THOMPSON, Presiding Judge.
Lori Hood ("the mother") appeals from the judgment of the Mobile Circuit Court in favor of Scott Hood ("the father"). For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the judgment in part and reverse it in part.
This is the second appeal involving these parties related to their 2001 divorce. In the first appeal, this court recounted the following procedural history:
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Hood v. Hood, 23 So.3d 1160, 1161-62 (Ala.Civ.App.2009) (footnote 1 omitted).
On October 27, 2009, before the trial court entered the order on remand, the father filed a petition to modify the divorce judgment. He alleged that there had been a material change in circumstances, and, based on that alleged change, he sought primary physical custody of the parties' daughter and a modification of his child-support obligation. The father also sought the termination of his obligation under paragraph five of the divorce judgment to pay the mother $296 per month, which he characterized as an award of alimony, alleging that she had begun cohabiting with someone of the opposite sex. The father later amended his petition by withdrawing his claim for modification of custody and child support but adding a request for an offset against any child-support arrearage that had accrued based on the extended period the parties' daughter had resided with him.
The mother filed a motion to enforce the divorce judgment in which she alleged that the father had failed to pay her certain money required by paragraph five of the divorce judgment and that, at the time she filed her motion, he had discontinued making payments to her under that paragraph. The mother later filed a motion to hold the father in contempt for his failure to make payments to her pursuant to paragraph five of the divorce judgment.
On September 17, 2010, the mother filed an amended motion to enforce the divorce judgment and to hold the father in contempt. In addition to realleging the claims from her previous motions, she asserted that, on March 4, 2010, the trial court had entered a judgment, following remand from this court, in which it had ordered the father to pay $616 per month as child support effective retroactively to June 2008 and to pay the mother $1,000 as an attorney fee. The mother asserted that the father had failed to pay the ordered child support and, thus, that a child-support arrearage had accrued and that he had failed to pay the attorney fee ordered
On October 18, 2010, the trial court held a bench trial at which it received ore tenus and documentary evidence. The father did not appear for the trial. The mother testified that she presently resided with the parties' children and her boyfriend and that she had been living with her boyfriend for approximately two years. She stated that she had received a monthly payment of $296 from the father's trust account beginning after the parties' 2001 divorce until October 2009, at which time the father had terminated those payments. The mother admitted that she had claimed the $296 monthly payment from the father's trust fund as income on her income-tax returns during the years she had received it, although she testified that the parties had considered the monthly payment a "property settlement."
The mother stated that her attorney had obtained documentation from the company that handled the father's trust fund and that she had had her attorney prepare an itemization of all the benefits the father had received from the trust fund in excess of the $700 he had been receiving on a monthly basis from the trust fund at the time of the divorce. The mother testified that the father's trust fund had been paying a portion of his child support and his student loans, as well as other benefits for the father, including $85,000 toward the purchase of a house for the father. She stated that, according to her attorney's calculations, she was presently entitled to at least $53,970.47 in payments from the trust fund, as well as interest on that amount of $11,986.46.
The mother submitted summaries of the documentation her attorney had obtained relative to the father's trust fund. Those summaries showed what each party had received from the trust fund on a monthly basis, as well as one-time payments the trust fund had made to or on behalf of the father for items such as travel expenses, estate-planning work, and the purchase of a house. The summaries indicated that in March 2007 the trust fund began making monthly payments on behalf of the father for his student loans.
The mother testified that the father owed her child support based on the fact that the trial court's previous modification of the father's child-support obligation had been retroactive to June of 2008. She also testified that she was seeking an attorney's fee of $10,000.
On November 9, 2010, the trial court entered a judgment terminating the father's obligation under paragraph five of the parties' divorce judgment to pay the mother a portion of the income of his trust. The trial court construed that obligation as periodic alimony and specifically found that it was due to be terminated because the mother had admitted to cohabiting with her boyfriend. The trial court also
The mother filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate the judgment in which she argued that the father's request for custody of the parties' daughter was no longer pending at the time of the trial and that no evidence was put forward in support of that request. She also argued that the trial court had erred in interpreting paragraph five of the divorce judgment as providing an award of periodic alimony to the mother and that the trial court should have held the father in contempt for failing to pay amounts that were due pursuant to that provision. The trial court granted the mother's motion in part and set aside those portions of its judgment modifying custody of the parties' daughter and modifying the father's child-support obligation. The trial court denied the balance of the mother's postjudgment motion. The mother appeals.
On appeal, the mother contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the award of a portion of the income from the father's trust constituted an award of periodic alimony rather than an award of alimony in gross.
In Daniel v. Daniel, 841 So.2d 1246 (Ala.Civ.App.2002), this court discussed the difference between periodic alimony and alimony irr gross:
841 So.2d at 1250.
As previously noted, paragraph five of the divorce judgment provides:
The amount of an award of alimony in gross is required to be certain, see Daniel, supra; however, the award made in this paragraph is not. First, there is no provision limiting the amount of time during which the award is to be paid. Second, the award was subject to an automatic increase upon the happening of an uncertain future event, i.e., an increase in benefits paid to the father. Thus, there is no way to determine the amount of the award to which the mother was entitled. See Rose v. Rose, 70 So.3d 429, 433 (Ala.Civ.App. 2011) ("Additionally, the former wife's award of a share of the former husband's benefits cannot be deemed to constitute an unmodifiable division of marital property, or alimony in gross, because both the time at which the former wife's award will completely vest and the total amount the former wife will receive are indefinite.").
