Susanne S. Levene

2014 WY 161, 340 P.3d 270, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 7140263
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
DocketS-14-0096
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 WY 161 (Susanne S. Levene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susanne S. Levene, 2014 WY 161, 340 P.3d 270, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 7140263 (Wyo. 2014).

Opinion

BURKE, Chief Justice.

[T1] Appellant, Susanne Levene (Mother), acting pro se, challenges an order denying her motion to modify child support. She contends the district court erred in determining she was voluntarily unemployed. We affirm.

ISSUE

[12] Mother presents four issues, each of which relates to the district court's determination that she was voluntarily unemployed from January to November, 20183. Accordingly, we distill Mother's issues into a single issue statement:

Whether the district court erred in determining that Mother was "voluntarily unemployed" for purposes of Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 20-2-303(a)(ii) and 20-2-307(b)(xi) from January to November, 2018.

FACTS

[13] The parties were married in 1996, 'and the marriage produced three children. Mother is a general surgeon and Appellee, Daniel Levene (Father), is an orthopedic surgeon practicing in Laramie, where he has resided at all times during this litigation. Mother filed a complaint for divorce in 2003, and the parties entered into a Property Settlement and Child Custody Agreement in January, 2004. That agreement contemplated that Mother would have primary custody of the children. Before the divorce decree was signed, however, Mother drove drunk with the children in her car and was involved in an automobile accident. She ultimately pled guilty to driving while under the influence of alcohol.

[14] As a result of the accident and Mother's drinking problem, Father and the children's guardian ad litem filed a joint petition to modify custody. The parties subsequently entered into a Stipulated Order for Modification of Custody, which incorporated the following provision concerning Mother's alcohol issues:

The above custody arrangement is conditioned upon (a) Mother maintaining sobriety without any significant relapses of use, and (b) Mother continuing phase II of substance and aleohol counseling or treatment so long as deemed necessary by Mother's present counselor and treatment substance abuse providers.

Mother relapsed shortly after entry of the stipulated order and in August, 2004, Father petitioned the district court for a modification of custody. The court granted Father's *272 petition and awarded him primary residential custody of the children. In granting Father's petition, the court noted that Mother had refused to comply with urinalysis testing and admitted that she had lied to the court about her compliance. With respect to Mother's child support obligation, the court noted that Mother was unemployed but was pursuing employment as a physician. As a result, the court attributed a minimum wage salary to Mother and ordered her to pay child support in the amount of $147.81 per month.

[15] On October 2, 2007, Mother filed a petition to modify the district court's custody order. Mother asserted that she was fit to have custody of the parties' children and that she had "remained sober and has completely abstained from the use of alcohol." Mother noted that she had been employed full time at a general surgical practice in Rugby, North Dakota since June, 2006. Three days before that petition was filed, however, Mother was again arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol while the children were riding as passengers in her vehicle. As a result of this incident, the district court ordered that Mother's visitation with the children be supervised. '

[16] In April, 2008, Father filed a petition for adjustment of child support. At that time, Mother was earning $260,000.00 per year at the surgical practice in North Dakota On August 29, the court entered an order finding that Mother's presumptive child support obligation was $1,259.00 per month. However, the court ordered Mother to pay child support in the amount of $259.00 per month, a $1,000 downward deviation from the presumptive child support amount. The court noted that the deviation was justified by the costs incurred by Mother for monthly visitation.

[17] In 2009, the district court entered a Stipulated Custody and Visitation Order after Mother filed a Motion to Allow Unsupervised Visitation. In that order, the parties agreed that Mother would be allowed to exercise unsupervised visitation on the conditions that she remain gainfully employed, maintain sobriety, and continue with appropriate alcoholism treatment and counseling. The order also required that "Neither parent shall ask questions of or engage in conversations with the children which invite a child to choose sides or provide information that reflects negatively on the other parent," and that neither party "shall video tape or audio record any of the visitation exchanges between the children and either parent, a nanny, sitter or the children's grandparents."

[T8] Mother left her employment in North Dakota in May, 2010 to take a job as a general surgeon in Lamar, Colorado, where she earned a yearly salary of $300,000.00. In May, 2011, the district court entered a Stipulated Order Modifying Child Support. The court ordered Mother to pay the presumptive child support obligation of $1,407.10 per month. Additionally, in March, 2011, Father requested that the court find Mother in contempt for violating the Stipulated Custody and Visitation Order entered in 2009. The court granted Father's motion after determining that Mother had violated the provision prohibiting the parties from inviting the children to choose or providing information that reflects negatively on the other parent.

[19] Mother left her job in Colorado in the summer of 2012 and remained unemployed until November, 2012, when she took a job as a surgeon in Lewiston, Idaho, earning a salary of $350,000.00 per year. However, Mother left that position after only two months as a result of job dissatisfaction and a conflict with another surgeon. After voluntarily leaving her position in Idaho, Mother apparéntly intended to start her own surgical practice with another doctor in Casper, Wyoming, but ultimately chose not to pursue that opportunity. In the fall of 2018, Mother secured employment as the Medical Director at the Wyoming State Penitentiary in Rawlins, Wyoming, at a salary of $249,000.00 per year. She also accepted employment at Memorial Hospital in Carbon County.

[T10] The present matter began in January, 2013, when Mother filed a petition to modify child support. Mother asserted that an adjustment of child support was appropriate because she was, at that time, unemployed. In response, Father filed a motion for an order to show cause as to why Mother should not be held in contempt for failing to *273 pay child support. The district court conducted hearings on the parties' motions on January 17 and January 31, 2014. Following the hearings, the district court entered an Order of Contempt and Order Denying Child Support Modification. The court determined Mother's monthly net income to be $10,980.00 and her presumptive child support obligation to be $1,898.00 per month. The court concluded that a modification of child support was not warranted because $1,898.00 did not represent a 20% change from Mother's existing child support obligation, as required under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 20-2-811. The court further found that Mother was in arrears on her child support obligation in the amount of $27,265.88 and ordered her to pay $1,000.00 per month toward the arrears.

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

Related

Elisha Schlafke Baer v. John S. Baer Iii
2022 WY 165 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2022)
Aimee V. Kidd F/K/A Aimee V. Jacobson v. Matthew T. Jacobson
2020 WY 64 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2020)
Christopher Gore v. The State of Wyoming
2019 WY 110 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2019)
Tracey Kamm v. Jason Kamm
2016 WY 8 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 WY 161, 340 P.3d 270, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 7140263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susanne-s-levene-wyo-2014.