In re the Marriage of CECILIA and DAVID W.; CECILIA W., Respondent, v. DAVID W., Appellant.
No. D066918
Fourth Dist., Div. One.
Nov. 3, 2015
1277
Linda Cianciolo for Appellant.
Dunne & Dunne and Anthony J. Dunne for Respondent.
OPINION
HUFFMAN, J.—David W. appeals from a postjudgment order establishing a duty of parental support to former spouse Cecilia W. for their adult child, Robert W.,1 pursuant to
David contends the trial court lacked jurisdiction, applied incorrect legal standards, and did not have substantial evidence to support its order finding Robert to be incapacitated from making a living and without sufficient
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The parties divorced in 1998 when Robert was 11 years old. On December 30, 1998, the trial court entered a judgment dissolving the marriage, which incorporated the parties’ marital settlement agreement (MSA). The MSA provided Cecilia with physical custody of Robert and required David to pay monthly child support until the earliest of Robert‘s completion of high school, reaching age 19, or certain other events.
After the MSA child support obligation expired, Cecilia made no formal request for child support until December 2012. At that time, Cecilia filed a request for order seeking, in part, child support. Cecilia claimed Robert, then 24 years old, was “not currently capable of earning a living or being self-supporting” and it was “uncertain he ever will be.”4 David moved to join Robert as a party, which Cecilia opposed. The family court commissioner granted the joinder request.
The matter came on for a full-day hearing in December 2013.5 The trial court admitted Robert‘s psychologist, Charles Hogan, Ph.D., as an expert witness on Robert‘s health issues and how they impacted him day-to-day. Cecilia, David, and Robert also testified. The witness testimony covered Robert‘s conditions, education, daily life, and potential capacity for work. We discuss each in turn.
Robert suffers from Tourette‘s syndrome and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Tourette‘s symptoms include affected motor skills, tics, and accompanying issues, including learning disabilities and emotional management issues. Robert exhibits all of these symptoms when stressed. Robert‘s attention issues mean he has great difficulty focusing continuously on a task.
Robert graduated from high school on time. He then attended Southwestern College, a community college. There, Robert earned two associates degrees and achieved a 3.3 grade point average, but took five years to graduate due to class withdrawals. Robert also needed accommodation, including intervention by disabled student services, less distracting test settings, extra time for tasks, and tutors (including private math tutoring). In addition, he was admitted to urgent care and the emergency room twice during one semester because panic attacks caused tachycardia on one occasion and cardiac arrest on the other.
Since August 2012, Robert has been enrolled at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD).6 He has had similar accommodation, including disabled student services intervention, quiet test facilities, and flexibility for test completion time, as well as use of a laptop and tape recorder in class. He also has had a private Spanish tutor. Robert generally has earned B-range grades at UCSD.
Robert lives on campus with roommates and resides with Cecilia on weekends, holidays, and during the summer. Robert has a car and drives himself.7 Robert advocates for himself, but Cecilia remains involved, including attending meetings with disabled student services, tracking his e-mail and schedule, and doing his laundry.
Robert receives approximately $30,000 annually in financial aid from UCSD, of which $5,000 is loans. Cecilia continues to pay for certain expenses, including Robert‘s Spanish tutor, cell phone bill, vehicle costs (e.g.,
The testimony regarding whether Robert is unable to find work and be self-supporting—the critical issue here—is sparse. Dr. Hogan is not a vocational expert and has not researched whether Robert could get a job in San Diego. David sought a vocational evaluation, which apparently was denied, and Cecilia made no similar request.9 Cecilia confirmed Robert has never been assessed as to whether he could get a job.
The only evidence on employability concerns Robert‘s potential ability to work and suggests he has such potential. Dr. Hogan believes Robert is intellectually capable of full-time work, but is concerned with his intermittent ability to regulate emotion and attention; he thinks these issues will be a “very major challenge” and put Robert at “high risk in trying to work effectively in a job on a consistent basis.” He is of the view Robert would have trouble in a stressful environment, but should be fine in a “low demand or low stress environment,” depending on the job. As for Robert‘s conditions, Dr. Hogan has experience determining whether ADHD patients can work and reported 50 percent of his adult ADHD patients can do so. He lacks similar expertise with Tourette‘s but thinks if Robert was not symptomatic, it should not affect getting a job (and reported the last time Robert was symptomatic in his office was “not in recent memory“). Dr. Hogan believes Robert can write a resume, complete a job application, and sit for an employment interview, and confirmed he was not saying Robert could not work. In fact, he counseled Robert on his career goals and developed job-seeking skills with him.
Cecilia believes and hopes Robert will one day become self-supporting. She also believes Robert could get a minimum wage job if he was not attending school. She has been advised Robert cannot go to school and work at the same time and does not want him to do so.
The record likewise reflects David believes Robert could work. No professional has told him Robert is incapacitated. David and Cecilia discussed the possibility of Robert getting a part-time job if he was not taking a summer class at Southwestern College. He also talked to Robert about applying for a job; Robert expressed interest in applying “at a Game Stop store,” but did not do so.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court stated it was “not sure” Cecilia met her burden, questioning whether there was “enough evidence on vocational abilities.” Notwithstanding its concerns, the trial court found Robert was incapacitated, explaining the evidence supported a finding he could not work and go to school full-time. As for Robert‘s ability to work, in general, the trial court found Robert‘s manner was atypical and was “going to make it very hard for him to find a job,” his issues with focus and stress would “interfere with the ability to hold the job,” and his ability to have a job earning $30,000 to $40,000 was “highly questionable.” It concluded “the only evidence is that [Robert] could potentially get a minimum wage job, maybe, but that would undoubtedly require ADA accommodations,” which it viewed as speculative.
