Albritton v. Kopp
Annotate this CaseThe parties, Peggy Albritton and Mark Kopp divorced in 2011. The final divorce decree incorporated a settlement agreement and child support addendum wherein Husband agreed to pay child support while the daughter was a full-time high school student. Daughter was enrolled as a senior in high school for the 2014-2015 school year, during which she turned 18 years old. Due largely to learning disabilities and medical issues, the daughter was a few credits shy of being able to graduate high school in a timely manner. In order to graduate, daughter needed to complete two semesters of advanced math, and one semester of economics followed by one semester of government. Accordingly, Wife enrolled daughter as a fifth-year senior for the 2015-2016 school year. Initially, daughter was registered in advanced math and economics for the fall semester but, in October 2015, she added two elective courses to her curriculum. Around this time, Husband ceased paying child support, claiming that daughter was not enrolled in enough classes to qualify as a “full-time high school student” as required in the parties’ divorce decree and related documents. Wife filed a motion for contempt based upon Husband’s failure to pay the required child support. The trial court denied Wife’s motion, and she appealed, arguing the trial court erred in denying her motion. The Supreme Court reversed, finding the trial court erred by effectively modifying the settlement agreement concerning Husband’s child support obligation, as the parties’ adult daughter was, in fact, attending school full time as contemplated by the settlement agreement.
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