[Cite as Bell v. Kinman, 2014-Ohio-2817.]




                            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                               SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                   CHAMPAIGN COUNTY

MELISSA BELL                                   :
                                               :     Appellate Case No. 2014-CA-2
        Plaintiff-Appellant                    :
                                               :     Trial Court Case No. 00-DR-102
v.                                             :
                                               :
DONALD KINMAN                                  :     (Civil Appeal from
                                               :     (Champaign County Family Court)
        Defendant-Appellee                     :
                                               :
                                            ...........

                                            OPINION

                              Rendered on the 27th day of June, 2014.

                                            ...........

MIRANDA A. WARREN, Atty. Reg. #0081103, Goslee & Goslee, Ltd., 114 South Main Street,
Post Office Box 416, Bellefontaine, Ohio 43311
       Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant

REBEKAH S. NEUHERZ, Atty. Reg. #0072093, Neuherz Law Offices, LLC, 115 North Main
Street, Suite F, Urbana, Ohio 43078
        Attorney for Defendant-Appellee

                                            .............

FAIN, J.

        {¶ 1}    Plaintiff-appellant Melissa Bell, formerly known as Melissa Kinman, appeals

from an order of the trial court adopting an in-court agreement between Bell and her ex-husband,
                                                                                                      2


Donald Kinman, regarding child support, medical bills and parenting time. She contends that the

trial court abused its discretion by adopting the agreement, because she did not agree with the

entry and was under duress at the time of its entry. She further contends that Kinman’s failure to

object to, or appeal from, a prior child support order waived his right subsequently to move for

modification of the order.

       {¶ 2}    The record supports a finding that the parties entered into an agreement, which

was reduced to writing and incorporated in the trial court’s order. Bell has failed to establish

that the order does not accurately reflect the terms of the agreement, or that she was under duress

at the time the agreement was reached. Finally, we conclude that the issue of child support

modification was properly before the trial court. Accordingly, the order of the trial court is

Affirmed.



                                 I. The Course of Proceedings

       {¶ 3}    Melissa Bell and Donald Kinman were divorced in the early 2000's. They have

one minor child. In August 2013, Kinman’s child support obligation was modified as a result of a

magistrate’s decision, pursuant to a motion to review filed by the Champaign County Child

Support Enforcement Agency. The modification set his obligation at $470.92 per month. A

month later, Kinman filed a motion seeking to hold Bell in contempt with regard to parenting

time, and for the trial court to “review and revise the current order of child support to comply

with [the] actual living arrangement” of the parties and the child.

       {¶ 4}     At the start of the hearing on Kinman’s motion, the trial court stated, “[t]he

Court has been discussing this matter with counsel and counsel has been discussing the matter
                                                                                                       3


with their clients, and I do believe we have a resolution; is that correct?” Counsel for Kinman

answered affirmatively, and proceeded to recite the terms of the agreement. The record indicates

that the CSEA had improperly calculated Kinman’s child support obligation and that Kinman,

since 2010, had overpaid child support in the sum of $4,045.56.               The parties agreed that

Kinman’s obligation would be reduced by the sum of $163.85 per month for the remaining term

of the obligation, in order to recoup the overpayment. 1 The parties further agreed that they

would split equally all medical bills. Kinman agreed to dismiss his motion for contempt in

exchange for Bell’s promises to abide by the terms of the existing parenting order and to

encourage the child to attend parenting time.

       {¶ 5}        Bell’s attorney acknowledged the agreement. The trial court then proceeded to

ask Kinman, personally, whether he agreed to the terms as stated by his attorney, to which he

responded affirmatively. The trial court then asked Bell, personally, whether the recited terms

represented the agreement she wanted. At that point, Bell’s attorney interjected, asking the court

whether it would enter an order requiring that Kinman’s girlfriend absent herself during his

parenting time. The trial court indicated that it would not do so, and then proceeded to advise

the parties about some “recommendations based on what I talked with [the child] about in a very

short time period. Some of it was reasonable. Some of it wasn’t.” The trial court then went

on to advise the parties to refrain from speaking to the child about the disagreements between the

parents. Bell did not respond to the prior question whether the agreement represented what she

wanted.

       {¶ 6}         The trial court then set a date for the parties to draft, sign, and file the agreed

          1
              The child was fourteen years old at the time of the hearing.
                                                                                                   4


order. The trial court then asked both attorneys whether they had “anything further,” to which

they responded in the negative. Court was then adjourned.

