Edwards v. Edwards
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Cite as 2009 Ark. 580
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
No.
08-1142
Opinion Delivered 11-19–09
ROBERT L. EDWARDS,
APPELLANT,
VS.
DIANE C. EDWARDS,
APPELLEE,
APPEAL FROM THE COLUMBIA
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, NO.
DR-04-320-5, HONORABLE LARRY
CHANDLER, JUDGE,
CERTIFIED QUESTION ANSWERED;
REMAND TO COURT OF APPEALS.
ROBERT L. BROWN, Associate Justice
The court of appeals certified this divorce case for purposes of determining whether
the circuit judge lost subject-matter jurisdiction over this case before he entered a
Supplemental Divorce Decree. We hold that these facts do not raise an issue of subjectmatter jurisdiction, and we remand the matter to the court of appeals.
Robert and Diane Edwards were married in 1986, and two children were born of the
marriage. On August 18, 2006, a divorce decree was entered in the Columbia County
Circuit Court, but the decree did not address the issue of alimony. On August 28, 2006,
Diane filed a Motion for Amendment of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, for
Additional Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, and for Reconsideration, Amendment
of Decree, and New Trial (hereinafter “motion for reconsideration”), in which she alleged
Cite as 2009 Ark. 580
that the circuit judge erred because he failed to award her alimony.1 On September 15, 2006,
the circuit judge entered an order granting Diane’s motion for reconsideration in part but
denying her request for a new trial. The September 15, 2006 order concluded that “a hearing
date will be scheduled as soon as the court and counsel can agree on a date and time.”
On October 9, 2006, apparently before the circuit judge scheduled a hearing to
reconsider the August 18, 2006 divorce decree, Diane filed a notice of appeal in the court of
appeals, which stated that she appealed the August 18, 2006 decree “in favor of Robert L.
Edwards” and “all of this Court’s rulings upon which the Decree was based.”2 Diane filed
an amended notice of appeal on October 26, 2006, in which she specified her points on
appeal: (1) the trial court abused its discretion in failing to award her alimony; and (2) the trial
court erred in failing to make provisions for medical insurance and other health care expenses
for the minor children. On October 24, 2007, the court of appeals dismissed Diane’s appeal
and found that the August 18, 2006 decree was not a final, appealable order since the circuit
judge had subsequently granted Diane’s motion for reconsideration and issues were still
pending before that court. See Edwards v. Edwards, CA 06-1499 (Ark. App. Oct. 24, 2007)
(unpublished).
1
Diane’s motion also asserted that the judge erred in failing to address the issue of
health insurance and other healthcare-related expenses for the children and that he erred in
failing to divide certain money that Robert had withdrawn from various accounts before the
couple separated. Those issues are not relevant to the instant appeal.
2
The certification memo from the court of appeals erroneously states that Robert
appealed from the August 18, 2006 divorce decree.
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After Diane’s appeal was dismissed, the circuit judge held a hearing on the issues raised
in Diane’s motion for reconsideration, including alimony. On June 12, 2008, the circuit
judge entered a Supplemental Divorce Decree in which he ordered Robert to pay $300 per
week in spousal support.3 The judge ordered that the alimony payments be retroactive,
effective as of the August 18, 2006 decree. Robert filed a motion for new trial, but before
the circuit judge ruled on his motion for new trial or before that motion was deemed denied,
Robert filed a notice of appeal from the Supplemental Divorce Decree.
The court of appeals’s certification memo to this court states that there is a
jurisdictional question that “must necessarily be decided in order to resolve the issues that the
parties raise” in the instant appeal. The court of appeals specifically contends that this court,
in Grady v. Grady, 295 Ark. 94, 747 S.W.2d 77 (1988), held that a circuit judge “has no
authority to reserve the question of alimony for later consideration” because Ark. Code Ann.
§ 9-12-312 requires that alimony be allowed or disallowed in the decree of divorce itself.
The certification memo concludes that “if the 2006 divorce decree and the 2008 supplemental
divorce decree constitute two separate orders, it follows that Grady has been violated and that
the trial court therefore had no jurisdiction to award alimony.”