The trial court then found Robert was without sufficient means, because he would lose the support he had if he was not in school. The trial court also found a lack of sufficient means because even if Robert could obtain minimum wage work, it would not permit his parents’ standard of living. The trial court reached this finding by interpreting the support guideline discussion in In re Marriage of Drake (1997) 53 Cal.App.4th 1139 [62 Cal.Rptr.2d 466] (Drake), a
In August 2014, the trial court issued further findings and orders (August 2014 Order). The trial court stated it found at the hearing “Robert is an adult disabled child.”10 On incapacity, the trial court largely reiterated its earlier findings. However, the trial court no longer found evidence of potential minimum wage employment, stating “while it was argued that Robert might be able to obtain a minimum wage job, the evidence did not support that finding.” On insufficient means, the trial court focused on Robert‘s UCSD funds, concluding he lacked sufficient means because his current support was based on continued UCSD attendance. David timely appealed.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
David contends the trial court lacked jurisdiction to award child support, claiming (1) support terminated pursuant to the MSA and jurisdiction terminates without an agreement to extend support, and (2) Robert purportedly does not live with Cecilia, rendering child support unavailable.11 We find jurisdiction.
First, as David acknowledges,
Second, David provides no authority to show that parental residence is required for
B. Legal Standards Regarding Child Support for Adult Children
David contends the trial court applied incorrect legal standards in ordering support under
1. First Prong: Incapacitated from Working
The first prong of
In the August 2014 order, the trial court concluded Robert was incapacitated based on the findings that Robert lacked the capacity to work and attend school at the same time, was disabled, had an odd affect that would impede finding a job and focus and stress issues that would interfere with holding one, and could not hold a minimum wage job (in contrast to its contrary finding at the hearing). These findings reflect the trial court did not apply the correct standards.
As an initial matter, whether Robert was unable to work and attend school at the same time is not the relevant incapacity for
Even to the extent the trial court purportedly focused on Robert‘s ability to work, it failed to do so in accordance with the applicable standards. In brief, it found Robert was disabled and his conditions would hamper him from finding and keeping employment. But the required showing is not disability, without more, or possible difficulties in the workplace. Rather, the inquiry should have been whether Robert was (1) unable to be “self-supporting,” due to the purported disability, or (2) unable to “find work” due to factors outside his control. (Jones, supra, 179 Cal.App.3d at p. 1015.) The only trial court
We recognize there is a dearth of authority applying the incapacity standards, as
2. Second Prong: Lack of Sufficient Means
The second prong of
Here, however, the trial court found Robert lacked sufficient means because his current support was based on UCSD attendance. It also found insufficient means because minimum wage work would not allow Robert to live at his parents’ level. Neither finding reflects the correct legal standard.
With respect to the finding on UCSD support, the trial court did not elaborate on its reasoning; we surmise it was responding to David‘s argument that Robert had his own means while enrolled at UCSD. Either way, the trial court was right in viewing the UCSD support as irrelevant, but for the wrong reason. It should have assessed Robert‘s ability to support himself and avoid becoming a public charge, regardless of UCSD support (which indisputably is
The trial court‘s earlier finding regarding the parents’ standard of living likewise ignored the appropriate standard and resulted from a misapplication of Drake. Drake addressed several issues, including the sufficient means standard and whether family court support guidelines applied to adult children. (Drake, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1154-1163.) The trial court suggested Drake found the guidelines reflect a legislative intent that children should share in their parents’ standard of living, and, from this, reasoned that Robert‘s ability to get a minimum wage job did not prevent him from being without sufficient means. Although Drake addresses this legislative intent in assessing the guidelines for calculating support, there is no parallel discussion in its analysis of sufficient means for awarding support. (Compare Drake, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1157-1162 with id. at pp. 1154-1155.) Rather, Drake made clear, as discussed ante, that sufficient means is determined based on the “likelihood a child will become a public charge.” (Id. at p. 1154.) The trial court failed to make this determination.15
C. Sufficiency of the Evidence
David contends there is no substantial evidence to support the court‘s order. In reviewing for substantial evidence, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the findings, give such findings the benefit of all reasonable inferences, and uphold the order if supported by substantial evidence. (Drake, supra, 53 Cal.App.4th at p. 1151; In re Marriage of Mix (1975) 14 Cal.3d 604, 614 [122 Cal.Rptr. 79, 536 P.2d 479].) We find the order is not supported by substantial evidence.
First, the record lacks substantial evidence of incapacity. It establishes Robert suffers from Tourette‘s syndrome and ADHD, conditions impacting his ability to manage stress and attention and requiring accommodation at college. It also shows Robert‘s stress and attention issues will be a major
As discussed ante, where incapacity is in dispute, the trial court must focus on whether the adult child is unable to find work or be self-supporting. Vocational evidence likely will be necessary to meet these standards and there is little to no such evidence here.
Second, there likewise is no substantial evidence that Robert is without sufficient means. The record reflects he potentially could hold a minimum wage job. Given the possibility of at least this level of employment, we find there would need to be additional evidence regarding the likelihood of Robert becoming a public charge to support a finding of insufficient means. (
III
DISPOSITION
The order is reversed. We remand this matter to the trial court with directions that it determine if Robert is incapacitated from earning a living and without sufficient means within the meaning of
McConnell, P. J., and O‘Rourke, J., concurred.
