Marriage Of Fieschko v. Veneman

2019 WI App 5, 925 N.W.2d 779, 385 Wis. 2d 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 28, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2017AP1885
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 WI App 5 (Marriage Of Fieschko v. Veneman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage Of Fieschko v. Veneman, 2019 WI App 5, 925 N.W.2d 779, 385 Wis. 2d 513 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BLANCHARD, J.

¶ 1 Craig Fieschko appeals the circuit court's denial of his motion to modify his child support obligations to reduce support payments for the two minor children he shares with his ex-spouse, Geraldine Veneman. Fieschko challenges the court's determination that large increases in his income, resulting in larger support payments under the pertinent percentage guidelines, did not create a substantial change in circumstances as is required for modification under WIS. STAT . § 767.59(1f) (2015-16).1

¶ 2 Fieschko argues that the circuit court erred in determining that the parties foresaw at the time of the divorce that his income would increase to the degree that it did, creating the corresponding increases in child support payments. He further argues that the court confused the standards governing the modification of child support under WIS. STAT . § 767.59(1f) with the standards used to determine whether to deviate from default guideline levels for child support obligations under WIS. STAT . § 767.511(1m) in a manner that unfairly prejudiced him. We conclude that Fieschko failed to carry his burden of demonstrating to the circuit court that the income increases were not foreseeable or otherwise erred in a manner undermining that determination.

¶ 3 Fieschko also appeals the court's denial of his alternative request for relief, which was to place a portion of child support payments that he deems excessive into trusts for the children under WIS. STAT . § 767.511(2). We conclude that Fieschko fails to meet his burden of showing that the court erroneously exercised its discretion in declining to place any portion of Fieschko's child support payments into trusts for the benefit of the children. Fieschko fails to show that the court clearly erred in declining to find that Veneman was incapable or unwilling to wisely manage the child support money for the benefit of the children. See Lyman v. Lyman , 2011 WI App 24, ¶25, 331 Wis. 2d 650, 795 N.W.2d 475 (requiring findings that payee is not willing and capable before a circuit court can impose the use of a trust for child support payments over payee's objection).

¶ 4 Accordingly, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 5 The following facts are undisputed. In January 2014, the circuit court entered a judgment of divorce, which incorporated a marital settlement agreement of the parties. The parties have three children. At the time of the divorce the two youngest were aged 7 and 12, and both remain minors at this time.

¶ 6 The settlement agreement required shared physical placement of the children, with Veneman having placement for a majority of overnights. It also included waivers of maintenance by both parties. It required Fieschko to pay child support based on percentage guidelines for high income earners as outlined under WIS. ADMIN CODE § DCF 150.04(5) (Nov. 2009).

¶ 7 Notably, the agreement recognized that "neither party can accurately foresee the amount of future child support under this reconciliation" "[b]ecause of [Fieschko's] fluctuating income" as an attorney. In part to address these anticipated fluctuations, the settlement agreement included a "true up" provision, under which Fieschko would periodically make payments, in addition to regular child support, based on guideline percentages of sources of Fieschko's income that the parties anticipated would fluctuate over time, such as bonuses and draws.

¶ 8 In October 2014, the parties stipulated to modify child support, reducing it to reflect the fact that the parties' eldest child had reached the age of majority. Fieschko continued to pay child support for the parties' younger two children based on the percentage standard contemplated in the settlement agreement.

¶ 9 Fieschko's total annual income, including bonuses and draws, increased as follows: from 2014 to 2015, $ 443,407 to $ 678,428; from 2015 to 2016, $ 678,428 to $ 723,357. Using the high earner percentage guidelines, this resulted in increasing annual child support obligations: $ 44,814.12 in 2014; $ 80,942.19 in 2015; and $ 88,560.54 in 2016.

¶ 10 The focus of this appeal is a motion to modify child support that Fieschko filed in November 2016. He alleged that Veneman was "depositing significant amounts of the child support payments in her own personal retirement [and] investment accounts for her own personal benefit."

¶ 11 The court commissioner denied Fieschko's motion. Fieschko sought de novo review in the circuit court. From that point on, Fieschko's motion to modify child support included two requests for relief: a downward deviation in his guideline support obligation, or, alternatively, placement of portions of child support payments into trusts for each of the two minor children. The parties engaged in discovery, including Fieschko obtaining information about Veneman's income, budget, and spending habits.

¶ 12 At an evidentiary hearing, Fieschko called accountant Dennis Kleinheinz to testify regarding Veneman's financial information. Kleinheinz testified in pertinent part that Fieschko's total 2016 child support payments exceeded Veneman's total 2016 living expenses, including what it cost her to care for the children, by approximately $ 8,600, and that Veneman's savings and other financial accounts increased by more than $ 38,000 during calendar 2016, even after subtracting her 2016 withdrawals and interest accrual. Veneman and Fieschko were the only other witnesses to testify at the hearing. Each testified about his or her respective income and both testified about Veneman's expenses.

¶ 13 As pertinent to this appeal, Fieschko argued that his increased income had escalated his child support payments to such high amounts that Veneman was using a portion of the support payments to benefit herself personally and not for the support of the children. Based primarily on aspects of Kleinheinz' testimony and Veneman's discovery responses, Fieschko argued that Veneman's personal income and savings could not, by themselves, account for increases in her savings and spending on herself, in the form of relative luxuries such as vacations, dining without the children, and jewelry purchases.

¶ 14 Veneman argued that the parties anticipated upward fluctuations in Fieschko's income when they entered the agreement, and that the agreement's application of guideline standards remained fair under the circumstances. She further contended that her failure to spend every dollar of her personal income and the child support she received in a given year was the result of her prudent management of her finances, not because she was receiving more child support than was appropriate.

¶ 15 The court denied Fieschko's motion. The court determined that changes in the parties' circumstances were not substantial.

¶ 16 The court noted that there had been "some change in the parties' financial circumstances" between the time of the stipulated modification of child support in October 2014 and the time Fieschko moved to modify support. (Emphasis in original.) However, the court found that these changes had been foreseeable to the parties at the time of the January 2014 divorce and the October 2014 modification.

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2019 WI App 5, 925 N.W.2d 779, 385 Wis. 2d 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-fieschko-v-veneman-wisctapp-2018.