STACIE CALIAN, Appellant, v ERIC CALIAN, Respondent.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department, New York
[814 NYS2d 649]
Ordered that the order is modified, on the law and as an exercise of discretion, by deleting the provision thereof directing the plaintiff to pay basic child support in the sum of $4,640 per year, and substituting therefor a provision directing the plaintiff to pay basic child support in the sum of $300 per year; as so modified, the order is affirmed insofar as appealed from, without costs or disbursements.
The parties have joint custody of their three children. In their January 6, 2004 stipulation (hereinafter the stipulation) determining the issue of parental access to the children, the parties agreed that a comparison of the amount of time each parent had physical custody of the children would not be used in a future hearing determining child support. By so stipulating, the parties, in effect, agreed to employ a method which potentially would have yielded a child support award deviating from what the basic child support obligation would have been under the Child Support Standards Act (hereinafter the CSSA). However, the stipulation failed to include the provisions required, pursuant to
Upon setting aside that part of the stipulation that deviated from the CSSA, the court properly determined that the defendant is the primary custodial parent (see Bast v Rossoff, 91 NY2d 723, 729 [1998]; Matter of Burke v Burke, 245 AD2d 1007, 1008 [1997]; Blaise v Blaise, 241 AD2d 680, 682 [1997]).
With respect to the award of child support, we find that the basic child support obligation was unjust and inappropriate under the circumstances of this case, even after the Supreme Court capped the combined parental income at $80,000, and we
Prudenti, P.J., Schmidt, Adams and Covello, JJ., concur.
