Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 2026
DocketA171951
StatusUnpublished

This text of Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4 (Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/20/26 Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

JOHN EDGCOMB, Plaintiff and Appellant, A171951 v. APRIL POWERS, (Marin County Defendant and Respondent. Super. Ct. No. FL1600953)

In 2018, after 21 years of marriage, John Edgcomb and April Powers negotiated a marital settlement agreement requiring John to pay $15,000 per month in spousal support to April, plus capped bonus support.1 After his income declined in 2023, John filed a request to terminate the spousal support under Family Code section 4322, or in the alternative to modify the amount of spousal support under Family Code section 4320.2 April agreed that John’s diminished income warranted reducing her level of support to $10,350 per month, but she otherwise opposed John’s request.

1 As is customary in family law cases, we use the parties’ first names

for clarity, not out of disrespect. (In re Marriage of Swain (2018) 21 Cal.App.5th 830, 832, fn. 1.) 2 Subsequent undesignated statutory references are to the Family

Code. The trial court found that John’s drop in income constituted a material change of circumstances, but it further determined that April’s separate estate was not sufficient to meet her needs. Accordingly, the court denied John’s request to terminate spousal support, and it granted his request to modify the spousal support, lowering it to $10,000 per month. John appealed both rulings. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND John and April married in October 1993. They had one daughter, who reached majority in April 2018. John and April enjoyed a high marital standard of living. John was the primary earner, working as the partner of a law firm and generally earning seven figures in annual income. April was the primary caretaker for their daughter, and she worked part-time as a physical education instructor. In 2014, the last year she worked, April earned less than $30,000. John and April separated in May 2015 and subsequently negotiated a marital settlement agreement. Judgment was entered incorporating the agreement on March 15, 2018. Each party received $3.2 million in community property; April’s share included the family residence. The judgment recognized John’s “base income” as $579,000, and it imputed $70,000 in income to April. The judgment required John to pay $15,000 per month in spousal support to April, plus bonus support in the event John’s annual income exceeded $579,000 up to a cap of $900,000.3

3 The spousal support payments were taxable to April and deductible to

John. The percentage of John’s income payable as bonus support gradually decreased, starting at 25 percent from 2018 through 2020, dropping to 22 percent from 2021 through 2024, and dropping again to 10 percent in 2025 and beyond.

2 After the parties divorced, April sold the family residence and purchased a home with a mortgage. John purchased a home with all cash. In 2023, John’s annual income was $385,000, a decrease of roughly a third from his $579,000 base income as determined by the judgment. In October of that year, he filed a Request for Order to Change Spousal Support (RFO), seeking “termination of the order for spousal support issued on March 15, 2018 or in the alternative, a substantial reduction in the amount of spousal support.” He asserted two grounds for the requested relief: his decreased income and April’s ability to support herself at the marital standard of living due to the growth in the net worth of her assets. April agreed there was “one changed circumstance . . . John’s ability to pay spousal support.” But she disputed that the value growth in her asset portfolio constituted changed circumstances. She represented that her expenses were about $15,000, excluding her healthcare costs, and therefore she required $21,000 per month in gross income.4 She calculated that “[u]sing a 3% return on her invested assets, she could generate investment income of approximately $5,250 per month.” If she also began taking $1,298 per month from a pension, bringing her gross income to “approximately $6500,” then she would “still need[] $14,500 per month to meet her needs unless she [began] drawing down savings and principal.” Thus, she argued that John was entitled to a reduction—but not a termination—of spousal support, and she consented to decreasing her spousal support to $10,350 per month, nearly one-third less than the amount set by the judgment.

4 April’s memorandum of points and authorities in opposition to John’s

RFO stated that her expenses were “$15,085 per month not including Medicare and gap policy.” In her attached declaration, April stated that her “monthly expenses [were] $14,894, not including $820 per month for Medicare plus and a supplemental Blue Shield plan.”

3 In reply, John countered that April’s request for a mere reduction in spousal support was inappropriate. He contended, inter alia, that her “demand [was] premised on the false notion that: 1) she should not have to expend any principle (savings) to pay for the cost of the . . . lifestyle she has enjoyed since the separation . . .; 2) she need not take full advantage of prevailing money market interest rates above 5% . . . because she is risk averse . . . .” Along with his reply briefing, John filed the declaration of his expert, Natalie McFarlin, who calculated April’s post tax assets and pretax retirement assets available through 2042 (the end of April’s actuarial life expectancy at age 84). The trial court held a hearing on John’s RFO at which it heard John and April’s testimony, and then the matter was continued. Neither party requested an evidentiary hearing. But April submitted a memorandum of points and authorities in rebuttal to McFarlin’s declaration, and McFarlin submitted an updated declaration. McFarlin’s updated declaration assumed April’s $14,894 asserted monthly expenses would increase at the same rate as inflation over the past 20 years. McFarlin found that April’s post tax assets were $2,430,719 and her pretax retirement assets were $839,411, and McFarlin assumed a 5% rate of return on those investments. McFarlin also anticipated that April would receive “social security starting at her retirement age, 50% of [John’s] social security at his full retirement age (replacing the amount she previously received under her own benefit), [her] pension payment . . . and age-based mandatory withdrawals from retirement accounts.” Based on those findings and assumptions, McFarlin calculated that April’s cashflow would be negative, starting at a roughly $80,000 deficit in the near term but growing to roughly a $190,344 deficit in the year 2042. By withdrawing principal from her assets to make up for her insufficient

4 income, McFarlin determined that April would have post tax assets of $147,756 and retirement assets of $1,147,233 at age 84. McFarlin separately projected that the value of April’s home would increase at the same rate as other homes in her zip code had increased over the past 20 years (11.22%), resulting in $4,906,488 of home equity at age 84. At the continued hearing, John requested a statement of decision, and the court heard counsels’ arguments. The court duly issued a proposed statement of decision, to which John filed objections. In its final statement of decision, the trial court found that John’s reduction in income constituted a material change in circumstances, authorizing the court to consider John’s RFO.

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Bluebook (online)
Edgcomb v. Powers CA1/4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgcomb-v-powers-ca14-calctapp-2026.