Mark WARNER, Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
v.
Deborah Elaine WARNER, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*267 Timothy R. Askew, Jr., Sanford, for Appellant/Cross-Appellee.
Patricia L. Strowbridge of Patricia L. Strowbridge, P.A., Law Offices of Strowbridge & Newnum, Orlando, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
GOSHORN, Judge.
In this appeal and cross-appeal of the final judgment dissolving the marriage between Mark Warner [husband] and Deborah Warner [wife], the parties allege error in the trial court's decision on the issues of attorney's fees, imputation of income to the husband, distribution of the proceeds of an employment buy-out agreement, the husband's obligation for the children's medical expenses, child support arrearages, and interest on the payments of equitable distribution, child support arrearages and attorney's fees. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
The parties were married in July 1975 and had two daughters, Kelly (born June 13, 1981) and Meredith (born October 27, 1987). They separated in April 1991 and divorced in June 1996. The husband's employment history is mercurial. He has been employed by a number of different advertising firms, and, in the past five years, his earned income has ranged from zero (a period of unemployment) to $80,000. At the time the dissolution judgment was entered, the husband was earning $42,000 in his own advertising firm. The wife's poor health precludes her from being employed. The Social Security Administration has declared her permanently and totally disabled and pays her disability benefits of $470 per month, plus medical coverage.
Pre-dissolution, the husband was ordered to make temporary child support payments. In May 1994, the husband became employed at an annual salary of $55,000, triggering the wife to seek upward modification of the temporary child support award. The trial court denied the wife's motion and the wife appealed to this court. See Warner v. Warner,
Following the dissolution hearing, the trial court concluded that the husband was capable of earning $70,914, the amount of the husband's gross income for 1995, and imputed that amount to the husband for the purposes of determining alimony, child support, support arrearages, and an award of attorney's fees. Permanent alimony was set at $1.00 per month, with the court reserving jurisdiction to increase the award when and if the husband gained the ability to pay more. The husband was ordered to pay the child support arrearage at the rate of $200 monthly without interest. He was also ordered to maintain medical insurance on the children and to reimburse the wife 100 percent of all out-of-pocket medical expenses. The court found the $36,000 buy-out the husband received from his former firm, Warner, Gallaspy and Lobel [WGL], was a marital asset and ordered the husband to pay the wife $18,000 at the rate of $350 per month without interest. Finally, as to attorney's fees, the husband was ordered to pay the wife's attorney $500 per month until he had paid the full $38,000 that the court found was owed. No interest was ordered on the fee obligation.
ATTORNEY'S FEES
The only evidence with regard to the wife's attorney's fees was the wife's testimony that she lacked the ability to pay her own fees, which she placed at "about $38,000." The trial court found that the wife's attorney's fees of $38,000 were reasonable and that the wife had a need for fees and the *268 husband had the ability to pay the fees. The court made no findings as to the number of hours reasonably expended or an hourly rate. The court's failure to make those findings was error. See Abernethy v. Fishkin,
Remand for the requisite findings is not appropriate here because the wife failed to bring forth any evidence to support such findings.[1]See Davis v. Davis,
We point out that there is a difference between establishing a need for fees and establishing what a reasonable fee award should be. The latter requires evidence detailing exactly what services were performed, the hours expended, and the hourly rate so that the opposing party can challenge the fee on those bases and so that a reasonable fee can be determined. Without any evidence of those factors, there is nothing to support an actual award. The party failing to establish its attorney's fees claim is not entitled to a second opportunity to make the requisite showing. See Powell v. Barnes,
IMPUTATION OF INCOME
The final judgment imputed an annual income of $70,914 to the husband for the purpose of setting alimony, child support, support arrearages, and attorney's fees. Paragraph 61.30(2)(b), Florida Statutes (1995) provides that income may be imputed to an underemployed parent
when such employment or underemployment is found to be voluntary on that parent's part, absent physical or mental incapacity or other circumstances over which the parent has no control. In the event of such voluntary unemployment or underemployment, the employment potential and probable earnings level of the parent shall be determined based upon his or her recent work history, occupational qualifications, and prevailing earnings level in the community....
The trial court did not make specific findings of fact concerning the husband's probable and potential earnings level, source of imputed income and actual income, and the record fails to support the imputation of income to the husband. Nothing suggests he was voluntarily underemployed or that he had been anything less than diligent in making *269 efforts to improve his financial picture. To the contrary, the record demonstrates that the husband has sought to be employed at levels equal to or better than what he held at any given time. Merely because he earned $70,000 the year prior to the dissolution hearing does not mean the husband was voluntarily underemployed when he was forced by circumstances to open his own agency. The absence of specific findings or record evidence to support the imputation of income mandates reversal. See Woodard v. Woodard,
BUY-OUT AGREEMENT
Eight months after the petition for dissolution was filed, the husband's former advertising firm, WGL, agreed to pay the husband a total of $36,000 in "full and complete settlement of all issues and disputes between ... [WGL and the husband]." The stated purpose of the agreement was to "compensate [the husband] for his past creative efforts." There is no evidence that the payments were based on the husband's services after the filing of the petition for dissolution, and the husband offered no reason why this asset should be distributed other than 50/50. We agree with the trial court that the WGL payments were marital assets subject to equitable distribution and affirm the court's distribution of this marital asset.
MEDICAL EXPENSES
The husband contends, and the wife concedes, that the dissolution judgment must be modified to limit the husband's responsibility for medical expenses to only those which are "reasonable and necessary." A dollar limitation on the husband's liability is also required. See McDaniel v. McDaniel,
The wife's concern regarding the fairness of limiting the husband's liability for unreimbursed medical expenses while leaving hers uncapped may be addressed by a petition for modification of the husband's limit in the event of a catastrophic illness or accident. We agree that the husband should not be absolved of responsibility for paying an equitable share of any such extraordinary expense just because a dollar limit is set for the routine medical expenditures.
CHILD SUPPORT ARREARAGE
The wife was entitled to an increase in child support only retroactive to August 22, 1994, the date on which she filed her notice to the husband that she was seeking increased support. See Wertheim v. Wertheim,
INTEREST
The trial court specifically declined to impose interest on the $18,000 the husband was to pay the wife as equitable distribution of the WGL agreement and rejected the wife's request for interest on the child support arrearage. On appeal, the wife contends interest should have been awarded on the support arrearage and on the $18,000 equitable distribution.
We agree that interest should have been awarded on the child support arrearage. See Nelson-Higdon v. Higdon,
We disagree, however, that the court erred in refusing to award interest on the equitable distribution payments. The decision to award interest on such payments is a matter within a trial court's discretion. Rey v. Rey,
CONCLUSION
In summary, we (1) strike the award of attorney's fees because it was unsupported by any evidence; (2) strike the imputation of income to the husband and remand for recalculation of child support under the husband's actual income; (3) affirm the portion of the judgment finding the $36,000 buy-out from WGL to be a marital asset and dividing it equally between the parties; (4) remand for the trial court to limit the husband's liability for medical expenses to only those which are "reasonable and necessary" and to impose a dollar limitation on the annual medical expenses for which the husband is liable; (5) remand for child support arrearages to be calculated only from the date increased support was sought (August 22, 1994); and (6) remand for the calculation of interest on the child support arrearages.
AFFIRMED in part; REVERSED in part; REMANDED.
PETERSON, C.J., and DAUKSCH, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Our review of the record reveals that the wife was not precluded from providing this evidence.
