline to live in a

       sorority house for the spring 2012 semester; however, toward the end of the

       spring semester Madeline decided to leave the sorority and move into an off-

       campus apartment, for which Father would not pay. Madeline testified that

       while there was one “on[-]campus” housing option, it “wasn’t the type of

       housing [she] was looking for at all[,]” id. at 62, and it was more expensive than

       the off-campus apartment. Madeline e-mailed Father photos of the new off-

       campus apartment at the end of May, and Father responded by e-mail, saying

       the apartment looked “so nice” and was “[d]ef[initely] something [he] would

       like.” Appellee’s App. p. 63. However, Father did not pay for Madeline to live

       in this apartment, claiming that the language of the Agreed Entry—“Room and

       board at the Institution the child attends[,]” Appellant’s App. p. 55—only

       obligated Father to pay for an on-campus residence. See Tr. p. 173.

[11]   In August 2012, Mother, pro se, filed a motion for contempt and emergency

       hearing regarding Father’s failure to comply with the Agreed Entry, with

       respect to Madeline’s educational expenses, in particular. Five days later,

       Father filed a petition requesting modification of the order with regard to

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 7 of 27
       Madeline’s educational expenses, alleging the occurrence of “[a] significant

       change in circumstances” that rendered Father’s obligation to pay for

       Madeline’s post-secondary education “unreasonable[.]” Appellant’s App. p.

       63. In October 2012, Mother, now represented by counsel, filed her amended

       motion for rule to show cause, alleging that Father had failed to pay for

       Madeline’s educational expenses since the spring 2012 semester in willful

       violation of the Agreed Entry.

[12]   In August and September, Madeline had medical problems. On August 29,

       Mother sent Father an e-mail requesting Father’s insurance information in

       anticipation of a scheduled medical appointment. On September 4, Madeline

       sent Father a text message that read as follows:

               Thanks dad for asking about my health but I have a doctors apt here
               tomorrow I need to stay here and get well so I can stay in school. But
               I need the new insurance number the card I have doesn’t work.
       Appellee’s App. p. 118. Father responded by text message: “The insurance is

       not new. It works. Call me so that we can talk.” Id. at 119. On September 5,

       Mother was in Atlanta with Madeline, and when they attempted to use Father’s

       insurance information at the doctor’s office, the insurance card was declined.

       Mother texted Father to notify him that the card was declined. Mother also

       called Father from the doctor’s office to notify him of the situation and ask that

       he try to figure out the problem with the insurance. Mother then paid for the

       appointment herself. Father did not see an actual copy of the medical bill until

       two weeks before trial, at Mother’s deposition.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015          Page 8 of 27
[13]   In December 2012, Madeline sent an e-mail to Father that read as follows:

               I was hoping that when I come back you would maybe want to go to
               counseling with me. We can do it in Atlanta or I can come home. I’m
               sorry that it has taken me this long to be ready. I feel like I just lost
               myself for so long . . . and I wasn’t waiting for any specific amount of
               time to talk to you . . . I just know I feel more ready than I have before.
               I miss you, and want you to share in my life . . . . I hope you are well.
               I have been keeping tabs on you . . . . I hope this message finds you
               well, and that you know I am in no way trying to attack you or
               provoke you or hurt you. I really do want to work things out because I
               genuinely love and miss you . . . and I can’t have one more dream
               about you, or look at the beach, or eat fruit and not talk to you. So, I
               love you. . . .
       Id. at 115. In response, Father sent an e-mail that concluded, “When you move

       home in the summer, we can go to counseling. Love, Daddy[.]” Id. at 111.

       On February 10, 2013, Father sent an e-mail to Madeline that read: “I saw this

       and thought of you. Lets [sic] meet when you come to town for spring break.

