Lead Opinion
Lynne E. Coppala, appellant/defendant below (hereinafter referred to as “Ms. Coppa-la”), appeals from a divorce decree entered by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County. Ms. Coppala assigns error to the circuit court’s decision to deny her alimony, and a determination that her former spouse, Stephen A. Robinson, appellee/plaintiff (hereinafter referred to as “Mr. Robinson”), is not required to maintain a life insurance policy for the parties four year old daughter.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The parties were married in Tennessee on February 7,1997. One child was born of the marriage. Throughout the marriage, Ms. Coppala was employed as a law clerk with the circuit court of Kanawha County.
On October 12, 1999, Mr. Robinson filed a divorce petition in West Virginia. He alleged irreconcilable differences as grounds for the divorce. Ms. Coppala filed an answer admitting irreconcilable differences. Hearings were held and evidence was taken before a family law master.
Mr. Robinson filed exceptions to both the alimony award as well as the requirement that he was to maintain his daughter as an irrevocable beneficiary of $250,000.00 from an existing life insurance policy.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We are called upon to review two recommendations by the family law master that were rejected by the circuit court. We pointed out in syllabus point 1 of Stephen L.H. v. Sherry L.H.,
The standards of review ... applying to the circuit court are the same standards for this Court. A court should review the record for errors of law; ensure the decision is supported by competent, material, and substantial evidence in the whole record; and ensure the findings and ultimate decision of a family law master are not clearly erroneous or an abuse of discretion. In reviewing the decisions of the circuit court, the scope of this Court’s review is relatively narrow. Our role is limited to considering errors of law and making certain that the circuit court adhered to its*635 statutory standard of review of factual determinations, that is, whether the family law master’s findings are supported by substantial evidence and consistent with the law.
Where there is disagreement between the circuit court and the family law master, however, the substantial nature of the evidence supporting the circuit court's findings is further called into question, and this Court must examine the record with greater care. This is so even when that circuit court does not disagree with the family law master’s factual findings, as such, but draws different inferences from the facts.
Stephen L.H.,
III.
DISCUSSION
A. Alimony
Ms. Coppala first asserts that the circuit court committed error in rejecting the family law master’s recommendation to award alimony payable at the rate of $1,000.00 per month for a period of thirty-six months. Under the statute applicable at the time of the proceedings in this matter, W. Va.Code § 48-2-15(1) (1999) (Repl.Vol.1999), a party was barred from receiving alimony in only three instances: (1) where the person has committed adultery; (2) where subsequent to the marriage the person has been convicted of a felony which is final; and (3) where a person has actually abandoned or deserted his or her spouse for six months.
As a general proposition, “[a]bsent a finding of a statutory bar to alimony or a finding of substantial fault or misconduct on the part of the spouse seeking alimony, the determination of awarding alimony is to be based on ‘the financial position of the parties.’ ” Banker v. Banker,
The circuit court concluded that “[t]he record ... sets forth sufficient evidence to support the Family Law Master’s factor # 1 and factor # 3.” However, the circuit court disagreed with the finding as to Ms. Coppala’s
Contrarily, Ms. Coppala contends that the circuit court created facts that were never litigated to support its ruling. That is, there was no evidence submitted regarding Ms. Coppala’s health or her reasons for not entering the private practice of law. As such, it appears that the circuit court relied upon facts outside the record to support its decision. Based upon the record before us, the family law master’s findings were not clearly erroneous. Our cases clearly hold that “a circuit court may not substitute its own findings of fact for those of a family law master merely because it disagrees with those findings.” Syl. pt. 4, in part, Stephen L.H. See also State ex rel. West Virginia Dep’t of Health and Human Res. v. Carl Lee H.,
B. Life Insurance
The next issue presented concerns the circuit court’s rejection of the family law master’s recommendation that Mr. Robinson, as the child support obligor, be required to maintain a life insurance policy, which he had purchased before the divorce proceeding was filed, that made his four year old daughter an irrevocable beneficiary to $250,000.00 of said policy.
1. Authority to require life insurance by a child support obligor. The issue of requiring a child support obligor to maintain an existing life insurance policy, with the child as beneficiary, is one of first impression for this Court. The parties have pointed out that there is a split of authority among other jurisdictions that have addressed the issue. However, it appears that “a majority of jurisdictions ... permit the court to secure child support payments by ordering the obligor parent to maintain ... life insurance for as long as the support obligation remains in effect, generally until the children reach the age of majority.” Knowles v. Thompson,
Both parties agree that there is no express statutory authority that specifically permits a court to require a child support obligor to maintain a life insurance policy with the child as the beneficiary. However, Ms. Coppala contends that the family law master had implied discretion to impose the requirement under W. Va.Code § 48-2-16(b)(20), which provision was in effect at the time of the divorce.
