Kinsey v. Kinsey

619 N.E.2d 929, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 1012, 1993 WL 316213
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 23, 1993
Docket30A01-9304-CV-140
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 619 N.E.2d 929 (Kinsey v. Kinsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinsey v. Kinsey, 619 N.E.2d 929, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 1012, 1993 WL 316213 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, Judge.

Randy A. Kinsey (Father) appeals the award of child support in excess of the amount indicated by an application of the *931 Indiana Child Support Guidelines. The present child support award was entered by the trial court after a trial upon Father's petition for the modification (reduetion) of the amount of child support that he had agreed to pay under the settlement agreement which had been merged and incorporated into the decree that had dissolved his marriage to Angela A. Egger Enzmann (Mother). The sole issue on appeal may be restated as whether the trial court abused its discretion in deviating from the guidelines and ordering child support in excess of the guideline amount. We analyze the propriety of an award of child support in excess of the guidelines generally, address the four (4) reasons entered by the trial court in support of the present deviation from the guideline amount, and reverse.

FACTS

Father and Mother were married on August 1, 1987, and divorced on April 8, 1991. One child, Jack, had been born of the marriage on July 28, 1988. As noted above, the parties resolved their differences by settlement agreement which was merged and incorporated into their divorcee decree. The parties agreed to joint legal custody of Jack, with primary physical custody in the Mother. At the time of the divorce, Father had been earning approximately $827.00 per week ($43,000.00 per year) as a partner in a pizza restaurant and Mother did not work outside the home. In the settlement agreement, Father agreed to pay $200.00 per week in child support, an amount substantially in excess of the guideline amount. Additionally, Father agreed to pay Mother $200.00 per month spousal support until she remarried, an event which took place sometime before the trial held on the instant petition.

In July of 1991, Father filed Chapter 7 (personal) Bankruptcy. He had no longer been able to keep up with his own bills along with the high support payments that he had agreed to pay under the settlement agreement. He had encountered various tax liabilities which had required him to relinquish his partnership arrangement in the pizza restaurant. At the time of trial, he was an hourly employee at the pizza restaurant earning $480.00 per week. Despite his financial difficulties, Father has kept up with his support payments and was current at the time of trial. The trial court found that Mother had remarried and had given birth to another child. The trial court imputed earnings of $170.00 per week to the Mother. The parties stipulated that any modification would be effective July 2, 1992.

The trial court found that Father's sharp decline in earnings constituted a substantial and continuing change of circumstances warranting a modification of the amount of his child support obligation. The trial court found that the amount of Father's child support obligation resulting from an application of the guidelines was $80.00 per week. The trial court deviated from the guidelines and ordered Father to pay $140.00 per week in child support. In support of the deviation from the guidelines, the trial court entered the following finding:

10. Deviation from Guideline support is appropriate in this case because (A) The agreement to pay $200.00 per week was part of a total 'financial package' contained in the Settlement Agreement; (B) Husband agreed to the $200.00 per week, in part, to terminate exhaustive discovery concerning his business and to end litigation and related fees; (C) The Guidelines caution that modifications should be avoided which cause drastic alteration in a standard of living; (D) An immediate reduction from $200 to $80 per week would cause an elimination of many discretionary items provided to the child and, thus, cause an alteration in the child's standard of living.
Additional facts are supplied as necessary.

DECISION

At the outset, we note that child support orders, including those entered by agreement, are modifiable Brokaw v. Brokaw (1980), Ind.App., 398 N.E.2d 1385. Although parties are free to bind them *932 selves to agreements to pay child support in excess of what the trial court could order if it crafted the award, such agreements are subject to modification upon proper petition. In Re Marriage of Loeb (1993), Ind.App., 614 N.E.2d 954.

In reviewing a determination of whether a child support obligation should be modified, we will reverse the trial court's decision only for an abuse of discretion from a view of the evidence most favorable to the trial court's determination, and in doing so, we will not reweigh the evidence or substitute our judgment for that of the trial judge. Drake v. Newman (1990), Ind.App., 557 N.E.2d 1348, trans. denied. A trial court's determination regarding how minor children will be provided for will be disturbed only where an abuse of discretion is clearly shown, that is, when the determination is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and cireum-stances before the court, including any reasonable inferences that might be drawn therefrom. Dahnke v. Dahnke (1991), Ind.App., 571 N.E.2d 1278, trans. denied.

The standard applicable to our review of a trial court's entry of a child support order which deviates from the amount resulting from an application of the guidelines was discussed in Talarico v. Smithson (1991), Ind.App., 579 N.E.2d 671, as follows:

The guidelines, which became effective October 1, 1989, provide a rebuttable presumption that the amount of the award which results from the application of the guidelines is the correct amount of child support to be awarded. {Ind.Child Support Guideline 2];
* * * * * *
Trial courts must avoid the pitfall of blind adherence to the computation for support without giving careful consideration to the variables that require a flexible application of the guidelines. However, when a trial court chooses to deviate from the guidelines, it must articulate a sufficient basis to do so. If the court concludes from the evidence in a particular case that the amount of the award reached through application of the guidelines would be unjust, the court shall enter a written finding articulating the factual cireumstances supporting that conclusion. Child Supp.G. 3;
* * * * * *
These findings need not be especially formal. They must, however, set forth the trial court's reason for deviating from the guidelines' amount so that as a reviewing court we may know the basis for the court's decision.... There are an infinite number of situations that may prompt a trial court to deviate from the guidelines' amount. For illustration only, and not as an exhaustive list, the guideline comments list several examples which include: noncustodial parent provides child care, purchases school clothes or has extraordinary medical expenses for his or her own self.

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619 N.E.2d 929, 1993 Ind. App. LEXIS 1012, 1993 WL 316213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinsey-v-kinsey-indctapp-1993.