¶ 1. Jerome Randall appeals the provisions .in the judgment of divorce from Elizabeth Randall that relate to child support and attorney fees, and the order denying his motion for reconsidera
BACKGROUND
¶ 2. Jerome and Elizabeth have two children; one was eighteen and the other fifteen at the time the judgment of divorce was entered in September 1998. Pursuant to stipulated temporary orders, Elizabeth had primary placement of the children and Jerome was to pay $525 per month in child support. The principal issue in dispute between the parties at trial was physical placement, with Jerome seeking equal physical placement and Elizabeth seeking primary physical placement.
¶ 3. With respect to child support, Jerome asked at trial that the court take into account the amount of time the court ordered the children placed with him, which, in his view, the administrative code provided for. Elizabeth asked that she receive child support of 25% of Jerome's gross income until the older child was nineteen, as long as the child was pursuing her high school degree, and then 17% of Jerome's gross income. Elizabeth testified that Jerome had not paid the children's variable costs in proportion to the time the
¶ 4. Elizabeth also asked at trial.for $1,500 from Jerome as a contribution to her attorney's fees. She testified that she was asking for attorney fees because Jerome had "backed out of' two previous agreements that she thought they had signed in good faith, and because the expense for the appraiser was in part due to having to reschedule twice because of Jerome. On cross-examination she acknowledged that the appraisal occurred only once.
¶ 5. After hearing the evidence and argument, the court took the matter under advisement. The court issued a written decision on custody, placement, child support and attorney fees, the terms of which were contained in the judgment of divorce. The court awarded joint custody, with primary placement during the school year with Elizabeth, placement alternating on a weekly basis between the parents during school summer vacation, and alternate placement for holidays.
2
During the school year, placement was with
¶ 6. Shortly after judgment was entered, Jerome moved the court to reconsider various points, including his child support obligation: he asked that this be determined under WlS. Admin. Code § DWD 40.04(2) for a shared-time payer. Jerome also requested that neither party be ordered to contribute to the attorney fees of the other, arguing that the court did not explain its reasoning for ordering his contribution, the parties' incomes are essentially the same, and Elizabeth received more than one-half of the estate. The court, with a different judge presiding, denied the motion in a written order that does not state the reasons for the decision.
Child Support
¶ 7. As both parties acknowledge, the setting of child support is committed to the sound discretion of the circuit court, and we affirm the circuit court's decision if it examined the relevant facts, applied the correct standard of law and, using a demonstrated rational process, reached a conclusion that a reasonable judge could reach.
See Luciani v. Montemurro-Luciani,
¶ 8. Before explaining the positions of the parties, we set forth the statutory and regulatory framework. Except as provided in WlS. STAT. § 767.25(lm) (1997-98), 3 "the court shall determine child support payments by using the percentage standards established by the department under s. 49.22(9)." Section 767.25(lj). WISCONSIN STAT. § 49.22(9) provides:
The department shall promulgate rules that provide a standard for courts to use in determining a child support obligation based upon a percentage of the gross income and assets of either or both parents. The rules shall provide for consideration ofthe income of each parent and the amount of physical placement with each parent in determining a child support obligation in cases in which a child has substantial periods of physical placement with each parent.
Upon request of either party, the court may modify any child support payment determined under subsec. (lj) if, after considering certain enumerated factors, the court finds that use of the percentage standard is unfair to the child or to either party.
See
§ 767.25(lm).
4
If the
¶ 9. Chapter DWD 40 of the Wisconsin Administrative Code is promulgated pursuant to WlS. STAT. § 49.22(9). See ch. DWD 40, preface. Under these rules "standard" or "percentage standard" means "the percentage of income standard under s. DWD 40.03(1) which, when multiplied by the payer's base or adjusted base, results in payer's child support obligation." WlS. Admin. Code § DWD 40.02(27). Wisconsin Admin. Code § DWD 40.03(1), "Determining child support using the percentage standard," explains the method for determining the income of the payer and applying specified percentages to that income according to the number of children — 17% for one child and 25% for two children. Section DWD 40.03(7) permits a deviation from "the amount of child support payments determined under sub. 1," in language that tracks WlS. Stat. § 767.25(lm).
¶ 11. Jerome contends the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion because it did not apply the shared-time payer formula of WlS. Admin. CODE § DWD 40.04(2), did not explain why it did not, and the record does not provide an explanation. An order that he pay 25% (or 17%) of his income in child support is unfair to him, he asserts, given the substantial amount of time the children are with him under the terms of the judgment. Elizabeth responds that the court's reasoning can be discerned from the provision in the judgment permitting a modification if Jerome can demonstrate that he is paying the variable costs and from the portion of the record where the court and attorneys engage in some dialogue during Elizabeth's testimony on variable costs. In Elizabeth’s view, the court decided that Jerome was not entitled to the shared-time payer formula because he did not prove that he had paid a proportionate amount of the varia
¶ 12. Underlying the parties' positions, although not directly addressed by either, is a dispute over the proper construction of WlS. STAT. § 767.25(lj), and we address this first. The issue is whether the reference in § 767.25(lj) to "the percentage standards established by the department under s. 49.22(9)" includes only the percentage standard determined under WlS. Admin. Code § DWD 40.03(1) (we will refer to this as the "straight percentage standard") or includes, in addition, the formulas established in Wis. Admin. Code § DWD 40.04. The result of the former interpretation is that it is Jerome's burden to show that a support payment of 25% (or 17%) of his gross income is unfair to him and the court should instead apply § DWD 40.04(2). The result of the latter interpretation is that, if Jerome is a shared-time payer under § DWD 40.04(2), Elizabeth has the burden of establishing that it is unfair to apply that formula. The interpretation of a statute presents a question of law, which we review de novo.
