TERAN v RITTLEY
Docket No. 322016
Michigan Court of Appeals
Submitted October 8, 2015. Decided November 17, 2015.
313 Mich App 197
Leave to appeal denied 500 Mich 877.
Dоcket No. 322016. Submitted October 8, 2015, at Petoskey. Decided November 17, 2015, at 9:05 a.m. Leave to appeal denied 500 Mich 877.
Plaintiff Susana E. Narvaez Teran gave birth to a child in Ecuador in 2006. Defendant Michael R. Rittley is the child‘s father. Shortly after the child‘s birth, defendant left Ecuador and did not leave plaintiff any contact information. In July 2007, in Virginia, plaintiff sued defendant for child support. Defendant submitted a Michigan driver‘s license to the Virginia court and asserted that his official residence was in Johannesburg, Michigan, in Otsego County. The Virginia court dismissed the case in 2008 for lack of jurisdiction. In September 2010, plaintiff filed the instant paternity action in the Otsego Circuit Court to determine custody, parental responsibility, and child support. Defendant, through counsel, filed an appearance. In April 2011, paternity testing confirmed that defendant was the child‘s father, the parties stipulated to entry of an order of filiation, and the matter was referred to the Friend of the Court (FOC) for child support. The FOC recommended setting defendant‘s child support obligation at $1,211 a month. In March 2012, defendant moved to dismiss the case on the basis that the circuit court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction, and the court, Michael K. Cooper, J., denied defendant‘s motion. In September 2013, four months after a two-day trial, the court issued a written opinion and order setting defendant‘s child support obligation at the amount recommended by the FOC—$1,211 a month. Plaintiff filed motions to make the child support retroactive and require defendant to pay plaintiff‘s attorney fees. The court ruled from the bench that child support was to be retrоactive to February 7, 2008, the date the case was dismissed in Virginia. The court also ordered defendant to pay directly to plaintiff‘s attorney a sum of $23,000 for plaintiff‘s attorney fees. Defendant appealed.
The Court of Appeals held:
1. The circuit court properly exercised jurisdiction in this case. The circuit court has subject-matter jurisdiction over paternity actions, child custody, and child support. Defendant argued that under
2. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it awarded plaintiff $23,000 in attorney fees, payable directly to plaintiff‘s Michigan attorney, part of which was to pay for plaintiff‘s attorney in Florida. Plaintiff first hired Florida attorney Paul Finizio, who did not file an appearance in the case. Finizio found Michigan attorney Jodi Doak to represent plaintiff in the proceedings in Michigan. In general, attorney fees are not recoverable. However, there are exceptions. MCR 3.206(C)(2) permits a court to award attorney fees in domestic relations actions when the party requesting the fees alleges facts sufficient to show that he or she is unable to bear the cost of an attorney, and that the other party is able to pay. In this case, $23,000 was proper, as was the requirement that Doak pay a portion of the fees to Finizio because Finizio was necessary to the case. Attorney fees should compensate an attorney for the expenses he or she incurred, including overhead and the cost of other staff. Attorney fees should not be withheld from an out-of-state attorney who did not file an appearance in the matter, when the attorney was necessary to the case.
3. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it ordered that the child support begin in 2008, the time at which the case in Virginia was dismissed. A child support obligation may be retroactive to the date the complaint was filed when a defendant avoids service of process or otherwise delays the imposition of process. In this case, defendant appeared in the Virginia court and successfully obtained dismissal of the case, and defendant attempted to do the same here in Michigan. The circuit court properly ordered that child support should begin at the time plaintiff first sought it.
4. The circuit court did not clearly err or abuse its discretion by refusing to deviate from the amount of child support recom-
Affirmed.
1. DOMESTIC RELATIONS — CHILD SUPPORT — CALCULATING AMOUNT — DIFFERENT COSTS OF LIVING.
As long as a child support amount is not unjust or inappropriate, a trial court must order child support as recommended under Michigan‘s child support formula (MCSF); a trial court generally may not deviate, on the basis of any differences between the costs of living in the area where the child resides and the area where the payer parent resides, from the amount of child support recommended; that is, the payer parent‘s child support obligation should not be reduced when the cost of living in the area where the child resides is lower than the cost of living in the area where the payer parent resides; the MCSF is founded on the needs of the child and the actual resources of each parent.
