760 N.E.2d 72 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2001
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *369
The matter came on for trial in September 1999 whereupon the court addressed the division of property issue. Appellee submitted a list of tools and other items that he claimed were separate property since they were gifts to him from his father. The court found that many of the listed items were, in fact, nonmarital and awarded them to appellee. Other items on the list were awarded to appellant. As for appellee's PERS contributions, the parties agreed to an offset whereby appellant disclaimed her property right to the PERS fund, and in return, appellee disclaimed his property right to the marital residence.
In response to appellee's motion that child support be reduced or eliminated due to his unemployment, the trial court opined that appellee is liable for child support and arrearage regardless of his unemployment and future prison term because commission of a crime is a voluntary act for which relief from child support may not be sought. The court then ordered appellee to pay over $723 per month in child support. As such, appellant asked that appellee's PERS contributions be distributed as a lump sum and secured in a bank account upon which the court could impose a withholding order to ensure future payments of child support while appellee was in prison. Appellee opposed this request, stating that he wished to keep his retirement fund intact since PERS is a substitute for Social Security. The court denied appellant's request and left the PERS fund intact.
Appellant also asked the court to reduce appellee's child support arrearage to a lump sum judgment and order appellee to pay the judgment out of assets granted to him in the property division such as a life insurance policy with a $3,228 cash value and a van worth $1,800. The court denied this request and instead ordered *371 appellee to pay an extra $10 per week towards his arrearage. Appellant filed the within timely appeal.
"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND ABUSED ITS DISCRETION TO THE PREJUDICE OF APPELLANT WHEN THE COURT FAILED TO SECURE APPELLEE'S RETIREMENT BENEFITS THROUGH THE PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT SYSTEM AS AN AVAILABLE ASSET FOR THE SUPPORT OF THE MINOR CHILDREN."
Appellant states that in order to ensure that she receives child support, the trial court should have ordered appellee to apply to PERS for a lump sum payment of his contributions and/or direct the contributions to a financial institution from which money could be withheld to pay child support. Thus, the issue at hand is whether a court can force a PERS member who no longer works for the state to apply for a lump sum distribution of his accumulated PERS contributions in order to create an account from which future child support installments could be withheld.
Pursuant to R.C.
According to R.C.
Pursuant to R.C.
As aforementioned, R.C.
Under the plain and ordinary language of the above subsections, the court may intercept a lump sum payment "that is to be made." However, nothing in R.C.
The fact that the statute merely provides for interception of a lump sum payment that is to be paid due to member application and does not provide for court invasion of a PERS accumulated contribution fund, demonstrates that a court may not compel a PERS member to apply for a lump sum payment of accumulated contributions. Specifically, the Second Appellate District has stated:
"We note, however, that the new law gives the court power to order the appropriate retirement board to withhold funds only when the obligor is receiving or is to receive benefits, or has received a warrant for refund of his account. Our reading of this language is that before a court can order withholding of funds, the PERS member must have requested a refund, or be entitled to receive retirement benefits. The new law does not give the court the power to `invade' the actual fund. As a member has to request the refund, it appears that monies cannot be withheld until such request is made. The new law, however, does not provide that a court can compel a party to make such a request." *373 Baecker v. Baecker (Nov. 6, 1986), Montgomery App. No. 9810, unreported, 4. (Emphasis added).
Accordingly, the court did not err by refusing to compel appellee to apply for a lump sum payment and direct that said payment be used to satisfy past and future child support primarily because such an option is not statutorily permitted. To permit appellant to defer the satisfaction of his child support obligation [including support for a child that he molested] is repugnant to this court. If someone has to economically suffer, it is far better to place that burden on the perpetrator of the crime rather than his innocent children. However, the remedy is to seek a legislative change of the statute as opposed to a judicial imposition of public policy that invades the doctrine of separation of powers. For the foregoing reasons, this assignment of error is overruled.
"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND ABUSED ITS DISCRETION TO THE PREJUDICE OF THE APPELLANT WHEN IT FAILED TO REDUCE THE CHILD SUPPORT ARREARAGES OWED BY APPELLEE TO A LUMP SUM JUDGMENT AND FURTHER, BY REJECTING APPELLANT'S REQUEST FOR PAYMENT OF THE SUPPORT ARREARAGE FROM ASSETS AWARDED TO APPELLEE."
