Howard R. FREEMAN, Appellant,
v.
Diane A. FREEMAN, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Steven G. Horneffer, Casselberry, for appellant.
Marcia K. Lippincott, Orlando and David R. Miller, Daytona Beach, for appellee Freeman.
Joanna B. Garrett, of Carlton & Carlton, P.A., Lakeland, for Florida Dept. of Health and Rehabilitative Services on behalf of Diane A. Freeman.
GOSHORN, Chief Judge.
Howard Freeman appeals from the order denying his petition for modification of child support. We reverse.
Howard and Diane Freeman were divorced in December 1989. Howard was ordered to pay $900 per month, in addition to paying medical insurance premiums, for the support of one child. He was already required to pay child support of $433.33 per month for a child in Massachusetts.
Howard has been employed as a sales representative for Lane Furniture Company for the past fourteen years. He is paid on commission and must pay his own business expenses. He testified that he is basically in business for himself, so he has all the business expenses one incurs in a sole proprietorship. He drives over 40,000 miles per year to service the retailers that sell Lane products in his territory, which extends from Jacksonville to Vero Beach. Howard also attends four furniture shows in North Carolina per year.
At the time of the dissolution, Howard was earning gross commissions of $105,976.14 and had business expenses of $20,764 as reflected on his 1989 income tax return. Subsequent to the final judgment, Lane initiated chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. Although Howard is still employed by Lane, Howard's income has substantially decreased. He testified that he lost over $700,000 in gross sales annually and that his commissions have declined proportionately. In 1991, his gross commissions fell to $61,357.46, while his business expenses decreased by only $4,100. The fact that his business expenses for 1991 were reduced only slightly was substantiated by his business mileage records. In 1989, Howard claimed 43,940 miles versus his 1991 report of 45,780 miles.
*226 Based on this change in his income, Howard petitioned the trial court to modify his child support obligation. After a hearing on the petition, the trial judge concluded that the former husband failed to establish a substantial and permanent reduction of his income sufficient to grant the requested modification. As a result, the trial court denied Howard's petition for modification of child support.
We are mindful that the standard of review in this case is abuse of discretion. See Canakaris v. Canakaris,
The former wife urges that even if the record demonstrates a substantial reduction of the former husband's income, this change in circumstances is not necessarily permanent. See Deatherage v. Deatherage,
Here, the evidence conclusively shows that the substantial reduction of Howard's commissions began in the second quarter of 1990 and continued through the fourth quarter of 1991. Accordingly, Howard is entitled to a modification of the amount he must pay for child support. Additionally, we note that if Howard's income substantially increases in the future, the former wife may apply to the circuit court for an increase in Howard's child support obligation.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
COBB and HARRIS, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] For clarification, we note that it is not necessary under all circumstances to require a year to elapse before a finding of permanency can be made. We can envision factual situations where a permanent change may be proved immediately.
