Adams-Smyrichinsky v. Smyrichinsky

467 S.W.3d 767, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1758, 2015 WL 4967197
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 2015
Docket2013-SC-000812-DGE
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 467 S.W.3d 767 (Adams-Smyrichinsky v. Smyrichinsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams-Smyrichinsky v. Smyrichinsky, 467 S.W.3d 767, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1758, 2015 WL 4967197 (Ky. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE NOBLE

This case raises two legal questions. First, does a court in this state have the authority to alter the duration of a child support order issued by another state when the court in this state exercises jurisdiction under the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act? Second, does a court in this state have authority to modify an award of the federal dependent-child tax exemption made by another state, and if so, what factors must be present to award the exemption? The Oldham Family Court answered both questions in the affirmative, and the Court of Appeals affirmed that decision. This Court, however, concludes that the duration of a support award is not modifiable, and that while awarding a tax exemption as part of a support order is modifiable, further awards of the tax exemption require finding an actual nexus to support of the child, which the trial court did not do. Consequently, we reverse and remand.

I. Background

The Appellee, Peter T. Smyriehinsky (referred to in the record as “Tod”) and the Appellant, Rachel Adams-Smyrichin-sky, were married in 1995. Their first child, Logan, was born in 1994, and the second, Maverick, was born in 1997. Tod filed for divorce in 2003, which began a rancorous and extremely litigious process that has resulted in this case. At the time, the parties were living in Indiana with their children.

The parties found little upon which they could agree. After a hearing, the circuit court in Harrison County, Indiana, entered a decree of dissolution in February 2005, leaving several property, custody, and support matters pending. The parties then entered into an agreed order signed by the Indiana court on November 9, 2005 resolving the property matters that had not been previously decided. This ^agreed order provided that the tax exemptions for the children for the years 1999 through 2005 would go to the husband if he chose not to file jointly on their belated returns (apparently the parties had not filed tax returns for those years). But the agreement also stated, and the court approved, the following: “Respondent shall receive children as tax exemptions for years following and applicable to IRS Tax Law.” (Rachel was the respondent in that action.) In essence, [769]*769the parties treated the tax exemption as part of their marital property division.

The history leading up to this agreed order is instructive. The trial court had originally granted temporary joint custody of the two children to the parties during the proceedings in a “Provisional Entry” dated March 30, 2004, but had specifically ordered that Rachel “shall have physical custody of the children at all times when the children are not with their father,” and then gave Tod very specific “physical custody” of every other weekend, one half the summer vacation in two time periods, and holidays in accordance with the Indiana Parenting Time Guidelines. Both parties found this order frustrating, and filed several pendente lite motions about time sharing and other matters. This is why the trial court finally agreed to bifurcate the proceedings, and entered the decree divorcing the parties, as referenced above, and reserving other matters. Specifically, the court required that the children were not to be removed from the United States at all, and not from Indiana or Kentucky except for vacations requiring specific notice. (Rachel and the boys had moved to Kentucky by then, but Tod still lived in Indiana.) The court then set a separate hearing date on custody and visitation and “any other matters” for February 17, 2005.

At that hearing, the parties entered into an agreed order that specified, again, new time sharing for Tod, and required that he pay “his regular support payment of $1,100/month.”

Disputes arose over this order. The court vacated it, and entered another order, after a hearing, which gave very specific and detailed “custody” time for Tod, and increased the time the children were with him. But in the same order, the court found that Rachel should now be the “temporary primary physical custodian of the children,” with Tod being the final decision maker on which school the children attended. Despite noting that this was becoming an expensive divorce and that the parties had repeatedly delayed a final hearing, the court nonetheless again delayed setting a final hearing on custody, visitation, and support matters.

The agreed order of November 2005, referenced above, followed. Many motions and orders followed this, including contempt orders against Tod, and many continuances of the final hearing, some related to challenges of the judge and looking for another judge to hear the case. In the meantime, Tod filed a motion for pendente lite modification of child support. The lawyers that the parties had discharged filed motions for fees.

Finally, on January 7, 2009, the trial court (presided over by a different judge) conducted a hearing and entered an “Order for Child Custody, Support, Visitation, Contempt, and All Other Outstanding Issues.” This final order named Rachel as “the primary physical custodian” of the children, with Tod to have “visitation” in accordance with the Indiana Parenting Time Guidelines, with some specifically addressed deviations. Clearly the court was trying to be as specific as possible to clarify the Various areas of dispute the parties had enjoyed over the last four years. Oddly, despite earlier orders, the trial court found that it was so difficult to obtain evidence of the parties’ income that he was simply imputing $500 per week to each parent, which resulted in Tod paying $53 per week in child support. After dividing the medical costs, the trial court then ordered the parties to split the tax exemptions for the children, each claiming one child, beginning in 2009. The court further ordered: “At the point in time in which only one child may be claimed, Mother will be entitled to claim that exemption for the first year followed by Fa[770]*770ther the next year and rotating back and forth each year after.”

Thus, after years of wrangling, a final custody, visitation, and support order was entered. That order related the award of the tax exemption to the amount of child support it set.

And then Tod moved to Kentucky.

Tod started this action by filing a petition to modify custody, support and visitation on December 10, 2010, in Oldham Family Court. This was accompanied by a motion asking the court to enter an order “transferring the jurisdiction of this matter to the Oldham Family Court ... pursuant to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA)” because such was in the best interest of the children now that the parents and children lived in Kentucky and had significant connections here. A copy of most of the proceedings from Indiana was attached to the motion.

But Tod had also gone back to court in Indiana and moved that court to “assume jurisdiction” over the parties, though everyone now lived in Kentucky. Meanwhile, the Oldham Family Court had stated in an order that while it could “accept” jurisdiction of the case, it lacked the authority to order another state to “transfer” a case to him. Tod then moved the Indiana court to recast his motion as one to determine if the Indiana court retained jurisdiction. That court promptly found that it did not, since the parties and the children now resided in Kentucky; Kentucky had not declined jurisdiction; and Kentucky was likely the children’s “home state.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
467 S.W.3d 767, 2015 Ky. LEXIS 1758, 2015 WL 4967197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-smyrichinsky-v-smyrichinsky-ky-2015.