Marek v. Marek

822 N.E.2d 410, 158 Ohio App. 3d 750, 2004 Ohio 5556
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 20, 2004
DocketNo. 21886.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 822 N.E.2d 410 (Marek v. Marek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marek v. Marek, 822 N.E.2d 410, 158 Ohio App. 3d 750, 2004 Ohio 5556 (Ohio Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

Batchelder, Judge.

{¶ 1} Appellant, Robert D. Marek Jr., appeals from a decision of the Summit County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, which ordered payment of child support and arrearages and apportioned responsibility for uninsured health care. We reverse.

I

{¶ 2} Marek has two ex-wives and seven children. He was married to his first ex-wife, Larraine, from circa 1976 until divorce in 1992, and has four children with her, ages 27, 25, 18, and five. He was then married to his second ex-wife, Lori, from 1993 until divorce in 2003, and has three children with her, ages eight, five, and three. Marek’s youngest child with first ex-wife Larraine was born in the midst of his marriage to Lori and was likely a cause of his second divorce. This contentious second divorce fostered the litigation underlying this appeal, litigation during which neither party has been entirely forthright, to put it mildly.

{¶ 3} Shortly after his divorce from Larraine in 1992, Marek incorporated MBE Trucking, Inc., making himself the sole owner and operator. He married Lori in 1993, and the two of them operated the business together until their marital difficulties. Essentially, MBE operates large, off-road dump trucks at construction sites, as an independent contractor. However, for all practical purposes, Marek is far from independent. When starting his company, Marek *754 lacked the financial ability to purchase or lease these dump trucks on his own, so he entered an agreement with Anthony Allega (d.b.a. Allega Construction, Cuyahoga Leasing, or Mid-America Trucking). Under this agreement, Allega provided the trucks and offered cash advances to MBE as needed to sustain its operations. In return, MBE worked exclusively at Allega’s direction, performing jobs only when and where Allega so instructed. Fees for these jobs were paid to Allega directly, and Allega credited that amount toward MBE’s truck leases or cash advances. Any revenues over and above the truck lease or advances would flow to MBE as income. That rarely happened. Rather, MBE operated at a perpetual loss, increasing its debt to nearly $100,000 when Allega stopped this free-fall and retrieved his trucks, in effect putting MBE out of business and placing the obligation for the debt on Marek personally.

{¶ 4} Another man might have abandoned this business much earlier and prudently cut his losses while the debt was still manageable. But Marek seems to have enjoyed the benefits of self-employment, and he tunneled certain personal expenses through the company, such as health insurance, home insurance, car insurance, car fuel, and car payments, including a car for his ex-wife Larraine. With these perks and rising personal credit-card debt, Marek and Lori were able to maintain their standard of living without significant effort. Yet their financial and personal relationships were deteriorating.

{¶ 5} In January 2001, Lori filed for divorce and moved for several orders. A magistrate heard the motions and granted temporary orders, including orders for spousal and child support. Meanwhile, Marek was repairing his relationship with Allega, who had returned to him the use of one truck so that he could continue to earn money to pay off his debt.

{¶ 6} In 2002, Marek filed for bankruptcy, thereby absolving himself of his debts (not including child support), but thereafter reaffirmed his immense debt to Allega, and has explained that he would have been blackballed from the construction business otherwise. Between the time of his bankruptcy and the hearing on his divorce, Marek managed to reduce his debt to Allega from approximately $94,000 to $47,000, although he correspondingly claimed very little personal income and at times received unemployment compensation from the state.

{¶ 7} In March 2003, after almost two years of bitter negotiation, the trial court conducted a hearing, entered the divorce settlement into the record, and granted the divorce, while withholding decision on three outstanding issues: arrearages from the temporary orders, the determination of child support, and the allocation of health-care cost responsibilities. In sum, the settlement granted Lori 50 percent ownership in MBE, split the value of the home (which resulted in $400 each after the foreclosure sale), allowed Lori to keep her entire IRA (approximately $6,000), gave each party one of their two boats, gave Lori a 1987 *755 Dodge automobile, and gave Marek certain deer heads, mounted fowl, a lawn mower, and a snow blower. The court did not award any spousal support.

{¶ 8} In April 2003, the trial court conducted a hearing on the child-support arrearages arising from the temporary orders, the determination of permanent child support, and the allocation of health-care cost responsibilities. Significant evidence was entered into the record, and both parties testified. The two viewpoints present drastically different images. Lori depicts Marek as a schemer with secret income in excess of $100,000 per year, who is simply shirking his responsibilities in order to spite her. However, in reading her testimony, we note that she repeatedly contradicts herself, makes implausible allegations, and willingly misleads for effect. Marek’s testimony depicts a desolate man who drives a 1979 Chevy Blazer, sleeps on his ex-wife’s couch, borrows $17 a week from his adult son so that he can go bowling, and was refused a job at Burger King. Since filing for bankruptcy, Marek reduced his debt to Allega considerably, so it appears that Marek had been working and MBE was capable of generating cash. Thus, in reviewing the record, we recognize that Marek continued to operate MBE in some form, at least to appease Allega by reducing his substantial debt. We also note that Marek was less than forthcoming about his financial status throughout the process.

{¶ 9} In formalizing its decisions in a December 19, 2003 judgment entry, the trial court made several findings of fact before issuing the order, including the following: Marek is in arrears on the temporary child-support payments; Lori is unemployed, as she is attending nursing school; Marek is unemployed, but has been pursuing a part-time job; Marek has a commercial driver’s license (“CDL”), so he is capable of working in that field; and neither party has health insurance. Therefore, the trial court (1) awarded Lori $21,037.95 in arrearages, (2) found Marek to be voluntarily unemployed, imputed to him an annual income of $37,440, and awarded child support of $296.57 per child, per month, and (3) determined that out-of-pocket health-care expenses in excess of $100 per child, per year, be paid 100 percent by Marek.

{¶ 10} Marek appeals from the trial court’s order. He asserts three assignments of error for review.

II

A

First Assignment of Error

The trial court erred and committed an abuse of discretion in basing Marek’s child support order on the basis of the fact that he is in possession of a CDI; in effect finding him to be voluntarily underemployed.

*756 {¶ 11} Marek asserts that the trial court erred by finding him voluntarily unemployed and imputing income for purposes of calculating child support.

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Bluebook (online)
822 N.E.2d 410, 158 Ohio App. 3d 750, 2004 Ohio 5556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marek-v-marek-ohioctapp-2004.