Knight v. Knight
This text of 702 So. 2d 242 (Knight v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Debra Lee KNIGHT, Appellant,
v.
Gary Allan KNIGHT, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*243 Bard D. Rockenbach of Sellars, Supran, Cole, Marion and Bachi, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Richard G. Bartmon of Bartmon and Bartmon, Boca Raton, for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
This action arose when appellee sought to reduce his child support obligation for the parties minor child. Appellee's original obligation of $200 per week was established by a settlement agreement that was incorporated by the parties 1991 New Jersey dissolution judgment. The trial court herein domesticated the New Jersey judgment and reduced appellee's child support obligation to $335.24 per month. Appellant appeals the trial court's reduction of child support. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.
I.
Burden of Proof For Downward Modification
Relying upon Tietig v. Boggs, 602 So.2d 1250 (Fla.1992), appellant contends that the burden of proof to support a downward modification of a child support order is greater where such order was based upon an agreement between the parties than where the support award was not based upon such agreement. Relying on section 61.14(7), Florida Statutes, which was added in 1993, appellee argues that the burden of proof is the same regardless of any agreement. Section 61.14(7), Florida Statutes (1995), provides: "When modification of an existing order of support is sought, the proof required to modify a settlement agreement and the proof required to modify an award established by court order shall be the same."
The supreme court recently reiterated the well established rule that when "the child support was based on an agreement by the parties that was subsequently incorporated into an order, a heavier burden rests on the party seeking a reduction than would otherwise be required." Overbey v. Overbey, 698 So.2d 811, 814 (Fla.1997) (emphasis added) (citing Tietig). Like the instant case, the Overbey decision was concerned with a 1995 request for reduction in child support. It must be presumed that the supreme court's ruling was made with awareness of section 61.14(7), which had been in effect since July 1, 1993.
Thus, it appears that the supreme court has decided that section 61.14(7) does not apply to a petition to reduce child support. Even prior to the supreme court's decision in Overbey, the possibility of such an interpretation of the statute was recognized by the First District Court of Appeal based on the reasoning that "a parent may agree to a child-support obligation that exceeds the duty imposed by law." Matthews v. Matthews, 677 So.2d 323, 325 n. 1 (Fla. 1st DCA *244 1996) (citation omitted).[1]Contrast State, Dept. of Revenue v. Sumblin, 675 So.2d 691 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996) (settlement agreement does not result in heavier burden of proof on party moving for increase in child support, citing section 61.14(7) and Matthews). Accordingly, appellee should have been required to satisfy a heavier burden of proof in his petition to reduce child support than would have been required if the child support obligation was not based upon the agreement which was incorporated into the New Jersey order.
II.
The Merits
A substantial change of circumstances generally must be established before a child support obligation is modified. See, e.g., Overbey, 698 So.2d at 813. It was clear from the arguments presented below that appellee's primary basis for establishing a substantial change of his circumstances was section 61.30(1)(b), Florida Statutes (1995), which provides:
(b) The guidelines may provide the basis for proving a substantial change in circumstances upon which a modification of an existing order may be granted. However, the difference between the existing order and the amount provided for under the guidelines shall be at least 15 percent or $50, whichever amount is greater, before the court may find that the guidelines provide a substantial change in circumstances. Additionally, appellee asserted a substantial change of his financial situation. Although this basis was argued at the hearing only summarily as an alternative to the section 61.30(1)(b) basis, it was set forth more specifically in appellee's pleading which sought the modification.
It appears that the trial court found a substantial change in circumstances in both respects asserted by appellee. Paragraph number 6 of the judgment appears to acknowledge a substantial change of circumstances pursuant to section 61.30(1)(b); and paragraph number 5 of the judgment clearly finds a substantial change of circumstances pursuant to appellee's altered financial situation. Accordingly, an analysis of both bases is warranted.
Section 61.30(1)(b)
Apparently utilizing the information set out in appellee's amended financial affidavit, the trial court determined that appellee's support obligation under the Florida guidelines today would be 267% less, or $526 per month less, than the support obligation set out in the 1991 New Jersey judgment. It is clear that these figures fall within the ambit of 61.30(1)(b), and seemingly would constitute a substantial change of circumstances under the plain reading of this section.[2]
However, as appellant points out, such reading of the statute would permit a parent who agreed to pay child support above the guidelines (by at least 15% or $50) to subsequently, even soon after the entry of final judgment, modify such obligation by simply *245 resorting to section 61.30(1)(b) without a change of circumstances independent from that provided by this section. It is difficult to believe that the Legislature intended to permit a child support agreement to be so easily circumvented by virtue of the differential in the support obligation amounts where there was no change of circumstances independent from that provided by section 61.30(1)(b). Rather, a more reasonable interpretation of this section, as suggested by appellant, is that a change of circumstances independent of section 61.30(1)(b) is required and that this section was intended only to provide one simplified means of establishing that such change was substantial.
The Third District Court of Appeal recently wrestled with this issue in Turner v. Turner, 695 So.2d 422 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997):
We have carefully reviewed the legislative history of the amendments to section 61.30(1)(b), Florida Statutes since the 1987 enactment of the child support guidelines, and find no clear support for the result in this case in which the guidelines statute is used as the sole basis on which to relieve a father from an agreed-to, judicially adopted child support order entered more than six years after the enactment of the child support guidelines. We are aware that the wording of the statute, on its face, arguably supports the action taken by the trial court in this case. However, we conclude that the legislature could not have intended to allow a father to use the guidelines statute to avoid his own, freely entered agreement within one year of its making even though his income has increased and the child's needs have not decreased, particularly where, as here, there is no finding of fraud, duress, or other intentional misleading circumstances surrounding the entry of the settlement agreement.
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702 So. 2d 242, 1997 WL 715590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-knight-fladistctapp-1997.