       {¶ 7}    When the agreed order was not filed within the time specified by the trial court, it

set a show-cause hearing. The agreed order was later presented, and the court noted, on the

record, that Kinman’s counsel was present, and indicated that Kinman would sign the agreed

order as drafted. The trial court then noted that Bell who had obtained new counsel, had

indicated that she “did not believe that the agreed entry reflected the agreement.” The trial court

permitted Bell’s counsel to listen to an audiotape of the prior hearing, following which Bell’s

counsel acknowledged that the agreement was reflected accurately in the agreed order submitted

to the court. But counsel again indicated that Bell “maintains that that wasn’t the agreement that

she had thought it was.” Bell’s prior attorney, who was also present, stated that the agreed entry

reflected the agreement previously read into the record. The trial court then noted that it would

“approve the agreed entry and make it a final order of the Court without [Bell’s] signature or her

counsel’s signature.” The order was entered on December 17, 2013. Bell appeals.



       II. The Trial Court Had Authority to Modify its Prior Child-Support Order

                  in Accordance with the In-Court Agreement of the Parties

       {¶ 8}    Bell asserts the following as her First Assignment of Error:

               THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT HAVE THE AUTHORITY OR THE

       JURISDICTION WHEN IT ADOPTED THE APPELLEE’S CHILD SUPPORT,

       WAVIED [SIC] ARREARGES [SIC], PERMITTIED [SIC] APPELLEE TO

       CLAIM THE PARTIES’ MINOR CHILD, AND SPLIT ANY AND ALL
                                                                                                    5


       UNINSURED MEDICAL EXPENSES EQUALLY WITHOUT BOTH PARTIES

       [SIC] APPROVAL.

       {¶ 9}    Bell contends that Kinman failed to follow the appropriate procedure for

challenging the child support order in place when he filed his motion. In support, she notes that

child support was modified by Magistrate order on August 19, 2013, at which time the Magistrate

set Kinman’s child-support obligation at $470.92 per month. She argues that Kinman was

required to object to the magistrate’s decision and, if unsuccessful, appeal from the trial court’s

order adopting the magistrate’s decision. She argues that because he failed to take either action,

his motion “was not properly before the trial court, and therefore the trial court had no authority

to adopt the Agreement.”

       {¶ 10} Bell is correct that a party who disagrees with the decision of a magistrate must

file objections thereto, and that the failure to file objections generally waives the right to appeal

from the order adopting the magistrate’s decision. Civ.R. 53(D)(3)(b)(1); Davis v. Gray, 10th

Dist. Franklin NO. 02AP-746, 2003-Ohio-1655, ¶ 10. But some time after the modification, the

parties discovered that the Child Support Agency had been incorrectly calculating the amount of

child support. “The court * * * retains jurisdiction to modify all matters pertaining to * * *

child support * * *.” R.C. 3105.65. “The trial court possesses considerable discretion in child

support matters.” Murray v. Murray (1999), 128 Ohio App.3d 662, 666, 716 N.E.2d 288 (12th

Dist. 1999). “The decision of the trial court will be reversed only if it is the product of an abuse

of discretion.” Id. The trial court had the continuing jurisdiction to modify its order of child

support, and the clerical error by the CSEA was a proper basis upon which to exercise that

authority.
[Cite as Bell v. Kinman, 2014-Ohio-2817.]
        {¶ 11} Bell also ignores the fact that the parties reached agreement regarding the

child-support issue, as well as the issues of medical bills and parenting time.         This case is

similar to Van Hoose v. Van Hoose, 2d Dist. Champaign No. 99 CA 18, 2000 WL 353213 (April

7, 2000), wherein the parties, on the morning of a hearing, negotiated a settlement that was read

into the record with the parties present. Id. at * 1. When an entry was subsequently drafted,

Ms. Van Hoose refused to sign it, claiming that it did not reflect the parties’ agreement. Id.

This court stated:

                Settlement agreements are favored in the law. Where the parties enter

        into a settlement agreement in the presence of the court, such an agreement

        constitutes a binding contract. Thus, when the parties to a divorce enter into an

        in-court settlement agreement, the court may accept the agreement even if one

        party tries to repudiate it so long as the court is convinced that the agreement was

        not procured by fraud, duress, overreaching, or undue influence.         Neither a

        change of heart nor poor legal advice is a ground to set aside a settlement

        agreement.

                A careful comparison of the settlement terms read into the record on May

        21, 1999 and the entry which Mrs. Van Hoose refused to sign reveals that the

        written entry does reflect the agreement entered in open court. Indeed, Mrs. Van

        Hoose does not contend that the written entry differed from the terms presented to

        the court on May 21, 1999. Rather, she claims that she had been so upset by the

        parties' negotiations that she “didn't even know what was said in [court]” on May

        21 and that, upon further reflection, she believed that she had been “duped.”

