In Re the Marriage of Scott

952 P.2d 1318, 263 Kan. 638, 1998 Kan. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1998
Docket77,278
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 952 P.2d 1318 (In Re the Marriage of Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 Scott, 952 P.2d 1318, 263 Kan. 638, 1998 Kan. LEXIS 8 (kan 1998).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

This is an appeal by Renee Scott concerning the net amount of a child support order and the termination of an automatic wage withholding order. David and Renee Scott were divorced in 1993. They entered into a property settlement agreement which provided that the primary custody of the three children would be with Renee. David was ordered to pay child support. In 1995, Renee filed a motion to increase child support. A hearing officer granted Renee’s motion and entered an order for an automatic wage withholding for payment of David’s child support obligation. David filed a motion for a de novo hearing with the Johnson County District Court. The district court reduced David’s child support obligation under the hearing officer’s ruling and terminated the automatic wage withholding. Renee appealed the trial court’s ruling to the Court of Appeals. The case was transferred to this court pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3018(c).

*639 The original child support agreed on by the parties and approved by the court was in the amount of $475 per month. The original order also granted Renee maintenance in the amount of $425 per month for 27 months so that she could return to college and get her teaching degree. Renee informed the court that she could complete her bachelor’s degree in 2 years.

In this action, Renee requested that the child support obligation be raised to $995 per month. This was based on Renee’s gross monthly income of $510 as a part-time teacher’s aide and David’s gross monthly income of $3,600. The hearing officer ordered the child support to be raised to $995 per month.

David had always paid his support obligation directly to the court trustee, who passed this payment on to Renee. David’s paycheck was not subject to wage withholding. However, the hearing officer’s order contained language that required David’s child support obligation to be withheld from his paycheck through wage withholding procedures. David’s attorney was not aware that David had not previously been subject to wage withholding procedures, and the attorney failed to inform David of this change. Thus, David did not become aware of this language in the hearing officer’s order until the first child support payment was withheld from his paycheck under the order. The wage withholding procedures caused David embarrassment at work because his employer thought the wage withholding was a garnishment.

David filed a motion for a de novo hearing from the decision of the hearing officer. According to David, the decision of the hearing officer was based upon erroneous determinations of the income of the parties and of day care expenses.

On May 28, 1996, the Johnson County District Court agreed with David and modified the decision of the hearing officer. Since Renee worked part-time, she required child care services for the youngest child, who was not in school. Due to a co-op agreement Renee had arranged with a neighbor, the child care services cost Renee $99 per month. The hearing officer calculated this expense into the overall child support obligation for which David was responsible. However, the trial court found that David’s mother was suitable, available, and willing to provide child care for the three *640 children at all times and at no charge. In fact, David’s mother was providing limited care for the youngest child 3 days a week at the time of the trial court’s hearing. Thus, the trial court decided that outside child care was not necessary. Hence, the trial court removed the $99 cost for outside child care from David’s overall child support obligation.

Since the divorce, Renee has gone to school part-time, on and off, to earn her teaching degree, and she has worked part-time as a teacher’s aide. Renee claims she is approximately 1 year away from earning her teaching degree. Based on the salary from her part-time job, the hearing officer calculated Renee’s gross income as $510 per month or $6,120 per year. The trial court found that Renee was capable of working full-time at a higher paying job and found that she could earn $18,000 per year for such employment. Thus, the trial court imputed to Renee a monthly income in the amount of $1,500 in determining the parties’ child support obligations. Based on these changes in the child support calculations, the trial court modified the hearing officer’s decision and reduced David’s child support obligation from $995 per month, as set by the hearing officer, down to $859 per month, effective May 1,1996. This amount is a $384 increase over the $475 child support obligation the parties agreed on and the court originally ordered David to pay.

The trial court also found, for good cause shown, that David did not have to pay his child support obligation through the wage withholding procedures. The trial court directed the trustee’s office to terminate the wage withholding order that had been issued to David’s employer and allow David to pay his child support obligation directly to the trustee’s office. David previously had never been late with child support payments when he paid them directly to the trustee’s office.

On appeal, Renee asserts that the trial court erred in deleting child care costs from David’s child support obligation simply because his mother could provide day care free of cost. Renee claims that having the paternal grandmother provide day care for the children is not in the children’s best interests due to the grandmother’s alleged alcohol abuse and the youngest child’s need for educational *641 day care (preschool). Renee also claims that the trial court erred in imputing income to her, so as to reduce David’s child support obligation, when there was no showing she was intentionally underemployed and when the imputed income was greater than any income she had ever previously earned. Finally, Renee claims that the trial court erred in failing to order that David must be subject to wage withholding procedures as mandated by statute.

I. DISREGARDING CHILD CARE COSTS

Since the divorce, Renee has been going to college part-time and she has worked part-time as a teacher’s aide. Renee’s youngest child is not yet in school, and she needs child care for him while she works. Renee has worked out a co-op arrangement with the other mothers in her neighborhood. This provides her children with, continuing contact with the other neighborhood children. Plus, it substantially reduces Renee’s child care expenses. Renee’s work-related child care expenses amount to $99 a month on an annualized basis.

David asked the trial court to exclude these child care expenses from the child support calculation. David contended that it was unnecessary for Renee to expend money on outside child care because his mother was suitable, available, and willing to watch the children for free. .

The trial court found that the paternal grandmother was suitable to provide child care and that if any child care was needed, it could be provided by the paternal grandmother for free. Thus, the trial court refused to include the cost of outside child care within the child support calculation. In so holding, the trial court stated:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
952 P.2d 1318, 263 Kan. 638, 1998 Kan. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-scott-kan-1998.