Scott asked this Court to determine whether a child support obligation extended beyond the death of the obligor. Prior to Scott, our cases had held that child support payments terminated with the death of the obli-gor. We overruled prior decisions in Scott and held that “a court has the authority to enforce the child support obligation as a lien against the deceased obligor’s estate.” Scott,
Here, the family law master sought to assure that the child’s standard of living would not diminish should Mr. Robinson suffer an untimely death. The remedy chosen by the family law master was consistent with, and an extension of, Scott. Indeed, it has been recognized that “[w]hen a trial court orders a parent to maintain a life insurance policy on his life for the child’s benefit, the court is ensuring future support is available for the child in the event that the parent dies.” Capehart v. Capehart,
In view of the foregoing, we hold that a child support obligor may be required to maintain or acquire a life insurance policy, with the obligor’s child[ren] as beneficiary, when unusual facts of a particular case make it necessary or appropriate in order to arrive at a fair and equitable grant of child support. Having so held, we likewise hold when a child support obligor has been required to maintain or acquire a life insurance policy with the obligor’s children] as the beneficiary, generally the duration of the life insurance policy imposed upon the obligor may not be required to extend beyond the child[ren]’s age of majority.
In the instant case, the unusual facts that caused the family law master to make the life insurance recommendation, concerned the age of Mr. Robinson and his daughter. Mr. Robinson is age fifty-two, while his daughter is only four years old. As a result of Mr. Robinson’s age and the tender age of his daughter, the family law master recommended the life insurance requirement as a way of assuring continued adequate support for the child in the event Mr. Robinson should die before she reached majority. We agree with the family law master that the age disparity made it appropriate to require Mr. Robinson to maintain the life insurance policy. We therefore reverse the circuit court’s ruling on this issue.
2. Premium costs and income deduction. The circuit court ruled that the family law master failed to make findings as to the premium cost for maintaining the life insurance policy, and further failed to make a deduction in the child support calculation based upon such premium payments. We agree with the circuit court that these issues should have been addressed by the family law master. This Court has recognized that, as an incident to child support, “all premium payments made by the [obligor] for ... insurance are to be deemed child support in such proportion as the court shall direct.” Kathy L.B. v. Patrick J.B.,
IV.
CONCLUSION
In view of the foregoing, we find that Ms. Coppala is entitled to alimony as recommended by the family law master. We also find that Mr. Robinson is required to maintain a life insurance policy as recommended by the family law master. However, the family law master is required to make findings as to the premium cost for maintaining the life insurance policy, and is required to make a commensurate deduction in the child support. Consequently, we reverse the circuit court’s ultimate disposition of the alimony and life insurance issues, and we remand this case for further disposition consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and Remanded.
Notes
. Due to Ms. Coppala's employment, all of the judges of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County recused themselves from this case. This Court appointed the Honorable O.C. Spaulding as a Special Judge to preside over this matter.
. The parties had initially planned to buy a home in West Virginia, but the purchase never occurred.
. The West Virginia Legislature has abolished the office of family law master and replaced it with the judicial office of family court judge. See W. Va.Code § 51-2A-1, et seq. To maintain consistency with the proceedings underlying this appeal, however, we will continue to use the phrase "family law master.”
. Mr. Robinson had purchased a $500,000.00 life insurance policy before the divorce proceeding was filed. The beneficiaries of the policy were Mr. Robinson’s adult son from a previous marriage, and his daughter from the marriage resulting in this litigation.
. See supra note 4.
. In 2001 the legislature rewrote and redesignat-ed the statutes pertaining to alimony. See W. Va.Code § 48-8-101 et seq. These statutes took effect September 1, 2001, several months after the entry of the circuit court’s order in the instant case. Thus, we will apply the law in place at the time of the divorce proceedings. See Syl. pt. 2, Public Citizen, Inc. v. First Nat’l Bank in Fairmont,
. For the years 1997-1999, Ms. Coppala had an annual average income of $34,080.00. Mr. Robinson had an annual average income of $177,230.00.
. Mr. Robinson contends that the family law master’s recommendation required him to maintain the life insurance policy after his daughter reached the age of majority. We do not interpret the recommendation to include such a requirement. The clear intent of the recommendation was to provide coverage only until the child attains the age of majority.