2. DOMESTIC RELATIONS — PATERNITY AND CHILD SUPPORT — JURISDICTION — CIRCUIT COURT.
A circuit court has subject-matter jurisdiction over paternity proceedings and proceedings involving child custody and child support; when the mother or the child does not live within the state, venue is proper in the county where the putative father may be found; venue may be proper in Michigan even when nonе of the parties live in Michigan; in the absence of evidence to the contrary; a putative father who receives notice of an action and who enters an appearance in the matter has been “found,” for purposes of
Jodi J. Doak, PC (by Jodi J. Doak), for plaintiff.
Bailey Smith & Bailey, PC (by John J. Smith), for defendant.
Before: MARKEY, P.J., and STEPHENS and RIORDAN, JJ.
I. SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In 2006, while defendant was in the military and stationed abroad in Ecuador, he fathered a child with plaintiff. The child was born on November 18, 2006, in Quito, Ecuador. Defendant left Ecuador shortly after the child was born and did not leave plaintiff any contact information.
In July 2007, plaintiff sued defendant for child support in the commonwealth of Virginia. Defendant, represented by counsel, submitted to the Virginia court a Michigan driver‘s license and asserted that his official residence was in Johannesburg, Michigan, in Otsego County, where he had paid taxes since 1982. The Virginia court dismissed the complaint for lack of jurisdiction on February 7, 2008.
On September 30, 2010, plaintiff filed the instant paternity action to determine custody, parental responsibility, and child support. Defendant, through counsel, filed an appearance on December 23, 2010. The trial court permitted both parties to appear tеlephonically at scheduled hearings. A stipulated order for paternity testing was entered on April 25, 2011. DNA testing was performed on samples from the parties and the child.
On March 29, 2012, defendant filed a motion to dismiss, asserting that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction pursuant to
On May 22, 2012, the trial court issued an opinion and order denying defendant‘s motion to dismiss. The trial court ruled that it possessed subject-matter jurisdiction over an action to identify the father of a child born out of wedlock, reasoning that the language in
In May 2013, the court conducted a two-day trial regarding child support at which both plaintiff and defendant testified via telephone. The main issues were the amount of child support and whether the court should deviate from the child support formula because plaintiff and the child lived in Ecuador. Defendant presented the testimony of Stan Smith, Ph.D. (University of Chicago), whom the trial court recognized as an expert in economics. Dr. Smith testified that he examined the cost of living in Quito, Ecuador, and Washington, D.C., and converted the costs of living in those cities to the cost of living in Detroit, Michigan. According to Dr. Smith, plaintiff‘s income of $22,900 in Quito equated to $36,914 of purchasing power in Michigan, and defendant‘s income of $127,000 in Washington, D.C., equated to $89,557 of purchasing power in Michigan. Using this determination of the parties’ respective purchasing power in Michigan dollars ($36,914 and $89,557), Dr. Smith calculated that the amount of child support should be $1,021 per month. Dr. Smith further testified that in order to achieve the equivalent of $1,021 purchasing power in
On September 24, 2013, the trial court issued a written opinion and order setting the amount of child support at $1,211 a month, as the FOC had recommended. The trial court rejected defendant‘s argument that it would not be a deviation to reduce the formula-recommended child support to an amount consistent with Dr. Smith‘s testimony regarding the relative purchasing power in the different locales. The trial court also rejected defendant‘s substantive arguments that a deviation from the child support formula was warranted. The court found that defendant‘s arguments partially failed for lack of proof because defendant had not presented any evidence of the difference between the costs of living in Ecuador and El Salvador, where defendant then resided. The trial court next discussed whether it would deviate from the child support formula for the time period between July 2011 and July 2012, when defendant was living in Washington, D.C. The court reviewed caselaw from other jurisdictions, finding the reasoning of a Maryland decision, Gladis v Gladisova, 382 Md 654; 856 A2d 703 (2004), the most persuasive. The court also noted that our Supreme Court in Verbeke v Verbeke, 352 Mich 632; 90 NW2d 489 (1958), which was decided before the current statutory scheme of the child support formula, had rejected international variations in the costs of living as reasons for modifying child support.
The trial court first reasoned that defendant‘s proposal would be administratively unworkable, require expert testimony in many cases, place undue burdens on litigants and the judicial system, and delay entry of support orders. Second, the court reasoned that child
Subsequently, plaintiff moved the court to make the support order retroactive and for an order requiring defendant to pay plaintiff‘s attorney fees. The trial court held a hearing on the motions on March 7, 2014. As to retroaсtivity, the court ruled from the bench that it was appropriate under
As noted, defendant appeals by right, contending that the trial court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction, and if it did have subject-matter jurisdiction, that it abused its discretion by ordering the amount of child
II. SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether a court has subject-matter jurisdiction is a question of law that this Court reviews de novo. Polkton Charter Twp v Pellegrom, 265 Mich App 88, 98; 693 NW2d 170 (2005). A jurisdictional defect may be raised at any time. Id. at 97.