See Brown v. Brown,
¶ 13. Although there are arguments to support both interpretations of WlS. STAT. §§ 767.25(lj) and 49.22(9), we conclude the supreme court has already decided this issue in
Luciani.
There the court considered whether the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion "when it did not deviate from the percentage guideline standards, where the payee earns a substantially greater income than the payer."
Luciani,
Application of the straight percentage standards would require Luciani to pay 25% of his gross income towards child support. However, because Luciani has the children for 32% of the overnight placement, the court is required to reduce this figure in accordance with the "shared-time" formula provided in [DWD Table 40.04(2)(b)] (i.e., 93.34%). Luciani's proper support obligation is therefore 24% of his gross income.
Id. at 287 n.5 (emphasis added).
¶ 14. Although the parties in Luciani were not disputing that the shared-time payer formula was part of the presumptive "percentage standard," we cannot overlook the supreme court's statement that the shared-time payer formula, rather than the straight percentage standard, was required because Luciani had the children for 32% of the overnights. The court did not merely implicitly accept the parties' assumption that the shared-time payer formula was part of the presumptive percentage standards, but expressly stated that it was "required" because of the number of overnights.
¶ 15. We recognize that interpreting WlS. Stat. § 767.25(lj) to include the shared-time payer formula
¶ 16. We now turn to the central dispute between the parties: whether Jerome is a shared-time payer. There is no dispute that, under the terms of the divorce judgment, he provides overnight care to the children beyond the threshold. However, Elizabeth argues that, because he did not assume all variable costs in proportion to the time he had the children under the stipulated temporary orders, when he also had the children overnight over the threshold amounts,
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he is not a shared-time payer. Jerome does not assert that he did assume variable costs in proportion to the overnights
¶ 17. We conclude that, while Elizabeth's reading of the regulation may be a reasonable one, it is not the most reasonable one. If we adopt her interpretation, the shared-time payer formula would never be applicable when parents first separate and either they or a family court commissioner or a circuit court decides there should be substantial time with both parents. In such situations there would be no track record of variable costs in separate households to rely on. Similarly, when there is a significant change in a child's physical placement which increases the number of overnights with one parent to an amount over the threshold, that parent may not be able to show that he or she assumed proportional variable costs under the existing physical placement and support order, but may fully intend to do so when the child is spending more time and more overnights with him or her. Under Elizabeth's interpretation of the regulation, before the shared-time payer formula could be applied, there would always be some period of time during which a
¶ 18. The evident assumption underlying the shared-time payer formula is that parents who have physical placement for a substantial number of overnights or the equivalent generally assume the variable costs for the children when the children are with them, and it is unfair to determine their support obligation based on the straight percentage standard which does not take the reality of the physical placement into account. See Connie M. Chesnik, HSS 80 Revisited: The Percentage of Income Standard Experience, 10 WlS. J. Fam. L. 70, 86 (1990). In addition, one purpose of having rules that apply in setting support unless they are unfair to a party or child in a particular case is to simplify the procedure for determining child support. Requiring a second hearing in every case to establish a track record of assuming proportional costs puts a financial burden on the payer during the time necessary to establish a track record and makes the procedure more complex.
¶ 20. We now examine the circuit court's decision on child support in light of the regulation as we have construed it. Because the court did not explain its reasoning, we do not know whether the circuit court viewed the regulation as requiring that Jerome demonstrate he had already assumed the variable costs in proportion to the number of overnights, which we have held is an incorrect view, or whether the court was considering Jerome's past practice as evidence that he would not be assuming proportional costs, which the court could do. If the latter is the reasoning of the court, we are uncertain why it ordered support at the straight percentage, without
any
reduction for the substantial placement with Jerome. Even if the court decided that the record did not support the application of the shared-time payer formula, the substantial physical placement with Jerome is still a relevant factor in deciding the amount of support to order.