       Love, Daddy[.]” Id. at 100. Attached to this e-mail was a photo of a sign that

       read “COMING TOGETHER IS A BEGINNING . . .” Id. at 101. Later that

       month, Madeline sent another e-mail to Father that read in part as follows:

               I would like to meet you when I come home. I’ve been thinking a lot
               about you. Sorry it took me so long to e-mail you back. . . . I guess
               we both know the deposition is scheduled for that Monday I come
               home. Should we meet before then? I think it would be a good idea if
               Mom comes too to sort of help ease the transition. It’s gonna be really
               hard. . . . I think we should keep e-mailing, though, between now and
               then, so we can feel more comfortable when the time comes. . . .
       Id. at 99. On February 26, Madeline in an e-mail again stated that she would

       meet with Father but “would feel more comfortable if mom was there too for

       emotional support.” Id. at 93. Father responded in a February 27 e-mail in part

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015          Page 9 of 27
       as follows: “Madeline, I will meet with you, not with your mother present.

       Whatever needs to be discussed, will be discussed between you and I.” Id.

[14]   In May, Father attended Madeline’s graduation from Emory without notifying

       her in advance that he was planning to do so. Following the graduation, Father

       stood approximately twenty feet away from Madeline, who was standing and

       talking with a group of people, and Madeline looked at him and then turned

       away. A flurry of text messages between Mother and Father followed:

               Mother: She stood there for a long time waiting for you. Why didn’t
               u come over. . . .
               Father: We followed her over to the side of the building. She turned
               and saw me and turned her back to us. . . .
                                                  *****
               Father: We waited for her and we went to the bathroom. When we
               came out she was gone. She didn’t call me. If she wanted me there
               that badly then she would have come over to me or made
               arrangements to see me. I came here to see her. When is she going to
               speak for herself. . . . I haven’t heard her say one word, only you.
               Mother: Well I guess u didn’t even tell her u were coming or u didn’t
               text her or you didn’t walk up to her before u went to the bathroom
               and it looked like u left to us. . . .
               Father: I wanted to surprise her today. . . . She never called me to ask
               me to come but I came anyway. . . .
                                                      *****
               Mother: U act like nothing has happened it’s like u can show up
               graduation day after I had to go through hell to make sure she could.
               And call friends for witnesses and u not even care if she had money for
               food and shelter. And walk in graduation day and her run with open
               arms to you and have a party. These are my words not hers. . . .
       Pet. Ex. 9, Ex. Vol. 1.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015        Page 10 of 27
[15]   At the end of May, Father e-mailed Madeline to notify her of a June 4

       appointment he had scheduled with a therapist. Appellee’s App. p. 87.

       Madeline texted back, “Yes, I’ll be there.” Tr. p. 137. Ultimately, Father and

       Madeline attended three counseling sessions together.

[16]   A hearing was held on June 10, 2013, and February 11, 2014. Between those

       two dates, Madeline traveled to New York for five days with Father, her

       brother, and Father’s girlfriend. Appellant’s App. p. 18. Following the hearing,

       the trial court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law, which

       provided in pertinent part as follows:

