667 N.E.2d 1236 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
Appellant, Tracy L. Smith, appeals the trial court's order modifying the child support obligation of the appellee, John C. Collins. We reverse.
Tracy and John married in 1984. Two children were born during the marriage. On November 22, 1989, Tracy and John petitioned the court for a dissolution of their marriage. The petition included a separation agreement which addressed custody and child support. Under the agreement, Tracy retained custody of the two minor children, subject to reasonable visitation by John, and John agreed to pay $1,200 each month in child support ($600 per child).
The parties' petition for dissolution was heard by a referee who found that each party had voluntarily entered into the separation agreement and that each party was satisfied with its terms. The referee further found that the separation agreement was fair, just, and equitable and recommended that a dissolution be granted incorporating the terms of the agreement. Neither party objected to the referee's report and recommendation. On March 7, 1990, the trial court adopted the referee's report and recommendation and dissolved the parties' marriage. The court incorporated the parties' separation agreement, as written, into the decree of dissolution and made the agreement an order of the court.
On April 12, 1990, five weeks after the parties' dissolution, the state legislature enacted R.C.
Under R.C.
Based on the statutory support schedule and the ten percent rule, John twice moved to modify his child support obligation. John first moved to modify on September 19, 1991. The parties resolved that motion on June 3, 1992, through an agreed journal entry in which John agreed to pay $1,200 per month in child support as originally set forth in the separation agreement. John next moved to modify on December 20, 1993. The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on that motion on March 24, 1994. After the hearing, the court reduced John's support obligation from $1,200 per month, as contained in the agreed journal entry, to $794.78 per month, as calculated under the statutory support schedule. In their briefs, the parties agree that in reducing John's support obligation, the trial court relied on the ten percent rule found in R.C.
A completed child support computation worksheet was not included in the trial court's record of this case. As a result, the trial court committed reversible error, and the case must be remanded for completion of the worksheet. The first assignment of error is sustained. *103
In his first motion to reduce his child support obligation, John specifically requested the court to "set [his obligation] within the support guidelines." John was obviously aware of the statutory support schedule when he filed his first motion to modify, and he was free to argue that his support obligation, as set forth in the separation agreement, should be reduced based on the modification provisions in subsection (B)(4). However, instead of making such an argument in favor of modification, John entered into the agreed journal entry. In that entry, John agreed to pay the support obligation set forth in the separation agreement, even though that obligation clearly exceeded the statutory support schedule by more than ten percent.
The child support statute does not contain any language prohibiting a party from voluntarily undertaking a child support obligation in an amount greater than the statutory level. Moreover, if a party voluntarily undertakes a child support *104 obligation in an amount greater than the statutory level, it can be reasonably presumed that the increased obligation would inure to the best interest of the parties' children.
The only evidence in the record indicates that John, with full knowledge of the support schedule, voluntarily undertook a child support obligation in an amount greater than the statutory level. Nothing in the record suggests that this support obligation was unjust or inappropriate, or contrary to the best interest of the children. Under these circumstances, it was within the trial court's discretion to adopt the agreed journal entry as the child support order of the court even though that order deviated from the statutory support schedule by more than ten percent.
In Marker, the Supreme Court cautioned that "any court-ordered deviation from the applicable worksheet and the basic child support schedule must be entered by the court in its journal and must include findings of fact to support such determination."
On remand, the trial court is instructed to complete a child support computation worksheet and to include the worksheet in the record. At that time, John may still argue that he is entitled to a reduction in his child support obligation. However, John may not rely solely on the ten percent rule to support his argument. Rather, he must show a substantial change of circumstances beyond the statutory ten percent deviation in order for the trial court to modify his current support obligation.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
BAIRD, P.J., concurs in Part I, Part II(B), and Part III.
QUILLIN, J., concurs in Part I and the judgment.