¶ 1. Robert Meyneke appeals from the family court’s denial of his motion to modify maintenance and from the trial court’s wage-withholding order. We affirm.
¶ 2. The background facts and procedural history of this case are as follows. Robert and Judith Meyneke had been married for twenty-four years when, in October 2007, they were divorced. In the final divorce decree, the family court ordered husband to pay $6,390 per month in maintenance to wife for thirteen years. The court later adjusted the period to fifteen years on wife’s motion. At the time of the final divorce decree, husband was earning about $400,000 per year.
¶ 3. In late 2007, husband lost his job, and was not reemployed until April 2008. In May 2008, husband moved to modify spousal maintenance, arguing that the award should be adjusted downward because he expected to earn only about $300,000 per year at his new job. In June 2008, while his motion was still pending, husband unilaterally reduced his maintenance payments to $2,600 per month. Wife subsequently filed a petition for wage withholding. In October 2008, the trial court denied husband’s motion to modify, held husband in contempt for failure to pay full maintenance to wife, and ordered that if husband did not become current on his maintenance obligation within thirty days it would garnish husband’s wages. The court also awarded wife $6,510 in attorney’s fees. Husband filed a timely appeal.
¶ 4. When husband failed to purge himself of contempt within thirty days, the court issued a wage-withholding order requiring husband’s employer to withhold the amount of $6,390 per month from husband’s wages and pay all amounts withheld to wife. We subsequently granted husband’s motion to amend his appeal to include a challenge to the wage-withholding order.
¶ 5. Husband raises one argument with respect to the wage-withholding order, and several arguments with respect to the family court’s decision on his motion to modify. We address each of husband’s contentions, in turn.
¶ 6. Husband argues that the wage-withholding order violates 15 U.S.C. § 1673(b)(2) because it requires his employer to withhold more than 55% of his bi-weekly pay. This argument presents a pure issue of law which we review de novo. See
Smith v. Desautels,
¶ 7. Section 1673 restricts the garnishment of wages to certain maximum amounts, depending on circumstance. In relevant part, § 1673(b) provides as follows:
(2) The maximum part of the aggregate disposable earnings of an individual for any workweek which is subject to garnishment to enforce any order for the support of any person shall not exceed —
(A) where such individual is supporting his spouse or dependent child (other than a spouse or child with respect to whose support such order is used), 50 per centum of such individual’s disposable earnings for that week ...
(B) ...
except that, with respect to the disposable earnings of any individual for any workweek, the 50 per centum specified in clause *572 (A) shall be deemed to be 55 per centum ... if and to the extent that such earnings are subject to garnishment to enforce a support order with respect to a period which is prior to the twelve-week period which ends with the beginning of such workweek.
15 U.S.C. § 1678(b)(2).
¶ 8. The parties agree, and the trial court ruled, 1 that the cap applicable to husband’s situation is 55%. The court found that, considering his current compensation and expenses, husband’s yearly “disposable earnings” amounted to $141,989.88. It therefore reasoned that garnishment of $6,390 per month, amounting to $76,680 per year, was within the 55% allowable under § 1673(b)(2) — $76,680 being approximately 54% of $141,989.88. Husband does not quarrel with the trial court’s findings or its math. Rather, husband argues that it was inappropriate for the trial court to order his employer to withhold $6,930 from his pay on a monthly basis because — as he receives approximately two-thirds of his compensation in a year-end bonus 2 — $6,930 is more than 55% of his monthly earnings. Husband points out that the limits in § 1673(b)(2) are set out by “workweek,” and complains that the wage-withholding order, as written, mandates the garnishment of more than 55% of his bi-weekly paycheck.
¶ 9. Whatever the merits of husband’s argument, we need not address them here because husband concedes that no more than 55% of his disposable earnings are
actually
being withheld from each of his paychecks. Instead, husband argues that while he “may be getting [a] reprieve from the illegal order because his employer has refused to violate federal law, [the] specter of an enforcement action or a contempt proceeding certainly places a risk of the order being enforced and [husband] having his wages illegally attached.” In light of his employer’s compliance, and wife’s concession, made in her brief, that only 55% of each of husband’s paychecks may be garnished under § 1673(b)(2),
3
we fail to appreciate the risk of an enforcement action or contempt
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proceeding. At any rate, husband remains free to raise § 1673(b)(2) as a defense to any such action or in any such proceeding. In short, husband has failed to show how he was prejudiced by the wage-withholding order, and we therefore have no basis upon which to disturb it. See V.R.C.P. 61 (“no error or defect in any ruling or order ... is ground for . . . disturbing a judgment or order, unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice.”); see also
Perry v. Green Mountain Mall,
¶ 10. Regarding the court’s decision on the motion to modify, husband first argues that the family court failed to consider the income, current living situation, or needs of the parties. Specifically, he argues that the court erroneously excluded as irrelevant wife’s testimony as to her reasonable needs, and failed to consider husband’s ability to pay maintenance based on his current income. Finally, husband challenges the family court’s award of attorney’s fees to wife.
