Inman v. Inman
Inman v. Inman
Opinion
This is a child support modification case.
The mother appeals from an order of the circuit court modifying a previous award of child support.
The dispositive issue on appeal is whether there was a material change in circumstances since the original decree sufficient to warrant a modification of that decree's provisions for child support. We find no material change in circumstances, and reverse.
The record reveals the following. During the marriage the husband was in military service, and at the time of the divorce was stationed in Virginia. In 1974 the parties separated. The wife returned to the husband's original hometown in Etowah County and in 1975 filed for divorce. By agreement, the wife was given custody of the parties' two minor children, then ages twelve and nine, "subject to the right of reasonable visitation" on the part of the husband. The husband was to pay $150 per month per child in child support. *Page 1039
Two months after the divorce the wife returned with the two children to her home state of California. The husband subsequently retired from the military, returned to Etowah County, and remarried. In July 1978 the husband filed a petition to modify the original decree, alleging that the wife had refused to allow him to exercise his rights of visitation. He sought to have his visitation rights specified and requested that the wife be ordered to allow the children to visit him or, alternatively, that he be relieved from paying child support. The husband also requested that the monthly child support payments be reduced commensurate with his ability to pay.
After a hearing, at which the husband was the only party to testify, the trial court ordered the wife to allow the children to visit the husband for two weeks each summer. The court also reduced the child support payments from $150 to $100 per month per child. The wife appeals only from that portion of the decree ordering a reduction in child support payments.
The basis for our review is the principle that an order modifying the child support provisions of a divorce decree will not be reversed on appeal unless it is such an abuse of discretion as to be plainly and palpably wrong. Little v.Little, Ala.Civ.App.,
We, therefore, look at the record to see if there is sufficient evidence therein upon which the modification order can be grounded.
One ground for reducing or terminating child support payments is the removal from the court's jurisdiction of the child by the custodial parent. Headley v. Headley,
The second ground offered for a reduction, a reason advanced by the husband in his testimony at trial, is an increase in the cost of living due to inflation. A court may take judicial notice of an increase in the cost of living due to inflation,Bearden v. LeMaster,
A third factor, and one which may properly be considered in support of the order of modification, is the remarriage of the husband. However, the husband's remarriage is not, standing alone, a change in circumstances sufficient for a modification.Mockridge v. Mockridge,
Finally, we find no evidence in the record of a substantial decrease in the father's *Page 1040 financial status. The husband testified that his annual incomes since the divorce were: 1975, $11,007; 1976, $15,194; and 1977, $14,216. He testified that he was employed and also receiving military retirement pay. There is no indication in the record that the husband is in ill health or in any way disabled.
The evidence in the record of the wife's financial status is meager. However, the record shows that the wife is unemployed, has become disabled since the divorce, and receives as her sole source of income a supplemental security income check of $307 a month. We find nothing in this evidence which would justify a decrease in child support.
After a careful examination of the record in this case we are unable to find that there has been a decrease in the father's earnings or that there has been such a legitimate demand made on those earnings as to warrant a reduction in child support. Nor has it been shown by the evidence that the financial needs of the children have decreased to the point where less support would be required of the father. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court's order reducing the father's support payments from $150 to $100 per month per child was plainly and palpably erroneous. This case is therefore reversed and remanded with directions that the support provisions of the original decree,i.e. $150 per month per child, be reinstated.
The wife has requested a reasonable attorney's fee. A fee of $500 is hereby awarded.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
WRIGHT, P.J., and HOLMES, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mary H. Inman v. Virgle Inman.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published