The parties to this action were married 12 April 1981 and separated 10 August 1993. On 24 August 1993, the parties consented to the entry of an order providing, inter alia, for the custody and support of their two minor daughters. The consent order awarded primary custody of the children to plaintiff and granted defendant visitation during certain holidays and custodial periods. Additionally, defendant was ordered to pay plaintiff child support in the amount of $315.00 per month from 1 September 1993 until 1 September 1994, $400.00 per month from 1 September 1994 until 1 September 1995, and $500.00 per month thereafter.
In August 1995, defendant moved for a modification of the custody, visitation and child support provisions of the prior consent order, alleging substantial changes in circumstances. After a hearing, the trial court modified the previous consent order and granted plaintiff and defendant joint custody of the children, with primary physical custody vested with plaintiff. The court also modified defendant’s visitation schedule and provided for a change in defendant’s child support obligations. Defendant was ordered to pay plaintiff $373.00 for child support for November and December of 1995, $534.00 per month from 1 January 1996 until 31 December 1996, $127.00 per month from 1 January 1997 until 31 December 1997, and provided for payments thereafter consistent with the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines according to the then existing circumstances. Plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred by modifying the provisions of the previous consent order with respect to custody and support of the minor children because its findings of fact do not support its conclusion that there was a substantial change of circumstances justifying modification of those provisions. We agree.
I. Custody
A party seeking modification of a child custody order, as defendant does in this case, bears the burden of proving the existence of a substantial change in circumstances affecting the welfare of the child or children.
Crosby v. Crosby,
With respect to the issue of custody, the trial court found the following changes had occurred:
A. The Defendant no longer resides with her parents, but rather now resides in a fully furnished, two bedroom mobile home, which is located on a private, secluded lot approximately A mile from the home of her parents;
B. The Defendant was formerly employed by Merck Manufacturing. As a result of factors directly and indirectly related to the separation and divorce of the parties, she was released from that employment, but now is secure in her employment with Trimeris, Inc.;
C. Shortly after the entry of the original Consent Order in this matter, the Defendant sought and received counseling and treatment for certain emotional problems. The Defendant now exhibits a mature and stable demeanor and attitude as it relates to her life and the care and development of the minor children of the parties; and,
D. The Plaintiff has moved his primary residence and the children from Nash County to Wilson County, thereby making it logistically more difficult for the Defendant to have contact with the minor children of the parties.
While these findings are indicative of defendant’s fitness as a parent, they reveal nothing about the critical inquiry, which is the impact of the changes upon the minor children. In
Garrett,
we stated upon similar facts that “(t)he factors . . . are bare observations of plaintiffs or defendant’s actions, not examples of how those actions adversely impact the children.”
Garrett,
at 197,
II. Child Support
The trial court also made findings with respect to the issue of financial support for the children. Child support orders may be modified upon a showing of changed circumstances. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.7(a),
Padilla v. Lusth,
In this case, the trial judge made findings that plaintiff was earning $18,000 per year more than he had been earning at the time of the original consent order and that defendant was earning $500 per year less than she had been earning in 1993. The court also found that defendant had provided medical insurance for the minor children, as required by the 1993 order, at the cost of $196.91 per month, but that such insurance could be provided by plaintiff at a cost of $107.00 per month. The court made no findings, however, regarding any changes in the needs of the minor children since the date of the original support order. Although a substantial decrease in the non-custodial parent’s income can support a modification without a showing of a change in the needs of the child, the decrease in defendant’s income in this case was not substantial. Since the original support order had been in effect less than three years at the time of the hearing on defendant’s motion to modify child support, she does not receive the *516 benefit of the fifteen (15) percent presumption contained in the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines. The order modifying defendant’s child support obligation, like the order modifying custody, is not supported by sufficient findings of fact of changed circumstances and must also be vacated.
Vacated.
