OPINION
{1 Daniel Andrus (Husband) appeals the trial court's decision to award Elizabeth An-drus (Wife) the cash value of certain stocks, child support, alimony, and attorney fees following a bench trial conducted to resolve those issues in conjunction with the couple's divorce. Husband's claims that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the cash value of stocks to Wife fail because the trial court has wide latitude in dividing marital property and there is evidence in the record to show that the parties contemplated a division of the pertinent stock in accordance with the trial court's rulings. We agree with Husband, however, that the trial court erred by not invalidating a provision from the parties' original stipulation that excluded Wife's income from child support determinations. Also, because the trial court's findings of fact are so insufficient concerning the calculation of Husband's disposable income, we remand for findings that adequately detail how or if the trial court considered Husband's tax obligations in setting his alimony payments and awarding attorney fees to Wife. We therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
12 Husband and Wife were married in 1981. After separating in October 1997, the couple entered into a stipulation and property settlement (the Stipulation), which became the basis of their Decree of Divorcee.
T3 Subsequently, Husband requested that the trial court set aside the Decree of Divoree. Husband's motion to set aside was partially granted in April 1998, with the trial court stating that "justice would be furthered by relieving [Husband] from his stipulation on the provisions of alimony and child support." The trial court enumerated which provisions of the Stipulation would be set aside and stated that the other provisions of the Stipulation would remain in full effect. The provision that precluded consideration of Wife's income as a factor in setting Husband's alimony or child support obligations (Paragraph 6) was not expressly set aside.
4] 5 Because Husband no longer owned any of the shares in dispute at the time of trial, the trial court ordered Husband to pay Wife the cash equivalent of the shares owed to her based, in part, on the profit Husband made in exercising and selling the shares. In calculating the value of the shares, the trial court averaged the price of the stock on the nine different instances when Wife requested her percentage.
I 6 The trial court relied on Paragraph 6 in refusing to consider Wife's income when calculating Husband's alimony and child support payments. The trial court calculated Husband's alimony payments, as well as his ability to pay Wife's attorney fees, from Husband's stipulated gross income of $10,000 per month. The trial court then subtracted certain expenses from Husband's gross monthly income, including child support, housing, food, and transportation costs, to arrive at Husband's monthly disposable income, half of which was awarded to Wife as alimony. The trial court also awarded Wife attorney fees because she was the prevailing party, finding that Husband had cash flow beyond his expenses and could better afford to pay the attorney fees than could Wife.
11 7 The trial court issued its Memorandum Decision on' July 15, 2005. Due to mathematical errors irrelevant to the instant appeal, the trial court issued an Amended Memorandum Decision, with some corrections to dollar amounts, on December 6, 2005. Husband now appeals. |
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
18 Husband has challenged the propriety of the trial court's division. of marital property, namely the stock to which Husband was entitled to purchase through his employment. We " 'will not disturb the trial court's decision [concerning property division] unless it is clearly unjust or a clear abuse of discretion.'" Shepherd v. Shepherd,
19 Husband also claims that the trial court erred in calculating his child support and alimony obligations. We will review the trial court's decisions regarding child support and alimony under the abuse of discretion standard. See Jensen v. Bowcut,
ANALYSIS
I. Division of Stock
A. Trial Court's Awafd of Stock
110 Husband claims that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that the Stipulation required him to transfer to Wife twenty-five percent of the approximately 55,000 shares of stock Husband obtained through his employment, and not just a percentage of the 9000 shares he actually had
111 Here, there is evidence in the record that Husband and Wife decided, a short time before their separation, to allow Husband's employer to continue holding the bulk of Husband's stock options for a longer time period so that they would be able to exercise the options at an improved rate. There is also documentary evidence that, at the time the Stipulation was created, both parties considered the stock options being held by Husband's employer to be marital property. Given this evidence, despite Hus- . band's testimony to the contrary, it was reasonable for the trial court to award Wife twenty-five percent of the value of the stock that the parties had considered marital property, even if the bulk of the stock options were not exercisable at the time of the Stipulation.
