Sanders v. Lott

630 A.2d 438, 428 Pa. Super. 119, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 12, 1993
Docket1486
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 630 A.2d 438 (Sanders v. Lott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Lott, 630 A.2d 438, 428 Pa. Super. 119, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

CAVANAUGH, Judge:

This case involves a sua sponte adjudicatory attempt to realign the import of our Child Support Guidelines and Federal Regulations concerning the payment of child support to children on welfare. The current way of treating the support of children whose custodial parent is on welfare embodies certain judgments as to what best fulfills the relevant social and economic goals of our society. The lower court order improperly attempts to change the current methodology and replace it with a practice it believes is more efficacious. We must conclude that the court’s calculation of the support award was in error. Accordingly, we reverse.

This case arose out of a claim for child support by Ms. Joell Sanders filed on August 23, 1991. The father, Vertís Lott, acknowledged paternity of the child in March, 1991. On January 22,1992, both parties appeared before the Permanent Hearing Officer. The Permanent Hearing Officer apparently applied the guidelines correctly, determining, inter alia, that [121]*121the mother had no earnings or earning capacity and the father earned a monthly net income of $1,778. The Permanent Hearing Officer, based on his calculations and his application of the guidelines, determined that $82.13 per week was the proper amount for the father to pay in support. The father filed exceptions to the Hearing Officer’s recommendation.

Argument was heard on these exceptions on March 9,1992, before the Hon. Stephen E. Levin. At no point did the lower court challenge the accuracy of the Permanent Hearing Officer’s calculation or point out an error in the Permanent Hearing Officer’s application of the guidelines. Nonetheless, Judge Levin reduced the Father’s support award approximately fifty (50%) percent, to $42.00 per week. At the hearing, he justified his action as follows:

THE COURT:
I am not going to belabor it, because I am going to grant your exceptions, but I want you to understand the tragedy that has occurred here. I think your client does.
We do not have the ability, although I think we should, to order that this child be removed from welfare. I have often thought, district attorney, that what we should be allowed to do in cases like this is order this child removed from the grant, and, unfortunately, I used to try to do that and I have given up.
MS. ESMONDE:
You can’t remove one child—
THE COURT:
I am aware of that.
MS. ESMONDE:
—if others remain.
Yes.
THE COURT:
This father should be entitled to provide for that child directly to this mother and not pay through the Department of Welfare. Now, I cannot do that. That is one solution that, unfortunately, I am blocked from using, which would [122]*122be the appropriate solution in my personal view, but not as a judge. I cannot do it.
The other solution, in the long run, sir, is, at some point, you should consider being very active in this child’s life and seeing if you can remove the child from the mother, because that would probably be the only way you are going to influence this child in a way that is positive.
As far as this Order is concerned, I will change the Order — all right? — because my own view is, this is providing the Department of Public Assistance with more money by a very significant amount than they are laying out for this child.
What I have done, counsel, just so you will understand it, in reaching my calculation, I have assumed that the actual cash grant that is being laid out is somewhere around $1100. I have further assumed that there will be a pass through of $600 to the mother. That is the $50 a month. I am assuming that the department is laying out at least the six hundred, no matter what we do; the eleven hundred, no matter what we do.
I am further assuming that the department will not have medical costs for the child, because I am ordering the father — I am changing the portion of that Order where it says, “when available.”
I am ordering that the child be covered by the father, and I am putting on the Order that we are advised that the child is presently covered by the father.
Now, having done those two things, I think there is still one additional sum that the department lays out, in addition to that, which is a food stamp amount, which I have difficulty calculating, because I do not know the accurate amount.
MS. ESMONDE:
Your Honor, if I could just get clear one point, the medical coverage, does that cover one hundred percent of the child’s needs, because if it doesn’t cover weli-baby care and things of that nature, the Department of Public Assis[123]*123tance and the taxpayers of the Commonwealth will be picking up that cost, without a reimbursement from the defendant?
THE COURT:
I will inquire.
What does it cover, sir?
MR. McD ANIEL:
Your Honor, he has two coverages. He has a city health plan, because he works for the City, so that’s full, as well as the government, which there would be an overlap. So— THE COURT:
Is there an HMO with the City, sir?
MR. LOTT:
Yes, sir. There is.
THE COURT:
O.K. Then the mother has available complete coverage, counsel.
MR. ESMONDE:
Thank you, Your Honor.
THE COURT:
Complete coverage, all right.
I am going to make the Order, and I am being very quite honest with both of you, so you understand how I am doing it. I am going to add $500 above that absolute minimal, that seventeen hundred, that is being laid out, and the Order will be approximately $2200 per year.
MS. ESMONDE:
Your Honor, if I could just make an argument for the record.
THE COURT:
Well, wait. Let me just—
MS. ESMONDE:
Oh. I’m sorry.
THE COURT:
So it is right—
[124]*124MS. ESMONDE:
I thought you were finished.
THE COURT:
—I am just showing both of you how I am calculating it out.
Although the guidelines — and you will have a chance to argue against what I am going to do.

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Sanders v. Lott
630 A.2d 438 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
630 A.2d 438, 428 Pa. Super. 119, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-lott-pasuperct-1993.