Carter v. Carter
This text of 591 So. 2d 1313 (Carter v. Carter) 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.
Opinion
Jane Gayle CARTER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Jeff Thomas CARTER, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1314 Ellen R. Eade, McLeod, Swearingen, Verlander, Dollar, Price & Noah, for plaintiff-appellant.
Charles R. Joiner, Joiner & Joiner, for defendant-appellee.
Before JASPER E. JONES, WYCHE and LOWE, JJ., Ad Hoc.
JASPER E. JONES, Judge Ad Hoc.
Jane Gayle Carter Stewart, mother and domiciliary custodian of Jeffrey Fox Carter appeals a judgment that rejected her demand to increase a $650.00 monthly child support award for her son and reduced the award to $500.00. The trial judge based the reduction of the child support award on a change of circumstances and the application of LSA-R.S. 9:315 et seq.
The appellant was divorced from the child's father, Jeff Thomas Carter on February 5, 1987. The child was twelve years old and attending Ridgedale Academy, a private school which required a monthly tuition expense of $134.00 at the time of the divorce wherein the child support award was confirmed in the amount that it had been set in the separation judgment which had occurred in 1986.
On September 6, 1990, the father filed this rule to reduce the support award because appellant's income had increased and the child was now attending a public school and the private school tuition no longer had to be paid. The tuition for the year before the modification suit was instituted had been $273.00 per month. The monthly income of the father at the time of the modification rule was about $2,978.00 and the monthly income of the appellant was $2,058.00. The husband's income had increased about $300.00 per month since the child support award was set and the appellant's income had increased about $555.00 per month since the award was set.
The appellant denied the husband was entitled to a reduction and sought on her behalf an increase in child support based on the increased needs of the child and the increase in the father's income.
*1315 The appellant filed an expense list on the child's needs at the time the child support was initially set totaling $1,544.00 per month. She filed an expense list in these proceedings reflecting total needs of the child in the amount of $2,243.71 per month. The new list contained an amount for the child's food in the amount of $454.00 and contained expenses for the boy's transportation totaling $624.99.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
1) The trial court should not have found change in circumstances and should not have applied LSA-R.S. 9:315 et seq guidelines because the child's needs increased and the father's income increased.
2) The court should not have applied the statutory guidelines because it was not in the best interest of the child and was inequitable to the parties.
3) The court should have left the child support undisturbed because it was established as a supplement to a community property settlement.
4) Because of the increase in the child's needs and the father's increase in income, the award should have been increased.
LAW
The child support shall be set in an amount that meets the needs of the child and provides a standard of living the child would have enjoyed living with the noncustodial parent and be an amount within the noncustodial parent's ability to pay. Updegraff v. Updegraff, 421 So.2d 1165 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1982).
A trial court's award of child support will not be disturbed absence a clear abuse of discretion. Updegraff v. Updegraff, supra.
An agreement between parents on an amount of child support contained in a community property settlement and which is in the best interest of the child is enforceable, but a change in circumstances may justify a change of the agreed upon child support. Abbott v. Dunlap, 541 So.2d 995 (La.App. 3rd Cir.1989).
The guidelines set forth in LSA-R.S. 9:315 et seq shall be used in any proceedings to modify child support filed after October 1, 1989. There shall be a rebuttable presumption that the amount of child support determined by the use of the guidelines is the proper amount of the child support. LSA-R.S. 9:315.1(A). The court may deviate from the amount determined by the guidelines if the amount so determined is not in the best interest of the child or would be inequitable to the parties. LSA-R.S. 9:315.1(B).
A change in circumstances following the rendition of a consent support judgment can require compliance to the amount determined by the LSA-R.S. 9:315 guidelines in a proceedings filed subsequent to October 1, 1989 to modify the consent judgment. Montgomery v. Waller, 571 So.2d 765 (La.App. 2nd Cir.1990); Crockett v. Crockett, 575 So.2d 942 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1991).
WAS THERE A CHANGE IN CIRCUMSTANCES?
The support award which was determined by the consent of the parents at the time of the separation in 1986 and at the time of the divorce in 1987 was the sum of $650.00. This award was only decreased by the judgment appealed by the sum of $150.00 to the sum of $500.00. There must be a change of circumstances which existed at the time of the modification herein to support this reduction. The trial court in excellent reasons for judgment specifically recognized that at the time the amount of support was set by consent that the child was attending a private school and that the child was no longer attending a private school at the time of the demand for the modification of the child support. The *1316 child had initially attended Ridgedale where the monthly tuition was $134.00 and had attended River Oaks which required a monthly tuition of $273.00 per month the year before this modification proceeding was filed.
The appellant argues that the elimination of the private school tuition was not a change in circumstances justifying the change in the support award because of the increase in the needs of the child brought about by his increase in age. We observe that the monthly list of needs in the amount of $1,544.00 filed by the appellant at the time this domestic litigation commenced appears to be exorbitant. However, she explained the large monthly amount needed for the eleven year old boy as being the result of excessive luxury bestowed upon the child by his parents.
The monthly need list of $2,243.00 which appellant filed in the instant litigation continues to grossly exceed any legitimate needs of a sixteen year old high school student. While we will make no attempt to analyze the entire list, we note that it included $454.00 per month expense for the child's food. The trial judge did not mention this specific item in his reasons for judgment but properly characterized the cost of the ownership and operation of a car provided for the boy as a luxury expense which should not have been incurred. The expense list showed a total of transportation costs for the child of $624.99 which was itemized as car note, car insurance, maintenance expense, operating expense and transportation cost.
The increase in the amount reflected upon the exorbitant needs list filed in the modification proceeding does not require a rejection of the change of circumstances resulting from the change to a public school. There has been a change of circumstances here established and the trial court recognized this finding by observing in its reasons for judgment that the child no longer attended a private school and the tuition for the private school was no longer required.
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591 So. 2d 1313, 1991 WL 274011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-carter-lactapp-1991.