               45. Indiana law provides that a court may enter an educational
               support order for a child’s education at a post-secondary educational
               institution. [citation omitted].
               46. Absent a modification of the Court’s order, Father was obligated
               to pay 100% of Madeline’s educational expenses at Emory University.
               [citation omitted].
               47. “A trial court has the discretionary power to make a modification
               for child support relate back to the date the petition to modify is filed,
               or any date thereafter.” [citations omitted].
               48. Father’s failure to pay for Madeline’s post-secondary educational
               expenses for the 2012 summer session at Emory University predated
               Father’s Petition to Modify.
               49. Even assuming that a modification of the Agreed Modification
               Order regarding post-secondary educational expenses was warranted
               due to repudiation, as suggested by Father, any modification of the
               Court’s post-secondary educational support order can only be entered
               retroactive to the date of filing.
               50. The Agreed Modification Order neither prohibits Madeline from
               attending the 2012 summer session, nor relieves Father of his
               responsibility to pay for Madeline’s post-secondary educational
               expenses during the 2012 summer session at Emory University.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015          Page 11 of 27
                                           *****
        54. The Court finds that Father’s refusal to pay Madeline’s post-
        secondary educational expenses for the summer 2012 session was a
        willful violation of this Court’s order.
                                           *****
        56. Father is in contempt of the Agreed Modification Order for
        refusing to pay Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses for the
        fall 2012 session at Emory University.
        57. The question of whether Father is in contempt for failing to pay
        for Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses at Emory
        University for the Summer and Fall, 2012, semester is dependent upon
        whether Madeline repudiated a relationship with Father, as Father
        suggests in his Petition to Modify the Agreed Modification Order.
                                           *****
        62. Here, the discord that exists between Madeline and Father does
        not rise to the level of repudiation. . . .
                                           *****
        64. The Court finds that as Madeline has not repudiated Father,
        Father’s Petition to Modify should be denied.
        65. However, this Court recognizes that one seeking equitable relief
        must come to Court with “clean hands.” The unclean hands doctrine
        is an equitable tenet that demands one who seeks equitable relief to be
        free of wrongdoing in the matter before the court. [citation omitted]. .
        .
                                           *****
        70. It would not be equitable for Father to pay for Madeline’s room
        and board when it was Mother who benefited exclusively from
        knowing where Madeline resided in Atlanta and enjoying her
        company in Atlanta and in Indianapolis.
                                           *****
        78. Mother has been injured as a result of Father’s contempt in that
        Mother, and her husband (Madeline’s Step-Father), were required to
        provide for Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses at Emory
        University due to Father’s refusal to do so.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015       Page 12 of 27
               79. Mother was also injured as a result of Father’s contempt in that
               Mother was required to incur attorney fees in order to seek the Court’s
               assistance in forcing Father’s compliance with the Agreed
               Modification Order, as well as defending Father’s Petition to Modify
               alleging repudiation.
               80. As sanction for Father’s contempt, and to bring father in
               compliance with the Court’s order, Father shall be responsible for
               satisfying Madeline’s tuition and student-loans for the summer and
               fall, 2012, and spring, 2013, in the sum of $34,596.64, including any
               interest or fees incurred on said loans, that were through Sallie Mae
               Bank, and co-signed by Madeline’s Step-Father [], within thirty days of
               the Court Order.
               81. As sanction for Father’s contempt, and to bring Father into
               compliance with the Court’s order, Father shall reimburse Mother the
               sum of $542.54 for Madeline’s medical expenses paid by Mother
               between August 30, 2012 and August 23, 2013. . . .
               82. As sanction for Father’s contempt, Father shall be responsible for
               77% of attorney fees Mother incurred due to Father’s contempt and in
               defense of Father’s Petition to Modify. Father shall pay the sum of
               $35,836.01 . . . .
                                                  *****
               90. It would not be equitable for Father to pay for Madeline’s room
               and board when it was Mother who benefited exclusively from
               knowing where Madeline resided in Atlanta and enjoying her
               company in Atlanta and Indianapolis.
               91. This Court finds that Mother shall remain responsible for
               Madeline’s room and board for summer and fall, 2012, and spring,
               2013, in the sum of $10,596.28.
       Appellant’s App. p. 18-25 (formatting altered).

[17]   Father now appeals the denial of his August 29, 2013 petition to modify, his

       motion to correct error, and his motion for relief from judgment. Mother cross-

       appeals, challenging specifically the trial court’s conclusion that Mother

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015       Page 13 of 27
       remains responsible for Madeline’s room and board for summer and fall 2012,

       and spring 2013.

                                     Discussion and Decision
[18]   Father raises five issues on appeal, which we consolidate and restate as follows:

       (1) whether the trial court erred in finding that Madeline did not repudiate

       Father, and that he was not, therefore, relieved of his obligation to pay the

       expenses specified in the Agreed Entry; (2) whether the trial court erred by

       holding Father in contempt for failing to pay Madeline’s post-secondary

       educational and medical expenses; and (3) whether the trial court erred in

       awarding Mother attorney fees. 4 Mother cross-appeals, presenting one issue for

       our review: whether the trial court erred in ordering her to pay Madeline’s room

       and board expenses. We consider each issue below.

