In Re Marriage of Carlsen
In Re Marriage of Carlsen
Opinion
In the course of responding to Donald Carlsen's motion to modify their visitation agreement, Lynnette Berry moved to modify Carlsen's child support obligation. Based on the declarations of the parties, the trial court awarded an increase in child support from $950 to $2,029 per month. Without benefit of a statement of decision, Carlsen appeals. In the *Page 215 published part of the opinion, we agree the trial court improperly credited Berry with a hardship allowance (Fam. Code, §§ 4071-4073; undesignated section references will be to this code), but reject Carlsen's claim that the court violated section 4057.5 when it considered the income of Berry's new spouse in determining the tax rate to which Berry's income would actually be subject. In the unpublished part, we reject his claim the trial court erred in failing to depart from the support guidelines prescribed by section 4055. We shall reverse.
According to the minute order for the initial hearing, "Court makes findings as to the father's income. The issue of child support is taken under submission. Counsel will provide the court with points and authorities."4
Berry's posthearing briefing did not identify any issue of financial hardship except to claim Carlsen should pay her legal fees because they were "an extreme financial drain." However, she included an exhibit using the default settings of the so-called "DissoMaster" software to calculate child support that contained an entry for a hardship deduction of $2,034. Carlsen's briefing explicitly disputed the inclusion of any hardship deduction. He argued the expenses of twin sons born to Berry and her present husband could be met by the income of her new spouse.
After a May 26 hearing, the court issued its support order. The order itself did not address the hardship deduction in any respect. A DissoMaster printout incorporated by the order contained an entry of $2,029 in the hardship category. We attach a copy of this printout as an exhibit to this opinion.
"(1) State the reasons supporting the deduction in writing oron the record.
"(2) Document the amount of the deduction and the underlyingfacts and circumstances.
"(b) Whenever possible, the court shall specify the duration of the deduction." (§ 4072, italics added.)
(3a) Carlsen argues there is no evidence to support a hardship deduction in this record. While we agree, there is a more fundamental flaw in the support order — its failure to comply with the requirements of section 4072 prescribing express findings by the trial court. The rules applied in the absence of a statement of decision do not cure this problem. The Legislature has determined it is the obligation of the trial court to identify in a support order the evidence on which it bases its decision to allow a hardship deduction and its reasons for allowing it, as well as the duration of the deduction where feasible. (In re Marriage of Kepley, supra, 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 952 [findings required by predecessor to section 4072]; 1 Hogoboom King, Cal. Practice Guide: Family Law (The Rutter Group 1996) ¶¶ 6:498, 6:500, pp. 6-142 to 6-143.)
Berry argues the DissoMaster printout satisfied the statutory requirement for findings. The fact this piece of paper results from calculations performed by a computer after the trial court inputs the figures the court has exercised its discretion to select does not imbue the printout with any greater talismanic value than if the trial judge had performed the calculations in her head and wrote down the resulting figures. The amount of the hardship deduction is a mere conclusion. What the Legislature has prescribed in section 4072 is an articulation of the reasoning by which the court has determined that the minimum basic living expenses of resident dependent minors from other relationships constitute a hardship rather than an expense the custodial parent is expected to bear without assistance from the obligor parent.5
This leaves the question of the nature of the trial court's error. Many considerations favor terming a failure to make prescribed findings "reversible per se." (4) The purpose in requiring findings is to demonstrate to a *Page 218
losing party the possible futility of any appeal, and to focus the appellate review on the pertinent portions of the record underlying the trial court's determination. (Cf. Miramar HotelCorp. v. Frank B. Hall Co. (1985)
Nonetheless, we are enjoined by our Constitution from imposing a reversible-per-se rule here. (Cal. Const., art VI, § 13.) Unlike statements of decision, the Legislature has not precluded us here from implying findings. (Cf. Code Civ. Proc., §
It was not. There is no evidence in the declarations supplied by Berry from which we can infer the necessary findings, nor is there any reporter's transcript. The sole reference to the hardship deduction appears as an entry in Berry's proffered DissoMaster printout without comment. We thus have no basis for determining the basic minimum living expenses attributable to the new children, or whether the hardship deduction should be for a limited duration. We will accordingly reverse the allowance of the deduction as unsupported.
