Anna Karpovich v. Gregory Brannick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 8, 2019
DocketW2017-01796-COA-R3-JV
StatusPublished

This text of Anna Karpovich v. Gregory Brannick (Anna Karpovich v. Gregory Brannick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anna Karpovich v. Gregory Brannick, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

01/08/2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs December 3, 2018

ANNA KARPOVICH v. GREGORY BRANNICK

Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Shelby County No. BB4293 Harold W. Horne, Judge1

No. W2017-01796-COA-R3-JV

This appeal arises from a modification of child support. Gregory Brannick (“Father”) and Anna Karpovich (“Mother”) divorced in 2003. Father was ordered to pay $560 per month in child support for the parties’ minor son (“the Child”). In 2016, the State of Tennessee ex rel. Mother filed a petition in the Juvenile Court for Shelby County (“the Juvenile Court”) to establish arrears and/or to modify child support. Following a hearing, the Juvenile Court entered an order increasing Father’s child support obligation to $1,464.17 per month. Father appeals, arguing among other things that the Juvenile Court failed to consider his actual income for purposes of modifying his child support obligation. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Juvenile Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. NEAL MCBRAYER and ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JJ., joined.

Gregory Brannick, pro se appellant.

Anna Karpovich, pro se appellee.2

1 Magistrate sitting as a special juvenile court judge. 2 Mother filed no appellate brief, and no one has appeared on Mother’s behalf on appeal. We, therefore, decide this matter on the record and Father’s appellate brief. OPINION

Background

Mother and Father divorced in 2003. Father was ordered to pay $560 per month to support the Child, who was born in June of 2000.3 In June 2016, the State of Tennessee ex rel. Mother filed a petition in the Juvenile Court to establish arrears and/or modify child support. In November 2016, the Magistrate entered her findings and recommendations. As pertinent, the Magistrate found:

1. That a Notice of Title IV-D Services and Notice of Transfer to the Juvenile Court of Memphis and Shelby County, Tennessee was filed on April 26, 2016, as required by law and further action to transfer jurisdiction to this Court to modify and enforce child support is not required. 2. That this Court has administratively accepted jurisdiction of the Final Decree of Divorce of the Circuit Court of Tennessee for the Thirtieth Judicial District at Memphis, docket number CT-003224-01, for the purposes of enforcement and modification of child support. 3. That child support was set by the Circuit Court of Tennessee for the Thirtieth Judicial District at Memphis on August 12, 2003, in the amount of $560.00 per month. 4. That the Petition to Establish Arrears and/or Modify Order filed on June 14, 2016, is granted. 5. That the Court determined the gross monthly income of the petitioner to be $4,723.00 pursuant to the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines based on the testimony of the petitioner as to her current income. 6. That the Court determined the gross monthly income of the defendant to be $2,500.00 pursuant to the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines based upon the defendant’s testimony, prior work history, and education. 7. That the previous order of the Court entered on August 12, 2003, be modified to increase child support payments from $560.00 to $1,197.00 per month beginning December 1, 2016, to be paid by income assignment to the Central Child Support Receipting Unit, P.O. Box 305200, Nashville, TN 37229 for the minor child . . . . That unless specifically ordered by the Court, such support shall not be reduced or prorated. 8. The presumptive amount of child support that should be paid pursuant to Tennessee Child Support Guidelines based upon the facts of

3 The Child is now 18 years old. -2- this case and application of the Income Shares Worksheets is $476.00 per month to be paid by the defendant; however, the Court finds that application of the Guidelines presumptive support amount would be unjust or inappropriate in this case and that the best interests of the child would be served by a upward deviation from the presumptive amount because of the extraordinary educational expenses incurred on behalf of the child that are appropriate based on the parent’s financial abilities and on the lifestyle of the child if the parents and child were living together. 9. That the child support arrears shall be reduced to a judgment in the amount of $26,600.00, through and including May 31, 2016, not including interest which shall be added to all accrued arrears at the statutory interest rate of 1% per month, or 12% per year, pursuant to T.C.A. §36-5- 101(f)(1). 10. That the child support arrears shall be paid by income assignment at the rate of $25.00 per month beginning December 1, 2016. Payment of arrears at the rate shown above is a minimum payment and does not preclude the petitioner from collecting the judgment by other means, such as tax refund intercept, lien, or levy and execution. 11. That the defendant shall be responsible for making child support payments directly to the Central Child Support Receipting Unit, P.O. Box 305200, Nashville, Tennessee, 37229, until the employer begins deducting payments and at any time that the full amount of defendant’s child support obligation is not being withheld by income assignment.

In August 2017, this matter went before the Juvenile Court for rehearing. The record contains no transcript of that hearing. The record, however, does contain a Statement of the Evidence, such as it is, filed by Father that, in part, summarizes the hearing. It does not appear from the record either that Mother ever objected to Father’s Statement of the Evidence or that the Juvenile Court took action with respect to it.4 The Statement of the Evidence recounts the hearing thusly:

At the August 8, 2017, hearing Appellant testified that the sole amount of taxable income on his 2016 tax return was from his Schedule C and in the amount of $4582. (Please see attached for a copy Appellant’s 2016 federal income tax return.) Appellant also again testified that the income shares

4 Pursuant to Tenn. R. App. P. 24(c), Mother was required to file any objections to the Statement of the Evidence within 15 days. No objection was filed. By rule, “[t]he trial judge shall approve the transcript or statement of the evidence and shall authenticate the exhibits as soon as practicable” after the 15-day period expires but “in all events within 30 days after the expiration of said period for filing objections.” Tenn. R. App. P. 24(f). As the Juvenile Court took no action, the “statement of the evidence and the exhibits shall be deemed to have been approved and shall be so considered by the appellate court. . . .” Id. -3- model had been applied unjustly and inappropriately and provided evidence that because of his chronic medical conditions, he again made application for Social Security Disability benefits in 2011. A copy of Appellant’s most recent Social Security Disability Appeal, filed in December 2016, is hereto attached as Exhibit C.

The Juvenile Court evidently was not persuaded by Father’s contentions. The Juvenile Court affirmed the Magistrate’s earlier findings and recommendations except as to modification of child support, where the Juvenile Court increased Father’s child support obligation beyond the amount found by the Magistrate. In August 2017, the Juvenile Court entered its final judgment, stating as follows:

1. That the Request for Hearing Before the Judge filed by the defendant on November 3, 2016, is granted. 2. That the Magistrate’s ruling entered on November 3, 2016, is reconfirmed as the decree of this Court with the exception of the modification of child support. 3. That Petition to Establish Arrears and/or Modify Support filed on June 14, 2016, is granted. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
Anna Karpovich v. Gregory Brannick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anna-karpovich-v-gregory-brannick-tennctapp-2019.