[19]   But at the outset, we note that the trial court entered Trial Rule 52(A) findings

       of fact and conclusions of law. 5 As such, we use a two-tiered standard of

       4
         In light of our decision regarding repudiation, we do not need to reach Father’s contention that “the
       repudiation should have been effective when [M.K.] severed her relationship with Father in January [] 2012”
       rather than dating the alleged repudiation to August 2012, when he filed his petition for modification. See
       Appellant’s Br. p. 23.
       5
         In his brief, Father asserts that he is appealing the denial of his Trial Rule 59 and 60 motions to correct error
       and set aside judgment, but in substance, Father’s arguments are directed toward the trial court’s findings of
       fact and conclusions of law. Thus, we employ the “clearly erroneous” standard of review.
       Father also writes in his brief that this Court reviews a trial court’s decision to order the payment of post-
       secondary educational expenses for an abuse of discretion. Appellant’s Br. p. 12 (citing Hirsch v. Oliver, 970
       N.E.2d 651, 662 (Ind. 2012)). While we do not disagree, we note that the Agreed Entry ordering Father to
       pay M.K.’s post-secondary educational expenses is not at issue in this appeal; instead, the question is whether
       repudiation has occurred, such that Father is relieved from that obligation.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015                              Page 14 of 27
       review: we determine whether the evidence supports the findings, and whether

       the findings support the judgment. Lovold v. Ellis, 988 N.E.2d 1144, 1150 (Ind.

       Ct. App. 2013). We neither reweigh the evidence nor assess the credibility of

       witnesses, but consider only the evidence most favorable to the judgment.

       Lechien v. Wren, 950 N.E.2d 838, 841 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). The appellant must

       establish that the trial court’s findings are clearly erroneous. Lovold, 988 N.E.2d

       at 1150. Findings are clearly erroneous when a review of the record leaves us

       firmly convinced a mistake has been made. Id. But we do not defer to

       conclusions of law, and a judgment is clearly erroneous if it relies on an

       incorrect legal standard. Id.

                                             1. Repudiation
[20]   Father argues first that the trial court erred in “denying Father’s request that the

       trial court relieve him of his education expense obligation based on [M.K.]’s

       repudiation.” Appellant’s Br. p. 13. Repudiation is defined as a complete

       refusal to participate in a relationship with the parent. Lovold, 988 N.E.2d at

       1150 (citing Norris v. Pethe, 833 N.E.2d 1024, 1033 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005)).

       Indiana law provides that a court may enter an educational support order for a

       child’s education at a post-secondary educational institute, but repudiation of a

       parent by a child is recognized as a complete defense to such an order. See Ind.

       Code § 31-16-6-2(a)(1); McKay v. McKay, 644 N.E.2d 164, 166 (Ind. Ct. App.

       1994). In McKay, the Court noted that there is no absolute legal duty on

       parents to provide a college education for their children, and adopted what was

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 15 of 27
       Pennsylvania’s approach at that time, stating “where a child, as an adult over

       eighteen years of age, repudiates a parent, that parent must be allowed to

       dictate what effect this will have on his or her contribution to college expenses

       for that child.” 644 N.E.2d at 166 (quoting Milne v. Milne, 556 A.2d 854, 856

       (Pa. Super. Ct. 1989)). A child’s repudiation of a parent—that is a compete

       refusal to participate in a relationship with a parent—may obviate a parent’s

       obligation to pay certain expenses, including college expenses. See Bales v. Bales,

       801 N.E.2d 196, 199 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), reh’g denied, trans. denied. It is well

       established that on appeal, we do not reweigh the evidence; instead, we

       consider first whether the evidence supports the findings and then whether the

       findings support the judgment. See Lovold, 988 N.E.2d at 1150. The appellant,

       for his part, must establish that the trial court’s findings are clearly erroneous;

       findings are clearly erroneous when a review of the record leaves us firmly

       convinced that a mistake has been made. See id.