                Mr. and Mrs. Van Hoose were each present and represented by counsel
                                                                                                 7


       during the negotiations and in court on May 21, 1999. After Mr. Van Hoose's

       attorney read the parties' agreement into the record, Mrs. Van Hoose's attorney

       clarified some points that he thought needed clarification and indicated that the

       agreement, as represented and clarified, reflected what the parties had negotiated.

       The trial court did not address Mr. or Mrs. Van Hoose directly regarding the

       settlement agreement, and neither party made a statement on his or her own

       behalf.

                 Mrs. Van Hoose would like this court to conclude that her attorney did not

       speak for her and that she did not assent to the agreement. We decline to do so.

       Mrs. Van Hoose's presence in court and her silence in response to her attorney's

       representations about the agreement the parties had reached served to ratify her

       attorney's actions. Moreover, Mrs. Van Hoose presented no evidence of fraud or

       other misconduct on the part of her attorney or her husband when she was given

       an opportunity to do so at the August 20, 1999 hearing. Her claim that she had felt

       overwhelmed by the negotiation process, without evidence of fraud, duress,

       overreaching, or undue influence, was simply insufficient to allow her to repudiate

       the agreement. To have permitted Mrs. Van Hoose to unilaterally repudiate the

       settlement agreement would have rendered the entire settlement process a nullity,

       even though, as we have already discussed, the in-court settlement agreement was

       binding. Id. at * 1-2 (internal citations omitted).

       {¶ 12} In the case before us, the parties entered into an agreement regarding the issues of

child support, medical bills and parenting time. The attorneys for both parties acknowledged the
                                                                                                8


agreement, which was read into the record before the trial court. While Bell did not personally

acknowledge the agreement, she did not disavow her attorney’s acknowledgment of her

agreement until the court held a show-cause hearing a month later. Even then, other than stating

generally that the agreement “wasn’t the agreement that she had thought it was,” Bell did not

specify in what respect the agreed entry tendered by Kinman’s attorney differed from what she

had thought the agreement to be. Indeed, as in Van Hoose, Bell “does not contend that the

written entry differed from the terms presented to the court.” Furthermore, as discussed in Part

III, below, Bell made no claims of fraud, duress, coercion, or other misconduct regarding the

agreement. Unlike in Van Hoose, Bell did not claim that she did not know what had been said in

open court concerning the agreement of the parties. Given these facts, we conclude that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion by entering the agreed order.

       {¶ 13} The First Assignment of Error is overruled.



    III. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion by Entering the Agreed Order in

                   Accordance with the In-Court Agreement of the Parties

       {¶ 14} Ms. Bell’s Second Assignment of Error states:

               IT WAS AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION WHEN THE TRIAL COURT

       ADOPTED AN AGREEMENT MODIFIYING [SIC] THE APPELLEE’S CHILD

       SUPPORT, WAVING [SIC] ARREARGES [SIC], AND PERMITTING THE

       APPELLEE TO CLAIM THE PARTIES [SIC] MINOR CHILD WITHOUT AN

       AGREEMENT BY BOTH PARTIES.

       {¶ 15} In this assignment of error, Bell contends that she did not assent to the terms of
                                                                                                  9


the agreement and was under duress when the agreement was presented to the court. In support,

she argues that she “was operating under the belief that if she just did as [Kinman] asked it would

stop the constant harassment, and she would no longer be required to defend herself in Court.

Further, [she] was under the impression the Trial Court would grant the relief requested should

she go forward with an evidentiary hearing. [She] was under the impression that she had no other

recourse to discontinue the constant duress caused by [Kinman].” Bell’s appellate brief, p.7.

       {¶ 16} The record does not support Bell’s claim of duress. There is also no evidence of

fraud, coercion, or any other misconduct surrounding the formation of the agreement. Bell did

not file any documents regarding her claim of duress prior to the show-cause hearing. And she

made no claims of duress during the show-cause hearing. Bell’s counsel merely stated that Bell

“maintains that [the agreement as written and recited] wasn’t the agreement that she had thought

it was.” Bell never filed any documents or made any statement on the record regarding what she

believed to be incorrectly set forth in the agreed entry presented to the trial court.

       {¶ 17} The Second Assignment of Error is not supported by the record, and is overruled.

                                          IV. Conclusion

       {¶ 18} Both of Bell’s assignments of error having been overruled, the order of the trial

court from which this appeal is taken is Affirmed.

                                               .............


HALL and WELBAUM, JJ., concur.

Copies mailed to:

Miranda A. Warren
Rebekah S. Neuherz
Hon. Lori L. Reisinger
