Nave Free v. Free
444 P.3d 3
Utah Ct. App.2019Background
- Husband and Wife divorced in 2013 after ~23 years; they stipulated child support above guideline amounts (upward deviation) tied to the ongoing medical needs of two older children and to division of marital estate.
- Decree set child support at $7,629/month (later step-downs tied to children turning 18), approximately $4,558/month above guidelines; deviation expressly described as for the children’s "medical needs" and to allow Wife to remain at home.
- Wife later remarried, moved to Wyoming, mortgaged and rented out the Heber City house, and received rental income; Wife’s monthly income at the time of the modification petition was found to be $3,000.
- Husband petitioned to modify child support alleging: (1) Wife’s income materially increased due to rental income; (2) Wife’s relative wealth increased because she now lives in a two‑income household; and (3) the children’s medical needs had decreased (so the upward deviation was no longer justified).
- Trial court found no substantial change in Wife’s income, relative wealth, or the children’s medical needs, denied the modification, and awarded attorney fees to Wife; Husband appealed.
Issues
| Issue | Husband's Argument | Wife's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether Wife’s income materially increased (>=30%) such that child support should be reduced | Wife’s income rose >40% from $4,084 to $5,834/month if rental income is counted, so modification warranted | Wife’s actual income at petition was $3,000/month; rental income offset by mortgage/expenses; net increase <30% | Court affirmed: Husband failed to show >=30% increase; actual increase (even counting rent) was ~16% from divorce income to petition income, not a material change. |
| Whether Wife’s relative wealth materially increased after remarriage (two‑income household) | Remarriage and shared household income materially improved Wife’s resources, warranting reduction | Mortgage and expenses on rental property offset rents; relative wealth largely unchanged | Court affirmed: Husband did not prove a substantial change in relative wealth. |
| Whether the children’s medical needs materially changed to justify reducing the upward deviation | Out‑of‑pocket medical expenses decreased, so the deviation (tied to medical needs) should be reduced | Deviation was based on the children’s ongoing medical needs (conditions), not merely expenses; no evidence needs changed | Court affirmed: Husband conflated expenses with needs; no evidence of changed medical conditions, so no modification. |
Key Cases Cited
- Fish v. Fish, 379 P.3d 882 (Utah Ct. App. 2016) (standard of review for modification determinations and legal correctness of underlying findings)
- Earhart v. Earhart, 365 P.3d 719 (Utah Ct. App. 2015) (presumption of validity for trial court’s change-of-circumstances findings)
- Diener v. Diener, 98 P.3d 1178 (Utah Ct. App. 2004) (moving party must show substantial material change and that change was not contemplated in decree)
- Bayles v. Bayles, 981 P.2d 403 (Utah Ct. App. 1999) (stipulations in contemplation of divorce are binding absent timely relief)
- Batty v. Batty, 153 P.3d 827 (Utah Ct. App. 2006) (property‑distribution stipulations are given great weight)
- Cantrell v. Cantrell, 323 P.3d 586 (Utah Ct. App. 2013) (distinguishable guidance on deviations tied to post‑divorce changes)
- Bagley v. Bagley, 387 P.3d 1000 (Utah 2016) (principles of statutory interpretation; look to plain language)
- Dole v. Dole, 437 P.3d 464 (Utah Ct. App. 2018) (statutory construction principles)