[21]   In determining what constitutes repudiation, we review Indiana caselaw on this

       issue. A finding of repudiation is fact sensitive. In McKay, this Court held that

       a twenty-year-old son had repudiated his father such that his father was relieved

       of the responsibility to pay his son’s college expenses where the son consulted

       with his mother and stepfather on all of his college-related decisions, rejected all

       of his father’s efforts to reconcile their relationship, and testified at trial that he

       “was electing not to have a relationship with [his] Father, that he did not want a

       relationship or contact with [his] Father, and there was nothing that could be

       done to change his mind.” 644 N.E.2d at 166. In Norris, this Court affirmed

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015      Page 16 of 27
the trial court’s finding of repudiation where a daughter admitted she “d[idn]’t

want anything to do with [her father],” declined to accept birthday and special

occasion cards in general, asked her father to leave a school activity, and

discarded flowers and a check the father had sent to her, informing him,

“You’re wasting your time and money. The flowers are in a trash can at

school, just like our relationship. . . . No matter what the judge orders, he can’t

order my heart.” 833 N.E.2d at 1034, 1033. In Scales v. Scales, we affirmed

repudiation of a Mother where the last time she had seen her daughter was six

months before the hearing in a meeting that had been confrontational and

intimidating to the mother, and in a telephone conversation a few days before

the hearing, her son had told her, “I hate you you f***ing b****. I hope you

die.” 891 N.E.2d 1116, 1120 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008). In Lechien v. Wren, this

Court affirmed the trial court’s finding of repudiation in the case of a son whose

only communication with his father for over a year was when he went to his

father’s workplace to ask for money, who had not acknowledged Father’s Day

or his father’s birthday for several years, and had as an adult petitioned to have

his last name changed to his mother’s maiden name, even after acknowledging

at the hearing on the name-change petition that by changing his name a judge

could later decide that he had repudiated his father and did not want any help

from his father. 950 N.E.2d 838 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). And in Lovold, we

affirmed the trial court’s determination of repudiation where a son and his

father became estranged post-divorce and had no contact for eight years, the

son had never sent Father’s Day or birthday cards or kept his father abreast of

his grades, activities, or progress, and the son’s claim in an in-camera interview
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 17 of 27
       that he was interested in having a relationship with his father “r[ang] hollow”

       and appeared “chiefly motivated by the fact Mother is now requesting Father to

       pay [the son’s] college expenses.” 988 N.E.2d at 1147.

[22]   In this case, by contrast, the findings showed that Father and Madeline had a

       close relationship for most of Madeline’s life and that Father was complying

       with the order to pay for all of Madeline’s post-secondary education expenses,

       but that the two had a falling out in December 2011 when Madeline wanted to

       take her car back to Atlanta after her Christmas break. See Appellant’s App. p.

       13, 14. Thereafter Madeline and Father did not see one another or speak on the

       telephone for over a year, but Madeline sent numerous e-cards, texts, and e-

       mail messages telling Father she loved and missed him, sharing updates about

       her life, and asking Father about developments in his life. See id. at 15. Father

       continued paying Madeline’s expenses through the Spring 2012 semester. See

       id. at 16. In December 2012, Madeline expressed an interest in going to

       counseling with Father. See id. at 17. In February 2013, Madeline said she

       would meet with Father in person but would feel more comfortable if Mother

       was present for emotional support; Father responded that he would not meet

       with Madeline if Mother was there as well. See id. The trial court found that

       Madeline and Father attended three counseling sessions together and traveled

       to New York for five days after the first hearing on the pending motions. See id.

       at 18. Given this evidence, we find that the trial court’s findings amply support

       the conclusion that the discord that existed between Madeline and Father did

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 18 of 27
       not rise to the level of repudiation so as to obviate Father’s obligation to pay the

       expenses specified in the Agreed Order. See id. at 21.

           2. Father’s Contempt and Madeline’s Expenses
[23]   Father next contends that the trial court erred by holding him in contempt for

       failing to pay Madeline’s college and medical expenses. The determination of

       whether a party is in contempt of court is generally a matter within the sound

       discretion of the trial court. See Hancz v. City of S. Bend, 691 N.E.2d 1322, 1324

       (Ind. Ct. App. 1998). Here, again, the trial court entered findings of fact and

       conclusions of law thereon; thus, we must determine whether the findings and

       conclusions are sufficient to support the judgment that Father was in contempt

       of the Agreed Entry. See id. Indirect contempt, or civil contempt, is the willful

       disobedience of any lawfully entered court order of which the offender has

       notice. Winslow v. Fifer, 969 N.E.2d 1087, 1093 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), reh’g

       denied. The objective of a contempt citation is not to punish but to coerce

       action for the benefit of the aggrieved party. Id. Thus, any type of remedy in

       civil contempt proceedings must be coercive or remedial in nature. Id.