See
Wis. Stat. § 767.25(lm)(ej). We are unable to tell from the court's
¶ 21. We have reviewed the entire record and, in particular, have studied the court's comments and the parties' arguments during trial when the issue of variable costs was the subject of testimony and the closing arguments. However, we are unable to answer our questions about the court's reasoning with any confidence. We therefore must reverse the provision of the judgment regarding child support and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Attorney Fees
¶ 22. The circuit court in a divorce action may award attorney fees to one party based on the financial resources of the parties,
see
WlS. STAT. § 767.262(1); because the other party has caused additional fees by overtrial,
see Johnson v. Johnson,
¶ 23. Jerome contends the court did not properly exercise its discretion in ordering that he contribute $1,000 to Elizabeth's attorney's fees because it provided no explanation for its decision. Elizabeth responds that the court based its- decision on her testimony that Jerome had backed out of two stipulations
¶ 24. Since the appraisal occurred only once, it is not readily apparent that any significant amount of attorney time was incurred simply by having to reschedule it twice. And although Elizabeth testified that Jerome "backed out of' two agreements, there was no testimony as to the circumstances surrounding those agreements, the reasons Jerome backed out, or the amount of additional attorney time caused by his doing so. During Elizabeth's cross-examination, the court's attention was drawn to a stipulation and temporary order filed December 26, 1996, and a stipulated and amended temporary order filed July 7,1997, which altered the details of the physical placement schedule (by incorporating a document entitled Partial Final Stipulation), but still gave Elizabeth primary physical placement. As we understand the brief testimony and these documents, apparently after Jerome agreed to primary physical placement with Elizabeth in the Partial Final Stipulation, he changed his mind and decided he wanted equal placement. However that fact, in itself, does not constitute overtrial or unreasonable conduct. In divorce actions, a party may withdraw from stipulations prior to the final trial.
See Evenson v. Evenson,
By the Court. — Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
At the time of trial, Wis. Admin. Code ch. DWD 40 was numbered WlS. ADMIN. CODE ch. HSS 80. We will refer to the regulation as it is currently numbered.
The court found that although one of the children was then eighteen, the placement schedule should apply to both children.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 1997-98 version unless otherwise noted.
Wisconsin Stat. § 767.25(lm) provides in full:
Upon request by a party, the court may modify the amount of child support payments determined under sub. (lj) if, after considering the following factors, the court finds by the greater weight of the credible evidence that use of the percentage standard is unfair to the child or to any of the parties:
(a) The financial resources of the child.
(b) The financial resources of both parents as determined under s. 767.255.
(bj) Maintenance received by either party.
(bp) The needs of each party in order to support himself or herself at a level equal to or greater than that established under 42 U.S.C. § 9902 (2).
(bz) The needs of any person, other than the child, whom either party is legally obligated to support.
(c) The standard of living the child would have enjoyed had the marriage not ended in annulment, divorce or legal separation.
(d) The desirability that the custodian remain in the home as a full-time parent.
(e) The cost of day care if the custodian works outside the home, or the value of custodial services performed by the custodian if the custodian remains in the home.
(ej) The award of substantial periods of physical placement to both parents.
(em) Extraordinary travel expenses incurred in exercising the right to periods of physical placement under s. 767.24.
(f) The physical, mental and emotional health needs of the child, including any costs for health insurance as provided for under sub. (4m).
(g) The child's educational needs.
(h) The tax consequences to each party.
(hm) The best interests of the child.
(hs) The earning capacity of each parent, based on each parent's education, training and work experience and the availability of work in or near the parent’s community.
(i) Any other factors which the court in each case determines are relevant.
The predecessor to Wis. Admin. Code ch. DWD 40 was first promulgated in 1987, see Register, Jan. 1987 No. 373, effective Feb. 1,1987 as Wis. Admin. Code ch. HSS 80. At that time, Wis. STAT. § 767.25(lj) (1985-86) directed the court to determine support "by using the percentage standard established by the department under WlS. STAT. § 46.25(9)(a)," "[e]xcept as provided in subsec. (lm)," and, if the court determined that based on the factors listed under subsec. (lm) or others that the percentage standard was unfair, then the court was authorized to consider the guidelines established under § 46.25(9)(b) in modifying the amount of support determined under subsec. (lj). WlS. Stat. § 767.25(ln)(a) (1985-86). Wisconsin Stat. § 46.25(9) (1985-86) was the predecessor to Wis. Stat. § 49.22(9). Section 46.25(9)(a) (1985-86) required the department to adopt and publish a standard "based upon a percentage of the gross income and assets of either or both parents"- — substantially the same as the first sentence of the present § 49.22(9); para, (b) directed the department to establish "guidelines for courts to consider in determining child support under ss. 767.25(lm)...." Wisconsin Admin. Code ch. HHS 80 as originally promulgated tracked this statutory framework, with the percentage standard in § HHS 80.03 carrying out the directive of § 46.25(9)(a) and the special circumstances in § HHS 80.04 carrying out the directive of § 46.25(9)(b).
Wisconsin Stat. § 46.25(9) (1985-86) was subsequently amended to remove the distinction between rules in para, (a) and guidelines in para, (b), by deleting para, (b) and adding the second sentence of what is now WlS. STAT. § 49.22(9) to para. (a).
See
1993 Wis. Act 481 § 12. At the same time, WlS. STAT. § 767.25(lj) was amended to require that child support, except as provided in subsec. (lm), be determined "by using the percentage standard under s. 46.25(9)," and subsec. (In) was
In Raz
v. Brown,
Elizabeth does not provide computations for her assertion that Jerome had the children under the temporary orders for more overnights than the threshold. However, since Jerome does not dispute this, we will take it as conceded,
see Schlieper v. DNR,
