2004 Ohio 3607 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2004
First Assignment of Error:
"The trial court erred in failing to include in plaintiff's income severance pay received from a former employer."
Second Assignment of Error:
"The trial court erred in failing to impute income to plaintiff who quit his former position of employment."
Third Assignment of Error:
"The trial court erred in reducing plaintiff's income by the amount of student loan payments."
{¶ 2} The parties married on December 27, 1989. Two children were born as issue of that marriage: Meghan M. Kerbyson (d/o/b 6-5-91) and Emma C. Kerbyson (d/o/b 5-17-94). On August 20, 1996, the couple filed a petition for dissolution of marriage together with a separation agreement. Their agreement provided for marital property disposition, shared parenting and child support payments. The trial court accepted their agreement and, on September 30, 1996, dissolved the marriage and adopted their various agreements. To that end, the court ordered shared parenting (with appellant serving as the primary residential parent) and ordered appellee to pay $2,186.48 per month in child support.
{¶ 3} On June 8, 1998, the trial court granted appellee's motion to modify his support obligation. The court found that appellee's income had "substantially declined since the last calculation" and noted that appellant must make substantial student loan payments to repay debt incurred to attend medical school. Accordingly, the trial court adjusted appellee's support obligation from $2,186.48 per month to $1,423.75 per month. We affirmed that judgment in Kerbyson v. Kerbyson (Jan. 23, 1999), Washington App. No. 98CA23 (Kerbyson I).
{¶ 4} On June 24, 2003, the Washington County Child Support Enforcement Agency (CSEA), pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 6} The provisions of R.C.
{¶ 7} Appellee testified that he left his previous employer in December, 2002, and started with his new employer in January of 2003. He provided the following explanation for the financial arrangements upon departure from his old job:
{¶ 8} "Q. And you took a 50,000 — $53,000 severance package with them?
{¶ 9} "A. Something like that. I don't recall the amount.
{¶ 10} "Q. And when was that paid?
{¶ 11} "A. December.
{¶ 12} "Q. Of 2002?
{¶ 13} "A. December of 2002.
{¶ 14} "Q. And they put it on your W-2, correct?
{¶ 15} "A. Yeah."
{¶ 16} This exchange establishes that appellee received severance money. R.C.
{¶ 17} Appellee responds with several counter arguments. First, he posits that his ex-wife waived this issue because she did not file her own objection to the CSEA decision to exclude severance pay from his income. We are not persuaded.
{¶ 18} When reviewing an administrative adjustment, the provisions of R.C.
{¶ 19} We further point out that appellant cites to us no authority in which waiver has been found in this context and we have found none in our own research.4 That said, without some affirmative indication from the Ohio General Assembly or the Ohio Supreme Court, we decline to limit a trial court's authority to consider any and all pertinent issues when determining an appropriate amount of "child support."
{¶ 20} Appellee also cites to a number of cases from this district and others where, in estimating income for the purpose of a child support calculation, courts indicate a preference for current data over income/expense data from previous years. We find none of these cases particularly persuasive. Without going into the factual details of each case, none of them involved a specific statutory provision requiring a particular item to be included in the calculation of income. In this case, R.C.
{¶ 21} Appellee also cites our McCoy decision and argues that no evidence exists to prove that this sum is actually "severance pay" as opposed to a "buyout" or some other such item that could be excluded from gross income pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 22} For these reasons, we agree with appellant that the trial court erred by excluding appellee's 2002 severance package from its calculation of income for purposes of determining child support. Accordingly, we hereby sustain her first assignment of error.
{¶ 24} First, to argue that appellee simply "quit" his previous job is not a completely accurate view of the evidence in the record. The uncontroverted evidence reveals that appellee was a co-owner in "Quick Care" (an urgent care medical practice), became embroiled in a contract dispute with one of the other (more senior) co-owners and left his employment as part of the "settlement" of that dispute. Appellee did not simply leave his employer because he was tired of working or wanted a change.
{¶ 25} Second, while appellee may be underemployed as a physician, the evidence in the record does not necessarily suggest that he is voluntarily underemployed.6 Appellee testified that he was not happy earning less money than he did at Quick Care, but was constrained in the type of medical jobs he could take because he did not complete a residency after medical school. Indeed, appellee explained that every time he looked for a job, he kept "running into a wall about . . . the residency issue." No evidence was adduced to the contrary and we find no error in the trial court's apparent conclusion that appellee's underemployment was involuntary.
{¶ 26} Assuming arguendo that the trial court had erred in not finding that appellee was voluntarily underemployed, we further note that appellant adduced no evidence to assist the trial court in arriving at an income amount that could be imputed. While appellee's 2002 W-2 from Quick Care showed him earning $195,103.02 for the last year of his employment, part of that amount consisted of severance pay. Appellee was also a principal in that practice. Thus, appellee's earnings would not have been a good indicator of what he would have earned in the first year of employment at another practice as a staff physician rather than a co-owner of the business.
{¶ 27} In the end, a determination of voluntary underemployment and the decision whether to impute income are left to trial court's sound discretion and will not be reversed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. Rock, supra at the syllabus; also see Cole v. Cole (Dec. 15, 2000), Jackson App. No. 00CA3; Slone v. Slone (Mar. 22, 1999), Pike App. No. 98CA610. We note that an abuse of discretion is more than an error of law or judgment; it implies that the trial court's attitude was unreasonable, arbitrary or unconscionable. Landisv. Grange Mut. Ins. Co. (1998),
{¶ 28} When reviewing a matter under the abuse of discretion standard of review, appellate courts are admonished that they must not substitute their judgment for that of the trial court.See State ex rel. Duncan v. Chippewa Twp. Trustees (1995),
{¶ 30} We noted in Kerbyson I that student loans are generally good investments and that educated people generally earn higher incomes than noneducated people. That was true then and it remains true now. The trial court found that appellee currently earns $85,000 per annum. We assume that this amount is greater than most of the families in Washington County earn in a year and is clearly attributable to appellee's medical training for which he took out the loans in the first place.7
{¶ 31} We further note that nothing in Kerbyson I made its application contingent on an income increase. Whether appellee earns $80,000 per year or $800,000 per year, the fact remains that he earns more than most people. Those earnings benefit his children and provide them with a higher level of support than those children whose parents do not have a medical education. Our reasons for allowing the deduction of student loan payments inKerbyson I still apply. For all these reasons, we find no merit in the third assignment of error and it is accordingly overruled.
{¶ 32} Having sustained appellant's first assignment of error, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The matter is remanded to the trial court for the limited purpose of recalculating a child support obligation that is based on a gross income figure that includes appellee's severance pay for the 2002 tax year.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART AND CASE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
Kline, P.J.: Concurs in Judgment Opinion.
Harsha, J.: Concurs in Judgment Opinion as to Assignments of Error II III; Concurs in Judgment Only as to Assignment of Error I.