Schneider v. Klevan

606 A.2d 1339, 1991 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 60
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 606 A.2d 1339 (Schneider v. Klevan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Klevan, 606 A.2d 1339, 1991 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 60 (Del. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

CONNER, Judge.

This is the Court’s decision on the petition of Lois J. Kievan, (hereinafter referred to as Ms. K.) requesting a modification increase in the amount of the support obligation due and owing from Steven Schneider (hereinafter referred to as Mr. S.) for their children Brian L. Schneider, born January 17, 1974, and Michael B. Schneider, *1340 born June 25, 1976. This petition was filed February 26, 1990 and service of said petition was accepted by Michael K. Newell, Esquire, attorney for Mr. S. on that date. Mr. S. has been paying support in the amount of $490.00 per month pursuant to a voluntary agreement reached in 1985. Brian and Michael reside with their mother during the school year and with their father during the summer months, when school is not in session.

Ms. K. contends that her economic circumstances resulting from her efforts to recover from a recurrence of cancer rebut the need to utilize the Melson Formula to calculate the amount of Mr. S.’s support obligation at this time. It has been judicially established that the Melson Formula is the applicable method to determine child support and operates as a rebuttable presumption in all child support cases. See Dalton v. Clanton, Del.Supr. 559 A.2d 1197 (1989), Holland, Justice. Thus, the threshold question is whether the facts and circumstances of this particular case are sufficiently unique to render use of the Melson Formula inequitable and to require that the amount of Mr. S’s child support be determined by another method.

Ms. K. is currently undergoing treatment for a 1990 recurrence of ovarian cancer. She is being treated at both the Sloane-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City and the University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. Ms. K. is insured by Delaware Blue Cross and Blue Shield who will pay for 80% of her treatments costs in accordance with State of Delaware standard costs for the same treatments. She anticipates that she will incur $10,000.00 in unreimbursed medical expenses for this present series of treatments. This estimate is based on the amount of her unreim-bursed expenses for her original cancer treatments received in 1988. In 1988, her medical bills totalled $200,000.00, of which $10,000.00 was not paid by Blue Cross. In addition to her medical bills, Ms. K. has transportation expenses to and from New York and Philadelphia, where she receives her treatments.

The Court is satisfied that Ms. K’s personal expenses far exceed those of a standard support obligee and that the use of the Melson Formula, which awards each party a monthly self-support allowance of $550.00, would be grossly unfair to her and is totally unrealistic in this particular case. This is a unique case where an extraordinary medical expense to one of the litigants would produce an inequitable result under the Melson Formula.

To determine the amount of Mr. Schneider’s support obligation, the Court must consider all the factors set forth at 13 Del.C. § 514(1)(2)(3), which provides as follows:

§ 514 DETERMINATION OF AMOUNT OF SUPPORT.
In determining the amount of support due to one to whom the duty of support has been found to be owing, the Court, among other things shall consider:
(1) The health, relative economic condition, financial circumstance, income, including the wages, and earning capacity of the parties, including the children;
(2) The manner of living the parties have been accustomed when they were living together under the same roof;
(3) The general equities inherent in the situation.

The Court will apply these guidelines in a four step procedure:

First, the monthly needs of Brian and Michael must be determined. To accomplish this, the Court will establish the actual monthly expenses of Ms. K., Brian and Michael and deduct those expenses which are related solely to Ms. K’s medical needs. Two-thirds of the remaining household expenses plus the boys’ school and activities expenses will constitute the monthly needs of Brian and Michael for child support purposes.

The second step will be to determine the amount that Ms. K. should contribute to the financial support of her sons. It will be necessary to calculate her gross and net income and deduct one-third of the household expenses which must be attributed to her. The Court will then balance the remainder of her available monies against the *1341 projected expenses necessitated by her poor health condition.

The third step will be to determine whether Mr. S. has the financial ability to pay the balance of the monthly support needs of his sons. The Court must consider Mr. S’s income, his share of his own household expenses, and his general financial circumstances.

The fourth step will be to determine whether any adjustment should be made for the three summer months that the boys reside with their father. Let us review each step separately.

STEP 1 — DETERMINATION OF THE NEEDS OF BRIAN AND MICHAEL

Ms. K. reports that she has the following basic monthly household expenses. Mortgage — $500.00; school and county taxes— $55.00; food (includes special diet food)— $750.00; sewer — $21.00; clothing — $150.00; electric — $85.00; oil — $160.00 (house must be kept warm); telephone — $100.00 (extra calls to father and medical providers in New York and Pennsylvania); household help — $216.00; car insurance — $100.00; gasoline — $80.00. These expenses total $2,117.00. At the time of the ancillary property division hearing in March of 1986, the Court determined Ms. K. to have monthly expenses for herself and the two children at the same residence in Fairfax of $1,823.00. The cost of living has increased approximately 4% each year since 1986. 20% of $1,823.00 is $365.00, which when added to the 1986 expense figure would bring it to $2,187.00. Thus, Ms. K’s claimed current expenses for herself and the two boys appear reasonable. For simplicity purposes, the Court establishes the household expenses of Ms. K., Brian, and Michael at $2,200.00; $1,474.00 or two-thirds of this amount is attributed to the needs of the two boys. The Court adds Michael’s $900.00 annual fee for books and lunches at Tower Hill, which translates to $75.00 a month, and his $86.00 a month for guitar lessons. Also, Brian has an $86.00 monthly expense for math tutoring. Ms. K. presented some other school expenses for the boys such as trips to Williamsburg and New York, and SAT tutoring. The trips and SAT tutoring are one time expenses. She also listed $85.00 for Michael’s rowing team. The Court does not know whether this $85.00 is a one time or annual expense, nor does the Court understand what the $200.00 for Brian’s religious activities involves. Therefore, these items are not included as necessary expenses. The Court will add the tutoring, the guitar lessons, and the Tower Hill fees and lunches to the boys’ share of the household expenses thus increasing their needs to $1,721.00 per month.

STEP 2 — DETERMINATION OF MS. KLEVAN’S CONTRIBUTION

Ms. K. is employed as a co-teacher by Tower Hill School. In 1990, her teaching income was $14,791.00.

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Bluebook (online)
606 A.2d 1339, 1991 Del. Fam. Ct. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-klevan-delfamct-1991.