Per Curiam.
This case arises from a May 16, 1994, order issued by the trial court that imputed income to defendant, the noncustodial parent, as a voluntarily unemployed person for purposes of computing child support. On the basis of the recommendations of the friend of the court, the trial court ordered defendant to pay $33 a week in child support even though she is
unemployed and receives Aid to Families with Dependent Children (afdc) benefits on behalf of her two minor daughters from a previous marriage who live with her. Defendant unsuccessfully sought leave to appeal from the order to this Court. In lieu of granting leave to appeal, however, our Supreme Court remanded the case to this Court for consideration as on leave granted. 449 Mich 861 (1995). On remand, we affirm.
Plaintiff James Ghidotti and defendant are the parents of James Allen Ghidotti, Jr. (bom November 30, 1987). The parties were never married. Plaintiff received custody of their son in 1993. Defendant has custody of her two minor daughters. Because her former husband is incarcerated, defendant receives no child support but instead receives afdc benefits, which are means-tested federal benefits provided for the support of defendant’s minor daughters.
The Calhoun County Friend of the Court’s investigation revealed that defendant suffered from no condition or restriction that would preclude her from obtaining gainful employment.
Accordingly, the friend of the court deemed defendant to be voluntarily unemployed and calculated an imputed income for defendant equaling $170 a week. In light of defendant’s imputed income, the friend of the court
recommended that defendant pay a total of $33 of child support a week to plaintiff, the custodial parent.
At the hearing regarding the friend of the court’s motion, defendant argued that the county’s policy of imputing income to noncustodial parents who are unemployed and receive only federal means-tested benefits is preempted by federal law precluding the alienation of these federal benefits. Defense counsel admitted, however, that defendant did not suffer from any medical condition that would preclude her from being employed. The trial court rejected defendant’s argument, refusing to agree that evén after excluding from consideration the AFDC benefits, the friend of the court should be precluded from imputing income to defendant consistent with the Michigan child support guidelines. Following Michigan precedent, the court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $33. a week in child support.
On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court violated MCL 400.63; MSA 16.463,
prohibiting the alienation of AFDC benefits, MCL 552.602(c); MSA 25.164(2)(c),
defining income for purposes of establishing child support, and the Michigan child support
guidelines by imputing income and ordering defendant to pay child support where defendant’s only source of income is AFDC. We find that defendant’s arguments lack merit.
We review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error, which is found to have occurred where an appellate court is left with a firm and definite conviction that a mistake was made. MCR 2.613(C);
Beason v Beason,
435 Mich 791, 804-805; 460 NW2d 207 (1990). If the findings are supported, we review the court’s dispositional ruling de novo.
Edwards v Edwards,
192 Mich App 559, 562; 481 NW2d 769 (1992). Generally, we will not reverse the court’s decision to award child support absent an abuse of discretion.
Morrison v Richerson,
198 Mich App 202, 211; 497 NW2d 506 (1993);
Edwards, supra
at 562.
Defendant’s assertion that the trial court is statutorily precluded from imputing income to an afdc recipient is factually flawed because the court imputed wage income to her on the basis of her voluntary unemployment. It did not impute her AFDC grant to her as income, which is prohibited under the child support guidelines. In short, the court imputed income to her without considering the afdc she received. It apparently viewed her as it should and
does view all unemployed yet employable noncustodial parents who, for one reason or another, have no job and claim an inability to financially support a child. Case law supports the trial court’s determination that a parent who voluntarily reduces income will have income assigned to the parent for purposes of supporting that parent’s child.
Olson v Olson,
189 Mich App 620, 622; 473 NW2d 772 (1991), aff’d 439 Mich 986 (1992) (approving income imputation in light of a parent’s voluntary reduction of income);
Rohloff v Rohloff,
161 Mich App 766, 769-776; 411 NW2d 484 (1987) (analyzing and affirming earlier cases addressing income imputation). Also, the Michigan Child Support Formula Manual (1996 rev) endorses the practice of imputing income, i.e., “treating a party as having income or resources that the party does not actually have. This usually occurs in cases where a party voluntarily reduces income.”
Id.,
p 8.
When evaluating whether a party has an unexercised ability to earn, the friend of the court must consider equitable factors such as the party’s prior employment, education, skills, disabilities, ability to earn the wages imputed, the prevailing wage rate in the area, and the effect that minor children residing with the party may have on that party’s earning ability.
Id.
The manual also provides that imputation is not appropriate where “[a] payee/payer source of income is a means tested income such as Aid for Families with Dependent Children, General Assistance, Food Stamps and Supplemental Security Income.”