¶ 11. We review husband’s contentions under an abuse-of-discretion standard. See
Luce v. Cushing,
¶ 12. Husband’s first argument — that the trial court erroneously excluded as irrelevant wife’s testimony as to her reasonable needs — is unavailing. In the original divorce decree, the family court made it clear that the maintenance award was in recognition of wife’s contribution to the marriage as caregiver to the parties’ child as well as the length of the marriage, “permanent in nature,” and “intended to provide support for [wife] at a level which is consistent with the parties’ standard of living.” During wife’s cross-examination at the hearing on husband’s motion to modify, husband’s attorney questioned wife as to the details of her expenditures. As husband’s attorney progressed with his line of questioning, the following colloquy took place:
COURT: . . . You certainly don’t suggest that something has happened that would support a reduction in maintenance because of changes in her life? Like a $150,000 job at U.S. Air or something?
HUSBAND’S ATTORNEY: No. No.... I want to make sure the Court understands she is not sitting there in desperation. She doesn’t have anything that she can’t rely upon. Plus, she has the ability to earn some money and has over a little bit of the time.
COURT: That was factored into the original award.
HUSBAND’S ATTORNEY: Exactly. And that’s all I was trying to get at, your Honor.
WIFE’S ATTORNEY: I object, your Honor, because I don’t see any relevance in this. ...
*574 COURT: I think that’s what I was trying to say. So let’s move on.
HUSBAND’S ATTORNEY: . . . [W]e feel that we can show that she’s living beyond, you know, getting more money than she needs from him. . . . $2,000 she could live off of, and comfortably off of $2,000 a month from [husband], and that’s what we would present.
COURT: Well, many people do, but surely not at the predivorce standard of living.
¶ 13. We have held that changes in the financial circumstances of either or both spouses are relevant to the modification of a maintenance award.
Bullard v. Bullard,
¶ 14. We need not decide, however, the extent to which any improvements in wife’s financial circumstances would have justified reduction in her maintenance award. As evidenced by the above colloquy, husband merely sought to show that wife could live “comfortably” on a reduced maintenance award. As the court correctly ruled, testimony to this effect was irrelevant; the court did not abuse its discretion in excluding it. See
Luce,
¶ 15. Husband’s second argument — that the trial court failed to consider his ability to pay maintenance based on his current income — is also unpersuasive. First, husband’s argument rests on a faulty premise, which we take this opportunity to correct. Husband contends that the family court was obligated to consider both husband’s ability to meet his needs while meeting wife’s needs and — in a partial rehash of his first argument, wife’s ability to meet her needs independently
*575
— by virtue of 15 Y.S.A. § 752(b)(1) and (6). We have made clear that “[w]hile the factors listed in § 752 could prove helpful to a court considering a motion to modify,” a court is not obligated to consider the factors when evaluating changed circumstances.
DeKoeyer v. DeKoeyer,
¶ 16. Finally, husband argues that if we reverse and remand the court’s decision as to his motion to modify we should vacate the award of attorney’s fees. Because we affirm, we need not reach this argument.
Affirmed.
Notes
In support of that ruling, the trial court found that “[t]he order that is being enforced . . . was issued . . . more than 12 weeks ago.”
While this appeal was pending, husband filed a second motion to modify spousal maintenance, arguing that maintenance should be adjusted downward because he no longer expected to receive the majority of his unguaranteed, year-end bonus. Husband’s references, in his brief, to his revised expectations, inter alia, are the subjects of a motion to strike filed by wife which we consolidated with the merits of the case. Because we dispose of the case without reference to the challenged portions of husband’s brief, we need not reach her motion to strike, and therefore dismiss it as moot.
Chase v. Bowen,
In her brief, wife argues that the wage-withholding order complied with § 1673(b)(2) thus: “Under the withholding order issued, the trustee withholds 55% of [husband’s] aggregate disposable earnings each pay period in compliance with [§ 1673(b)(2)], At the time [husband] receives his bonus, the shortfall throughout the year is made up by calculating the arrearages . . . and paying [wife] at that time.”
Husband also argues that it was an abuse of discretion for the family court to exclude wife’s testimony as to her current financial needs because she did not testify to her needs at the evidentiary hearing for the final divorce. A motion to modify maintenance does not create a forum in which to revisit the merits of a final divorce decree per se; rather, it provides the family court with jurisdiction to modify a decree based on changed circumstances.
Cliche v. Cliche,
Cabot v. Cabot,
