Pecoraro v. Pecoraro

148 S.W.3d 813, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 310, 2004 WL 2367228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 22, 2004
Docket2003-CA-001975-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 S.W.3d 813 (Pecoraro v. Pecoraro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pecoraro v. Pecoraro, 148 S.W.3d 813, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 310, 2004 WL 2367228 (Ky. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

TACKETT, Judge.

David Pecoraro appeals from an order of the Jefferson Family Court denying his motion to set aside a wage garnishment and recalculate child support retroactively. The dispositive issue in this case is whether there was evidence that his former spouse, Margaret Pecoraro, agreed to accept half of his court ordered child support after one of their two children became emancipated. If so, the question becomes would such an agreement override Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 403.218(1) which governs modifications of child support? We agree with the family court that David failed to file a motion to reduce his child support and that there was insufficient evidence to support the conclusion that Margaret agreed to a reduction. Therefore, the family court correctly concluded that KRS 403.213(1) did not permit retroactive modification to his child support and its order is affirmed.

When David and Margaret were divorced in 1994, Margaret was the primary residential custodian for their two minor children. Originally, David’s court ordered child support obligation was $1,564.00 per month. Margaret filed a motion to increase this amount in 1998. The family court’s final order, entered May 28, 1999, found that David’s monthly income was $17,652.18 while Margaret’s was $1,094.08 and ordered David to pay $2,162.33 per month to support the two children. The parties’ oldest child turned eighteen in April 2001 and graduated from high school the following month. At that time, David began paying Margaret only half of the court ordered child support amount; however, he did purchase his daughter a car and pay some of her college tuition and expenses. Two years later, the parties’ seventeen-year-old son moved in with his father, and David filed a motion requesting a change to the primary residential custodian. Margaret responded by obtaining an order garnishing David’s wages for payment of a $27,025.00 child support arrearage. David filed a motion requesting that the garnishment be set aside and that his child support obligation be reduced retroactively to reflect the date the parties’ daughter became emancipated. The family court denied David’s motion in an order dated July 24, 2003. David filed a motion to amend, alter or vacate the family court’s order which was also denied, and this appeal followed.

David first argues that the family court erred by applying KRS 403.213(1). The statute reads as follows:

The Kentucky child support guidelines may be used by the parent, custodian, or agency substantially contributing to the support of the child as the basis for periodic updates of child support obligations and for modification of child support orders for health care. The provisions of any decree respecting child support may be modified only as to installments accruing subsequent to the filing of the motion for modification and only upon a showing of a material change in circumstances that is substantial and continuing.

He contends that Margaret agreed to the modification in child support payments after their daughter became emancipated; *815 therefore, there was no motion filed to modify his child support obligation and the statute is inapplicable. The family court found that there was no agreement between the parties to reduce David’s child support payments and that KRS 403.213(1) barred any retroactive reduction in child support which was what David requested in his motion. David’s brief characterizes this motion as a request to set aside a wage garnishment rather than a motion to modify child support, but this does not get around the fact that it also asks the family court to retroactively reduce his child support which is forbidden by the statute.

Next, David claims that the family court misinterpreted the Kentucky Supreme Court’s holding in Price v. Price, Ky., 912 S.W.2d 44 (1995). In Price, a mother who had originally been awarded custody of her minor son and child support in a divorce decree agreed to transfer custody to the father. After sixteen months, the mother filed a motion to compel her former spouse to pay his child support arrearages accumulated since the child had been in his father’s custody. Although the father subsequently obtained a legal change to his status as custodian, the Kentucky Supreme Court held that KRS 403.213(1) prevented the father from being relieved of his obligation to pay child support between the time he had the child in his custody and the time he filed a motion to modify his child support obligation. The Court reasoned that, absent an out-of-court agreement between the parties to modify child support, the statute still applied even though the mother no longer had custody.

In contrast, David argues that his daughter’s emancipation relieved him of the obligation to pay child support, that he never filed a motion to modify child support, and that he and Margaret had an out-of-court agreement to modify his child support. These facts, he claims, distinguished his situation from the facts in Price and made the family court’s reliance on it erroneous. First, we would point out that only one of David’s children became emancipated. David correctly asserts that he was under no continuing obligation to pay child support for his daughter, but the family court’s 1999 order does not set a per-child amount to his support obligation. In fact, the Domestic Relations Commissioner’s proposed order did set David’s child support at $2,177.57 per month or $1,088.78 per child, but this order was unsigned. The family court’s 1999 order sets David’s child support at $2,162.33 per month, making no mention of a per child amount. In addition, in the order denying David’s motion to set aside the wage garnishment, the family court states that Kentucky’s “Child Support guidelines are not set so as the obligation of child support is in direct proportion to the number of children to support. In other words child support does not decrease by one half when one of two children in the home are emancipated....” Second, with regard to David’s argument that he never filed a motion to modify his child support, but rather a motion to recalculate his child support retroactively, we find that to be a distinction without a difference as far as KRS 403.213(1) is concerned. Also, the family court found that, as in Price, the parties in the case at hand did not agree to modify David’s child support and that Margaret’s acceptance of two years’ worth of diminished child support payments cannot be taken to indicate the presence of an out-of-court agreement. David has failed to show that the family court erred in interpreting the Kentucky Supreme Court’s holding in Price to support its finding that KRS 403.213(1) applied to bar a retroactive recalculation of David’s child support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.3d 813, 2004 Ky. App. LEXIS 310, 2004 WL 2367228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecoraro-v-pecoraro-kyctapp-2004.