Court Opinion

ID: 9741419
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 20:55:23.021729+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:24:24.007434
License: Public Domain

OPINION
BAKER, Judge.
Appellant-respondent Joyce Zan appeals the trial court's order granting appellee-petitioner Lawrence Zan's Verified Petition to Modify or Revoke Prior Order of Maintenance. Specifically, Joyee contends *1286that the trial court erred in modifying the parties' settlement agreement with respect to Lawrence's obligation to make rehabilitative maintenance payments. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS
Lawrence and Joyce were married on May 11, 1985, and Lawrence petitioned to dissolve the marriage on December 18, 2001. On April 9, 2002, the parties filed their negotiated Summary Dissolution Decree (the "Agreement"), which was approved by the trial court. The Agreement includes the following provision:
8. REHABILITATIVE NANCE MAINTE-
Father agrees to pay directly to Mother eight hundred dollars ($800.00) per month in rehabilitative maintenance for a period of three years, so long as Father remains employed in his current capacity with the FAA. If Father's employment should change, this event shall be considered a substantial change in cireumstances thereby effectuating a modification of the amount of maintenance payable to Mother.
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The parties note that Father is agreeable to paying rehabilitative maintenance due to the fact that Mother has not worked continuously throughout the marriage and needs assistance in obtaining an education to better employment opportunities. Said maintenance is not being paid due to disability.
Appellant's App. p. 49.
Pursuant to the rehabilitative maintenance provision, between April 2002 and February 10, 2004, Lawrence made twenty-three monthly payments to Joyce at the rate of $800 per month. Joyce did not attend school between April 2002 and December 2002 because she was concentrating on a drug rehabilitation program related to her addiction to pain pills. Between December 2002 and April 2008, Joyce attended the Masters Pro program, but she did not complete that educational program. In October 2003, Joyee enrolled at ITT Technical Institute, but subsequently learned that she did not meet the requirements and withdrew. As of February 10, 2004, Joyce was looking into, but had not yet enrolled in, educational and vocational training programs at Goodwill, Hendricks College Network, and Sheltering Wings.
As of February 10, 2004, Lawrence was still employed with the FAA. He testified that he is willing to continue making rehabilitative maintenance payments if Joyce actually enrolls in an educational program.
On February 10, 2004, Lawrence filed the maintenance modification petition in open court and the trial court conducted a hearing on the petition. On the same date, the trial court issued its order granting Lawrence's petition. The order provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
5. The purpose of the maintenance award was to provide Wife assis-tamee to obtain education to obtain better employment opportunities.
6. I.C. 81-16-8-1 permits modification of an order for maintenance if (1) there is a change so substantial and continuing that the original terms are unreasonable and (2) if more than twelve months have passed since the prior order.
7. Wife has made no substantial effort to enroll in and complete any formal education.
8. Wife has been employed in various jobs earning from $7.50 to $10.00 per hour.
9. Wife pays no child support and thus does not have that weekly expense.
*128710. Wife has had the benefit of $18,400.00 to be used towards her education.
11. Wife has been in substance abuse treatment to cope with a long term prescription drug problem.
12. The Dissolution Decree is silent as to the nature and extent of education needed.
13. Wife has been drug free for 18 months, but has not gained better employment than at the time of the decree.
14. Husband shall make the next $800.00 maintenance payment, that being the 24th payment.
15. Husband's obligation to make the payments of $800.00 per month shall terminate.
16. Husband's maintenance obligation shall, until and including April 7, 2005 be to reimburse Wife in an amount up to $9,600.00 for educational classes or training begun prior to April 7, 2005 and successfully completed by Wife.
17. Wife shall provide Husband with an invoice at the beginning of the class or training and with a report showing successful completion of the class or training.
18. Husband shall reimburse wife [sic] within 7 days of receiving the report.
Appellant's App. p. 9 (emphasis in original). Joyce now appeals.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Joyee contends that the trial court erred in modifying the Agreement. Specifically, she argues that the trial court lacked the authority to modify the Agreement because it could not have ordered Lawrence to make spousal maintenance payments without the parties' consent. Lawrence responds that because the trial court would have had the statutory authority to order him to make rehabilitative maintenance payments, it had the authority to modify the Agreement.
As we consider Joyce's argument, we note that the trial court's order is a general judgment entered with findings: "[slua sponte findings control only as to the issues they cover and a general judgment will control as to the issues upon which there are no findings. A general judgment entered with findings will be affirmed if it can be sustained on any legal theory supported by the evidence." Estate of Skalka v. Skalka, 751 N.E.2d 769, 771 (Ind.Ct.App.2001). We further note that to the extent the order relies upon interpretation of the Agreement, we will review that de novo because it is a pure question of law. Dedelow v. Pucalik, 801 N.E.2d 178, 188 (Ind.Ct.App.2003).
