Robert K. LEONARD, former husband, Appellant,
v.
Kerry D. LEONARD, former wife, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
Deborah L. Greene and Tobe C. Karrh, of Smith GreenE & Combs, Jacksonville, for Appellant.
Wesley L. Wallace, Jacksonville, for Appellee.
KAHN, J.
Robert K. Leonard appeals an order granting his petition to modify a consent final judgment of dissolution of marriage. The original judgment required Mr. Leonard to pay appellee, Kerry D. Leonard, $2,500 per month in permanent periodic *265 alimony. The trial court granted modification; Mr. Leonard nevertheless argues the court erred in setting the new alimony amount because the court wrongly imputed inсome to Mr. Leonard. We agree that no evidence in this case meets the test for imputing income. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Background
At the time of the consent final judgment, Mr. Leonard worked as a consultant, with an annual salary of $135,000, having retired from his career employment with the Jacksonville Electric Authority (JEA). Mr. Leonard had worked for the JEA since 1964. Mr. Leonard has a high school diploma but no college degree, although he attended some engineering courses and completed correspondence courses benchmarked by the JEA to satisfy requirements for promotion in his employment.
In April 2004, Mr. Leonard sought to modify the consent final judgment. In his petition, Mr. Leonard alleged he had lost his job and now relied solely on his pension. The petition recited Mr. Leonаrd's age (61) and his lack of a college degree, concluding his ability to find new employment is "greatly reduced." Mr. Leonard contrasted Mrs. Leonard's situation, stating she had rehabilitated herself by finding full-time emplоyment and continues to receive 25% of Mr. Leonard's pension, or $1,153.04 per month. Mr. Leonard requested that the court, among other things, "substantially reduce or eliminate the alimony in this case."
A hearing toоk place during which both parties testified. Mr. Leonard introduced into evidence a vocational evaluation. The vocational evaluator conducted labor market survey activitiеs and found only three jobs with "[p]otentially feasible openings." Only one of those jobs was near Mr. Leonard's home in Jacksonville; the others were in Gainesville and Raleigh, North Carolina. Mr. Leonard had inquired after the Jacksonville position and found he could not qualify.
In the order on appeal, the court found "there has been a substantial, material and involuntary change in circumstances sincе entry of the Final Judgment to warrant a reduction in the [Wife's] permanent alimony." The court also made the following findings concerning the parties' employment and income:
Since losing his job in 2004 [due to funding cutbаcks, the Husband] has not sought employment outside of his field as a power distribution engineer. The Court received into evidence a vocational evaluation report dated December 20, 2004 whiсh details the [Husband's] work history, education and job qualifications. The report indicates he has no limitation that would effect [sic] his ability to obtain and maintain full-time competitive employment in his field. The Court finds that would be true for any field for which he has transferrable skills. His earning potential for his field is from $4,435.00 [sic[*]] to $103,337.00 and the Court finds that the earnings potential for fields for which he has transferrable skill would be at least $40,000.00. Howеver, the [Husband] now 61 years of age has made no effort to obtain employment outside his field.
The [Wife], age 57, was not employed on the date of the Final Judgment; however, she became emplоyed as a secretary with Mayo Clinic in 2004 and earned $27,629.00 gross and presently *266 earns $2,572.00 per month gross. The [Wife] will be social security eligible at age 67.
. . . .
Based on the above the [Husband] presently receives $3,459.00 per month from his pension (after deduction [of] $1,153.00 per month lump sum alimony) and has a wage earning capacity of $2,917.00 per month gross at an income of $35,000.00 per year for a total of $6,375.00 per month. The [Wife] presently has income of $1,153.00 per month gross as lump sum alimony and $2,572.00 per month gross from her job for a total of $3,725.00 per month gross. The difference between the two monthly incomes is $2,652.00, and the Court finds that thе [Husband] should have his permanent alimony obligation reduced to $1,325.00 per month which gives each party an approximate income of $5,050.00 per month gross.
The decretal portion of the ordеr granted Mr. Leonard's modification petition and reduced the monthly alimony obligation to $1,325, retroactive to April 20, 2004.
Analysis
"The abuse of discretion standard of review applies to trial court orders in mоdification of alimony and child support cases." Woolf v. Woolf,
"A court may impute income if a party is earning less than he could, based on a showing that he has the capability of earning more by the use of his best efforts." Ritter v. Ritter,
A trial court can impute income where a spouse has failed to use his or her best efforts to earn income. A claim that a payor spouse has arranged his financial affairs or employment situation so as to shortchange the payee spouse is a valid matter to be explored in determining the payor's real ability to pay. When the obligor spouse voluntarily becomes unemployed or underemployed, the income that he or she is capable of earning may be imputed for purposes of determining an appropriate award of support.
Smith v. Smith,
In this case, the trial court found the Husband "has a wage earning capacity of $2,917.00 per month gross at an income of $35,000.00 per year. . . ." The court did not identify the source of this income; moreover, nothing in the record supports this finding. Accordingly, the court erred in imputing this income to Mr. Leonard. See, e.g., Schram,
Further, the court erred in imputing any income to Mr. Leonard, given the lack of findings in the order and lack of record support for such findings had they been made. According to case law, "restraints on imputation exist in the form of a required twо-step analysis." Schram,
First, the trial court must conclude that the termination of income was voluntary; second, the court must determine whether any subsequent underemployment "resulted from the spouse's pursuit of his own intеrests or through less than diligent and bona fide efforts to find employment paying income at a level equal to or better than that formerly received."
Schram,
Beyond the dearth of record support, we question why the trial court did not consider Mr. Leonard's age (he is now 64), education level (high school diploma, plus a few college courses), his past employment history with only one employer (JEA) during his career, his only employer's policy not to rehire retired employees, and his lifelong residency in Jacksonville. Cf. Smith,
On remand, the court should consider these matters, as well as the parties' incomes, Mrs. Leonard's need for alimony, and Mr. Leonard's ability to pay such alimony. See Vriesenga,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
BROWNING, C.J. and ROBERTS, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[*] A review of the Vocational Evaluation Report indicates the court likely intended this number to be $40,435.
