Busche v. Busche

2012 UT App 16, 272 P.3d 748, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 20, 2012 WL 163822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 20, 2012
Docket20080388-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2012 UT App 16 (Busche v. Busche) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busche v. Busche, 2012 UT App 16, 272 P.3d 748, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 20, 2012 WL 163822 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

ROTH, Judge:

11 Matthias Busche (Husband) appeals the district court's denial of his motion to modify his child support and alimony obligations following his termination from employment and subsequent employment at a lower salary. Husband also contends that the district court abused its discretion when it ordered him to pay $20,000 in attorney fees. Lori Ann Busche (Wife) filed a cross-appeal, in which she challenges the district court's decision to award her only $20,000 of the $51,000 she requested in attorney fees. We reverse the district court's finding that Husband's job loss did not amount to a substantial change of cireumstances because he was voluntarily underemployed and remand for reconsideration of whether he was in fact voluntarily underemployed. We affirm the attorney fees award of $8324.71 resulting from the August 29, 2005 order to show cause hearing but reverse and remand for reconsideration of the remaining attorney fees award.

BACKGROUND

1 2 The Busches married in June 1995 and divorced on January 7, 2005. At the time of the divorcee, Husband was earning a gross *750 monthly salary of $7067. The parties have five children, and Wife stayed home to care for them. As part of the stipulated divorce decree, the parties agreed that Husband would pay $1766 per month in child support and $1545 per month in alimony, for a total of $3311 in monthly support obligations.

{8 Husband's employment as a manager for Tahitian Noni, however, ended on January 28, 2005, shortly after the divorce decree was entered. On June 21, 2005, Husband filed a verified petition to modify the support obligations of the divorce decree, citing his termination from employment through no fault of his own as "a substantial and material change in circumstances with regard to [his] income." The termination of Husband's employment followed written warnings from his employer in March 2004 and in December 2004, requiring him to correct certain behaviors the employer considered inappropriate. After discharging him as a regular employes, Tahitian Noni retained Husband as a contract employee at a rate of $5000 monthly. When the contract ended in early 2006, Tahitian Noni declined to renew it, and Husband remained unemployed until October 2, 2006, when he began work with SupraNaturals at a monthly salary of $4583.38.

€ 4 The district court held a bench trial on June 7, 2007, to determine whether Husband's change in employment and coinciding pay decrease warranted a modification of the child support and alimony obligations as specified in the divorce decree. In its subsequent memorandum decision, the court attributed Husband's "less remunerative salary" to "his refusal to accept the [March and December 2004] warnings from his supervisor at Tahitian Noni to change his behavior and work habits," even though he had agreed, less than two weeks after the second warning, to pay a combined $3311 per month in child support and alimony. The court therefore found Husband to be voluntarily underemployed. Based on this finding, the district court determined that there was no substantial change in cireumstances to warrant further consideration of Husband's petition to modify the decree's support orders.

T5 The district court also awarded Wife some, but not all, of her attorney fees. Wife requested over $51,000 in attorney fees, which she incurred in the course of earlier order to show cause (OSC) proceedings as well as in connection with the trial on Husband's petition. The court granted Wife's request for $3824.71 in attorney fees from an August 29, 2005 OSC hearing. With respect to the remaining fees, the court found that Wife had prevailed at the OSC hearings and at trial and that she had shown a need but concluded that the attorney fees requested were "excessive." It also determined that Husband, after factoring in his support obligations, had very little ability to pay. In this regard, the court refused to consider Husband's equity in the marital home as a source of ongoing income for purposes of determining his ability to pay attorney fees. Accordingly, it granted Wife attorney fees in the reduced amount of $16,675.29, bringing the total fee award to $20,000.

T 6 The district court's findings and conclusions regarding the modification petitions and the award of attorney fees were memorialized in the Findings of Fact and Amended Decree of Divorce. 1 Husband now challenges the denial of his request for modification. Husband and Wife both appeal the attorney fees order.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

T7 Husband challenges the district court's decision that there had not been an unforeseeable and substantial change in circumstances that warranted modification of the divorcee decree's child support and alimony orders. His contention of error, in essence, has two components. Husband claims that the district court erroneously found him to be voluntarily underemployed. He also argues that the court abused its discretion in determining that the voluntary underemployment did not result in a substantial change of circumstances that warranted modification of his support obligations. In making this deter *751 mination, Husband argues, the district court failed to properly conduct the statutorily-required imputation analysis that is part and parcel of a finding of voluntary underemployment and instead simply imputed income to him at the amount he earned when Tahitian Noni fired him-$7067 per month. "The determination of the trial court that there [has or has not] been a substantial change of circumstances ... is presumed valid, and we review the ruling under an abuse of discretion standard." Young v. Young, 2009 UT App 3, ¶ 4, 201 P.3d 301 (alteration and omission in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). An abuse of discretion can occur if a trial court misapplies the law in exercising its discretion. See State v. Barrett, 2005 UT 88, ¶ 77 & n. 5, 127 P.3d 682. We review the court's interpretation of statutory requirements for correctness. See Lilly v. Lilly, 2011 UT App 53, ¶ 6, 250 P.3d 994.

T8 Husband also challenges the district court's decision to award Wife her attorney fees, arguing that the court failed to enter findings on three statutorily-required factors. While Wife purports to raise three issues for review, all of her claims relate to the issue of whether the district court properly awarded her attorney fees in an amount less than she requested. We review the district court's decision to award attorney fees in a modification proceeding for an abuse of discretion. See Wilde v. Wilde, 2001 UT App 318, ¶ 38, 35 P.3d 341.

ANALYSIS

I. Modification of the Divoree Decree's Support Obligations

T9 Husband challenges the district court's determination that he was voluntarily underemployed and its consequent refusal to modify his support obligations. As an initial matter, we consider whether the district court properly used its finding of voluntary underemployment as the basis for its conclusion that there was not a substantial change in cireumstances sufficient to warrant modification of the support orders.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 16, 272 P.3d 748, 700 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 20, 2012 WL 163822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busche-v-busche-utahctapp-2012.