South Carolina appellate courts finally approve an alimony termination based on continued cohabitation

Posted Wednesday, August 14th, 2013 by Gregory Forman
Filed under Alimony/Spousal Support, Of Interest to Family Court Litigants, Of Interest to Family Law Attorneys, South Carolina Appellate Decisions, South Carolina Specific

As noted in a blog earlier this year, I have despaired that our South Carolina appellate courts would ever find the requisite “ninety or more consecutive days” of  “continued cohabitation” to terminate alimony pursuant to S.C. Code § 20-3-130(B) and § 20-3-150.  In seven previous reported decisions alimony obligors had always failed in their attempts to terminate alimony on this basis.

An August 14, 2013 Court of Appeals decision in the case of McKinney v. Pedery, 406 S.C. 1, 749 S.E.2d 119 (Ct. App. 2013), may–and I mean may–finally end this losing streak for alimony obligors.  In McKinney the Court of Appeals upheld the family court’s determination that ex-husband was, as defined by these statutes, engaged in “continued cohabitation” with his girlfriend and terminated his alimony.

In McKinney ex-husband’s girlfriend was spending every Wednesday afternoon through Monday morning at his house but spending every Monday morning through Wednesday afternoon at her son’s house taking care of her grandchildren.  This went on for at least seven months: ex-wife, at what must have been considerable expense, had a private investigator go to ex-husband’s house daily during this time period.  The issue was whether the girlfriend spending only five days each week with ex-husband for a period of seven months was “continued cohabitation.”

Two of the three members of the Court of Appeals panel believed this met the statutory requirement.  Judge Konduros dissented, believing the girlfriend’s weekly two-day stay with her son prevented there from being cohabitation ninety or more consecutive days.

As a cynic I note that the seven previous times our appellate courts rejected the continued cohabitation finding it was a husband trying to terminate an ex-wife’s alimony, while here it was a wife trying to terminate her ex-husband’s alimony.  Alimony awards remain one of the last bastions of sexism in our family courts.  Yet I suspect the Supreme Court may grant a writ of certiorari if asked.  Under SCACR 242(b)(2) one of the factors the Supreme Court uses in deciding whether to grant certiorari is when, as here, “there is a dissent in the decision of the Court of Appeals.”

Another strong basis for granting certiorari is “[w]here the decision of the Court of Appeals is in conflict with a prior decision of the Supreme Court.’ SCACR 242(b)(3).  There is some argument that language from the Supreme Court’s opinion in Strickland v. Strickland, 375 S.C. 76, 650 S.E.2d 465 (2007) directly conflicts with the holding in McKinney.  In Strickland, the Supreme Court interpreted continued cohabiting as a “requirement that the supported spouse live under the same roof as the person with whom they are romantically involved for at least ninety consecutive days.”  Here no party argued, and no judge found, that ex-husband and his girlfriend were ever under the same roof for ninety consecutive days.  The broad reading of cohabitation in McKinney may conflict with the more narrow reading in Strickland.

Thus I remain unconvinced that the alimony obligors’ losing streak on continued cohabitation ends with the Court of Appeals’ opinion in McKinney.

5 thoughts on South Carolina appellate courts finally approve an alimony termination based on continued cohabitation

  1. Stanley Feldman says:

    It sounds like the 3 seconds in the lane rule from basketball. I have seen stronger cases for termination end with a different result.

  2. MJ Goodwin says:

    So according to the dissent, if I go see my Dad once a week or on any regular schedule and spend the night I don’t live with my husband those days? Interesting.

  3. Paul Schwartz says:

    What is really needed is a statutory correction. Many could ill afford 90 days of daily surveillance, so in most cases the necessary proof would be cost prohibitive.

  4. Kelly says:

    Permanent alimony should be supported by sc courts. When it was awarded. After 20 years of marriage and abuse. I feel he is able to make money he has more education. I have full custody of our 10 year old which he pops in and out of his life. I take the heat
    The court does not support getting away from abuse.
    How can he terminate alimony based on his anger toward himself reflected one? I don’t date not dead and not co habitat ing So how can they consider this

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