B. DISCUSSION
We find defendant‘s argument that the circuit court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff‘s paternity action to be without merit. Nothing in
Subject-matter jurisdiction “is the right of the court to exercise judicial power over a class of cases, not the particular case before it.” Grebner v Oakland Co Clerk, 220 Mich App 513, 516; 560 NW2d 351 (1996). “It is the abstract power to try a case of the kind or character of the one pending, but not to determine whether the particular case is one that presents a cause of action or, under the particular facts, is triable before the court in which it is pending.” Id. The Legislature has conferred subject-matter jurisdiction on circuit courts as follows:
Circuit courts have original jurisdiction to hear and determine all civil claims and remedies, except where exclusive jurisdiction is given in the constitution or by statute to some other court or where the circuit courts are denied jurisdiction by the constitution or statutes of this state. [
MCL 600.605 .]
Thus, the circuit court is presumed to have subject-matter jurisdiction over a civil action unless Michigan‘s Constitution or a statute expressly prohibits it from exercising jurisdiction or gives to another court еxclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit. Id.; In re Petition by Wayne Co Treasurer, 265 Mich App 285, 291; 698 NW2d 879 (2005).
Nevertheless, defendant argues that the circuit court does not have subject-matter jurisdiction to identify the father of a child born out of wedlock and to award child support when the father, mother, and child all reside outside of Michigan. In support of his argument, defendant asserts that
Except as otherwise provided in section 6b or 6e, if the circuit court of this state does not have prior continuing jurisdiction over a child, the action shall be submitted to the circuit court of the county where the child resides or may be found by complaint or complaint and motion for order to show cause.
This Court has held that
Defendant asserts that
Defendant‘s argument is without merit. The language used in
Moreover, defendant‘s argument is premised on his not residing in Michigan, but the statute on which he
III. ATTORNEY FEES
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a trial court‘s “decision whether to award attorney fees and the determination of the reasonableness of the fees for an abuse of discretion.” In re Temple Marital Trust, 278 Mich App 122, 128; 748 NW2d 265 (2008). We review a trial court‘s findings of fact underlying the award of attorney fees for clear error, and we review any underlying issues of law de novo. Id. A trial court abuses its discretion when it selects “an outcome outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes.” Id.
B. DISCUSSION
Plaintiff initially hired Paul Finizio, a Spanish-speaking attorney with an office in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, to help her obtain child support from defen-
Following trial, Doak again moved the court for payment of attorney fees. Doak asserted the total amount due for her and Finizio‘s services was $35,000, of which $14,000 had been paid. Plaintiff provided the court with detailed billing statements for Doak and Finizio. According to Finizio‘s statement, he had billed aрproximately $19,500 and was owed approximately $11,500.3 According to Doak‘s statement, she had billed approximately $15,300 and was owed approximately $9,600.4 The trial court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $23,000 in attorney fees less any payments defendant had already made.
Defendant‘s primary argument is that the court abused its discretion when it ordered defendant to pay attorney fees of $23,000 because Doak‘s fee was only $15,326, Finizio was not entitled to attorney fees because he never appeared in this case, and there is no evidence that Finizio was necessary. Additionally, de-
Generally, under the “American rule,” attorney fees are not recoverable in the absence of a statute, court rule, or common-law exception that provides to the contrary. Dessart v Burak, 470 Mich 37, 42; 678 NW2d 615 (2004). MCR 3.206(C)(2) permits a court to award attorney fees in a domestic relations action when the party requesting the fees alleges “facts sufficient to show that... the party is unable to bear the expense of the action, and that the other party is able to pay[.]” “The party requesting the attorney fees has the burden of showing facts sufficient to justify the award.” Borowsky v Borowsky, 273 Mich App 666, 687; 733 NW2d 71 (2007).
In this case, plaintiff testified that she earned $23,000 a year ($1,916 a month) and that her monthly expenses included $400 for her daughter‘s school, $400 for rent, $600 for food, and $450 for child care. In contrast, defendant testified that he made approximately $127,000 a year, and that he owned a house in Washington, D.C., that he rented out. The government paid defendant‘s housing and other expenses in El Salvador. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the trial court did not clearly err by finding that plaintiff was unable to bear the expense of the action and that defendant had the ability to pay. MCR 3.206(C)(2).