Id.,
p 9. This is consistent with the child support guidelines’ statement that means-tested sources of income “should
not
be considered as
income to either parent for the purpose of determining child support.”
Id.,
p 7.
The manual contains no substantive right liberating a noncustodial parent who receives afdc from all child support obligations. If this were the case, we would find statutory authorization for this exclusion, but none exists. Rather, we recognize that the manual restates the rule contained in MCL 552.602(c); MSA 25.164(2)(c) that AFDC is not income, the rule set forth in
Proudfit v O’Neal,
193 Mich App 608, 610-611; 484 NW2d 746 (1992), that AFDC is not to be treated as if it were income, and the rule in MCL 400.63(1); MSA 16.463(1) that AFDC benefits cannot be alienated.
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Per Curiam.
This case arises from a May 16, 1994, order issued by the trial court that imputed income to defendant, the noncustodial parent, as a voluntarily unemployed person for purposes of computing child support. On the basis of the recommendations of the friend of the court, the trial court ordered defendant to pay $33 a week in child support even though she is
unemployed and receives Aid to Families with Dependent Children (afdc) benefits on behalf of her two minor daughters from a previous marriage who live with her. Defendant unsuccessfully sought leave to appeal from the order to this Court. In lieu of granting leave to appeal, however, our Supreme Court remanded the case to this Court for consideration as on leave granted. 449 Mich 861 (1995). On remand, we affirm.
Plaintiff James Ghidotti and defendant are the parents of James Allen Ghidotti, Jr. (bom November 30, 1987). The parties were never married. Plaintiff received custody of their son in 1993. Defendant has custody of her two minor daughters. Because her former husband is incarcerated, defendant receives no child support but instead receives afdc benefits, which are means-tested federal benefits provided for the support of defendant’s minor daughters.
The Calhoun County Friend of the Court’s investigation revealed that defendant suffered from no condition or restriction that would preclude her from obtaining gainful employment.
Accordingly, the friend of the court deemed defendant to be voluntarily unemployed and calculated an imputed income for defendant equaling $170 a week. In light of defendant’s imputed income, the friend of the court
recommended that defendant pay a total of $33 of child support a week to plaintiff, the custodial parent.
At the hearing regarding the friend of the court’s motion, defendant argued that the county’s policy of imputing income to noncustodial parents who are unemployed and receive only federal means-tested benefits is preempted by federal law precluding the alienation of these federal benefits. Defense counsel admitted, however, that defendant did not suffer from any medical condition that would preclude her from being employed. The trial court rejected defendant’s argument, refusing to agree that evén after excluding from consideration the AFDC benefits, the friend of the court should be precluded from imputing income to defendant consistent with the Michigan child support guidelines. Following Michigan precedent, the court ordered defendant to pay plaintiff $33. a week in child support.
On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court violated MCL 400.63; MSA 16.463,
prohibiting the alienation of AFDC benefits, MCL 552.602(c); MSA 25.164(2)(c),
defining income for purposes of establishing child support, and the Michigan child support
guidelines by imputing income and ordering defendant to pay child support where defendant’s only source of income is AFDC. We find that defendant’s arguments lack merit.
We review the trial court’s factual findings for clear error, which is found to have occurred where an appellate court is left with a firm and definite conviction that a mistake was made. MCR 2.613(C);
Beason v Beason,
435 Mich 791, 804-805; 460 NW2d 207 (1990). If the findings are supported, we review the court’s dispositional ruling de novo.
Edwards v Edwards,
192 Mich App 559, 562; 481 NW2d 769 (1992). Generally, we will not reverse the court’s decision to award child support absent an abuse of discretion.
Morrison v Richerson,
198 Mich App 202, 211; 497 NW2d 506 (1993);
Edwards, supra
at 562.
Defendant’s assertion that the trial court is statutorily precluded from imputing income to an afdc recipient is factually flawed because the court imputed wage income to her on the basis of her voluntary unemployment. It did not impute her AFDC grant to her as income, which is prohibited under the child support guidelines. In short, the court imputed income to her without considering the afdc she received. It apparently viewed her as it should and
does view all unemployed yet employable noncustodial parents who, for one reason or another, have no job and claim an inability to financially support a child. Case law supports the trial court’s determination that a parent who voluntarily reduces income will have income assigned to the parent for purposes of supporting that parent’s child.
