ANTHONY GROGAN, Petitioner-Respondent v. TINA MARIE GROGAN

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 2021
DocketSD36599
StatusPublished

This text of ANTHONY GROGAN, Petitioner-Respondent v. TINA MARIE GROGAN (ANTHONY GROGAN, Petitioner-Respondent v. TINA MARIE GROGAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ANTHONY GROGAN, Petitioner-Respondent v. TINA MARIE GROGAN, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

ANTHONY GROGAN, ) ) Petitioner-Respondent, ) v. ) No. SD36599 ) Filed: February 25, 2021 TINA MARIE GROGAN, ) ) Respondent-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HOWELL COUNTY

Honorable Donna K. Anthony, Associate Circuit Judge

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED

Tina Grogan (Mother) appeals from an amended judgement dissolving her

marriage to Anthony Grogan (Father). In relevant part, the amended judgment ordered

Father to pay $708 as monthly child support for the parties’ two children. In calculating

the child-support amount, the trial court created its own Form 14.1 The court’s form

included an entry of $1,100 per month that Father paid as child support for children from

a previous marriage. After the initial judgment was entered, Father’s child-support

obligation for those other children was reduced from $1,100 to $225 per month. In a

timely post-trial motion to modify the judgment, Mother asked the trial court to recalculate

Father’s child support using the reduced $225 amount. After a hearing, the trial court

1 All references to rules, including to Form 14, are to Missouri Court Rules (2019). denied Mother’s request to use the $225 number in the court’s Form 14 child-support

calculation. The court entered an amended judgment modifying the amount of child

support awarded to Mother, but the court’s Form 14 still used the $1,100 number.

Mother presents four points on appeal, but the first is dispositive. In Point 1,

Mother contends the trial court abused its discretion by denying Mother’s timely request

to recalculate the court’s Form 14 using the $225 number for Father’s other child-support

obligation. We agree. Therefore, we reverse the child-support calculations/award and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We affirm the amended

judgment in all other respects.

Factual and Procedural Background

Mother and Father married in March 2014 and separated in August 2017. One

child, a son (Son), was born of the marriage. Father adopted Mother’s daughter (Daughter)

from a previous marriage. Father also had been married previously and paid monthly child

support for two children from that marriage.

In December 2017, Father filed his petition for dissolution of marriage. Mother

filed a counter-petition requesting the same relief. Prior to trial, a custody agreement was

reached. The parties agreed that custody of Son would alternate between each parent every

week. Father was granted visitation with Daughter every other weekend.

The trial was held in April 2019. At that time, Father was paying $1,100 in child

support for his two children from his previous marriage. Father testified that he was

seeking to reduce that amount in a separate proceeding. He informed the trial court that he

was asking for more time with his two older children and a reduction in the amount of child

support he paid for them.

2 Father’s gross income was $5,776 per month. He testified that his 2018 income

was reduced because of: (1) a disciplinary action; and (2) a blood clot in his leg that

resulted in the loss of wages for one month. Mother’s gross income was $1,594 per month.

She worked 32 hours per week and earned $11.50 per hour. Mother testified that she

worked part-time so she would have more time to take care of Son and Daughter. Son was

expected to start school in the fall of 2019.

On November 14, 2019, the trial court entered the initial dissolution judgment.

With respect to child support, the trial court rejected both parties’ Form 14 submissions

and created its own. The court included Father’s prior support obligation of $1,100 in the

calculation and arrived at a presumed support amount (PSA) of $769 per month. The court

computed this amount by: (1) dividing Father’s 2018 income by 11 months instead of 12

to account for the month of lost wages, which increased Father’s monthly income to

$6,408; (2) finding Mother to be underemployed; (3) using Mother’s reported part-time

income to impute a full-time income of $1,952 per month; (4) giving Father a $376 per-

month credit for overnight visits, adjusting for the 50% shared custody of Son and visitation

with Daughter every other weekend; and (5) finding the PSA of $769 per month was not

unjust or inappropriate.

On December 12, 2019, Mother filed a timely motion to reopen, correct, amend or

modify the judgment or for a new trial. Mother requested, inter alia, that the judgment “be

opened, additional testimony taken, and the findings be amended or new findings made[.]”2

In relevant part, Mother’s motion asserted that:

2 Father filed a similar motion. With respect to the child-support calculation, Father requested: (1) a reduction in his monthly income to $5,000; and (2) a correction for the health insurance cost he pays for the parties’ two children, from $14 that the court listed to $114 per month. 3 [A]fter the trial in this case [Father and his previous wife] in that case – Hood v. Grogan, 13AL-FC00511-02 – agreed to a downward deviation in child support so that [Father] is set to pay only $225 per month in support, which new amount in that case substantially impacts the child support calculations in this case.

Mother asked the court to recalculate its Form 14 by showing Father’s other support

obligation to be $225, instead of $1,100.

On February 3, 2020, a hearing was held on the parties’ post-trial motions. The

parties agree that the trial court was told Father’s monthly child support in Hood v. Grogan

had been reduced from $1,100 to $225 on January 28, 2020. This reduction occurred

approximately 75 days after the November 14, 2019 judgment was entered.

On March 5, 2020, the trial court entered an amended judgment. The trial court

calculated its own Form 14, which still showed Father’s prior support obligation as $1,100

per month.3 The court set Father’s child-support obligation for Son and Daughter at $708

per month. In reaching the $708 monthly amount, the court: (1) reduced Mother’s monthly

income back to her part-time income of $1,546; (2) found Mother underemployed, noting

she was capable of full-time work since Son “will enter school full time with the upcoming

school year”; (3) did not impute any income to Mother; (4) gave Father “0” credit for

overnight visits due to Mother’s reduced monthly income, as required by Form 14, Line 11

“CAVEAT” disallowing Father overnight credit if Mother’s income was below $1,700; and

(5) reached a PSA of $1,224 per month. The court decided, however, that the PSA was

“unjust and inappropriate” due to Mother’s “underemployment” and because Father has

custody of Son “50% of the time and an unknown number of weekends with [Daughter.]”

3 The record reflects the trial court’s awareness of Father’s reduced child-support obligation for his other children because the court mentioned the reduction in another portion of the amended judgment dealing with school expenses beyond high school. 4 The court reduced Father’s support obligation to $708 per month, a downward deviation

of about 42%. This appeal followed.

Discussion and Decision

Mother’s first point contends the trial court abused its discretion when it declined

Mother’s request to reopen the evidence and recalculate the child-support amount on the

court’s Form 14. The parties agree that, during the hearing on post-trial motions, the trial

court was informed that Father’s monthly child-support obligation for his other children

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ANTHONY GROGAN, Petitioner-Respondent v. TINA MARIE GROGAN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-grogan-petitioner-respondent-v-tina-marie-grogan-moctapp-2021.