Anderson v. Anderson

117 So. 3d 208, 2013 WL 1976424, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 927
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 2013
DocketNo. 48,027-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 117 So. 3d 208 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 117 So. 3d 208, 2013 WL 1976424, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 927 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinions

MOORE, J.

| Thomas J. Anderson (“Jason”) appeals a judgment ordering him to pay his ex-wife, Angela Anderson, final periodic support of $1,035 a month, retroactive to the date of divorce. We amend and affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Jason and Angela got married in January 1991; they had one child, a daughter, who was 18 by the time of the divorce. The couple physically separated in October 2009, and Jason filed for an Art. 102 divorce; Angela reconvened, seeking an Art. 102 or 103 divorce and demanding interim and final periodic support. After a hearing on June 21, 2010, the district court granted an Art. 102 divorce.

Although the minutes do not reflect it, the parties testified that in December 2009, Jason was ordered to pay, as interim support, the house note on the former marital home, and he did so until they sold the house in March 2011. As a result of the sale, each received about $6,000 as a community share of the equity.

At a hearing in July 2011,1 the parties were unclear whether the issue before the court was interim or final support. Ange[211]*211la argued that she had asked the district court to maintain interim support equal to the house note, over $900 a month, until final support was fixed, but Jason argued that the interim support could not exceed 180 days. The court stated that it would rule only on final support.

\9Evidence at the Hearing

Both sides’ financial pictures were fairly intricate. Angela works as a human resources assistant for Gilley Enterprises, a McDonald’s franchisee in West Monroe, at $9.85 an hour, the same pay she has earned since 2007. She does not work a full 40-hour week because of depression. Her gross monthly pay is $1,154, and after withholdings she nets $770. During the marriage, she left work and attended a few quarters at Louisiana Tech to study nursing and become more self-sufficient, but had to drop out because it was too demanding; she still hopes to become a nurse.

After the parties sold the marital home, Angela moved into a house owned by her father, Sammy Byrd, and was living there rent-free with the parties’ adult daughter and with her sister. She claimed monthly expenses of $2,563.83, including rent of $600 a month, even though she was not paying rent; food and household supplies of $602, including groceries and eating out; clothing of $100, including “school uniforms”; transportation expenses of $770, even though she listed fuel and maintenance at $236.50 and testified that insurance ran about $56 a month; utilities of $203, or one-half (because she shares the house with her sister) of total utilities, including land line telephone; pet care of $53 a month; and cell phone charge of $50 a month. With monthly expenses totaling $2,563 and net income of $770, she con-eluded that she was $1,793 in the red each month.

Jason was always the primary provider for the household. His principal employment was with Regency Gas (now known as Energy Gas Transfer), at $23 an hour; his 2010 W-2 showed a salary of $63,117. In | ¡¡addition, he pursued side businesses. He had formed Superior Weed Control, an oilfield service contractor, using as startup capital a loan secured by a $30,000 certificate of deposit pledged by Angela’s father, Mr. Byrd. In 2009, Superior Weed showed gross sales of $79,617, gross income of $65,182, and a net profit of $19,697. Then, around the time of the divorce, Jason formed another company, Ash Oilfield Services, to perform contracting similar to Superior Weed. Ash Oilfield reported 2010 business income of $17,940. This, with his salary from Energy Gas Transfer, would yield a total annual income of $80,835; by affidavit, he claimed to net $4,296.28 a month.

Jason testified that his monthly expenses totaled $4,959 a month, exceeding his available income by $662.72. On cross-examination, however, he admitted that his truck note and insurance were actually paid by Superior Weed, and that many daily charges to restaurants and fast-food places appeared on Superior Weed’s credit card; these items should not have been listed as personal charges. Even though he claimed to be running a deficit, he paid a caterer for his recent wedding, bought a $160,000 house and testified he was unsure how much his new house note would be.2 In addition, he had recently bought a self-storage facility, on which he owed a note of about $1,000 a month. He admitted giving his adult daughter $250 a month and paying her car note and auto expenses. Finally, he had sold Superior Weed, and liquidated its assets, without making any [212]*212effort to repay Angela’s father, Mr. Byrd, the $30,000 he had received when Mr. Byrd Lpledged a CD to start up the company.

Mr. Byrd testified that he had helped the couple many times over the years, and confirmed that he pledged his CD to secure a loan for Jason to start Superior Weed, but Jason never repaid him. Mr. Byrd was living in a trailer while Angela and the other daughter were staying in his house rent-free, but this was only until Angela got back on her feet. He said he wanted to retire soon and move back into his house.

Action of the District Court

By written reasons, the court found that Angela was free from fault in the divorce, a finding not contested on appeal. The court then analyzed the parties’ finances in a random manner, first finding that Angela had received “abundant support” from her father, but this would not be considered in setting interim or final support, Shelton v. Shelton, 395 So.2d 899 (La.App. 2 Cir. 1981).

The court found that Jason was an aggressive worker with a good salary and strong business income totaling $127,272 in 2009. In 2010, his salary and business income totaled $80,835, but the court added Ash Oilfield’s claimed depreciation of $11,621 to yield a total of $92,456, or $7,704 a month gross. However, with his recent purchase of a house for $160,000 and a self-storage facility for $100,000, the court found that Jason “did not address the debt [to Mr. Byrd] in a reasonable manner.” The court accepted Jason’s claimed net monthly expenses of $4,959, but disallowed the following: car note, fuel and allowance paid to the couple’s major daughter, $765; payment into a 401(k) match plan, $106.96; and house note |sof $1,089, only to the extent that it exceeded Angela’s housing cost of $600, or $489. The court reasoned that these three adjustments freed up $1,360 a month in Jason’s budget.

As for Angela, the court found that even though she expressed a desire to become a nurse, there was no evidence of a “plan of education expense and forecast of greater earning capacity.” The court therefore took her hourly wage and imputed a 40-hour week ($9.85 x 40 = $394), or a monthly gross of $1,707.33. He reduced this by “about 15%” to reflect withhold-ings, for a monthly net of $1,450. Of her claimed expenses of $2,563.83, the court disallowed the following: dog care, $53; cell phone in addition to land line, $50; and school uniforms, $50. The court added an “appropriate adjustment” for her health care premium, $74.36. This brought her necessary expenses to $2,485.09. Because her necessary expenses exceeded her monthly net income by $1,035, the court found her in need of support under La. C.C. art. 111.

Finally, the court found that Angela’s proven need, $1,035, was within the statutory cap of one-third of Jason’s claimed net income (1/3 x $4,296.28 = $1,432.09), La. C.C. art. 112 C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 So. 3d 208, 2013 WL 1976424, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-lactapp-2013.