We also conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by including in a reasonable attorney fee payable to Doak the partial reimbursement of expenses plaintiff incurred using Finizio‘s services. We note that “there exists no precise formula by which a court may assess the reasonableness of an attorney fee,” and that the court must consider “the expense[s] incurred” when establishing a reasonable attorney fee.
“Clearly, attorney fees are not meant to compensate only work performed personally by members of the bar. Rather, the term must refer to a reasonable fee for the work product of an attorney that necessarily includes support staff. The rule allowing an award of attorney fees has traditionally anticipated the allowance of a fee sufficient to cover the office overhead of an attorney together with a reasonable profit. The inclusion of factor 5, the expenses incurred, reflects the traditional understanding that attorney fees should be sufficient to recoup at least a portion оf overhead costs.... Thus, until a statute or a court rule specifies otherwise, the attorney fees must take into account the work not only of attorneys, but also of secretaries, messengers, paralegals, and others whose labor contributes to the work product for which an attorney bills a client, and it must also take account of other expenses and profit.” [Allard v State Farm Ins Co, 271 Mich App 394, 404-405; 722 NW2d 268 (2006), quoting Joerger v Gordon Food Service, Inc, 224 Mich App 167, 181-182; 568 NW2d 365 (1997) (citation omitted).]
We conclude that the trial court did not clearly err by finding that plaintiff‘s retention of Finizio was a necessary expense. Indeed, it appears highly probable, given the complexity of a case involving both international and language barriers, that this action might never have come to fruition without Finizio‘s involvement. Finizio successfully found an attorney to represent plaintiff in Michigan, and the record suрports that a Spanish-speaking attorney was necessary in order to successfully communicate legal issues to plaintiff. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by awarding attorney fees in an amount that at least partially included the expense of utilizing Finizio‘s services.
The question is not whether the law firm retained is in-state or out-of-state; the question is whether retention of the firm is necessary. It is the trial court‘s duty to determine whether retention of the firm was necessary. Absent an abuse of discretion, the decision of the trial court should not be reversed. Just because the firm employed is out-of-state does not make retention unnecessary. Accordingly, we decline to rule that it is prima facie unreasonable to award attorney fees to out-of-state counsel.
In sum, we conclude that the trial court did not clearly err by finding that plaintiff‘s retention of Finizio was a necessary expense, and it did not abuse its discretion in awarding Doak attorney fees in an amount that at least partially included the cost of Finizio‘s services.
IV. RETROACTIVE CHILD SUPPORT
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review child support orders to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion. Holmes v Holmes, 281 Mich App 575, 586; 760 NW2d 300 (2008).
B. DISCUSSION
The trial court did not abuse its discretion by commencing defendant‘s child support obligation as of the date the Virginia support action was dismissed—February 7, 2008. The retroactive child support order was permitted by
A child support obligation is only retroactive to the date that the paternity complaint was filed unless any of the following circumstancеs exist:
(a) The defendant was avoiding service of process.
(b) The defendant threatened or coerced through domestic violence or other means the complainant not to file a proceeding under this act.
(c) The defendant otherwise delayed the imposition of a support obligation.
In this case, the trial court determined that both Subsection (a) and Subsection (c) applied. We find it unnecessary to determine whether the trial court clearly erred by finding that defendant was avoiding service of process because the record supports the trial court‘s conclusion that “defendant otherwise delayed the imposition of a support obligation,”
V. DEVIATION FROM THE CHILD SUPPORT FORMULA
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“A trial court must presumptively follow the MCSF [Michigan Child Support Formula] when determining the child support obligation of parents.” Ewald, 292 Mich App at 714. “This Court reviews de novo as a question of law whether the trial court has properly applied the MCSF.” Id. Any factual findings of the trial court underlying its determination regarding child support are reviewed for clear error, and any discretionary rulings that a statute or the MCSF permits are reviewed for an abuse of that discretion. Id. at 714-715.