[24]   First, Father contends that the trial court’s sanction of ordering him to pay

       Madeline’s expenses for the spring 2013 semester was an impermissible

       modification of the parties’ agreement, which “required Madeline to finish her

       undergraduate degree by December 31, 2012.” Appellant’s Br. p. 25. But the

       evidence showed, and the trial court found, that Father had failed to pay

       Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses for both the summer and fall

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 19 of 27
       semesters of 2012, in willful violation of the Agreed Entry. Specifically, the

       trial court set forth the following conclusions of law:

               50. The Agreed [Entry] neither prohibits Madeline from attending the
               2012 summer session, nor relieves Father of his responsibility to pay
               for Madeline‘s post-secondary educational expenses during the 2012
               summer session at Emory University.
               51. The Agreed [Entry] provides that Father is responsible for all of
               Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses at Emory University.
                                                      *****
               54. The Court finds that Father’s refusal to pay Madeline’s post-
               secondary educational expenses for the summer 2012 session was a
               willful violation of this Court’s order.
                                                      *****
               78. Mother has been injured as a result of Father’s contempt in that
               Mother, and her husband (Madeline’s Step-Father), were required to
               provide for Madeline’s post-secondary educational expenses at Emory
               University due to Father’s refusal to do so.
                                                      *****
               80. As sanction for Father’s contempt, and to bring Father into
               compliance with the Court’s order, Father shall be responsible for
               satisfying Madeline’s tuition and student-loans for the summer and
               fall, 2012, and spring, 2013, in the sum of $34,596.64, including any
               interest or fees incurred on said loans . . . .
       Appellant’s App. p. 20-24.

[25]   Father’s argument that “the trial court impermissibly modified [the Agreed

       Entry] to carry forward Father’s obligation for an additional semester” is

       unavailing for two reasons. Appellant’s Br. p. 27. The first is that this does not

       address the fact that Father failed to pay for Madeline’s summer 2012

       semester—meaning she was not able to register and receive credit for summer-

       semester classes, see Tr. p. 59—although that was well within the timeframe
       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015         Page 20 of 27
       contemplated in the Agreed Entry and before Father filed his Petition to

       Modify; and the second reason, which follows from the first, is that if he had

       paid for the summer 2012 semester, Madeline would have been able to graduate

       in December 2012, as originally planned. Thus, we find that the trial court did

       not err in finding Father in contempt for failing to pay Madeline’s education

       expenses for the summer and fall 2012 and spring 2013 semesters.

[26]   Father also disputes the trial court’s finding that he was in contempt for failing

       to pay Madeline’s medical expenses. Although the trial court did not make any

       findings of fact on the issue of Madeline’s unpaid medical expenses, the court

       nonetheless concluded that “[a]s a sanction for Father’s contempt, and to bring

       Father into compliance with the Court’s order, Father shall reimburse Mother

       the sum of $542.54 for Madeline’s medical expenses paid by Mother . . . .”

       Appellant’s App. p. 24. It is undisputed that the Agreed Entry provides:

       “Father is responsible for the children’s uninsured health care expenses.” Id. at

       56. In his brief Father insists that he received the medical bill only a few weeks

       before trial; but there is evidence in the record that both Mother and Madeline

       contacted Father for updated insurance information at or around the time the

       medical bill was incurred, as his insurance card had been declined. See, e.g.,

       Appellant’s App. p. 367; Appellee’s App. p. 84, 118. However, we do not

       reweigh the evidence on appeal. Given that Father concedes that he is ordered

       to pay all of the children’s uninsured medical expenses, we find that the trial

       court did not err in holding Father responsible for this expense.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 21 of 27
                               3. Mother’s Attorney’s Fees
[27]   Next Father contends that the trial court erred in ordering Father to pay 77% of

