Bryan v. Bryan

452 S.W.2d 293, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 670
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1970
Docket8913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 452 S.W.2d 293 (Bryan v. Bryan) 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
Bryan v. Bryan, 452 S.W.2d 293, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 670 (Mo. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

HOGAN, Judge.

In this action to modify a decree of divorce, the defendant appeals from the order of the trial court increasing plaintiff’s allowance for child support from $35 per month to $125 per month, and from the court’s order awarding plaintiff the sum of $150 as attorney’s fees.

The parties were apparently quite young when they were married. They became the parents of a little girl, who was five years of age when this motion was heard. In November 1966, the parties were divorced. The plaintiff was awarded custody of her minor child, and defendant was ordered to pay the sum of $35 per month as child support. It was developed at the trial that the child had actually been in the custody of her maternal grandparents since the divorce.

At the time the divorce was granted, Mr. Bryan was an engineering student at the University of Missouri at Rolla. The amount of child support had been set at $35 per month, Mrs. Bryan said, “ [because he was a student * * * and so he could finish school without having too much difficulty.” Plaintiff had been a “licensed beauty operator,” but she had abandoned that occupation permanently because “[t]here is not enough money in it.” A native of Hickory County, she had recently moved to Kansas City. Her child had been, as we say, with her parents, and she had been visiting her in Hickory County on weekends. She had found an apartment within her means in Kansas City and wanted to take her daughter with her. Mrs. Bryan testified that she had found an acceptable “baby sitter” who would care for her child and furnish one. meal a day for $25 per week.

Plaintiff intended to share her apartment with a “girl friend” who would presumably pay part of her rent, but even unfurnished the apartment would cost $125 per month. Mrs. Bryan worked in the “stock department” at Ralston Purina in Kansas City. She was .not very definite about the nature of her work, but her gross pay was $315 per month, her “take-home” pay was “around $235.00 to $240.00 a month,” and she was obliged to pay her own utilities in the unfurnished apartment she had rented. Plaintiff owned a car, on which she was making monthly payments of $72. She planned to “get furniture from my folks and take some up [to Kansas City].” It was plaintiff’s “judgment” that she could manage to care for her child for $30 per week.

The defendant, who was remarried, had graduated in June 1968 as a mechanical engineer. He was employed as a “product engineer” by the Bendix corporation in Kansas City. He earned, after seven or eight months on the job, a gross salary of $775 per month, which, after taxes and deductions, amounted to $599.54 per month. At trial time, Mr. Bryan owned an auto *295 mobile worth $3,000, on which he owed $2,600, a pickup truck worth $900, on which he owed $800, and a house trailer worth $2,500, on which he owed $2,000. Mr. Bryan also owed an open note at the Bank of Urbana, Missouri, in the sum of $1,700. He estimated his fixed expenses to be $569 per month, plus $170 per month more for food, clothing, medical expense, recreation and laundry. Mr. Bryan answered “Yes” to counsel’s question, “So on your present income you do have a deficit each month * * * at the present time ?” Mr. Bryan testified that he “ * * * was wanting to pay about $50.00 [per month] but * * * could get up as high as $60.00, I believe.”

In this court, the defendant contends that the amount allowed as child support— $125 per month — is excessive; it is more than he can afford to pay, he says, and more than the child needs at present. The respondent answers this by saying that if the defendant is having financial difficulty he should reduce his standard of living in order to provide for his child.

We are handicapped in this case by an incomplete record. The parties filed affidavits showing their respective resources and their estimated expenses and needs. These affidavits were received in evidence by agreement as exhibits 1 and 2, and the trial court apparently relied on them in fixing the amount of the award for child support. The exhibits were not filed here. To some extent, the parties repeated the contents of the exhibits in their oral testimony, but we do not have a complete picture of either party’s financial status before us. In the circumstances, we must presume that the contents of the exhibits were favorable to the judgment entered and unfavorable to the appellant. Lange v. Baker, Mo.App., 377 S.W.2d 5, 7 [4]; Fuzzell v. Williams, Mo.App., 288 S.W.2d 372, 373 [2]; Cooper v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 239 Mo.App. 67, 71, 186 S.W.2d 549, 551-552 [6].

For whatever it is worth, we will say that we have gone over the part of the record we have very carefully. Primarily, the amount to be awarded as child support is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial court, and we review the record only to determine whether or not that discretion has been abused. McCann v. McCann, Mo.App., 448 S.W.2d 323, 325 [1]; Houston v. Snyder, Mo.App., 440 S.W.2d 156, 159 [3]. On the face of the record before us, there is an entirely rational basis for the trial court’s judgment. Plaintiff, 22 years of age, had of economic necessity left her child with her parents; she had obtained gainful employment in Kansas City and wanted her child with her. She had “planned out” how much would be required to support her daughter, and she set that figure at $30 per week. Certainly it was most desirable for the child to be with her mother, and while the plaintiff’s estimates of her needs were only projections in the nature of a conclusion, Houston v. Snyder, supra, 440 S.W.2d at 159, the amount allowed is only slightly in excess of the cost of day care for the child. We are in no position here to say there should have been a particularized substantiation of plaintiff’s estimate. As for the father’s ability to pay, we agree that no father should be saddled with payment of a sum beyond his ability to pay, McCann v. McCann, supra, 448 S.W.2d at 326-327 [6]; Houston v. Snyder, supra, 440 S.W.2d at 161 [11], but we cannot say that an award of $125 per month will probably impair the defendant’s financial position or leave him without means to defray his necessary expenses. There appears to be Some duplication of his items of expense, and in any event the trial court was entitled to reject his account of his living expenses to the extent it considered the estimate exaggerated. Anno., 1 A.L.R. 3d 382, § 10 [a], p. 403 (1965). We cannot confidently say that the trial court abused its discretion in fixing the amount of the award at $125 per month.

The defendant’s other point is more technical. He claims that the trial court *296 was without jurisdiction to allow an attorney’s fee of $150, because the motion to modify did not specifically pray the allowance of an attorney’s fee, and no order allowing it was made until after the trial court lost jurisdiction of the cause. In support of this point, defendant cites Beckler v. Beckler, 227 Mo.App. 761, 57 S.W.2d 687

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Bluebook (online)
452 S.W.2d 293, 1970 Mo. App. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-bryan-moctapp-1970.