Olson v Olson,
189 Mich App 620, 622; 473 NW2d 772 (1991), aff’d 439 Mich 986 (1992) (approving income imputation in light of a parent’s voluntary reduction of income);
Rohloff v Rohloff,
161 Mich App 766, 769-776; 411 NW2d 484 (1987) (analyzing and affirming earlier cases addressing income imputation). Also, the Michigan Child Support Formula Manual (1996 rev) endorses the practice of imputing income, i.e., “treating a party as having income or resources that the party does not actually have. This usually occurs in cases where a party voluntarily reduces income.”
Id.,
p 8.
When evaluating whether a party has an unexercised ability to earn, the friend of the court must consider equitable factors such as the party’s prior employment, education, skills, disabilities, ability to earn the wages imputed, the prevailing wage rate in the area, and the effect that minor children residing with the party may have on that party’s earning ability.
Id.
The manual also provides that imputation is not appropriate where “[a] payee/payer source of income is a means tested income such as Aid for Families with Dependent Children, General Assistance, Food Stamps and Supplemental Security Income.”
Id.,
p 9. This is consistent with the child support guidelines’ statement that means-tested sources of income “should
not
be considered as
income to either parent for the purpose of determining child support.”
Id.,
p 7.
The manual contains no substantive right liberating a noncustodial parent who receives afdc from all child support obligations. If this were the case, we would find statutory authorization for this exclusion, but none exists. Rather, we recognize that the manual restates the rule contained in MCL 552.602(c); MSA 25.164(2)(c) that AFDC is not income, the rule set forth in
Proudfit v O’Neal,
193 Mich App 608, 610-611; 484 NW2d 746 (1992), that AFDC is not to be treated as if it were income, and the rule in MCL 400.63(1); MSA 16.463(1) that AFDC benefits cannot be alienated. If the manual excluded parents receiving afdc from paying child support, it would conflict with MCL 722.712(a); MSA 25.492(a) of the Paternity Act, which requires parents to support their children, MCL 552.519(3)(a)(vi); MSA 25.176(19)(3)(a)(vi) of the Friend of the Court Act, which authorizes the manual’s promulgation for use in determining the amount of child support that noncustodial parents must pay, and MCL 722.717(3); MSA 25.497(3) of the Paternity Act, which requires the court to follow the manual’s determination regarding the child support amount awarded unless doing so would be unjust or inappropriate. Defendant’s proposed interpretation of these statutes and the manual precludes an harmonious interpretation of in pari materia statutes,
Jennings v Southwood,
446 Mich 125, 136-137; 521 NW2d 230 (1994), and results in repugnancy, absurdity, or unreasonableness,
Michigan Humane Society v Natural Resources Comm,
158 Mich App 393, 401; 404 NW2d 757 (1987). It also conflicts with decisions of this Court endorsing the imputation of income for volun
tarily unemployed noncustodial parents. See
Olson, supra
at 621-622;
Rohloff, supra.
Indeed, defendant’s constrained reading of these statutes, cases, and the manual cannot control because it does not yield a construction that avoids conflict. See
House Speaker v State Administrative Bd,
441 Mich 547, 568-569; 495 NW2d 539 (1993). Thus, the fact that a party receives an afdc grant is irrelevant when determining whether a parent is voluntarily unemployed and the amount of child support that a voluntarily unemployed noncustodial parent will pay for the benefit of the noncustodial child.
Additionally, although at first glance the language of MCL 400.63; MSA 16.463 and MCL 552.602(c); MSA 25.164(2)(c) may appear to protect defendant from child support obligations because her only income is afdc, neither statute prohibits imputing wage income to a voluntarily unemployed parent who receives afdc
as long as
that parent is not required to satisfy the child support order from the AFDC grant. Defendant’s argument presumes, incorrectly so, that afdc is her sole means of
paying
the child support, which would constitute an illegal alienation of those benefits. Instead, we believe that both the trial court and the friend of the court understand that neither could require defendant to pay the weekly child support from the AFDC benefits. We also find implicit in the court’s holding the conclusion that as long as defendant has no source of income outside the afdc benefits with which to pay the child support, defendant’s unpaid weekly child support will accumulate in arrears. Thus, the child support order does not improperly alienate her afdc benefits. When defendant eventually obtains employment and earns income,
she will then be required to make support payments to plaintiff and pay the arrearages.
Causley v LaFreniere, 78
Mich App 250, 252; 259 NW2d 445 (1977) (the court may order child support to be paid in the future from future wages).
