In Re the Marriage of Case

879 P.2d 632, 19 Kan. App. 2d 883, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJuly 29, 1994
Docket70,808
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 879 P.2d 632 (In Re the Marriage of Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Marriage of Case, 879 P.2d 632, 19 Kan. App. 2d 883, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 80 (kanctapp 1994).

Opinion

PlERRON, J.;

Sue Ann Miller appeals from an order reducing Carlton M. Case’s child support obligation for the parties’ two minor children. Miller alleges that the district court abused its discretion when it imputed Case’s income at the same level as Miller’s for purposes of determining Case’s child support obligation.

This court previously considered this case and remanded it for an evidentiary hearing. See In re Marriage of Case, 18 Kan. App. 2d 457, 856 P.2d 169 (1993).

Case and Miller were granted a divorce on June 22, 1989. By agreement of the parties, Case was ordered to pay $800 per month child support. Each party was awarded his or her “respective employment benefits, including any savings, retirement, pension, *884 annuity, insurance and/or stock ownership plans, free and clear of any claims of the other party.”

On March 27, 1992, Miller filed a petition to enforce support, alleging that Case had an arrearage of $1,600 in child support payments. An income withholding order was filed on April 20, 1992.

On May 1, 1992, Case filed a motion to reduce child support. Case attached a domestic relations affidavit (DRA) and child support worksheet (CSW). Other issues have been litigated between the parties, but this appeal revolves around Case’s motion to reduce child support.

At the time of the filing of this motion, Case owned The Studio, Inc., a photography business. Case and his current wife had filed articles of incorporation for The Studio on January 17, 1992. Case was initially its sole employee.

The amount of Case’s actual income is unclear. Case reported varying amounts to the court and to Miller’s attorney. Case reported his salary was $800 per month in a letter dated March 19, 1992. Case testified that the $800 per month figure was a “projected” amount which he was not paid. Case stated in one DRA and CSW that his income from The Studio was $515 per month as of April 30, 1992. However, Case testified that he did not begin receiving a salary from The Studio until September 1992. Case reported that his salary was $515 per month in a revised DRA dated August 1993. Case reported a gross annual salary of $2,060 from The Studio on his 1992 income tax return.

Prior to his employment with The Studio, Case was employed with Southwestern Bell (SWB) as a line forecaster, a management position. He worked for SWB for 12 years. Prior to that, Case owned a photography studio and a frame shop and had worked, at different times, as an offset printer, an administrative assistant for Topeka Parks and Recreation, a salesman for a Topeka radio station, and a business manager for the Topeka Housing Authority. Case also did “some photography work on the side” during the time he worked for SWB.

Case’s W-2’s .from SWB show the following gross salaries for the following years:

1991 $39,524.71

1990 37.419.75

*885 1989 35,836.80

1988 34,141.29

1987 32,548.43

1986 28,712.64

1985 27,002.19

In the latter part of 1991, SWB offered an “enhanced management pension plan” to all its managers. This voluntary plan, also known as a “buy out,” was available until December 31, 1992. The plan included an additional incentive of $1,756.57 for Case (and managers similarly situated) if he chose to “retire” prior to December 31, 1991. Case accepted the buy-out offer and retired on December 31, 1991. In total, Case received the following amounts as a result of accepting the buy-out offer:

Pension Lump sum $36,110.00

(SWB contributions entirely)

Savings Plan Lump sum $ 6,314.61

(SWB and Case contributions)

Loan Default $ 3,567.91

(Loan forgiveness)

Sale of Shares Lump sum $ 2,025.36

(Distributed under “Employee Stock Ownership Plan” [ESOP])

1991 Team Award Lump sum $ 2,665.00

(Received for work done in 1991)

TOTAL Gross amount $50,682.88

Case received these amounts between January 1 and May 1, 1992. He testified that some of these benefits were in existence at the time of his divorce from Miller in 1989 and were awarded to him as part of the divorce. He also testified the buy-out money was used for payment of personal debts, tax penalties for early withdrawal of the pension funds, and purchase of a mobile home and land. He also used some of the money to visit relatives in New York and South Dakota and to take a business trip to Colorado. Case testified he had taken out a $15,000 start-up business loan. The record does not indicate whether any of the buy-out money was used to start the photography business.

*886 Case testified that the pension plan buy out was voluntary. However, he also testified there had been articles in the newspapers about SWB’s intent to decrease the number of management and nonmanagement employees. Case understood that he would either lose his job or be transferred away from Topeka as par.t of this reduction in workforce. He believed that involuntary separation would be a possibility. He testified that he was concerned for his job “seniority-wise.”

When considering whether to accept the buy-out offer, Case looked around for a line forecaster job. He did not consider line forecaster jobs in any other states in the region, as he wished to remain in the Topeka area where he could be with and visit his children. Case said he had gone through the classified ads in the paper for other job opportunities. He testified he had not submitted any employment applications since leaving SWB. Case said that he believed he had the opportunity to build a photography business in Topeka due to his reputation, his clientele, and his belief that a major Topeka studio would be closing.

Miller, employed as a school teacher, testified that her salary aS of May 1992 was $2,096 per month ($25,152 per year). Her salary is not at issue in this appeal.

The trial court completed a CSW and imputed $2,100 ($25,200 per year) to Case as income. The trial court found that there had been a material change in circumstances which warranted a modification in the amount of child support. The change of circumstances was due to Case’s termination of employment with SWB and his reduced income through The Studio. The court noted that Case’s lump sum payment from SWB was, for the most part, property which was previously awarded to Case during the parties’ divorce. Additionally, the court found Case’s resignation was voluntary but was done during a time when SWB was reducing numbers of employees. The court found Case did not accept the buy-out offer for purposes of reducing his child support. Although the court noted that it must be suspicious of drastic changes in income by one party, it also took note that “the fact of divorce should not totally limit someone’s options.” The court noted:

"The fact, that you have a child support order . . . canfnot] be reasonably construed to say to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
879 P.2d 632, 19 Kan. App. 2d 883, 1994 Kan. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-case-kanctapp-1994.