Rusenstrom v. Rusenstrom

981 P.2d 558, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1999 WL 357365
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1999
DocketS-8118
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 981 P.2d 558 (Rusenstrom v. Rusenstrom) 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
Rusenstrom v. Rusenstrom, 981 P.2d 558, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1999 WL 357365 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

When Carrie and Alan Rusenstrom divorced, the court awarded Carrie custody of their two daughters. It later ordered Alan to provide his daughters with health insurance through a policy funded by his employer. Athough Aaska Civil Rule 90.3(d)(1) allowed Alan’s child support to be reduced by half of the cost he actually paid for this coverage, the court declined to grant any reduction, finding that he had failed to prove what cost he actually paid. We reverse this decision because Alan lost more than $300 in monthly pension contributions by insuring his daughters; this is an actual payment of coverage costs. The court also declined Alan’s request to claim one of his daughters as a tax exemption. We affirm this decision because Alan alleged no material change in circumstances to justify this request.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Carrie and Alan Rusenstrom married on August 10, 1985, and had two children, Kristen and Kaylee, before the marriage ended in divorce in June 1994. The court awarded Carrie primary physical custody of the girls and ordered Alan to pay monthly support under the guidelines established by Aaska Civil Rule 90.3. The court did not direct either parent to provide health insurance for the girls. Alan nonetheless maintained health insurance for them under an employer-funded policy that was available to him as a member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The court also did not decide which parent would be entitled to claim the girls as dependents for tax purposes. Carrie, as custodial parent, claimed them as her dependents. 1

More than two years after the divorce, Alan moved to modify the child support order, seeking credit against his child support obligation for half the cost of insuring his daughters. He also asked to be allowed to claim one of his daughters as a tax exemption.

The superior court amended the child support order to require that Alan provide . health insurance for his daughters, but it denied him any credit for paying the cost of coverage. The court also denied Alan’s request for an exemption as to one of his daughters.

Alan appeals.

II. DISCUSSION

A. The Superior Court Erred in Denying Allan a Child Support Credit for Maintaining Health Insurance for Kristen and Kaylee.

After the Rusenstroms divorced, this court amended Aaska Civil Rule 90.3(d) to require divorcing parents to provide their children with health care insurance if it is available. Under the amended rule, parents must ordinarily share the cost of the insurance, and if the non-custodial parent pays for the coverage, the non-custodial parent is entitled to a child support credit for the custodial parent’s share of the payment. 2

*560 Although the Rusenstroms’ original child support order did not address the topic of insurance, Allan voluntarily provided medical coverage for his daughters. On August 30, 1996, after Rule 90.3(d) was amended, he moved to modify the support order to allocate to Carrie half the cost of this insurance. Claiming that the girls’ coverage cost him $339.20 per month, Allan requested a monthly child support credit of $169.60 (one half of the claimed actual cost).

Following a hearing, the superior court ordered Allan to provide health insurance for his daughters, finding that “[t]he parties’ two minor children are in need of health care coverage by insurance” and that “[t]he necessary health care coverage for the children is available to Allan under the collective bargaining agreement between IBEW and his employer.” But the court further found that “Allan ha[d] failed to offer any admissible evidence ... [of] the cost necessary to insure the two children.” It thus denied him any credit for the cost of maintaining this insurance.

Allan challenges this ruling, arguing that he presented admissible evidence proving that his actual monthly cost for insuring his daughters amounts to $339.20. In response, Carrie maintains that Allan should receive no credit, since his employer actually pays for the coverage. Alternatively, she claims that Allan failed to prove that the girls’ insurance is necessary.

1. Standard of review

We review rulings admitting or excluding evidence for abuse of discretion. 3 We review factual findings for clear error. 4 But in determining how legal doctrine applies to undisputed facts, we rule de novo, without deference to the trial court’s judgment. 5

2. The admissibility of Allan’s evidence of added cost

To support his claim that insuring Kaylee and Kristen cost him $339.20 per month, Allan presented the affidavit of Donald Parks (with attached exhibits) and his own affidavit. At the hearing on Allan’s motion, Carrie did not argue that this evidence was inadmissible. The court nevertheless found that Allan had “failed to offer any admissible evidence that the sum of $339.20 is the cost necessary to insure the two children.” The court’s reference to inadmissibility suggests that it denied Allan’s motion because his affidavits contained hearsay. Allan persuasively disputes this ruling.

Absent a proper objection, hearsay is normally admissible. 6 Here, Carrie raised no hearsay objection. Moreover, the trial court did not suggest that it considered the evidence to be problematic on this ground. 7 *561 To the contrary, when Allan offered to call Parks as a witness during the hearing on his motion, the court indicated that his testimony was unnecessary. 8 Given these circumstances, if the trial court denied Allan’s motion on the ground that his evidence of added cost was inadmissible hearsay, the court abused its discretion.

Carrie offers an alternative explanation for the trial court’s ruling, suggesting that, in finding no admissible evidence of “the cost necessary to insure the two children,” the court meant to say that Allan had failed to prove that the insurance package he had chosen was actually necessary to meet the children’s needs.

But this argument misconstrues the trial court’s order, which directs Allan to continue providing the coverage precisely because it is “necessary health care coverage for the children [and] is available to Allan under the collective bargaining agreement.” In finding that Allan failed to show that $339.20 was the “cost necessary” to insure the girls, the court echoed the words of the commentary to Civil Rule 90.3(d)(1), which it had quoted in its decision. The commentary explains that the rule’s cost-sharing provision “is limited to that portion of the total cost necessary to insure the children involved — not the parent, the parent’s new spouse or children of another relationship.” 9

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Bluebook (online)
981 P.2d 558, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 76, 1999 WL 357365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rusenstrom-v-rusenstrom-alaska-1999.