There is no indication the trial court would resolve any differently on remand the issues underlying Carlsen's other arguments. In the interest of judicial economy, we thus address them in the present appeal for guidance in subsequent proceedings.
The Legislature added section 4057.5 after its enactment of the Family Code. It provides in pertinent part, "(a)(2) The income of the obligee *Page 219
parent's subsequent spouse . . . shall not be considered when determining or modifying child support. . . ." (Italics added.) Broadly read, one "considers" the income of Berry's new husband in calculating Carlsen's support obligation because it is part of the determination of Berry's income tax rate. However, it is our obligation to construe a statutory scheme as a whole, harmonizing its components. (Sanford v. Garamendi (1991)
The Legislature's object in adding section 4057.5 was to change previously existing law under which a court could depart from child support guidelines if there was "income of a parent's subsequent spouse . . . which helps meet that parent's basicliving expenses, thus increasing that parent's disposableincome. [¶] This bill would delete this factor, and instead provide that the income of the . . . subsequent spouse . . . shall not be considered when . . . modifying child support, except as specified." (Legis. Counsel's Dig., Sen. Bill No. 145, Stats. 1993 (Reg. Sess.) ch. 935, italics added.) The use of a subsequent spouse's income to determine the actual income tax rate to which the parent's income would be subject does not violate this concern, because the subsequent spouse's income is not being used to subsidize the parent's expenses in any way. Since Carlsen does not dispute the accuracy of the tax liability computed when using the new spouse's income to set the rate, there is no error in the support order in this regard.
Blease, Acting P.J., and Scotland, J., concurred. *Page 220
CARLSEN H W DissoMaster(tm) # of kids 0 2 Input: MONTHLY % time w/NCP 29% 0% Tactic: 8(f) Fil status SINGLE MFJ Year: 1995 # fed exempt 3 4 Wages+salary 8863 661 Settngs=Default Self-emp inc 0 83 Other taxabl 0 0 FC 4055 CS /U AFDC+CS recd 0 0 S.Clara SS /A Oth nontaxbl 0 0 Nets:Adjusted New sps inc 0 2350 Husb 5537 IRA+Keogh 0 0 Wife 0 SS pd prev m 0 0 Comb 5537 CS pd prev m 0 0 Health insur 0 0 ChCare 0 Oth med exp 0 0 GDL CS 2029 Prop tax exp 83 146 GDL SS 0 Interest exp 430 295 Total 2029 Contrib exp 0 0 Misc itemizd 0 0 PROP: Union dues 0 0 NonDed 0 Mand retrmnt 426 36 Deduct 3103 Hardship ded 0[*] 2029[*] Total 3103 Oth GDL deds 0 0 Saving 311 Add-ons(CCE) 0 0 Release 2
V.95-1 (c)1995 CFLR 00:01:13 GDLN PROP COMBINED Comb net spendable 5537 5849 Percent change 0% 6% HUSBAND pays GDLNCS PROPPS Paymt cost/benefit -2029 -1831 Net spendable inc 3509 3706 Change from GDLN 0 197 % of combined net 63% 63% % of savng ovr GDLN 0% 63% Total taxes 2900 1628 Dep exemption value 132 119 # withhold allows 8 23 Net wage paycheck 5956 6998 WIFE Paymt cost/benefit 2029 2143 Net spendable inc 2029 2143 Change from GDLN 0 114 % of combined net 37% 37% % of savng ovr GDLN 0% 37% Total taxes 567 1528 Dep exemption value 65 119 # withhold allows 5 3 Net wage paycheck 706 706
Date: 06/13/95 Time: 11:42:24 Tax year: 1995 Tactic: 8(f) Brislain O'Neil Attorneys at Law
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In Re the Marriage of Donald and Lynnette A. Carlsen. Donald Carlsen v. Lynnette A. Berry
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published