Jeffrey K. Elnicki v. Michelle D. Carraci, Defendant/Respondent.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 2014
DocketED99455
StatusPublished

This text of Jeffrey K. Elnicki v. Michelle D. Carraci, Defendant/Respondent. (Jeffrey K. Elnicki v. Michelle D. Carraci, Defendant/Respondent.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey K. Elnicki v. Michelle D. Carraci, Defendant/Respondent., (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FOUR

JEFFREY K. ELNICKI, ) No. ED99455 ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) St. Louis County vs. ) ) Honorable Dale W. Hood MICHELLE D. CARRACI, ) ) Defendant/Respondent. ) Filed: May 27, 2014

I. INTRODUCTION

Jeffrey K. Elnicki (“Father”) appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of St.

Louis County modifying the terms of child support paid to Michelle Caracci (“Mother”)

for care of their sole child (“Child”), a daughter, born during the marriage. Father raises

nine points of error on appeal. Specifically, Father claims the trial court erred by: (1)

imputing additional salary income to him, because the evidence does not support the trial

court’s finding that he was underemployed; (2) imputing additional capital gains to him,

because the evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that he underreported his

capital gains income; (3) imputing additional yearly income to him based on a one-time

inheritance; (4) determining the amount of child support and expenses that are reasonable

and necessary for Child’s care; (5) ordering him to pay child support until Child is

twenty-two years old; (6) requiring him to pay 100% of Child’s out-of-state college tuition, as well as room, board, meals, travel, and study abroad; (7) allowing evidence on

the issues of Child’s college expenses and the date Father’s support obligation terminates,

because those issues were not properly pled or tried by consent; (8) ordering him to pay

Mother’s attorneys fees of over $165,000; and (9) denying his motion to disqualify the

trial judge for prejudice.

We affirm the trial court’s decision to receive evidence on the issues of Child’s

college expenses and the date Father’s support obligation terminates. We also affirm the

denial of Father’s motion to disqualify the trial judge. We reverse the remainder of the

trial court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

II. BACKGROUND

Father and Mother divorced in 1990. Several amendments and modifications

regarding custody, visitation, and support of Child would follow. The first of these

proceedings occurred in 1992, when the parties filed a motion to re-open the dissolution

in order to amend their separation agreement. They agreed that Mother would have

primary custody of Child and that Father would pay $600 per month in child support,

which represented 74% of the cost of Child’s care. Father agreed to maintain health

insurance for Child through his work and pay 74% of any uncovered medical expenses.

The parties also agreed to set up a college fund for Child, anticipating that they would

share equally in the cost of Child’s college education, and that Father would pay child

support until Child reached twenty-two years of age. The trial court entered judgment to

this effect. Though Father received visitation rights in the agreement, he has since had

almost no contact with Child.

2 In 1996, Mother filed a motion to modify the separation agreement. After a

hearing and by consent of the parties, the trial court entered judgment increasing Father’s

support obligation to $736 per month. The parties’ agreement also stipulated that Father

would pay for 100% of Child’s uncovered medical expenses.

In 2000, Mother filed a motion for contempt. After a hearing, the parties

consented to another amended agreement. The agreement provided that parties would

alternate the years in which they would claim a dependency exemption for support of

Child on their federal and state tax returns. The trial court entered judgment to this effect.

In 2005, Mother filed the instant motion to modify, requesting a retroactive

increase in Father’s monthly child support payments, various extraordinary child-rearing

expenses, the dependency exemption for all years, and attorney’s fees for prosecuting the

action. In the summer of 2006, shortly before the motion to modify was heard, Father

filed a motion to disqualify trial judge Dale W. Hood for cause. Father alleged that Judge

Hood had shown bias throughout the pre-trial proceedings. Judge Hood denied Father’s

motion without an evidentiary hearing and proceeded to hear Mother’s motion to modify.

In its 2007 judgment, following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court found that

Father, an attorney, was not earning a salary commensurate with other similarly situated

attorneys in the St. Louis area. Though Father’s full-time salary at the time of the

judgment was $58,875 per year, the trial court imputed $100,000 per year in salary

income to him. The trial court also found that Father deliberately underreported his

income from premature IRA withdrawals and then imputed $11,618 in investment

income. Lastly, the trial court imputed $17,446 in annual capital gains income based on

3 Father’s average reported capital gains between 2003 and 2005. In all, the trial court

imputed to Father an income of $129,064 per year.

Based on this imputed income figure and its own Form 14 calculation, the trial

court ordered Father to pay retroactive child support $1,154 per month from the time of

the 2007 judgment to the time the modification was filed in 2005. The trial court ordered

Father to pay $1,263 per month prospectively. The trial court also specified that Child’s

college expenses would be split evenly between the parties, and ordered Father to pay

Mother’s attorney’s fees of $25,958.

Father appealed the trial court’s 2007 judgment, and in Elnicki v. Caracci, 255

S.W.3d 44, 50 (Mo. App. E.D. 2008), this Court held that the trial court erred by failing

to permit Father an evidentiary hearing on his motion to disqualify Judge Hood. This

Court remanded for an evidentiary hearing on Father’s motion and for a new trial on

Mother’s motion to modify.

On remand, Judge Michael D. Burton conducted an evidentiary hearing on

Father’s motion to disqualify Judge Hood. Father argued that Judge Hood was hostile to

him throughout the proceedings, for example, by stating that Father “dodged a bullet” by

settling a contempt motion before the court could rule on it. However, Judge Burton did

not find credible Father’s testimony that Judge Hood made the complained-of statement.

Judge Burton also noted that even if Judge Hood had made such a statement, it would

have been warranted due to the repeated failures of both parties to follow pre-trial

instructions. Judge Burton denied Father’s motion and Judge Hood proceeded to re-try

4 In the summer of 2012, after a hearing at which all parties were present and

evidence was received, the trial court entered its second judgment on the motion to

modify, which imposed even greater financial obligations on Father. Again, the trial court

found that Father’s salary was not commensurate with other similarly situated attorneys

in the St. Louis area. Though Father’s salary had dropped to $46,411 by 2010, the trial

court imputed a salary of $115,000 to him. Father’s reported capital gains had also

dropped by the time of the 2012 judgment to an average of approximately $93 per year

between 2006 and 2011.1 However, the trial court concluded that Father was deliberately

hiding capital gains income and imputed annual capital gains of $16,860. The trial court

also imputed annual income of $16,600 based on Father’s receipt in 2008 of a one-time

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Jeffrey K. Elnicki v. Michelle D. Carraci, Defendant/Respondent., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-k-elnicki-v-michelle-d-carraci-defendantrespondent-moctapp-2014.