Sawicki v. Haxby

186 P.3d 546, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 82, 2008 WL 2389483
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 2008
DocketS-12447
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 186 P.3d 546 (Sawicki v. Haxby) 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
Sawicki v. Haxby, 186 P.3d 546, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 82, 2008 WL 2389483 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Annie Sawicki moved for a reduction of her child support payments after she left one job and took another that paid about half as much. The superior court found that Annie was voluntarily and unreasonably underemployed, imputed her prior income to her, and denied her motion. We affirm. Because John Haxby made out a prima facie showing of unreasonable underemployment, it was not error to require Annie to produce contrary evidence. Because the evidence does not demonstrate that it was clear error to impute income to her, the court did not err in denying her reduction motion. 1

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Annie and John divorced in 1999. They initially shared equal custody of their two children, but when Annie moved from Alaska to Indiana, John obtained primary physical custody. The children live with John during the school year and visit Annie during the summer and school vacations. Annie has the children for approximately twelve to fourteen weeks per year.

The superior court issued the parties' present child support order in March 2004. Annie was then Director of National Development at St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, Indiana. Based on Annie's income from St. Mary's, the court found that her gross annual income was $52,000 and set Annie's support payment at $838 per month.

Annie voluntarily left her St. Mary's job in June 2005. She began working as a senior area manager in the business development department of a consulting firm called International Profit Associates, Inc. (IPA) in August 2005. She worked without pay during a training period that lasted until mid-November 2005. Annie also worked as a part-time event staffer at University of Notre Dame sporting events, but the time commitment and pay were minimal.

Alleging a reduction in her income, Annie asked the court in December 2005 to reduce her child support obligation. Based on her 2005 income, Annie claimed that her monthly child support payments should be reduced *548 from $838 to $427.16. John opposed, arguing that she failed to provide an adequate explanation for her change in jobs or documentation substantiating her claim that her decreased income warranted reduced support payments. Annie replied that she quit her St. Mary's job because it required too much travel, limiting her ability to be with the children when they visited.

Both parties testified before a special master in March 2006 after filing current, notarized Child Support Guidelines affidavits. Annie admitted that she had earned over $100,000 per year as a drug company representative in Alaska. She testified that she quit her St. Mary's job because it would have required her to travel locally and nationally between fifty-five percent and eighty percent of the time, 2 interfering with her ability to see the children. She stated that she expected her income from her new job to increase as she gained more experience and that her position afforded her the opportunity to earn promotions and raises. Finally, she testified that she was studying for a master's degree in business administration, but that she was probably two years away from getting the degree.

After the hearing, John moved to re-open the evidence because he claimed Annie perjured herself by testifying that she did not have a master's degree in education. He argued that her education had a direct bearing on her income-producing potential. The court granted John's motion, set another hearing for June 2006, and ordered Annie to file a financial declaration and documentation supporting her claim that she traveled eighty percent of the time while working for St. Mary's.

Annie claimed that documentation substantiating her assertion that she traveled eighty percent of the time was unavailable. She explained that St. Mary's had all of her travel records and tickets, that she did not keep any records of her own, and that St. Mary's tracked only her mileage, not her travel time. Annie's financial declaration showed that she had $507,000 in assets including $82,000 in cash or cash accounts, $50,000 in stocks and bonds, and $270,000 in a retirement or pension fund.

At the June 2006 hearing conducted by the master, Annie acknowledged that she had a master's degree in education. She also admitted that she was not actually working towards a master's degree in business administration, but towards a "certificate in executive management." She stated that she would not get a master's degree because the classes were not for credit.

The master filed his report and his recommended rulings in July 2006. He found that Annie failed to substantiate her testimony about how much she traveled and that her March 2006 testimony contained conflicting evidence on that issue. He also found that she intentionally misled the court about her master's degree in education and that it was "difficult to accept her explanations." The master recommended that the superior court (1) deny Annie's modification motion because he found that she was unreasonably underemployed, and (2) award John fifty percent of his reasonable actual attorney's fees pertaining to the support modification motion: thirty percent because John was the prevailing party and an additional twenty percent of his fees because Annie engaged in vexatious and bad faith conduct. The superior court adopted the master's recommendations and denied Annie's request for reconsideration.

Annie appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Annie's Motion To Modify Child Support

1. The burden of proof was properly on Annie.

Annie argues that the master incorrectly imposed the burden of proof on her to prove she was not unreasonably underemployed. She asserts that the burden of showing a prima facie case of unreasonable *549 underemployment should have rested with John. Annie claims that John failed to meet his prima facie burden because the only evidence of unreasonable underemployment he presented was testimony he elicited from Annie about her work history, education, and why she changed jobs. She posits that an initial showing of voluntary and unreasonable underemployment "should require more."

We rule de novo in determining how the law applies to undisputed facts. 3 Annie relies on a footnote in Beaudoin v. Beaudoin in which we stated that the court should assume that the obligor's earnings "accurately reflect reasonable efforts to maintain employment at earning capacity" when an obli-gor moves the court to modify his or her child support payments. 4 We noted that the court should "depart from this assumption only to the extent [the custodial parent] makes out a prima facie showing of voluntary and unreasonable underemployment." 5

Beaudoin does not define a prima facie case of voluntary and unreasonable underemployment. 6

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Bluebook (online)
186 P.3d 546, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 82, 2008 WL 2389483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawicki-v-haxby-alaska-2008.