If an arrearage exists from a temporary support order then, upon request, the court must reduce the arrearage to judgment or refer to the arrearage within the final divorce decree. Colom v. Colom (1979),
Admittedly, a trial court has discretion to permit a gradual repayment of an arrearage. Jones v. Jones (May 13, 1991), Butler App. No. CA90-06-122, unreported, 2. See, also, Snyder v. Snyder (1985),
Because the court has discretion in choosing to preserve an arrearage of temporary child support by reducing it to a lump sum judgment or ordering it to be paid in gradual installments, we cannot reverse the court's choice absent an abuse of discretion. An abuse of discretion entails a decision by the court that is unreasonable, arbitrary or unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore (1983),
Specifically, appellant had to support herself and three children on an income of approximately $17,000. Appellee owed appellant $3,681 in temporary child support arrearage. He also owed appellant over $1,500 for marital debt that she incurred. His present child support obligation was calculated to be $723 per month. However, he was unemployed, and the court did not enter a seek work order. He had recently been convicted of two counts of gross sexual imposition against minors and sentenced to three years in prison. At the time of the court's order, he was out on bail as the sentence was stayed pending his appeal.
By failing to reduce the arrearage to a lump sum judgment, appellant was left with no viable opportunity to collect the arrearage owed to her. Allowing gradual repayment is a reasonable option when the obligor is working or his employment future is promising. However, when the obligor is unemployed and preparing for a long prison term, gradual repayment is unrealistic. A life insurance policy with a cash value of $3,228, upon which the court placed no restrictions, was available for set-off at the time of the divorce. We find that it was unreasonable to refuse to reduce the $3,681 arrearage to a lump sum judgment and partially satisfy that judgment by offsetting the $3,228 cash value of the life insurance policy. We thus reverse the court's order on arrearage and remand for the entry of a lump sum judgment on the arrearage of temporary child support and a determination of whether the life insurance policy remains an available source for offsetting of judgments. *375
We do not, however, agree with appellant's suggestion that the remainder of the lump sum judgment, less than $500, should be satisfied by ordering a sale of the vehicle granted to appellee in the divorce which was worth $1,800. It is reasonable to assume that a person is more likely to engage in employment if they own a vehicle. (In fact, a wage withholding order reveals that appellee engaged in employment after the final decree and before this court affirmed his convictions). Hence, refusing to use the vehicle as a set-off for the arrearage was not unreasonable. Accordingly, this assignment of error is sustained in part and overruled in part.
"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND ABUSED ITS DISCRETION TO THE PREJUDICE OF APPELLANT WHEN IT DETERMINED CERTAIN PERSONAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN THE MARITAL RESIDENCE TO BE SEPARATE PROPERTY AND AWARDED SAME TO APPELLEE."
Appellant complains that appellee was awarded many of the items on appellee's list of gifts from his father. Pursuant to R.C.
Appellant does not contest that the disputed items were gifts from appellee's father. Appellee's father testified that he gifted the disputed items only to appellee for birthday and Christmas presents. (Tr. 45, 46, 52). The court apparently believed the father with regards to his intent to give the gifts to his son alone. There is no need to second-guess the court's decision on witness credibility in this case. In fact, appellant basically concedes that the gifts were made to appellee alone.
Nonetheless, appellant contends that any separate gift property has "transmuted" into marital property by virtue of the time that the items were located within the marital residence and the allegation that the items were used to benefit the family. However, this argument fails because the doctrine of transmutation has been replaced by the concept of traceability, i.e. the "source of funds" rule. See, e.g., Frederick v.Frederick (Mar. 31, 2000), Portage App. No. 98-P-0071, unreported, 10;Young v. Young (Jan. 22, 1998), Columbiana App. No. 96CO26, unreported, 4; Fincannon v. Fincannon (Aug. 7, 1997), Noble 231, unreported, 2. Pursuant to R.C.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded. On remand, the court shall enter a lump sum judgment for appellant in the amount of the temporary child support arrearage and determine if the life insurance policy awarded to appellee in the divorce remains available to set-off against the arrearage.
___________________ VUKOVICH, J.
Donofrio, J., concurs, see concurring opinion.
DeGenaro, J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur wholeheartedly in the majority opinion filed herein. I would simply add in response to appellant's assignment of error number one the following. Although the law is very clear in not permitting a court order of distribution from a P.E.R.S. account, an order for P.E.R.S. to notify the court and/or appellant upon a requested voluntary distribution is the only available alternative to satisfy appellant's objectives. *377