Case Information
*1 #27196-rev & rem-SLZ
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
* * * *
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA,
EX REL., FATIMA K. TEGEGNE Plaintiff and Appellee,
v. TADESSE M. ANDALO, Defendant and Appellant.
* * * *
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT MINNEHAHA COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA * * * *
THE HONORABLE SUSAN M. SABERS
Judge
* * * *
RICHARD L. JOHNSON
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorney for plaintiff
and appellee.
STEVEN K. RABUCK of
Nichols & Rabuck, PC
Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant
and appellant. * * * *
CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON MAY 26, 2015 OPINION FILED 07/01/15 *2 ZINTER, Justice
[¶1.] Fatima Tegegne (Mother) brought an action against Tadesse Andalo (Father) to establish Father’s child support obligation and to determine arrearages. With respect to arrearages, a child support referee recommended that Father receive a credit for mortgage payments as well as for food, clothing, and school supplies Father had purchased for the children while he was absent from the home. The circuit court adopted the recommendation in part and rejected it in part. The court gave Father no credit for mortgage payments and food, but it allowed a credit for clothing and school supplies. Father appeals the denial of credit for the mortgage payments and food. We reverse and remand to accept the referee’s recommendation.
Facts and Procedural History
[¶2.] Mother and Father lived together, had two children, but never married. During the course of the relationship, Father made a down payment on a house, and Mother and Father each paid one-half of the mortgage payments. After they separated, Mother obtained physical custody of the children. Father obtained his own housing and has been absent from the familial home ever since. Father, however, continued to pay one-half of the mortgage payments. When the house was later sold, Mother and Father divided the proceeds equally.
[¶3.] Mother subsequently brought this action to establish Father’s child support obligation and to determine arrearages. The circuit court approved the child support referee’s recommendation for future support in the full amount required by the child support guidelines. That award has not been appealed. *3 [¶4.] Father’s appeal arises out of the circuit court’s rejection of the referee’s recommendation that Father receive a credit for the mortgage payments and food he allegedly provided when he was absent from the home. 1 In the proceedings below, Father requested that he receive a credit for the mortgage payments as well as for food, clothing, school supplies, and other items he provided the children after the parties’ separation. Father testified and introduced bank statements, sales receipts, and other documentation to support his request. Mother, however, objected to a credit for the mortgage payments and food. 2 She contended that Father had no right to a credit for mortgage payments, and she disputed that food was provided to the children. She did agree that Father provided the other items for the children.
[¶5.] The referee determined that Father’s child support arrearages for the time he was absent from the home would have been $26,130 if the calculation were made under the child support guidelines. The referee, however, determined that Father should be given the credits he requested because his expenditures constituted “maintenance, education, and support” of the children within the meaning of the statute governing child support arrearages. See SDCL 25-7-6.1. 1. This matter was considered by the referee on two occasions. On the first occasion, the referee recommended a credit for a number of things, including the mortgage payments and food. The circuit court remanded for reconsideration. The referee conducted a new evidentiary hearing and affirmed his prior recommendation.
2. Mother also contended that any credit for the mortgage should be reduced by
the amount Father received from the sale of the house. However, Mother and Father divided the proceeds of the sale equally. Additionally, Mother has not pursued this argument on appeal. Therefore, we decline to address the issue.
And because the credits were greater than the scheduled child support, the referee recommended that Father owed no arrearages. In making his recommendation, the referee specifically found Mother’s assertion that Father never purchased food for the children was not credible.
[¶6.] The circuit court rejected the referee’s recommended credit for the mortgage payments. The court noted that Father was “financially bound to make those mortgage payments due to a separate, binding financial obligation to which he and [Mother], as non-married persons, had voluntarily agreed.” The court further noted that Father received benefits from the mortgage payments because they increased his equity in the house, which increased the amount of his proceeds from the sale of the house.
[¶7.] The circuit court also rejected the referee’s recommended credit for food purchases. The court relied on Mother’s general denial that Father provided food. The circuit court concluded that the referee clearly erred in finding that Mother’s testimony was not credible. The court did, however, allow Father a credit for the school supplies, clothing, and other items that Mother did not dispute were provided.
[¶8.] Thus, the court ordered Father to pay $23,165.68, the scheduled amount of arrearages less a credit for the school supplies, clothing, and other items that Mother agreed Father had purchased for the children ($26,130 scheduled support – $2,964.32 credits = $23,165.68). Father appeals the circuit court’s disallowance of mortgage payments (a credit of $25,517.97). Father also appeals *5 the court’s conclusion that the referee clearly erred in finding that Father purchased food for the children (a credit of $2,241.08).
Decision
[¶9.]
We generally “review the decision to grant or deny child support under
the abuse of discretion standard.”