There are two ways in which a party to a divorcee may be obligated to make spousal maintenance payments. Ki-ther the parties may provide for maintenance in a negotiated settlement agreement or the court may order maintenance payments in certain limited cireumstances. Voigt v. Voigt, 670 N.E.2d 1271, 1275-76 (Ind.1996). A trial court may award only "three, quite limited" varieties of post-dissolution maintenance: spousal incapacity maintenance, caregiver maintenance, and rehabilitative maintenance. Id. at 1276; see also Ind.Code § 31-15-7-2. A court may order rehabilitative maintenance for no more than three years if it finds that a spouse needs support while acquiring sufficient education or training to get an appropriate job. I.C. § 81-15-7-2(8). Additionally, the parties "may themselves provide for maintenance in settlement agreements where the court could not otherwise order it." Voigt 670 N.E.2d at 1277. Indeed, "the parties to a maintenance agreement *1288are both grown-ups, free to bargain with their own legal rights." Id. at 1274.
Our supreme court has noted that courts should exercise their authority to review settlement agreements with "great restraint." Id. at 1279. In Voigt, our supreme court established a general principle: "[wlhere a court had no authority to impose the kind of maintenance award that the parties forged in a settlement agreement, the court cannot subsequently modify the maintenance obligation without the consent of the parties" Id. at 1279-80. The court reserved the question whether a court may modify a maintenance obligation that originated in a settlement agreement but that rested on one of the grounds-including rehabilitative maintenance-on which the court could have ordered the same maintenance in the absence of agreement. Id. at 1280 n. 13; see Stuart v. Phillips, 734 N.E.2d 1046 (Ind.2000) (confirming that Voigt did not resolve whether a trial court may modify a spousal maintenance obligation where it could have ordered the same maintenance initially).
The trial court and Lawrence both contend that Indiana Code section 31-16-8-1 1 vests the trial court with authority to modify the Agreement. Appellant's App. p. 9; Appellee's Br. p. 11. But as noted by our supreme court in Voigt, this provision "refers to the modification of only court-imposed maintenance, not of approved maintenance agreements." 670 N.E.2d at 1279 (emphasis in original). Thus, the statute does not answer the question of whether the trial court in this case had the authority to modify the negotiated Agreement.
Here, Joyce and Lawrence agreed that Lawrence would make rehabilitative maintenance payments to Joyce "due to the fact that [she had] not worked continuously throughout the marriage and needs assistance in obtaining an education to better employment opportunities." Appellant's App. p. 49. The trial court would have had the authority, pursuant to Indiana Code section 81-15-7-2(8), to order Lawrence to make such rehabilitative maintenance payments without the agreement of the parties.
Although our supreme court has not squarely decided the issue presented today, it is our view that the trial court may modify the Agreement under these circumstances. To hold otherwise may circumvent the parties' ability or desire to bargain independently without court intervention. Put another way, a party may be loathe to enter into an agreement such as the one here, knowing that a court could not intervene in the event of changed circumstances.
Even more compelling, when the Agreement is examined as a whole, it is apparent that the purpose of the rehabilitative maintenance provision was to enable Joyce to attend an educational or vocational train*1289ing program. Specifically, the Agreement requires Lawrence to make rehabilitative maintenance payments for a full three years "so long as [he] remains employed in his current capacity with the FAA." Appellant's App. p. 49. While Joyce concludes from this clause that the only way, aside from the passage of three years, that Lawrence's obligation may be modified is if he loses his job with the FAA, our review of the Agreement leads us to disagree. A subsequent clause goes on to note that Lawrence "is agreeable to paying rehabilitative maintenance due to the fact that [Joyee] has not worked continuously throughout the marriage and needs assistance in obtaining an education to better employment opportunities." Id. It is apparent from this clause that the parties intended that the rehabilitative maintenance would assist Joyce "in obtaining an education" so that she could seek better employment opportunities. The evidence presented at the hearing showed that rather than obtaining an education, Joyce has collected over $18,000 from Lawrence and has instead apparently used it as a means of supporting herself. In our view, such was not the intent and spirit of the Agreement. Thus, under these cireumstances, the trial court properly modified Lawrence's maintenance obligation.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
ROBB, J., concurs with opinion.
KIRSCH, J., dissents with opinion.

. Indiana Code section 31-16-8-1 provides as follows:
f Provisions of an order with respect to child support or an order for maintenance ordered under IC 31-16-7-1 (or IC 31-1-11.5-9(c) before its repeal) may be modified or revoked. Except as provided in section 2 of this chapter, modification may be made only:
(1) upon a showing of changed circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the terms unreasonable; or
(2) upon a showing that:
(A) a party has been ordered to pay an amount in child support that differs by more than twenty percent (20%) from the amount that would be ordered by applying the child support guidelines; and
(B) the order requested to be modified or revoked was issued at least twelve (12) months before the petition requesting modification was filed. _