B. DISCUSSION
Defendant asserts that the trial court erred by not deviating from the MCSF-recommended child support on the basis of the costs of living relative to where the child resides and where defendant, the support payer, resides. As an issue of first impression, we hold that the trial court may not, аs a general rule, deviate from the MCSF-recommended child support on the basis of any differences between the general costs of living where the parents and the child reside. We also conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by finding that the MCSF-recommended child support was not “unjust or inappropriate” as required by
Except as otherwise provided in this section, the court shall order child support in an amount determined by application of the child support formula developed by the state friend of the court bureau as required in section 19 of the friend of the court act,
MCL 552.519 . The court mаy enter an order that deviates from the formula if the court determines from the facts of the case that application of the child support formula would be unjust or inappropriate and sets forth in writing or on the record all of the following:(a) The child support amount determined by application of the child support formula.
(b) How the child support order deviates from the child support formula.
(c) The value of property or other support awarded instead of the payment of child support, if applicable.
(d) The reasons why application of the child support formula would be unjust or inappropriate in the case. [
MCL 552.605(2) (emphasis added).]
As the trial court recognized, other jurisdictions are split on the issue whether differences in costs of living based on geоgraphic location should factor into determining child support. In Gladis, 382 Md at 657, the father lived in the United States, and the mother and child lived in the Slovak Republic. The trial court concluded that applying the Maryland child support guidelines was “inappropriate when there is a wide disparity in the cost of living,” and therefore reduced the amount of the monthly award from $497 to $225. Id. at 660.5 The mother filed a motion to amend that
decision, and a different judge ordered the father to pay $497 per month in accordance with the guidelines. Id. at 661. Maryland‘s highest appellate court, the Maryland Court of Appeals, issued a writ of certiorari before any action was taken by the Court of Special Appeals, Maryland‘s intermediate appellate court. Id.
In Gladis, 382 Md at 665-668, after recognizing the conflicting views among state courts that have addrеssed the issue, the Maryland Court of Appeals held “that the better position is to prohibit courts from deviating from the Guidelines based on the standards of living in different areas.” Id. at 668.6 The court reasoned that the Maryland legislature did not explicitly make the standards of living in relevant geographic areas part of the child support formula, that the child should enjoy the standard of living that he or she would have enjoyed if the child‘s parents had stayed together, and that there is nothing wrong with a child support award that would allow a child to enjoy an above-average standard of living that corresponds
In contrast, other jurisdictions have allowed differences in costs of living to be a proper factor in determining whether to deviate from child support guidelines. In People ex rel AK, 72 P3d 402, 404 (Colo App, 2003), the court found that the trial court erred by not considering whether the difference between living expenses in Colorado and Russia would render applying the guidelines “inequitable, unjust, or inappropriate.” Id. at 405 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Similarly, in Booth v Booth, 44 Ohio St 3d 142, 144; 541 NE2d 1028 (1989), the Supreme Court of Ohio addressed whether the trial court erred by deviating from the child support guidelines because of the “substantial difference” between the parents’ costs of living in New York and Ohio. The court found that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in deviating from the guidelines. Id. According to the court, after “a careful review of the facts and circumstances of this cause, we find that the child support order herein was proper in all respects, and was neither unreasonable, arbitrary nor unconscionable.” Id.
Like the trial court, we agree that the reasoning of the Maryland Court of Appeals in Gladis is persuasive. But, more importantly, principles of statutory construction dictate that we affirm the trial court. This
The primary goal of judicial interpretation of statutes is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature. The first criterion in determining intent is the specific language of the statute. The Legislature is presumed to have intended the meaning it plainly expressed. Nothing will be read into a clear statute that is not within the manifest intention of the Legislature as derived from the language of the statute itself. [Polkton Twp, 265 Mich App at 101-102 (citations omitted).]
Neither the Legislature, in
Both our Supreme Court and this Court have repeatedly held that the provisions of the MCSF are mandatory and that any deviation must be justified by strict compliance with the procedures of
Our conclusion is also consistent with caselaw predating the MCSF-enabling legislation.7 In Verbeke, the trial court ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiff $40 a week in child support. Verbeke, 352 Mich at 633. The plaintiff then moved to Germany, and the trial court modified the support order by reducing the paymеnts from $40 a week to $10 a week. Id. at 633-634. On appeal, our Supreme Court set aside the modified support order, reasoning that the defendant “did not contend that his financial condition had changed, but called attention to the fact that plaintiff could purchase more per dollar in Europe than she
Accordingly, because a difference between the cost of living at the payer parent‘s location and the cost of living at the child‘s location is not a proper basis for deviating from the child support formula, the trial court‘s application of the child support formula was not “unjust or inappropriate” under these circumstances,
We affirm. Plaintiff, as the prevailing party, may tax costs under MCR 7.219.
MARKEY, P.J., and STEPHENS and RIORDAN, JJ., concurred.
