Zalmanoff v. Zalmanoff

862 S.W.2d 941, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1547, 1993 WL 387185
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1993
Docket62518 & 62581
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 862 S.W.2d 941 (Zalmanoff v. Zalmanoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zalmanoff v. Zalmanoff, 862 S.W.2d 941, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1547, 1993 WL 387185 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

SIMON, Presiding Judge.

Sharon Zalmanoff, wife, appeals from an order modifying a dissolution decree, and Norman Zalmanoff, husband, cross-appeals. Wife and husband were married in 1963. Two children were born of the marriage: Jodi Zalmanoff, daughter, born June 22, 1971, and Sean E. Zalmanoff, son, born March 4, 1978. The decree of dissolution of the marriage, granted on March 24, 1987, awarded custody of both children to wife, and ordered husband to: pay $300 per month for the support of each child and $500 per month to wife for her maintenance; maintain in full force and effect health and hospital insurance for the minor children and husband’s life insurance policy naming minor children as beneficiaries; and not change the beneficiaries of his life insurance policy until the youngest of the children is emancipated.

On September 20, 1988, the trial court issued a modification order which reduced the maintenance from $500 to $150 per month; required wife to maintain health, hospitalization, medical, and dental insurance on behalf of the minor children; relieved husband of his obligation to provide and maintain health, medical, and dental insurance; and required husband to pay wife or health care provider upon written notice for one half of the reasonable and necessary medical expenses incurred on behalf of the minor children not covered by health insurance benefits provided by wife’s employer.

On October 2,1990, husband filed a motion to modify the dissolution decree seeking: *943 termination of wife’s maintenance; elimination of child support for daughter due to her emancipation; and a judgment against wife for back child support for daughter paid by husband after her emancipation. Husband subsequently filed an amended motion to modify and a motion to adjudicate daughter emancipated.

On December 6, 1990, wife filed a motion for judgment against husband for failure to pay one half of daughter’s medical expenses. Wife also filed a cross-motion to modify, seeking to increase child support and maintenance, and to require husband to pay for the minor children’s health insurance. Later wife filed a motion for contempt for husband’s failure to keep in effect his life insurance policy for the benefit of his minor children. All motions were presented to the trial court on March 23, 1992.

Wife is employed at St. John’s Mercy Medical Center. She works 40 hours a week earning $7.39 an hour. When wife’s maintenance was modified in 1988, her income was $11,050. In 1990, her income increased to $14,405.00, and in 1991, it increased again to $16,422.31. Her income for 1989 is not part of the record on appeal. She testified that she was diagnosed as a diabetic after the modification order in 1988 and that her medication for diabetes was very expensive. The record indicates wife was spending $55 a month on her medication.

Husband is a self-employed mechanic. In 1988, husband’s income was $18,996. Husband earned $25,293 in 1989, $26,427 in 1990, and $27,920, or $2,325 per month, in 1991. On direct examination, husband testified as follows:

Q. ... So — So your net income for 1991 is $27,920, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. Now what is your projection for 1992?
MS. BENOIT: Objection, Your Honor. It calls for speculation.
THE COURT: Overruled. Go ahead.
BY MR. FRAPOLLI:
Q. Do you think your income will be— Your net income, will that be less or more than that?
A. I’m saying this year, the way things seem to be, that, if I had a $20,000 year, it’s going to be — going to be a good year.
Q. Okay. And why is that?
A. Business is terrible. It’s just— There’s just nothing going on right now. The last — The last five months, I’ve averaged about $1,550 a month,—
Q. Okay.
A. —from October through March.

On cross-examination, husband testified as follows:

Q. ... Has your business changed at all, or is it basically the same business that you’ve been operating since 1988?
A. I lost one very good account that I had.
Q. And who was that?
A. Jefferson — Jefferson Smurfit.
Q. And have you managed to replace that account with other business?
A. No not — not to that extent.

Daughter graduated from high school in June 1989 when she was eighteen, and enrolled at the University of Missouri-St. Louis in August 1989 as a part-time student. The evidence shows she remained enrolled at that university, averaging 8 hours a semester. She did not attend school during the summer. In October 1990, daughter started working at Hit or Miss, a clothing store, for $5.85 per hour. She worked there an average of 15 hours a week. Daughter earned $5,975.64 in 1991. She had her own checking account. Out of her earnings, daughter bought her own car, paid for her tuition, books, gas, ear repairs, ear insurance, phone bills, most of her clothes, cosmetics, and haircuts. She lived with her mother, but did not give her mother any regular contributions on a monthly basis to defray household expenses. Wife did not impose a curfew or any other rules on her daughter, and did not supervise her work or school schedule. Wife did not give daughter an allowance, and when she did give daughter money, she loaned it to her. However, wife did buy clothes and food for daughter, and- paid for her daughter’s health insurance. Wife paid $40 to $50 per *944 month for her daughter’s clothes, but the record does not reflect how much she paid for food. The health insurance for the children cost $88 per month in 1991, and increased to $100 per month in 1992. The record does not indicate how much she paid for health insurance from 1988 to 1990.

At the trial, wife’s counsel did not submit a Form 14, which calculates the presumed child support amount, to the trial court. Instead, counsel requested that for any child support finding the court incorporate as part of its decree a child support calculation chart. Further, husband testified that he had initially misread the modification order to have terminated his obligation to maintain life insurance under the dissolution decree. Husband admitted that at the time of trial he understood the modification order did not terminate this obligation, and that he had not reinstated his policy.

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Bluebook (online)
862 S.W.2d 941, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1547, 1993 WL 387185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zalmanoff-v-zalmanoff-moctapp-1993.