. The circuit court also found that the life insurance recommendation was not necessary because of our holding in Scott v. Wagoner,
. A minority of courts find that, without statutory authority, courts cannot require a child support obligor to obtain or maintain life insurance for the benefit of the child. See Laws v. Laws,
. This provision was deleted by the 2001 Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, ch. 91. See note 6, supra.
. At the time of the decision in Bridgeman, the provision was codified at W. Va.Code § 48-2-16(b)(16).
. Mr. Robinson has asked this Court to consider alternatives to the whole life policy, such as "decreasing term life insurance in an amount adequate in order to fund an annuity, which would pay Court ordered monthly installment child support payments.” We decline to address this issue in the first instance. However, on remand Mr. Robinson is not precluded from asking the lower tribunals to consider alternative life insurance plans.
. In addressing the issue of premium payments for the life insurance by Mr. Robinson, the family law master must not consider the full premium for the $500,000.00 policy. Instead, the family law master should consider only the premium cost for maintaining a $250,000.00 life insurance policy.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
(Filed Dec. 10, 2002)
I concur with the majority opinion, but I write separately to clarify how family courts should address the issue of life insurance policies bought by divorced parents to protect their dependent children, and to clarify whether and how premiums for those policies should be allocated to reduce a child support obligation.
The majority opinion makes it clear that family law masters were, under the old statutory scheme, empowered to require a parent to maintain a life insurance policy to protect his or her children. Under the new statutory scheme, family courts have the same remedy at their disposal. In devising a child support order, family courts can consider the income-earning abilities of the parties, the costs of educating minor children, and the general standard of living of the parents and children during the marriage. See W.Va. Code, 48-6-301 [2001]. Family courts must consider those “factors as the court deems necessary or appropriate to consider in order to arrive at a fair and equitable grant of ... child support[.]” W.Va.Code, 48-6-301(b)(20) [2001].
When considering whether a parent should be required to maintain life insurance for a dependent child, family courts must consider that “children have a right to share in their natural parents’ level of living,” and that the child support ordered must be “related, to the extent practicable, to the standard of living that children would enjoy if they were living in a household with both parents present.” W.Va.Code, 48-13-102 [2001]. “[A] family ... court should examine what a reasonable, similarly-situated parent would have done had the family remained intact or, in cases involving a nonmarital birth, what the parent would have done had a household been formed.” Porter v. Bego,
In other words, family courts have flexibility to craft remedies that reflect the pre- and post-divorce circumstances of the parties, so that the final child support order ensures that the children can share in both parents’ standard of living. If a parent — particularly a parent of means — would have provided life insurance to protect his or her child’s standard of living and future opportunities in the event of the parent’s death while the parties were married, then the parent may be required to provide a similar level of life insurance after the dissolution of the marriage.
I can conceive of numerous situations where a parent should receive little or no deduction from a child support obligation for life insurance premiums. For instance, there is the hypothetical, absurd, and yet very real possibility that a parent would buy a life insurance policy with premiums equal to or greater than the current child support obligation. Similarly, a parent could choose to buy life insurance without consulting the other parent, without being required to do so by the family court, or without any real need (such that the policy benefits are so high in relation to current income that the policy is merely a gamble to enrich the beneficiaries, not replace lost income). In these situations, it would be unfair to markedly reduce the current child support obligation to pay the life insurance premiums.
Furthermore, if the parent purchases a “whole life” insurance policy, or some other similar insurance product, that actually accrues value that the parent can borrow against or recover in the future, then the parent should not receive a dollar-for-dollar reduction in the current child support obligation for the premiums paid. It would be patently unfair for a parent to pay premiums on a whole life policy to avoid paying current child support, and then after the child turns 18, cash in the policy, thereby financially benefitting from this action. In such situations, the minor child does receive some inchoate current benefit by receiving the protection of the insurance policy, a benefit that a family court can consider in calculating child support. But the child should not be deprived of a substantial measure of current child support so that the parent can receive a future windfall when the policy is cashed in or borrowed against years down the road.
In its final child support award, a family court may craft a child support award that will accommodate “the needs of the child or children or the circumstances of the parent or parents.” W.Va.Code, 48-13-702 [2001]. This means a family court may, in its discretion, require a parent to purchase a life insurance policy, and may credit all, some or none of the premiums against the parent’s child support obligation.
I otherwise respectfully concur with the majority opinion.
