In re Marriage of Johnson-Dill

2015 Ohio 4020
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
Docket2014-L-120
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 Ohio 4020 (In re Marriage of Johnson-Dill) 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
In re Marriage of Johnson-Dill, 2015 Ohio 4020 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Marriage of Johnson-Dill, 2015-Ohio-4020.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

LAKE COUNTY, OHIO

IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF : OPINION SANDRA JOHNSON-DILL,

Petitioner-Appellee, : CASE NO. 2014-L-120 and :

COLIN SCOTT DILL, :

Petitioner-Appellant. :

Appeal from the Lake County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, Case No. 10 DI 000081.

Judgment: Affirmed.

Sandra A. Dray, Sandra A. Dray Co., L.P.A., 1111 Mentor Avenue, Painesville, OH 44077 (For Petitioner-Appellee).

Gregory S. Costabile, Gregory S. Costabile Co., LPA, 1300 Fifth Third Center, 600 Superior Avenue, East, Cleveland, OH 44114 (For Petitioner-Appellant).

THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.

{¶1} Appellant, Colin Scott Dill, appeals the trial court’s decision overruling his

post-decree motion to modify child support. He primarily asserts that the trial court

erred in adopting the magistrate’s factual findings regarding appellee, Sandra Johnson

Dill’s annual income. In light of the limited record before us, the factual findings are

upheld, as well as the trial court’s decision increasing appellant’s monthly support payment.

{¶2} The parties were married for approximately four years and had one child,

Luka Scott Dill, born in May 2008. In February 2010, the parties filed for dissolution and

two months later, the marriage was dissolved. The shared parenting plan that the

parties had previously negotiated was incorporated into the dissolution decree.

{¶3} Appellee was named the residential parent for school purposes. In all

other respects, the parties were to share physical custody of Luka on a 50/50 basis.

The plan provided for appellant to pay child support in the amount of $377.95 per

month.

{¶4} To accommodate joint custody, appellant purchased a residence in the

general vicinity of appellee’s home, incurring a monthly mortgage of $1,346. The

shared parenting plan requires appellant to pay $1,496 generally to cover Luka’s

medical, dental and optical insurance. Additionally, through the years following the

dissolution, he has been financially responsible for all out-of-pocket costs associated

with Luka’s health care, for the child’s casual clothing, and all summer camp fees.

Appellee has covered Luka’s school clothing and quarterly fees associated with the

child’s participation in a youth soccer league.

{¶5} At dissolution, appellant’s annual income was $94,500, and appellee’s

was $75,996. Appellant’s income was from two sources: (1) his primary job at

Progressive Insurance; and (2) a weekend job at a fireworks company in Pennsylvania.

Appellee’s income was based solely upon her employment as a sales representative for

Custom Products Corporation. During the three-year period after the dissolution,

appellant’s income remained fairly consistent. However, appellee’s income increased

2 dramatically to $125,838 in 2011 and $146,958 in 2012.

{¶6} In January 2013, appellee’s job with Custom Products was terminated. At

the time of discharge, she was offered a severance package which included three

months of her average monthly sales commissions. To receive these benefits, though,

appellee had to agree not to compete with Custom Products for two years and waive all

claims she might have against the company. Believing she needed to do so, appellee

accepted the severance package and executed the non-compete agreement.

{¶7} In the months following discharge, appellee landed two full-time jobs. The

second of these positions was as a sales representative with PBM Graphics, with a

starting salary of $60,000. However, in light of the non-compete agreement, appellee

could not sell some of the products offered by PBM Graphics. When she did not satisfy

her monthly sales requirements, PBM Graphics terminated her employment in June

2014. Appellee then returned to work at Lakeside Sunray Window Films, the original

company hiring her following her discharge from Custom Products. But, this most

recent position was only part-time.

{¶8} In late 2013, appellee requested administrative review of the pending child

support order through the Lake County Child Support Enforcement Agency. Before the

agency could go forward, appellant moved the trial court to modify his support obligation

due to a change in circumstances. Specifically, he argued that the parties’ respective

annual incomes had changed, and it was no longer equitable to require him to pay child

support when he had custody of the child just as much as appellee.

{¶9} Appellant’s motion was assigned to a court magistrate for consideration,

and an evidentiary hearing was held in June 2014. During this proceeding, appellant

3 sought to present evidence establishing that Custom Products fired appellee because

she refused to comply with company policy. Based upon this, appellant maintained that

appellee was voluntarily underemployed, and that her annual income, for purposes of

child support, should be deemed to have remained at the rate she earned in 2011 and

2012. In response, appellee testified that she never engaged in any intentional bad acts

while working for Custom Products, and that her termination was due to a personality

conflict she had with a manager who was hired in 2010.

{¶10} In a written decision, the magistrate found that appellee’s termination at

Custom Products was not “voluntary” for purposes of determining child support; hence,

the magistrate did not impute an annual income for her at the rate she earned prior to

2013. The magistrate then found appellant’s 2013 gross income to be $95,934.16, and

appellee’s gross income to be $95,175.64. The figure for appellee was based on the

severance pay she received from Custom Products and the income she earned from

PBM Graphics and Lakeside Sunray Window Films.

{¶11} Because the parties’ combined adjusted income was greater than

$150,000, the magistrate applied R.C. 3119.04(B) and the child support schedule to

determine a new child support obligation for appellant. The magistrate’s calculation

revealed that appellant’s minimum support payment should increase from $337.95 to

$518.10 per month and ordered said increase. Moreover, the magistrate found that

even though appellant had physical custody of Luka the same amount of time as

appellee, he was not entitled to a decrease in the minimum child support payment

because appellee’s income would likely be less in 2014.

{¶12} Appellant filed objections raising two arguments. First, he asserted that

4 the magistrate erred in finding appellee’s income for 2013 to be $95.175.64 rather than

$123,000. Second, appellant argued that it was unjust for the magistrate not to grant a

downward deviation from the minimum child support obligation because his percentage

of parenting time was equal to that of appellee.

{¶13} With his objections, appellant requested additional time to submit a

transcript of the evidentiary hearing. However, one month later, he informed the court

that a transcript was not needed in order for the trial court to rule upon his objections.

Thus, a transcript was not submitted.

{¶14} After appellee responded to appellant’s objections, the trial court issued its

judgment overruling the objections and adopting the magistrate’s decision in its entirety.

In part, the court emphasized that, absent a transcript, the magistrate’s factual findings

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