It is well settled that subject-matter jurisdiction is a court’s authority to hear and decide
a particular type of case. See David Newbern & John Watkins, Civil Practice and Procedure
3
The supplemental decree also addressed the issue of the children’s medical insurance.
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§ 2:1, 19–20 (4th Ed. 2006) (emphasis added). A court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction if it
cannot hear a matter “under any circumstances” and is “wholly incompetent to grant the
relief sought.” Id. (quoting J.W. Reynolds Lumber Co. v. Smackover State Bank, 310 Ark. 342,
352–53, 836 S.W.2d 853, 858 (1992)). A court obtains subject-matter jurisdiction under the
Arkansas Constitution or by means of constitutionally authorized statutes or court rules. Id.
Before the enactment of Amendment 80 to the Arkansas Constitution, chancery courts had
original jurisdiction over divorce cases; however, since Amendment 80 was adopted, circuit
courts have original jurisdiction of “all justiciable matters not otherwise assigned pursuant to”
the constitution. Ark. Const. amend. 80; see also Edwards v. Nelson, 372 Ark. 300, 302, 275
S.W.3d 158, 161 (2008).
Using this blackletter law, it is evident that the circuit judge in the instant case had
subject-matter jurisdiction over alimony matters. See Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-312 (Repl.
2008) (alimony and child-support statute). Because section 9-12-312 clearly gives circuit
courts jurisdiction over the subject matter of alimony, the question then becomes whether
our case law controverts this conclusion.
In Ford v. Ford, this court reversed a chancery court order to the extent that it declined
to award alimony but attempted to “retain[] jurisdiction for the purpose of awarding alimony
in the future should the needs of the [wife] require modification of the Decree.” 272 Ark.
506, 517, 616 S.W.2d 3, 21 (1981) (emphasis added). The alimony statute at the time
included substantially similar language as section 9-12-312, which reads: “When a decree is
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entered, the court shall make orders concerning the alimony of the wife or the husband and
the care of the children, if there are any, as are reasonable from the circumstances of the
parties and the nature of the case.”
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-312(a)(1) (Repl. 2008)
(previously Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1211). According to the Ford court, the judge was required
by statute to “allow or disallow alimony and not retain jurisdiction for the purpose of allowing
it in the future based on changed conditions.” 272 Ark. at 517, 616 S.W.2d at 21.
Seven years later, in Grady v. Grady, this court revisited its decision in Ford. 295 Ark.
94, 747 S.W.2d 77. In Grady, the chancery judge awarded the wife $10 per year in alimony.
On appeal, the husband argued that this violated Ford because the chancery judge essentially
“reserve[d] jurisdiction” and deferred a decision on alimony to a later time because, at the
time the decree was entered, the husband earned very little money but had the capacity to
earn much more in the future. Grady, 295 Ark. at 99, 747 S.W.2d at 79.
This court acknowledged in Grady that it had “sent mixed signals on the question of
whether a chancellor may enter a decree pursuant to which alimony may be made effective
some time after the divorce has been entered.” Id. at 99, 747 S.W.2d at 80. We said:
It is inequitable to hold that a spouse who may be entitled to alimony is forever
barred from receiving it because the spouse who should pay it cannot at the moment
of entry of the decree. It is illogical to hold, as we do, that alimony may be raised or
lowered upon a showing of changed circumstances but that the spouse who may have
an obligation to pay alimony may not be made to do so when his or her circumstances
permit it just because they did not permit it at the time the obligation was determined.
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Id. at 100, 747 S.W.2d at 80. We next cited the Ford language that a “chancellor had no
power to retain jurisdiction or to treat alimony as a matter ‘reserved for further
consideration’” and held that “if either spouse is entitled to alimony, the chancellor must
comply with the statute by making that decision when the decree is entered” but may indicate
that the spouse who is to pay the alimony cannot do so at the time and decline to award a
specific amount of alimony. Id. Then, the party entitled to alimony may petition the court
at a later date if circumstances change with respect to the other spouse’s ability to pay. Id.