       Mother’s attorney’s fees. Here the trial court made the following findings and

       conclusions on the issue of attorney’s fees:

               44. Mother incurred attorney fees and expenses totaling $46,540.27
               for Mother’s Verified Motion for Rule to Show Cause and Father’s
               Petition to Modify.
                                                      *****
               52. Mother attempted to avoid pursuing a contempt citation against
               Father by first requesting that Father bring himself into compliance
               with the Agreed [Entry] and pay the expenses associated with
               Madeline’s enrollment in the 2012 fall semester at Emory University.
               53. Despite Mother’s efforts to get Father to comply with the Court’s
               order, Father refused to pay for Madeline’s post-secondary educational
               expenses at Emory University.
                                                      *****
               82. As sanction for Father’s contempt, Father shall be responsible for
               77% of attorney fees Mother incurred due to Father’s contempt and in
               defense of Father’s Petition to Modify. . . .
       Appellant’s App. p. 19. Ultimately, the trial court ordered “that as a sanction

       for Father’s contempt, Father shall be responsible for $35,836.01, or 77% of

       attorney fees Mother incurred due to Father’s contempt and in defense of

       Father’s Petition to Modify . . . .” Id. at 26.

[28]   The trial court has inherent authority to award attorney’s fees for civil

       contempt. Winslow, 969 N.E.2d at 1093. In other words, no statutory sanction

       is needed, as a court’s power to enforce compliance with its orders and decrees

       duly entered is inherent. Crowl v. Berryhill, 678 N.E.2d 828, 831 (Ind. Ct. App.

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015      Page 22 of 27
       1997). Accordingly, apart from any statutory authority, a court has the

       inherent authority to enforce its orders and to compensate the aggrieved party

       for losses and damages resulting from another’s contemptuous actions. Id. at

       832.

[29]   Here, Father argues that the trial court erred by failing to consider evidence of

       the parties’ resources, ability to pay, and employment. But given that Mother’s

       request for attorney’s fees was based on Father’s misconduct for failure to

       comply with the Agreed Entry, and given the trial court’s inherent authority to

       award attorney’s fees for civil contempt, Winslow, 969 N.E.2d at 1093, we

       cannot say the trial court erred in ordering Father to pay a percentage of

       Mother’s attorney’s fees.

                 4. Madeline’s Room and Board Expenses
[30]   Last, Mother raises one issue on cross-appeal, which is whether the trial court

       erred in finding that it would be inequitable for Father to be responsible for

       Madeline’s room and board after she moved out of the sorority house. Mother

       does not challenge the trial court’s findings of fact; instead, she asserts that the

       trial court clearly erred by concluding that Mother should be responsible for

       Madeline’s room and board expenses for the 2012 summer and fall semesters

       and the 2013 spring semester on purely equitable grounds, namely that she “did

       not come to Court with clean hands.” Appellant’s App. p. 24. On appeal, we

       will not reweigh the evidence nor assess the credibility of the witnesses; instead,

       we determine whether the evidence supports the findings, and whether the

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015    Page 23 of 27
       findings support the judgment. Lovold, 988 N.E.2d at 1150. We do not defer to

       conclusions of law. Id.

[31]   The unclean-hands doctrine is an equitable tenet that demands one who seeks

       equitable relief to be free of wrongdoing in the matter before the court.

       Coppolillo v. Cort, 947 N.E.2d 994, 1000 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (citing Fairway

       Developers, Inc. v. Marcum, 832 N.E.2d 581, 584 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans.

       denied.). The purpose of the unclean-hands doctrine is to prevent a party from

       reaping benefits from his or her misconduct. Id. For the doctrine of unclean

       hands to apply, the alleged wrongdoing must be intentional and must have an

       immediate and necessary relation to the matter being litigated. Id. The

       doctrine of unclean hands is not favored by the courts and must be applied with

       reluctance and scrutiny. Id. (citing Wagner v. Estate of Fox, 717 N.E.2d 195, 202

       (Ind. Ct. App. 1999)).

