Christopher Charles Brooker (Defendant) appeals from the trial court’s order increasing his child support obligation from $260.00 to $446.00 per month.
Defendant and Tracey Kyles Brooker (Plaintiff) were married on 29 July 1989 and divorced on 25 March 1996. On 5 November 1993, one minor child was born of the marriage. The Iredell County District Court entered a consent judgment on 13 December 1995 in which Defendant agreed to pay child support in the amount of $260.00 per month.
On or about 8 April 1997, Plaintiff filed a motion, in Iredell County District Court, for an increase in Defendant’s child support obligation. Defendant subsequently filed notice that “he intends to request a continued deviation from the child-support guidelines, and it will therefore be necessary to inquire as to the parties’ reasonable living expenses as well as to the child’s reasonable needs.” In addition, Defendant filed a motion for change of venue on the grounds that “plaintiff is now a resident of Wilkes County, while defendant is a resident of Forsyth County,” noting that “neither party nor the minor child [currently] resides in Iredell County.”
Because tapes of the hearings on the parties’ motions were deemed unuseable, the parties prepared a narrative statement of the testimony presented at the hearings for the record on appeal. See N.C. R. App. P. 9(c)(1). The record, including this narrative statement, reveals that Plaintiff and the minor child lived with Plaintiff’s grandmother when the consent judgment setting child support was entered. At that time, Plaintiff earned approximately $1,190.00 (net) per month. From this amount, Plaintiff paid her grandmother $100.00 per month for rent and paid “about $35.00” per month in “grocery and school” expenses for the minor child. In addition, her grandmother provided daycare for the minor child. Since that time, however, Plaintiff’s net monthly income has increased to $1,415.00 per month; in addition, she receives coaching supplements in the amount of $700.00 per semester. Plaintiff and the minor child have moved out of her grandmother’s home, and Plaintiff’s rent is now $270.00 per month. Plaintiff’s grocery bills, at the time of the hearing, were $90.00 per month, and the minor child’s daycare expenses were $65.00 per month. In addition, “the minor child is now becoming involved in recreation department activities that costs [sic] between $35.00 and $50.00 per month.”
*287 The record reveals that Defendant’s income at the time of the consent judgment was “substantial,” but does not reveal the actual amount. Defendant testified that his current gross income is $28,296.00, and that he “now has a roommate with whom he share[s] expenses.” Defendant calculated his total monthly expenses (including the existing $250.00 child support obligation) at $1,915.00.
After hearing all the evidence presented by the parties, the Iredell County District Court made the following pertinent findings of fact:
4. That on or about the 13th day of December, 1995, the parties entered into a Consent Judgment filed in the District Court Division, Iredell County, North Carolina; and that said Consent Judgment established jurisdiction before this court and retained jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter herein ....
5. That since entry of the prior Order, the plaintiff has moved to Wilkes County, and the defendant has moved to Forsyth County; and that Iredell County is the most convenient forum for witnesses and the parties and the minor child.
6. That there has been a substantial change of circumstances with respect to the needs of the minor child and the needs of the plaintiff to support the minor child since the aforesaid Consent Judgment was entered; that over two years have passed during which time the defendant and the plaintiff have received salary increases so that the defendant’s gross salary is $28,296.00 and the plaintiff’s gross salary, including supplements, is $29,412.00; and that the defendant’s financial situation is now more stable than the date of the entry of the Consent Judgment as based upon the testimony and affidavits of the parties.
8. That the minor child is now 4 years old and has advanced in age so that her needs have greatly increased as based upon testimony of the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s affidavit.
9. . . . [T]hat there is a deviation [between Defendant’s current child support payment and the] existing North Carolina Child Support Guidelines [(Guidelines)] of 78 percent.
The trial court made no specific findings as to the actual expenses of Plaintiff and/or the parties’ minor child. The trial court did, however, make a detailed finding as to Defendant’s expenses and found some of Defendant’s claimed expenses to be either “unnecessary,” “exorbi- *288 taut,” or unverified. The trial court was “not persuaded by the evidence of the defendant that the defendant is unable to meet the calculated child support obligation in the amount [of] $446.00 per month.”
Based on its findings, the trial court concluded that “there exist a substantial changes [sic] in circumstances warranting a modification of the prior Consent Judgment of this Court.” The trial court further concluded that Defendant “has failed to overcome the presumption of the [Guidelines] and is not entitled to a deviation therefrom.” Accordingly, the trial court entered an order on 20 February 1998 denying Defendant’s motion for a change of venue and increasing Defendant’s child support obligation to $446.00 per month pursuant to the Guidelines.
The issues are whether: (I) the trial court abused its discretion in denying Defendant’s motion for a change of venue; (II) the trial court’s findings of fact support the conclusion of law that changed circumstances exist; and (III) the trial court made sufficient findings of fact to deny Defendant’s request for deviation from the Guidelines.
I
Where custody and support have been determined by the trial court and a party seeks modification of the custody and support order, “the court first obtaining jurisdiction retains jurisdiction to the exclusion of all other courts and is the only proper court to bring an action for the modification of an order establishing custody and support.”
Tate v. Tate,
In this case, the original child support order was filed in Iredell County District Court. Iredell County District Court is therefore the proper forum for motions to modify that order. In his motion to transfer, Defendant contended he had relocated to Forsyth County and Plaintiff had relocated to Wilkes County. Iredell County is, essentially, located between Forsyth County and Wilkes County and is in relatively close proximity to both. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Defendant’s motion to transfer venue to Forsyth County based on its determination that the Iredell County District Court remained the most convenient forum.
*289 II
An existing child support order may not be modified absent a showing of changed circumstances. N.C.G.S. § 50-13.7(a) (1995). The determination of whether changed circumstances exist is a conclusion of law.
See In re Helms,
In this case, the trial court found that “the needs of the minor child and the needs of the plaintiff to support the minor child [had increased] since the aforesaid Consent Judgment was entered,” and that the minor child’s needs “have greatly increased.” These ultimate findings support the conclusion that changed circumstances exist, and are themselves amply supported by undisputed evidence revealing that daycare expenses for the minor child have increased by *290 $65.00 per month, recreation expenses for the minor child have increased by $35.00 to $50.00 per month, and the amount Plaintiff must expend for rent and groceries has increased from $135.00 to $360.00 per month. Accordingly, the trial court properly concluded that a substantial change in circumstances exists justifying modification of the child support order.
We note that the trial court’s finding that Defendant’s initial child support obligation deviated from the current Guidelines by 78 percent is irrelevant and cannot support the conclusion that changed circumstances existed, because less than three years had elapsed since entry of the consent judgment setting Defendant’s child support obligation.
See
Child Support Guidelines, 1999 Ann. R. N.C. 34 (“If the order is less than three years old, this presumption [of a substantial change in circumstances based on a 15 percent deviation from the Guidelines] does not apply.”);
Wiggs,
Ill
Once changed circumstances have been shown, the trial court should “compute the appropriate amount of child support” pursuant to the Guidelines then in effect.
Hammill v. Cusack,
In this case, Defendant requested a variation from the Guidelines. Although the trial court made findings as to the reasonableness of some of Defendant’s claimed expenses, it did not make findings as to the reasonable needs of the parties’ minor child or of the parties’ relative ability to provide support.
See Norton v. Norton,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Notes
. We note that cases decided prior to the imposition of the presumptive Guidelines required the trial court to “make findings of specific fact on the actual past expenditures for the minor child, the present reasonable expenses of the minor child, and the parlies’ relative abilities to pay” prior to modifying an existing child support order.
See, e.g., Mullen v. Mullen,