Furthermore, the parties have treated the award as constituting periodic alimony rather than as nonmodifiable alimony in gross. For example, both parties have sought a modification of the award, the mother in the action that led to the previous appeal and the father in the action leading to the present appeal. Moreover, the mother testified that she has consistently treated her receipt of the monthly payment called for in paragraph five as income on her income-tax returns, which is not consistent with its treatment as alimony in gross but, instead, is consistent with its treatment as periodic alimony. See Rose, 70 So.3d at 433 ("The record also shows that the former wife has listed her share of the former husband's benefits as income in her tax filings—a characterization that would not be valid if the former husband's benefits had been divided as marital property."); Adkins v. Adkins, 61 So.3d 1071, 1077 (Ala.Civ.App.2010) ("The payments are also designated as taxable income to the former wife and tax deductible for the former husband, as is the case with periodic alimony."); Brunner v. Ormsby, 10 So.3d 18, 23 (Ala.Civ.App.2008) ("The parties also stated their intent that
The fact that the parties purported to waive their "claims to alimony, past, present and future," in a separate paragraph of the divorce judgment does not persuade us that paragraph five of the divorce judgment provided for an award of alimony in gross rather than an award of periodic alimony. The characterization of an award in a divorce judgment as alimony in gross or periodic alimony is properly determined from the substance of the award rather than from its form or label. See Kenchel v. Kenchel, 440 So.2d 567, 569 (Ala.Civ.App.1983). In the present case, as we have discussed, the substance of the award in paragraph five comports more readily with its characterization as periodic alimony rather than as alimony in gross, as does the parties' intent, as gleaned from their treatment of the award after the entry of the divorce judgment.
Because paragraph five of the divorce judgment provided for an award of periodic alimony rather than an award of alimony in gross, we conclude that the trial court did not err in terminating the father's obligation under that paragraph. Section 30-2-55, Ala.Code 1975, provides, in relevant part:
The mother admitted that she had been cohabiting with a person of the opposite sex since at least November 2009. Thus, the trial court properly terminated the father's periodic-alimony obligation.
The mother next contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying her motion for contempt because, she says, the evidence was undisputed that the father had violated the terms of paragraph five of the divorce judgment by failing to increase the payments to the mother required thereunder in the same proportion that the trust fund had increased its payments to him. As to certain alimony payments under that paragraph due before November 2009, we agree.
Discussing contempt, this court has written:
Reed v. Dyas, 28 So.3d 6, 8 (Ala.Civ.App. 2009).
In the prior appeal, this court wrote:
Hood, 23 So.3d at 1166. The mother has made the same argument in the present action as she did in the prior action, but, unlike in the prior action, the mother has provided evidence as to payments made to her and to the father from the father's trust fund. Therefore, in this action, the mother has provided a basis on which the courts may determine the extent to which the father should have increased his payments to her pursuant to paragraph five of the divorce judgment.
It is undisputed that, at the time of the divorce, the father's trust fund was paying him $700 monthly. The evidence the mother presented in this action demonstrates that additional funds from the trust fund were used to make the father's monthly student-loan payment of approximately $187 for him beginning in March 2007. It also demonstrates that, by that time, funds from the trust fund were being used to pay the father's child-support obligation to the mother of $525
In failing to increase the amount of alimony due the mother pursuant to paragraph five of the divorce judgment, the father "fail[ed] to perform an act required by the court for the benefit of" the mother. Reed, 28 So.3d at 8. Thus, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion when it failed to hold the father in contempt. To that extent, the trial court's judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for the trial court to enter a judgment adjudging the father to be in contempt.
We note however, that, to the extent the trial court did not hold the father in contempt for any periodic-alimony payments that he failed to make after he filed his petition to terminate that alimony obligation, the trial court acted appropriately. Discussing the termination of periodic alimony based on the receiving spouse's cohabitation with someone of the opposite sex, our supreme court has written:
Ex parte Ward, 782 So.2d 1285, 1288 (Ala. 2000). As previously noted, the mother began cohabiting with her boyfriend at least as early as November 2009, which is when the father stopped paying periodic alimony to her and after he had filed his petition to terminate his alimony obligation. Thus, the trial court did not err in failing to hold the father in contempt with regard to any alimony payments the mother claims for the period following November 2009.
Finally, the mother contends that the trial court erred in failing to hold the father in contempt because of his failure to pay certain child support that, she says, had accrued. However, the mother failed to preserve that issue for appeal. In Kelley v. Kelley, 52 So.3d 534 (Ala.Civ.App. 2010), this court wrote:
52 So.3d at 544.
In the present case, the trial court did not make any findings of fact relative to the issue of child support. Thus, to preserve for appeal the issue whether the evidence demonstrated that the trial court was required to hold the father in contempt for failure to pay all the child support required by the trial court's prior judgments, the mother was required to have filed a postjudgment motion specifically raising that issue. Kelley, supra. Although the mother did file a postjudgment motion, she did not raise that issue, focusing instead on the trial court's improper change of custody of the parties' daughter and paragraph five of the divorce judgment. As a result, this court cannot consider the mother's contention related to the issue of child support.
Based on the foregoing, we reverse the trial court's judgment to the extent that it failed to find the father in contempt for failing to pay, before November 2009, the additional alimony due the mother as a result of the increase in the monthly benefits he was paid from his trust fund. We affirm the balance of the trial court's judgment. We remand the cause for the trial court to consider the evidence presented and to enter a judgment consistent with this opinion. Both parties' requests for an attorney's fee on appeal are denied.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
PITTMAN, BRYAN, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
MOORE, J., concurs in the result, without writing.