Kauth v. Bartlett
,
Mortgage Payments SDCL 25-7-6.1 obligates parents, who are absent from the home, to pay
child support for their children. If they fail to furnish “maintenance, education, and support” for their children, they are obligated to pay the minimum amount required by the child support guidelines. SDCL 25-7-6.1 . 3 Thus, the question is the extent to which Father, when absent from the home, failed to furnish “maintenance, 3. SDCL 25-7-6.1 provides in relevant part:
The parents of a child are jointly and severally obligated for the necessary maintenance, education, and support of the child in accordance with their respective means. Until established by a court order, the minimum child support obligation of a parent who fails to furnish maintenance, education, and support for his child, following a continued absence from the home, is the obligor’s share of the amount shown in the support guidelines, commencing on the first day of the absence.
education, and support” for his children. If he failed to do so, he is liable for the amount called for under the child support guidelines. See id. Mother argues that, in considering whether Father failed to maintain
and support his children, SDCL 25-7-6.1 does not allow consideration of money he paid directly to the mortgagee. Mother points out that the mortgage payments went to the bank, not to her. Mother also contends that a mortgage is a separate legal obligation that should not be considered absent the parties’ agreement. Mother points out that Father received benefits from his mortgage payments in the form of tax benefits and accumulating equity. Thus, Mother argues that mortgage payments may not be considered in making an arrearage determination under SDCL 25-7-6.1. We disagree. By making the mortgage payments, Father assisted in providing
housing for the children. We have considered the provision of housing as
maintenance and support for determining child support arrearages under SDCL 25-
7-6.1.
See Huffaker v. Huffaker
,
military housing at no cost.
Huffaker
,
Mother also points out that the obligor paid an additional $1,000 per month to the obligee. Id. Because the children in Huffaker were supported by cash payments and free housing, Mother contends that Huffaker is distinguishable. But neither of these facts detracts from the central point that the provision of housing constitutes maintenance and support, which is what is required to be considered in determining arrearages under SDCL 25-7-6.1. Moreover, Mother’s position is inconsistent with the meaning of
“maintenance” and “support” in SDCL 25-7-6.1. Clearly, housing is necessary to
maintain and support children.
See Huffaker
,
the mortgage. Housing is necessary to support children, and it makes no difference whether the housing is provided in an owned home or through mortgages, leases, or other contractual arrangements. In this case, Father paid one-half the cost of the house by making one-
half of the monthly mortgage payments. Further, Mother and the children received
the benefit of the payments. Mother and the children chose to continue occupying
the house after the parties separated. Therefore, Father’s mortgage payments must
be considered maintenance and support of the children in determining arrearages
under SDCL 25-7-6.1.
Mother’s reliance on
Hirzel v. Ooten
,
1987519 (Ohio Ct. App., May 12, 2010), is misplaced. Hirzel involved a proceeding to determine ongoing support. The trial court ordered that, in lieu of ongoing child support required under the guidelines, the obligor was to directly pay mortgage payments and lawn care services without providing any cash to the obligee. Id. ¶ 20. The court also awarded obligor sole ownership of the residence, including possession of that residence when the child turned eighteen or graduated from high school. Id. The Ohio Court of Appeals noted that under this order, the custodial parent was deprived of “discretion . . . in how to allocate the child support for the minor child.” Id. ¶ 21. The appeals court also noted that the child’s need for clothing and food clearly outweighed the need for lawn care services. Id. ¶ 22. The appeals court concluded that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing these “deviations” from the child support guidelines in a proceeding to determine ongoing support. Id. In today’s case, Mother was awarded the full amount of ongoing child *10 support required under the guidelines, and we are not considering deviations from those guidelines. Therefore, Mother retained the discretion to allocate support among various necessities of the children. Furthermore, the children in this case were not placed in the position of being deprived of clothing and food at the expense of lawn care. Hirzel is not helpful in cases like this involving a determination of a parent’s maintenance and support provided before any order of support had been entered.
Food Mother and Father presented conflicting evidence on the question
whether Father provided food for the children. After listening to the testimony of both parties, the referee examined Father’s receipts and found that Mother’s assertions were not credible. The referee noted that the receipts were evidence that Father purchased food; and Mother did not offer any evidence, other than a general denial, contradicting Father’s claim that the food was purchased for the children. The circuit court reversed, concluding that the referee clearly erred in adopting Father’s assertion that he had provided food for the children. Father argues that the circuit court erred in overturning the referee’s credibility finding. “A circuit court may not overturn a referee’s findings unless the record
reflects that, based upon its own review of all the evidence, the court is left with a
definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.”
Tovsland v. Reub
, 2004
S.D. 93, ¶ 12,
resolution of this credibility dispute was a matter for the referee as the fact finder.
“[A]s we have often noted, ‘the fact finder . . . ha[s] the advantage of hearing
testimony of witnesses and [can] directly judge their credibility. As a reviewing
court, neither the circuit court nor this Court should attempt to assume such a
role.’”
Orth v. Stoebner & Permann Constr., Inc.
,
determine the credibility of Mother and Father. After considering the evidence introduced at the evidentiary hearing, we are not left with a definite and firm conviction that the referee clearly erred in making his credibility finding. The circuit court erred in concluding otherwise. *12 Reversed and remanded to adopt the recommendation of the referee. GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and SEVERSON, WILBUR, and KERN,
Justices, concur.
