Miller v. Clough

165 P.3d 594, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2007 WL 2333326
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2007
DocketS-11908, S-12108
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 165 P.3d 594 (Miller v. Clough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Clough, 165 P.3d 594, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2007 WL 2333326 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

*596 OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal requires us to interpret Alaska Civil Rule 90.3(a)(4), which allows courts to impute potential income to a voluntarily underemployed parent in calculating the parent's child-support obligation. The main issue presented is whether a divorced parent's remarriage to a person of wealth allows the new spouse's assets to be counted as potential income under this rule if the parent remains underemployed. Because Rule 90.3(a)(4) directs courts to consider only "work history, qualifications, and job opportunities" in determining how much potential income should be imputed, we conclude that the rule does not allow a new spouse's wealth to be counted as potential income of the remarried parent. We therefore affirm the superior court's order denying Glenn Miller's attempts to pursue this theory through motions for discovery and modification of his child-support obligation. We also affirm the superior court's order denying Marian Clough's motion for attorney's fees. But we remand the case with directions to correct three inaccuracies in the method used to calculate the parties' support.

II FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Glenn Miller and Marian Clough divorced in 2001 and shared equal custody of their children. In January 2002 the superior court ordered Glenn to pay $356.38 per month in child support. In calculating the amount of this award, the court determined that Marian was voluntarily underemployed; it imputed potential annual earnings to her of $52,700. In August 2002 Marian married John Clough. Henn did not remarry but has lived with another woman since August 2003.

In late 2004 the parties' eighteen-year-old daughter Gwenn began living with Glenn full-time. Soon after, Glenn filed a pro se motion to modify the original custody order by awarding full custody of Gwenn to him; he also moved for a corresponding change in his child-support obligation.

In early 2005 Glenn-now represented by counsel-filed a second motion to modify child support, arguing that his support obligation should be modified not just because Gwenn was living with him but also because Marian "should have additional income assigned to her by reason of her re-marriage to a wealthy second husband." According to Henn, Marian's marriage to Clough gave her access to her new spouse's wealth and income, so the new income should be imputed as potential income available to Marian, who remained underemployed. In his reply to Marian's opposition, (ilenn further asked the court for discovery of the Cloughs' household income, seeking production of their last three federal income tax and trust returns as well as permission to depose the Cloughs concerning their income and assets.

After hearing oral argument by the parties, Superior Court Judge Patricia A. Collins issued an oral decision on the record on March 17, 2005. The judge began by noting that Glenn had effectively withdrawn his motion seeking custody of Gwenn by acknowledging in reply to Marian's opposition to that motion that the court no longer had jurisdiction over Gwenn's custody, since Gwenn had already turned eighteen and was no longer a minor.

Judge Collins next addressed Glenn's motion to impute potential income to Marian based on her new spouse's wealth. The judge first determined that Marian's remarriage did not qualify as a changed cireum-stance warranting modification. Because potential income had already been imputed to Marian under Rule 90.3(a)(4) before she remarried, the judge ruled that her remarriage did not by itself justify a reexamination of her potential income.

The judge nonetheless observed that the support award might still be modified under Rule 90.3(c)'s provision allowing courts to deviate from the amount of support required under Rule 90.3(a) "if unusual cireumstances would make an award under [Rule 90.3(a) ] unjust." But Judge Collins interpreted Rule 90.8(c)'s "unusual cireumstances" exception narrowly, noting that the commentary on this exception emphasizes that a variance ordinarily will be justified only by "clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice would result if the support award were not *597 varied." 1 The judge further pointed to commentary specifically stating that, although either party may attempt to show that unusual cireumstances justifying a variance exist in a particular case, the income of a new spouse will not normally warrant a variation. 2 While acknowledging that the commentary also mentions that a parent who does not work because of a new spouse's income may be assigned potential income, 3 the judge interpreted this as a reference to Rule 90.3(a)(4)s provisions governing unemployment and underemployment, not as a suggestion that a new spouse's income should routinely be deemed an unusual cireumstance warranting a variance under Rule 90.3(c).

In the present case, potential annual income was already imputed to Marian under Rule 90.3(a)(4d) in the original child-support order, which had been entered before Marian's remarriage. Judge Collins thus inquired whether Marian's new husband's wealth should be deemed to increase her imputed earning potential under Rule 90.3(a)(4). Because this rule directs courts to consider only "work history, qualifications and job opportunities" when determining how much potential income to impute to an underemployed parent, 4 the judge reasoned that a new spouse's wealth could not alter the calculation of imputed income under Rule 90.3(a)(4);" rather, it could only be considered to decide whether potential income should be imputed-a decision that had already been made in Marian's case.

In Judge Collins's view, then, John Clough's wealth would justify reexamining the original child-support order only if Glenn could specifically show that Marian's access to the wealth increased her actual income or required a variance from the amount of support originally ordered to avoid manifest injustice. Relying on this interpretation, Judge Collins rejected Glenn's "core argument" that John Clough's income should be deemed to enhance Marian's potential earnings, finding this argument to be inconsistent with Rule 90.3 and its commentary. In the court's view, Glenn had not "remotely established a prima facie case that unusual cireum-stances would make application of the 90.3(a)(4) formula," as reflected in the 2001 child-support calculations, manifestly unjust.

Judge Collins went on to consider whether Glenn was entitled to an order allowing him to pursue discovery of John Clough's income in order to develop a more persuasive "unusual cireumstances" argument. Given the intrusive nature of the discovery request and the fact that it implicated the privacy rights of a person who had no child-support obligation, the judge suggested that, as a general matter, some threshold showing of actual need should be required before discovery of this kind would be allowed. At a minimum, the judge noted, she would be willing to consider allowing such discovery only if both parties agreed to provide income information concerning their domestic partners.

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Bluebook (online)
165 P.3d 594, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 89, 2007 WL 2333326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-clough-alaska-2007.