Gore v. Grant

2015 UT App 113, 349 P.3d 779, 785 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 1955534
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 30, 2015
Docket20130871-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 113 (Gore v. Grant) 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
Gore v. Grant, 2015 UT App 113, 349 P.3d 779, 785 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 1955534 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge:

¶ 1 Ann Gore (Mother) challenges the district court's order modifying the child support agreement she entered into with Horace Grant (Father). First, she contends that modification of the support order is unjust, inappropriate, and not in the best interest of the parties' child. Second, she asserts that the district court did not have the authority to order her to pay Father a $1,700 security deposit. Finally, she appeals from the denial of her requests for attorney fees. We affirm the district court's order on the security deposit but reverse and remand for further proceedings on the other two issues We decline to award Mother the attorney fees she incurred on appeal.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Mother and Father have one daughter (Daughter), who was born in January 1996. In fall 1997, the parties entered into an agreement governing Father's support obligations to Daughter throughout her minority (the Agreement). The Agreement initially *782 required Father to pay child support in the amount of $8,000 per month. Then, beginning in January 1998, the "monthly amount of Child Support shall be increased by three percent (8%) on January 1 of each calendar year." An attachment to the Agreement details the amount of Father's support obligation, year by year, from 1996 through 2013 when his monthly child support obligation would be $4,812. 1 The parties do not appear to have taken Utah's child support statute into account in establishing these amounts, and, indeed, Father's monthly child support obligation was well above the highest single-child support obligation designated by Utah guidelines at the time. 2 Utah Code Ann. § 78-45-7.14 (Michie 1996) (setting the highest child support obligation amount for one child at $826 per month). In total, the Agreement obligated Father to pay about $850,000 in child support. He also agreed to be responsible for "all reasonable expenses for [Daughter's] medical, dental, orthodontic, psychological or psychiatric care," when those expenses were not covered by insurance. The Agreement further required Father to purchase a residence in Utah for Mother and Daughter to reside in rent-free until the support obligation ended. Father was responsible for "all major structural repairs" to the home, while Mother was to perform "routine maintenance and repair." The Agreement was registered and approved by a Pennsylvania court in December 1997.

¶ 3 At the time, Father was employed as a professional basketball player for the National Basketball Association (NBA). His NBA career began in 1987 and lasted seventeen seasons (ten before execution of the Agreement and seven after). In 1997, the year the Agreement was executed, Father earned nearly $14.3 million-about $1.19 million per month-from salary alone. Over the next seven seasons, Father earned nearly $27 million more-an average of $8.85 million per year in salary, with his lowest salary for any one year being $583,267. Father retired after the 2004 season and received an additional $2.5 million in deferred compensation. From his retirement through fall 2010, Father remained unemployed and lived solely on his previous earnings. During those years, Father also "lost substantial sums of money from investments and failed business ventures." In late 2010, Father began doing promotional engagements for the NBA. In total, between 1996, the year Daughter was born, and 2011, the year Father moved to modify child support, Father had earned $46.5 million in salary from the NBA. At the time of trial in May 2018, Father was earning $124,000 a year, or $10,352 a month, for his promotional appearances, which took up less than seven weeks per year. Since Daughter's birth, Mother has earned only minimal income from songwriting and a self-owned business. Both parties testified that when they entered the Agreement, they expected that Mother would not seek full-time employment but instead would stay at home to care for Daughter until her majority.

¶ 4 From 1997 through 2008, Father complied with the Agreement. He purchased a home for Mother and Daughter in Utah and kept current with his child support obligation. In 2009, Father began reducing his monthly support payments. Over the next three years, he typically paid just $3,000 per month, which, in 2009, was about $1,200 less than what he was obligated to pay under the Agreement and by 2011 resulted in a $1,500 monthly deficit. In November 2011, Father filed a petition to modify the Agreement to reduce his monthly child support obligation *783 to $783, an amount Father asserted was consistent with the Utah child support guidelines for persons with the parties' then-current incomes, and to rescind his obligation to provide a home for Mother and Daughter so that he could sell the house to pay off his child support arrearages. Father argued that his cireumstances met the threshold requirements for modification under Utah law, both because the child support amount had not been modified within the last three years and because there had been a change of 80% or more in Father's income so as to result in a difference of 15% or more between the support amount due and the amount required by the child support guidelines. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-12-210(8)-(9) (LexisNexis 2012). 3

¶ 5 Father's motion for temporary orders reducing his child support payments was denied, but he continued to pay less than his obligation under the Agreement. With the assistance of the Office of Recovery Services and the contempt power of the district court, Mother eventually recovered the child support arrearages. The district court deemed its contempt order against Father purged after he paid his overdue child support in full.

¶ 6 Following a one-day trial in May 2018, the district court granted Father's petition to modify. The court concluded that a reduction in child support was warranted because Father had experienced a substantial, non-temporary reduction in annual income from $14 million at the peak of his career in 1997 to $124,000 in 20183. The court found that Father was "no longer capable of working as a professional basketball player due to age and physical injuries" and that without any "discernible specific education, training, or skills qualifying him for employment," Father had no ability to obtain employment other than the kind of promotional appearances he was already doing. The court further found that Father was "accept[ing] and appear[ing] at as many such promotional opportunities as reasonably possible and available" and that he did not have "any other perceptible opportunity to recoup or restore a higher level of income." From these statements, it appears that the district court determined that Father was not voluntarily underemployed. The court also found that Father's income was insufficient "by several thousands of dollars" to cover his household's monthly expenses of $26,000. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 113, 349 P.3d 779, 785 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 116, 2015 WL 1955534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-grant-utahctapp-2015.