Shanigan v. Shanigan

386 P.3d 1238, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 2, 2017 WL 65345
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 2017
Docket7144 S-15956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 386 P.3d 1238 (Shanigan v. Shanigan) 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
Shanigan v. Shanigan, 386 P.3d 1238, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 2, 2017 WL 65345 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A mother appeals from an order reducing the amount of child support the father was required to pay. The mother argues that the superior court relied on incorrect income calculations from the Child Support Services Division (CSSD) and that it erred in finding a material change in circumstances sufficient to warrant a reduction in child support. She also argues that the court should have required the father to submit an income affidavit, and that its failure to do so improperly shifted to her the burden of- proving the father’s income. We conclude that CSSD’s income calculations were incorrect, that it was - error for the court to adopt them, and that the father should have been required to *1240 submit an income affidavit. We therefore reverse the superior court’s order modifying child support.

II.FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Elissa Przywojski (formerly Shanigan) and Terrence Shanigan divorced in January 2012, and Elissa was granted sole legal and primary physical custody of their two minor children. The 2012 child support order required Terrence to pay monthly child support of $ 1,932.92.

In June 2014 Terrence asked CSSD to review his support obligation. He gave CSSD copies of his 2013 federal tax return and the six most recent pay stubs from his employment with the State. CSSD recalculated his support obligation and determined that it could be reduced by $315.92 a month. Because this was a reduction of 16.3%, Terrence was presumed to have had a material change in circumstances as defined by Alaska Civil Rule 90;3(h), which would justify a modification of his obligation. 1 Accordingly, in January 2015 CSSD asked the superior court to modify the existing child support order to reflect its new calculations.

Elissa opposed the motion to modify, arguing that. CSSD’s calculations were wrong in several respects. According to Elissa, a correct calculation would result in only a 10.7% decrease from the original child support order, too small a change to justify a reduction in Terrence’s support obligation. Elissa also challenged Terrence’s failure to submit a sworn income affidavit in support of CSSD’s request. Finally, she claimed that CSSD erred in assuming that Terrence had no income from a consulting business he had recently launched.

Along with her opposition Elissa filed an affidavit from her mother, a certified public accountant, who had done her own calculations based on the income information Terrence had given CSSD. This competing analysis showed that Terrence’s monthly support obligation should be reduced to $ 1,725.24 per month, a reduction of $ 207.68 instead of the $315.92 proposed by CSSD. Because her figures showed only a 10.7% reduction in Terrence’s obligation, Elissa argued that a material change in circumstances could not be presumed under Rule 90.3(h) and no modification was justified.

The superior court granted CSSD’s requested modification in February 2015, decreasing Terrence’s child support obligation to the CSSD-recommended amount of $ 1,617 per month. The court issued no separate written findings, but it noted on its order that it had reviewed Elissa’s opposition and found “no supporting evidence” for her claims. Elissa filed successive motions for reconsideration, which the court denied.

Elissa filed this appeal. Terrence did not participate. 2

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

“We use the clearly erroneous standard when reviewing factual findings, including findings regarding a party’s income — ” 3 “Factual findings ‘are clearly erroneous when, “after reviewing the record as a whole, [we are] left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” ’ ” 4

IV. DISCUSSION

A. It Was Error To Grant The Requested Modification Of Terrence’s Child Support Obligation Because He Failed To Show A Material Change In His Income.

1. Child support is calculated under Rule 90.3.

Rule 90.3 prescribes how child support is calculated. The starting point is the non *1241 custodial parent’s “total income from all sources.” 5 Subtracted from this income figure are five “mandatory deductions” set out in Rule 90.3(a)(1)(A): .

(i) federal, state, and local income tax,
(ii) Social Security tax or the equivalent contribution to an alternate plan established by a public employer, and self-employment tax,
(iii) Medicare tax,
(iv) mandatory union dues, [and]
(v) mandatory contributions to a retirement or pension plan,

Rule 90.3(a)(1)(B) also allows a deduction for “voluntary contributions to a retirement or pension plan or account ... except that the total amount of these voluntary contributions plus any mandatory contributions ... may not exceed 7.5% of the parent’s gross wages.” After the court has made these deductions (and several others not relevant here), what remains is the non-custodial parent’s “adjusted annual income.”

Once this amount has been determined, Rule 90.3(a)(2) gives the formula for calculating the child support obligation of the noncustodial parent. Because Terrence and Elissa have two minor children, the amount of the obligation is the adjusted annual income multiplied by .27. 6

To trigger a modification in child support under Rule 90.3(h)(1), the party petitioning for modification must demonstrate that there has been “a material change of circumstances,” which is presumed “if support as calculated under [the] rule is more than 15 percent greater or less than the outstanding support order.”

2. Terrence’s gross income for 2014 was $ 108,729.72.

Because Terrence submitted his request for modification before the end of 2014, CSSD extrapolated his gross annual income through the end of the year using his most recent income information. As of his latest pay stub, dated October-28, 2014, Terrence’s “total gross” income from his State employment was $ 88,295.60. Elissa correctly extrapolates that amount to an annual income of $ 105,954.72. 7 In -2014 Terrence also received a $1,884 Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) and $891 in native corporation dividends. These three amounts added together equal $ 108,729.72 in gross income. As Elissa notes, CSSD’s calculation of Terrence’s gross income, $109,269.72, was $540 too high because it again added Terrence’s non-taxable cell phone allowance, already included as income on his pay stub. 8

3. CSSD incorrectly calculated Terrence’s Rule 90.3 adjusted annual income by overstating his federal income and Medicare tax obligations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sharon Thompson v. Everett Thompson
454 P.3d 981 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2019)
Nicholas Ryan Dunn v. Dakota Christine Jones
451 P.3d 375 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 P.3d 1238, 2017 Alas. LEXIS 2, 2017 WL 65345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shanigan-v-shanigan-alaska-2017.