Metz v. Metz

711 S.E.2d 737, 212 N.C. App. 494, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 1059
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 7, 2011
DocketCOA10-1382
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 711 S.E.2d 737 (Metz v. Metz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metz v. Metz, 711 S.E.2d 737, 212 N.C. App. 494, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 1059 (N.C. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

MARTIN, Chief Judge.

Defendant Michael Metz and plaintiff Linda Metz were married on 1 November 1997. During their marriage, the parties adopted four children. The parties separated from one another on 3 July 2008 and are now divorced.

During their marriage, Mr. Metz worked at Presbyterian Hospital (“Presbyterian”) as a nurse anesthetist, where he earned $18,867.00 a month. Ms. Metz worked and continues to work as a teacher employed by Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools. Her monthly income is $7,607.00. Thus, prior to their separation and divorce, the Metz’s combined monthly income was $26,474.00.

While the parties were still married, Mr. Metz sexually assaulted one of his daughters. He was charged with three felony charges of taking indecent liberties with a minor. As a result of those charges, he was suspended from his position at Presbyterian without pay on 15 September 2008.

*496 On 27 October 2009, a consent order addressing equitable distribution of the parties’ property was entered. As part of that order, Mr. Metz was distributed a Wachovia IRA account with a balance of $107,497.72, the proceeds of a Wachovia Roth IRA account, a Vanguard Traditional IRA account with a balance of $11,171.76, and a Vanguard Rollover IRA account with a balance of $62,219.33. That same day, a consent order was entered giving Ms. Metz sole permanent legal and physical custody of the children and ordering that Mr. Metz have no contact, visitation, or communication with the children.

As of the temporary child support hearing on 8 January 2009, Mr. Metz’s criminal case had not yet been resolved and he was working delivering pizzas, earning $6.85 an hour for a total gross monthly income of $1,172.00. A temporary child support and interim distribution order was entered on 6 February 2009, finding that Mr. Metz was “capable of contributing to the support of the minor children” and it was equitable “to impute income to [Mr. Metz] in light of his voluntary actions, unreasonable behavior, conscious disregard of his obligation to support his minor children and his termination from the healthcare field being entirely predictable.”

Following the temporary child support hearing, Mr. Metz continued to work at the pizza store for a total of seven months until 27 July 2009 when he was convicted of sexual battery of a minor and incarcerated for two months. As a result of that conviction, Mr. Metz was placed on the sex offender registry, was asked to resign from his position at Presbyterian, and, after completing his incarceration, was not permitted to return to delivering pizzas because of the possibility of contact with children. His licenses as a certified registered nurse anesthetist and as a registered nurse practitioner were suspended by the state licensing board. The licenses will remain revoked for as long as he remains on the sex offender registry — a period of at least ten years.

As of the 8 April 2010 hearing, despite an extensive job search, Mr. Metz still had not found regular work. In his financial affidavit which he provided to the court, Mr. Metz listed his income as $25,000.00; however, he explained at the hearing that this figure was “speculation,” that it is “a hopeful number,” and that “it’s an overestimate if [he] had to work for minimum wage.”

When calculating permanent child support, the trial court imputed to Mr. Metz a monthly gross income of $18,867.00, which was the last salary he received while working as a nurse anesthetist and the same salary figure which the court had imputed to Mr. Metz in the *497 temporary child support order. The court noted that Mr. Metz’s efforts to find employment were “well-documented and unchallenged” but that he had been unable to secure any employment besides “temporary jobs lasting only a day or two, because of his status as a convicted sex offender.” The court also noted that:

As sympathetic as [Mr. Metz’s] plight might be, unavoidably, the Court comes back to the plain fact: his plight resulted from his own behavior in sexually abusing his child, and unemployment was the foreseeable result. While he probably did not intend all the consequences which have occurred, certainly, Mrs. Metz and the parties’ four children did nothing to cause the destruction of this family, or the loss of income.

The court then noted that Ms. Metz’s monthly gross income combined with the imputed monthly gross income of Mr. Metz is $26,474.00, which is above the maximum amount contemplated by the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines and that therefore the court would consider the reasonable needs of the children in determining the appropriate amount of child support. The court found that the children’s total reasonable monthly needs and expenses total $7,956.00. The court noted that if it were to base Mr. Metz’s child support obligation on this figure, Mr. Metz would be responsible for 71% of $7,956.00 or $5,670.00.

The court considered both parties’ submissions as to what a reasonable amount of child support would be. Mr. Metz requested that his monthly income be calculated at $2,083.00, resulting in a monthly child support obligation of $447.00. Ms. Metz submitted a child support worksheet which based the parties’ monthly combined income at the highest level set forth in the Child Support Guidelines, $25,000.00 — a figure slightly lower than the parties’ monthly combined gross income with Mr. Metz’s salary imputed at the level he earned at Presbyterian, $26,474.00. At the $25,000.00 income level, the combined monthly child support obligation would be $3,350.00 and Mr. Metz’s 71% share would be $2,627.00.

The court ordered that Mr. Metz’s child support obligation be set at $2,627.00 per month, a number which was calculated by imputing Mr. Metz’s income so that the parties’ combined monthly income is calculated at the highest level of income set forth in the Guidelines. The trial court also found that the parties were “capable of providing child support for the benefit of their minor children” at this level.

*498 In the alternative to imputing Mr. Metz’s income at the level he made while working at Presbyterian, the court justified the $2,627.00 monthly child support obligation by finding that Mr. Metz’s proposed monthly child support obligation of only $447.00 was insufficient to meet the reasonable needs of the parties’ four children and that an upward deviation from the Guidelines was appropriate based on the children’s actual needs and expenses and the combined income of the parties.

Mr. Metz appeals.

Mr. Metz argues that in both the temporary and permanent child support orders the trial court failed to make sufficient findings of fact supporting the imputation of income, erred in imputing income, and, even if imputation was proper, erred in the amount of income imputed. Furthermore, Mr. Metz contends that the trial court’s alternative basis for the award, a deviation from the Guidelines, lacked sufficient findings of fact or conclusions of law regarding the reasonableness of the children’s expenses and the parents’ ability to pay support.

Preliminarily we must address whether this appeal is properly before us at this time. When Mr. Metz filed this appeal, it was interlocutory, as Ms. Metz’s alimony claim was still pending.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
711 S.E.2d 737, 212 N.C. App. 494, 2011 N.C. App. LEXIS 1059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metz-v-metz-ncctapp-2011.