We reject defendant’s assertion that this Court is bound to follow the decision in
Joslin v LaVance,
154 Mich App 501; 398 NW2d 453 (1986), which precluded the accumulation of child support in arrears where the noncustodial parent is receiving federal assistance. In
Joslin,
a majority of this Court determined that the plaintiff should continue paying $21 a week in child support to his noncustodial child after his income dropped, but it wiped clean all arrearages that accumulated while the plaintiff had custody of his two minor children from another marriage because he was dependent upon ADC
as his sole source of support. Unlike an unemployed father who had “considerable free time” to earn $21 a week, the majority found that the plaintiff in
Joslin
was busy caring for his two minor children “who presumably would have required alternative child care at some cost to plaintiff had he acquired employment so as to pay $21 per week support.”
Id.
at 505. The majority reasoned that the child at issue would not suffer in the absence of the $21 of weekly support because that child could also receive ADC. Thus, the majority of this Court opined that “[t]o the extent that the minor child ... is being provided adequate support and care by the custodial parent, there is no reasonable societal need to saddle an indigent father with an onerous arrearage obligation.”
Id.
at 505.
Judge Gnus dissented from this finding, holding that this Court’s decisions in
Causley, supra,
and
Gonzalez v Gonzalez,
121 Mich App 289; 328 NW2d 365 (1982), were dispositive with regard to permitting the accumulation of child support in arrears for ADC recipients. In those cases, this Court found that the defendant fathers could be employed and earn the minimum amount necessary to pay child support without jeopardizing the receipt of ADC benefits.
Joslin, supra
at 507. Judge Gnus also noted that the plaintiff’s children in
Joslin
were twelve and fourteen and his girlfriend lived with them, thereby dispelling the majority’s contention that the plaintiff could spend no time away from the children in his custody in order to find employment.
Id.
We agree with Judge Gnus.
In the eleven years since
Joslin
was published, more children are being bom out of wedlock only to become recipients of state, and federal welfare programs. Efforts are currently being made in Michigan and across the nation to educate welfare recipients in order to help them find work and end their dependence on welfare. We would thwart these attempts at
welfare reform and perpetuate the unwitting membership of noncustodial parents’ children in welfare programs if we permit noncustodial parents to avoid their financial obligations to their children who live apart from them solely because we refuse to require recipients of afdc to find some type of work that will not jeopardize their AFDC eligibility.
Further, we believe that Judge Gnus’ approach in
Joslin
more accurately reflects the realities facing the trial court on a daily basis. Indeed, in
Causley, supra
at 253-254, n 1, this Court recognized that an ADC-U recipient could work fewer than one hundred hours a month and still maintain those benefits. More importantly, we also agreed in
Causley
that the trial court could order
the future
payment of child support from
future
earned income, and unpaid support would accumulate in arrears when the parent had no support other than inalienable welfare benefits.
Id.
Thus, in
Causley,
we affirmed the court’s reduction of child support to $5 a month during the defendant’s unemployment and found no alienation of benefits as a result because the “defendant had twenty-odd work days available each month in which to seek whatever employment would be necessary to earn $5.”
Id.
at 253.
This Court in
Gonzalez, supra
at 292, followed the lead set in
Causley
by instructing the trial court on remand that it could approve “an order to pay child support from future wages and [hold] in abeyance collection of arrearages until the defendant was again employed.” Thus, in light of the compelling precedent set forth in
Causley, supra,
and
Gonzalez, supra,
that should have controlled in
Joslin,
we cannot and will not follow the majority’s decision in
Joslin.
Assuming that defendant earns minimum wage and works insufficient hours to imperil her afdc status, we believe that defendant would be fully capable of paying child support for her noncustodial child. She would also have additional income for the benefit of the two children living with her. As this Court stated in
Causley, supra
at 256, quoting the trial court’s admonition to the noncustodial parent, “you have this continuing obligation just as much to support this [noncustodial] child as the children that are at home with you. And I don’t think it is appropriate that you entirely forget it despite the fact that your income is less.”
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order requiring defendant to pay child support because she is a voluntarily unemployed individual. As long as defendant’s sole source of income is afdc, defendant will not be required to pay support, but all unpaid support shall accumulate in arrears until defendant has a source of income other than AFDC from which she can pay support. At that time, defendant shall begin paying weekly support and shall also make weekly payments to reduce the arrearage amount.
In light of our disposition of this issue, we need not address the remaining issue raised on appeal.
Affirmed. No taxable costs pursuant to MCR 7.219, a question of public policy being involved.
T. G. Kavanagh, J., did not participate.