Matter of Frazier v. Penraat

2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U)
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2004
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U) (Matter of Frazier v. Penraat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Frazier v. Penraat, 2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Matter of Frazier v Penraat (2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U)) [*1]
Matter of Frazier v Penraat
2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U)
Decided on December 16, 2004
Family Court, New York County
Sturm, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on December 16, 2004
Family Court, New York County


In the Matter of a Proceeding for Support under Article 4 of the Family Court Act ALEXIS FRAZIER, Petitioner,

against

NOELLE PENRAAT, Respondent. In the Matter of a Proceeding for Support under Article 4 of the Family Court Act

NOELLE PENRAAT Petitioner, -against-

against

ALEXIS FRAZIER Respondent.




F-01303/02

Helen C. Sturm, J.

The parties are the mothers of two sons, and enjoy equal parenting time with the [*2]children.[FN1] After conducting an extensive hearing on cross-petitions for support, Support Magistrate Palos entered a lengthy decision in which he concluded that neither parent was entirely candid or credible. Because he found that the parties have essentially identical income and spend equal amounts of time with the children, the magistrate dismissed the petitions and entered no order of support.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY Each party objected to the magistrate's calculation of the other's income and to his conclusions about her own credibility. Both parties requested in the course of their objections and rebuttals that these matters be resolved as expeditiously as possible to avoid incurring additional legal fees and delay. The Court remanded the matter to Support Magistrate Palos for clarification of the Findings of Fact on April 22, 2004 seeking further elucidations of the magistrate's conclusions and specific determinations regarding Ms. Penraat's income. Support Magistrate Palos entered Supplemental Findings on June 18, 2004. On or about July 14, 2004, Ms. Frazier, by her counsel, filed a sur-objection to the support magistrate's Supplemental Findings. Ms. Penraat, by her counsel, filed a rebuttal to the sur-objections on or about August 30, 2004. Support Magistrate Palos explained that he rejected all of Ms. Penraat's testimony concerning her financial difficulties and relied entirely on her tax forms to determine her income for child support purposes. The support magistrate deemed Ms. Penraat's returns to be more reliable than her testimony because they were prepared by an accountant. The magistrate added [*3]that petitioner's expert witness conceded that her analysis of the parties' finances, which was based on information from the year 2000, was too remote to be determinative of whether respondent currently collects significant unreported income. OBJECTIONS Petitioner's objections, read cumulatively from the initial objection, rebuttal to respondent's objection and sur-reply to the Supplemental Findings, are primarily that Support Magistrate Palos failed to give sufficient weight to the parties' lifestyle while living together, failed to impute income to respondent from a variety of sources, and failed to credit petitioner's credible testimony regarding respondent's operation of her film editing concern as a cash business. Specifically, petitioner objects that: (1) more weight should have been given to the parties' mediated agreement of October 23, 2001 in which respondent agreed to provide child support; (2) more weight should have been given to petitioner's documentary evidence that respondent had agreed to provide other forms of financial support to petitioner after their separation; (3) despite the magistrate's findings that respondent was incredible, he credited her self- prepared business receipts and the income she declared on her tax returns with only minor deviations; (4) the magistrate did not properly credit the forensic accountant's lifestyle analysis in order to arrive at a proper figure to impute to respondent as income; (5) the magistrate did not impute income to respondent from her father; (6) the magistrate should have credited petitioner's testimony regarding the piles of cash she saw in the apartment when the parties' resided together because it was supported by the record established in the course of the hearing; (7) the magistrate erred in not awarding petitioner counsel and expert fees. Respondent's objections, read cumulatively from the initial objection, the rebuttal to petitioner's objection and the rebuttal to petitioner's objection to the sur-reply to the Supplemental Findings, are primarily that petitioner's income was miscalculated because she did not provide her 2002 tax returns as required, that income was improperly imputed to respondent and that the magistrate "went to great lengths to equalize the income of the parties for child support purposes" (see, Respondent's Objection at p.3). Specifically, respondent objects that: (1) petitioner's 2002 income was calculated using her W-2 form. Reliance on the W-2 form resulted in an underestimation of petitioner's income because it did not reflect an end-of-year tax refund which petitioner presumably received in light of past refunds and therefore credits petitioner for a higher tax burden than she actually incurs; (2) the magistrate improperly imputed income to respondent based on her 2002 investment income by using her tax return when he was not provided with petitioner's tax return and was therefore unable to impute investment income to petitioner; (3) the magistrate should have imputed income to petitioner in light of her failure to submit a copy of her 2002 tax return; (4) the magistrate improperly deducted petitioner's union dues of $764.66 before arriving at her Adjusted Gross Income; (5) the magistrate should have relied on respondent's tax returns absent a showing that the forms were incorrect. The declared income and business expenses total $48,325 [*4]for 2002. The magistrate instead relied on an unconventional formula using average past income; (6) the magistrate double-counted respondent's income and expenses; (7) it was improper for the magistrate to impute $3,000 to respondent based on her joint ownership of her father's home and a sale of securities; The Court has reviewed the substantial record in this matter and finds that both parties have articulated meritorious objections to the decision and order of Support Magistrate Palos entered on January 20, 2004 as discussed below. ORDERS OF SUPPORT IN SHARED CUSTODY CASES Application of the Child Support Standards Act is clear in situations when children reside primarily with one of their parents. An order or agreement that merely adopts the term "joint custody" or "shared custody" to describe the parents' access and decision-making does not in and of itself resolve a support matter. In most situations, the court can determine the custodial parent for support purposes by identifying the parent who has physical custody for the majority of the time. The Court of Appeals observed in Bast v. Rossoff, 91 NY2d 723 (1998) that neither the legislative history of the Child Support Standards Act nor the statute itself suggest that the legislature intended to deviate from the application of the guidelines in shared custody cases.

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2004 NY Slip Op 51668(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-frazier-v-penraat-nycfamct-2004.