In Mulling v. Mulling, this court again addressed the issue of the courts’ authority under
section 9-12-312(a)(1). 323 Ark. 88, 912 S.W.2d 934 (1996). There, the chancellor entered
a decree and ordered the husband in a divorce action to pay $1 per month in alimony to his
ex-wife. The Mulling court “affirm[ed] the chancellor’s intention here to reserve the possible
fixing of a specific and reasonable amount of alimony at a future time when the circumstances
permit it,” but held that it had “problems with the manner in which the chancellor directed
alimony payments to be reserved and paid.” Id. at 92–93, 912 S.W.2d at 936. The court
then modified the divorce decree to “reflect that [the husband’s] unemployment prevents him
from paying alimony at the time of the entry of the decree, although [his] earning capacity
would otherwise warrant such an award of alimony.” Id. at 93, 912 S.W.2d at 936. The
court also held that the decree should “read to reserve to [the wife] the right to petition the
trial court to establish an alimony amount if circumstances change.” Id.
The Mulling court went on to expressly discuss the Grady and Ford opinions and said:
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In Ford, this court overturned the chancellor’s decision denying alimony “for
the time being, but retaining jurisdiction as to the possible future needs of the wife.”
While this court in Grady recognized that the decision in Ford incorrectly held the
chancellor had no power to retain jurisdiction or to treat alimony as a matter “reserved
for future consideration,” the Grady court did not overrule that holding in Ford. We
do so now, at least to the extent the Ford holding conflicts with Grady and today’s
decision. In other words, if a spouse shows a need for alimony, and the other spouse
is shown to have the ability or earning capacity to pay alimony except for a
circumstance at the time the parties’ decree is entered, the chancellor may reserve
jurisdiction, without assigning a nominal amount. This procedure would permit the
spouse requesting alimony to petition for its payment after showing a change in
circumstances.
Id.
While the Ford, Grady, and Mulling courts used the terms “jurisdiction” and “power”
somewhat interchangeably, it is clear they are distinct legal concepts. A court’s power or
authority under a statute does not necessarily implicate subject-matter jurisdiction. Again,
subject-matter jurisdiction is lacking where the court is “wholly incompetent to grant the
relief sought”. J.W. Reynolds Lumber Co., 310 Ark. at 352, 836 S.W.2d at 858. A court may
act contrary to a statute or in conflict with this court’s case law but do so within its subjectmatter jurisdiction. The Grady court alluded to this when it cited the Ford language regarding
the trial court’s ability under the alimony statute to “retain jurisdiction,” but then framed the
issue as “whether a chancellor may enter a decree pursuant to which alimony may be made
effective some time after the divorce has been entered.” 295 Ark. at 99–100, 747 S.W.2d at
80 (emphasis added).
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In sum, because the circuit judge in the instant case had subject-matter jurisdiction
over alimony matters, the issue of whether he violated section 9-12-312 by not deciding
alimony in the original decree should have been raised to that judge. Therefore, we decline
to address the merits of whether section 9-12-312 or Grady applies to the instant matter
because neither party posed the issue to the circuit judge. Of course, our general rule is that,
absent an issue of subject-matter jurisdiction, an appellate court will not address an issue if it
was not presented to the trial court, ruled upon by the trial judge, and argued by the parties
on appeal. See, e.g., Reeve v. Carroll County, 373 Ark. 584, 587, 285 S.W.3d 242, 246 (2008).
We hold that the circuit judge had jurisdiction to enter the Supplemental Divorce Decree.
We further hold that any question about the propriety of that order, under section 9-12-312
and Grady, is not proper for appellate review because it was not first presented to the circuit
judge for resolution.
The court of appeals’s certification memo also raises public-policy concerns, since one
of the parties to the divorce apparently remarried between August 18, 2006, when the original
divorce decree was entered, and June 12, 2008, when the supplemental decree was filed. The
public-policy issue submitted by the court of appeals is not properly before this court. Robert
appealed from the circuit judge’s Supplemental Divorce Decree on grounds that the judge did
not consider subsequently discovered evidence that Diane was employed. Neither party
raised or developed any public policy issue before the circuit judge. As a result, we will not
consider it. Reeve, 373 Ark. at 587, 285 S.W.3d at 246.
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Certified question answered. Remand to court of appeals.
IMBER, J., not participating.
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