Rudick v. Rudick, 437 S.C. 270, 878 S.E.2d 686 (2022), is a published August 2022 opinion from the Supreme Court. It represents the biggest professional disappointment of my career and my first unmitigated loss in the Supreme Court. I had hoped Rudick would provide the Supreme Court an opportunity to explain why alimony should be awarded. It declined that invitation.
I was not Ms. Rudick’s trial attorney. Despite being the primary homemaker, and being awarded custody of the parties’ three children, she was ordered to pay her husband $3,000 per month in permanent periodic alimony. She hired me for the appeal. The Court of Appeals reduced her obligation to $2,700 per month based upon a miscalculation of her income.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari on the sole issue of whether Husband was a “‘supported spouse’ and therefore alimony should be lower than it would be in a more traditional marriage and should only be rehabilitative.”
In a 4-1 decision, the Supreme Court decided to leave Wife’s alimony obligation at the level set by the Court of Appeals. The majority did not find the alimony statute ambiguous merely because it did not define “supported spouse,” holding:
[I]t is clear the descriptive term “supported spouse” is used merely to delineate the person actually receiving alimony. We refuse to accept Wife’s invitation to augment the language of the statute by requiring an alimony recipient to establish that he or she has actively reduced his or her earning capacity in order to support the marriage.
The majority agreed with Wife “that our jurisprudence has, at times, overemphasized the standard of living factor in deciding whether to award alimony.” However it refused to find “the parties’ [marital situation] was ‘unusual’ and that it justified a departure from the principle that a spouse is entitled to support which places him or her—as far as practical—in the same position as he or she enjoyed during the marriage.” It held:
The court of appeals properly rejected this argument, ostensibly not finding the situation sufficiently unusual. We likewise see nothing particularly unusual presented here, and instead view these facts as a fairly typical scenario in a modern marriage where both parents work outside the home and share the child-raising responsibilities as their work schedules permit.
What the majority opinion fails to note is no prior opinion had required a primary homemaker to pay alimony.
Justice Few dissented. His dissent may be a template for future alimony litigation. One reason this opinion took over 16 months after oral argument to issue is Few read every published alimony opinion since 1990. He wrote, “I have found it surprising—troubling—that hardly any of these opinions actually explain the importance and reasoning behind the statutory factors.”
His dissent begins:
Alicia and Brian Rudick were forty-five years old in 2016 when the family court ordered $3,000 a month in periodic alimony with no end date. The idea that Alicia must pay Brian even the $2,700 to which the court of appeals reduced the award for the rest of their lives is breathtaking. The notion that Alicia may have this award reduced only by filing a new action and showing a substantial, unanticipated change in circumstances is also absurd. Neither the permanency of the award nor the practical impossibility of changing it is called for under the terms of our State’s comprehensive statutory alimony scheme set forth in section 20-3-130 of the South Carolina Code (2014). Rather, the facts that Brian will receive this unnecessary windfall and Alicia must bear this unjust burden derive from two incorrect views of the law of alimony taken by the family court bench and bar. The first is that there is a “preference” for periodic alimony. The second is that periodic alimony may end only upon the remarriage of the supported spouse, the death of either spouse, or a family court’s determination in a later action that a substantial, unanticipated change in circumstances has occurred.
One reason for my tremendous disappointment with Rudick is that the opinion was initially transmitted to me with a ruling “Affirmed as Modified.” From that caption I assumed the Supreme Court had affirmed some alimony but either reduced the amount or term. However, in reading this draft, I realized alimony had not been changed.
A few minutes later the opinion was resubmitted to me as “Affirmed,” reflecting that alimony had not been changed. Few’s dissent explains his belief why Ms. Rudick’s alimony should be terminated but then goes to great length explaining why a $2,000 per month figure, which would have represented a $700 per month reduction, is the correct amount if alimony isn’t terminated. Given this lengthy justification for a specific figure, I sense that an earlier draft of the majority opinion reduced my client’s alimony to $2,000 per month—hence a caption “Affirmed as Modified”—but then the majority decided not to reduce it at all. My belief that Ms. Rudick came very close to getting some alimony reduction (and I came close to at least a partial victory) compounds my disappointment.
It will take our state legislature or Justice Few convincing two other justices that alimony jurisprudence needs reform to fix the issues his dissent spots.
Supreme Court remands for recalculation of child support
On November 6, 2024, the South Carolina Supreme Court opinion in the case of Gandy v. Gandy, remedies what would appear to be
The October 16, 2024, Court of Appeals opinion in SCDSS v.Caldwell, held that a juvenile cannot be ordered into confinement for an evaluation
Pet peeve: attorneys who value their time more than your time
A pet peeve of mine, for which I am getting increasingly peevish, is attorneys who set office procedures that value their time more