B. Trial Court's Value of the Stock
112 Husband also claims that the trial court abused its discretion in calculating the cash value of the stock. "Generally, the marital estate is valued at the time of the divorce decree or trial." Shepherd,
118 Here, the trial court noted multiple factors supporting its decision to caleu-late the stock's value based on the average price of the stock on the nine different dates Wife asked Husband for her twenty-five percent. First, the stock was no longer in Husband's possession, as he had sold his shares sometime prior to trial, so a simple transfer of the stock was impossible. Next, the court noted that Wife requested her share of the stock multiple times during an eighteen-month time period. Finally, the trial court found that the price of the stock "fluctuated substantially" during that eighteen-month period. Rather than using either the extreme high or low price during the relevant time period, the trial court simply calculated Wife's award based on the average of the stock's price on the days Wife requested her portion from Husband. This method of calculation, given the unusual factual cireum-stances of the instant case, is reasonable and shows the court's effort to avoid an inappropriate windfall for either party. The trial court therefore did not abuse its discretion in valuing the stock.
II. Child Support
{14 Husband challenges the trial court's decision to adhere to Paragraph 6 in the Stipulation, which precludes consideration of Wife's income in calculating Husband's child support payments. Utah Code sections 78-45-38 and 78-454 respectively require every father and every mother to provide support to their children. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 78-45-38 to-4 (2002). "The right to support from the parents belongs to the minor children and is not subject to being bartered away, extinguished, estopped or in any way defeated by the agreement or conduct of the parents." Hills v. Hills,
{16 Here, while Paragraph 6 does not expressly relieve Wife of her duty to provide support, it effectively puts the entire burden of supporting the children on Husband, no matter how much income Wife earns. Taken to the extreme, Paragraph 6 would require Husband to fully support the children even in the event that Wife begins to earn more money than Husband because Wife's income could not be considered in any petition to modify based on a change of cireumstances. The trial court's decision to apply Paragraph 6, even after the other provisions dealing with alimony and child support were invalidated, was an abuse of discretion because it allows Wife to avoid her statutory and inalienable common law duty to provide financial support to her children. We therefore remand to the trial court with instructions to consider Wife's income in the calculation of Husband's monthly child support payments. 1
III. Husband's Ability to Pay Alimony and Attorney Fees
A. Alimony
«17 Husband argues that the trial court abused its discretion by calculating his alimony obligations based on his gross monthly income instead of his net income. Specifically, Husband claims that the trial court improperly ignored his duty: to pay taxes and thereby mistakenly overestimated his disposable income. In determining alimony, a trial court must consider, along with other factors not under attack in the instant appeal, "the ability of the payor spouse to provide support." Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(8)(a)(ii) (Supp.2007). A trial court's " "findings of fact must show that the court's judgment or decree follows logically from, and is supported by, the evidence. The findings should be sufficiently detailed and include enough subsidiary facts to disclose the steps by which the ultimate conclusion on each factual issue was reached"'" Rasband v. Rasband,
118 Here, the trial court arrived at its alimony award by awarding Wife half of Husband's monthly disposable income. The trial court determined Husband's disposable income by subtracting certain expenses, including housing, food, transportation, and child support, from Husband's stipulated gross monthly income. The findings of fact are silent on the issue of Husband's tax obligations and monthly net income. Even though there is some evidence in the record concerning the amount of taxes Husband pays, including testimony by Wife and documentary evidence provided by Husband, we cannot ascertain how or if the trial court contemplated Husband's duty to pay taxes in calculating his disposable income. The trial court's findings of fact are not sufficiently detailed to show the steps it took determining Husband's disposable income. We therefore reverse and remand for adequate findings that will show proper consideration of Husband's net fncome.
B. Attorney Fees
119 Husband also asks us to reverse the trial court's decision requiring him
CONCLUSION
120 The trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding Wife twenty-five percent of the stock in question because there was evidence in the record that the parties considered the nearly 55,000 shares to be marital property at the time of the Stipulation. Also, the trial court's decision regarding the cash value of Wife's percentage of the stock was not an abuse of discretion because Wife made multiple requests for her percentage during a time period when the market value of the stock was fluctuating greatly. The trial court erred by enforcing Paragraph 6 of the Stipulation, which prevents Wife's income from becoming part of the court's child support determinations, because parents cannot barter or contract away their duty to provide for their children. Finally, the trial court's failure to provide adequately detailed findings of fact concerning Husband's disposable income requires us to remand for adequate findings.
1 21 We therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Notes
. We do not comment on whether Wife's current income will require the trial court to alter Husband's support payments. On remand, we merely require the trial court to factor in Wife's income.
. We do not hold that the amounts awarded Wife in alimony or attorney fees were per se abuses of discretion, only that the trial court's failure to disclose all its steps in reaching the challenged awards prevents us from properly reviewing the awards on appeal.