[32]   With respect to this issue, the trial court issued the following conclusions of

       law:

               65. [] [T]his Court recognizes that one seeing equitable relief must
               come to Court with “clean hands”. The unclean hands doctrine is an
               equitable tenet that demands one who seeks equitable relief to be free
               of wrongdoing in the matter before the court. Fairway Developers, Inc. v.
               Marcum, 832 N.E.2d 581, 584 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans. denied. The
               alleged wrongdoing must have an immediate and necessary relation to
               the matter being litigated. Id. For the doctrine of unclean hands to
               apply, the misconduct must be intentional. Id. The purpose of the
               unclean hands doctrine is to prevent a party from reaping benefits from
               his misconduct. Id. at 585.
                                                      *****

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015       Page 24 of 27
               69. During 2012, Madeline lived in a location in Atlanta that was
               unknown to Father. Madeline chose to notify Mother exclusively
               regarding the location of her apartment.
               70. It would not be equitable for Father to pay for Madeline’s room
               and board when it was Mother who benefited exclusively from
               knowing where Madeline resided in Atlanta and enjoying her
               company in Atlanta and Indianapolis.
                                                      *****
               84. The Court finds that Madeline and Mother bear some of the fault
               for the deteriorating relationship between Madeline and Father and
               thus did not come to Court with clean hands.
               85. Madeline made no attempt to have a relationship with her Father
               except for a few text messages and e-mails.
                                                      *****
               88. Madeline invited Mother to Atlanta for family occasions but did
               not invite Father.
               89. Father did not know where Madeline lived in Atlanta when she
               moved out of the sorority in April, 2012.
               90. It would not be equitable for Father to pay for Madeline’s room
               and board when it was Mother who benefitted exclusively from
               knowing where Madeline resided in Atlanta and enjoying her
               company in Atlanta and in Indianapolis.
               91. This Court finds that Mother shall remain responsible for
               Madeline’s room and board for summer and fall, 2012, and spring,
               2013, in the sum of $10,596.28.
       Appellant’s App. p. 22-25.

[33]   Here, Mother asserts, and we agree, that the trial court made no specific

       findings about any intentional misconduct on Mother’s part. And indeed, we

       can find nothing in the record that supports the conclusion that Mother

       committed any acts of intentional misconduct. We acknowledge that Mother

       visited Madeline in Atlanta and that Madeline stayed exclusively with Mother

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015       Page 25 of 27
       when she was home in Indianapolis. But we cannot imagine faulting Mother

       for the fact that Madeline preferred to spend time with her rather than with

       Father, and we find no evidence to support the conclusion that Mother bore

       “some of the fault for the deteriorating relationship between Madeline and

       Father.” Appellant’s App. p. 24.

[34]   As to Father’s knowledge of Madeline’s housing: we acknowledge that

       Madeline did not invite Father to visit her off-campus apartment, and that she

       was not entirely forthcoming with information about her housing. But she did

       notify Father that she was moving out of the sorority house to an off-campus

       apartment, and she sent photos of the apartment to Father. See Appellee’s App.

       p. 149, 163-66. Father, for his part, responded that “[t]he apt. looks so nice.

       The faucet looks very hot and cool (LOL)[.] Def something I would like.” Id.

       at 149. There is no evidence that Father ever questioned her housing choice or

       communicated to her that he would not pay for her to live in off-campus

       housing.

[35]   The Agreed Entry clearly states that Father is responsible for housing. There is

       no distinction made in the language of the Agreed Entry between on- vs. off-

       campus housing, as Father contends. Given that the trial court found—and we

       affirm—that Madeline’s behavior did not rise to the level of repudiation, we

       conclude that Father remains liable for that expense. And because we find no

       evidence whatsoever that Mother engaged in any acts of intentional misconduct

       regarding Father’s knowledge of or access to Madeline’s housing, we

       respectfully disagree with the trial court’s use of the equitable doctrine of

       Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 29A02-1409-DR-663 | June 23, 2015   Page 26 of 27
unclean hands in this context. We conclude that Father remains liable for

Madeline’s room and board for the summer and fall semesters of 2012, and the

spring 2013 semester.

Affirmed in part and reversed in part.

Kirsch, J., and Bradford, J., concur.

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