Collins v. Collins

2011 Ohio 2087
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 2, 2011
Docket10CA0004
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 2011 Ohio 2087 (Collins v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Collins, 2011 Ohio 2087 (Ohio Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

[Cite as Collins v. Collins, 2011-Ohio-2087.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF WAYNE )

EMORY J. COLLINS C.A. No. 10CA0004

Appellee

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE KARIN A. COLLINS COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF WAYNE, OHIO Appellant CASE No. 07-DR-0564

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: May 2, 2011

Per Curiam.

{¶1} Appellant, Karin Collins, appeals from a judgment of the Wayne County Court of

Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, that granted her a divorce from Appellee, Dr.

Emory Collins, and ordered Dr. Collins to pay child and spousal support. This Court reverses

and remands.

I.

{¶2} The parties were married in July 1993 and have two minor children. During the

early years of their marriage, Mrs. Collins worked as a school teacher while Dr. Collins attended

medical school and later obtained specialized training as a pediatric gastroenterologist. During

those years, Mrs. Collins supported the household. Mrs. Collins followed Dr. Collins to various

parts of the country in support of his career. While living out of state, Mrs. Collins’s Ohio

teaching certification lapsed. After the parties’ first child was born in 2000, they made a joint

decision that Mrs. Collins should stay home to raise their children. Thus, the children and Mrs. 2

Collins were financially dependent upon Dr. Collins because he was the sole wage earner of the

family.

{¶3} The parties separated in June 2007. Dr. Collins left the marital home and moved

from Medina County to Wayne County. Shortly after the separation, Dr. Collins decided to quit

his job at a hospital where he was earning approximately $200,000 annually in base salary and

bonus. In November 2007, Dr. Collins filed a complaint for divorce. At that time, he had

informed the hospital, but not Mrs. Collins, that he was resigning. The hospital asked him to

stay. Eventually, he told Mrs. Collins that he had resigned from the hospital and planned to open

a private practice.

{¶4} In February 2008, Dr. Collins left the hospital. He did not immediately establish a

location for his practice and used other doctors’ offices to see clients. This resulted in a loss of

referrals. In August 2008, Dr. Collins established his own office location and began operating

his medical practice. Although Dr. Collins earned income at the hospital for the first two months

of 2008, his medical practice did not report significant income that year due to start-up expenses

and substantial errors by his medical billing company which had failed to properly submit

insurance claims.

{¶5} An evidentiary hearing took place before the magistrate in March 2009. The

parties disputed what income should be imputed to Dr. Collins. His accountant projected Dr.

Collins’s current income at $29,400. Dr. Collins suggested that his income could be imputed at

$75,000. Mrs. Collins argued that Dr. Collins’s income should be imputed at $200,000 given

that he unilaterally terminated his employment at the hospital. In considering the issue of

spousal support and child support, the magistrate’s central inquiry was whether or not Dr.

Collins’s decision to leave his position at the hospital with a substantial income to start his own 3

practice was for the purpose of reducing his income in the divorce proceedings. In considering

both spousal and child support, the magistrate imputed minimum wage to Mrs. Collins and

recommended that an annual income of $75,000 be imputed to Dr. Collins for purposes of

calculating both child support and spousal support.

{¶6} Mrs. Collins filed objections to the magistrate’s decision that focused primarily on

the magistrate’s imputation of income to Dr. Collins at an amount well below his income at the

hospital. The trial court remanded the matter for further hearing on the parties’ financial

situation after expressing concern that Dr. Collins’s decision to leave his hospital position may

have been for improper reasons.

{¶7} Instead of a further hearing before the magistrate, at the parties’ request, the trial

court held a hearing. After that hearing, the trial court overruled in part and sustained in part

Mrs. Collins’s objections to the magistrate’s decision. Specifically pertaining to Dr. Collins’s

income, the court concluded that, although it had been concerned that Dr. Collins’s decision to

leave his hospital position had left him “substantially underemployed,” it stated that “its initial

concern was unfounded” and imputed income of $100,000 for the purpose of computing child

and spousal support. The trial court retained jurisdiction to modify spousal support, explicitly

recognizing that Dr. Collins’s income was likely to increase in the future and that his medical

practice had “tremendous upside *** potential.”

{¶8} The trial court granted the parties a divorce, divided the marital property and

debts, and ordered Dr. Collins to pay spousal and child support. Mrs. Collins appeals and raises

three assignments of error. 4

II

Assignment of Error Number One

IT WAS AN ABUSE OF THE TRIAL COURT’S DISCRETION AND IT WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE TO FIND EMORY TO BE VOLUNTARILY UNDEREMPLOYED, BUT THEN TO ONLY IMPUTE AN ARBITRARY INCOME LEVEL TO HIM AND FAIL TO [IMPUTE] UPON HIM HIS LAST EMPLOYMENT SALARY OF $200,000 PER YEAR.”

Assignment of Error Number Two

IT WAS AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION FOR THE TRIAL COURT TO IGNORE THE REVENUES THAT EMORY GENERATES IN HIS PRACTICE THAT ARE NOW DIRECTED TO SERVICING ‘SEPARATE DEBT OBLIGATIONS’ INCURRED SOLELY BY EMORY DURING THE PENDENCY OF THE DIVORCE PROCEEDING IN CALCULATION OF CHILD AND SPOUSAL SUPPORT OBLIGATION.”

Assignment of Error Number Three

“IT WAS AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION BY THE TRIAL COURT TO ORDER SPOUSAL SUPPORT TO BE PAID BY EMORY TO KARIN IN THE NEGLIGIBLE AMOUNT OF ONLY $2,500 PER MONTH FOR MERELY FOUR YEARS IN DURATION.”

{¶9} Mrs. Collins has raised three assignments of error. However, in light of our

decision below, we find it necessary to consider her first assignment of error only. In her first

assignment of error, Mrs. Collins has asserted that the trial court erred when, after it found Dr.

Collins to be voluntarily underemployed, it merely imputed an arbitrary income figure to him.

As evidenced by the language contained in this assignment of error, Mrs. Collins broadly

challenges the trial court’s imputation of income to Dr. Collins and thus we find it appropriate to

examine whether there was error in the manner in which the trial court imputed income. This

inquiry in turn implicates the trial court’s determinations relative to the award of spousal and

child support. 5

{¶10} In order to review the propriety of the manner in which the trial court “imputed”

income, it is necessary to examine the separate statutory schemes established by the Ohio

legislature when considering spousal support and child support.

Spousal Support

{¶11} Upon the request of either party and after the court determines the division or

disbursement of property, the trial court may award “reasonable spousal support” to either party.

R.C. 3105.18(B). The trial court has latitude to award spousal support in real or personal

property or both, or by decreeing a sum of money paid in gross or by installments or from future

income, as the trial court considers equitable. Id.

{¶12} Pursuant to R.C.

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