Charles Tumey v. Jill Tumey ( 2024 )


Menu:
  •                                  Cite as 
    2024 Ark. App. 166
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CV-23-31
    Opinion Delivered March 6, 2024
    CHARLES TUMEY
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SHARP COUNTY
    CIRCUIT COURT
    [NOS. 68DR-21-39 & 68DR-21-59]
    V.
    HONORABLE ADAM G. WEEKS,
    JILL TUMEY                                     JUDGE
    APPELLEE
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
    Charles (“Chris”) Tumey brings this one-brief appeal from the Sharp County Circuit
    Court’s May 24, 2022 order awarding appellee Jill Tumey alimony and child support. He
    raises three points: (1) it was erroneous to award Jill permanent alimony after she disclaimed
    it; (2) the child-support calculation is flawed and should be reversed; and (3) the retroactive
    child support should be reversed. In support of his second point, Chris argues that Jill’s
    income was understated because the circuit court did not take into account her Social
    Security disability (SSD) payments and the entirety of a monthly payment she was awarded
    as part of the parties’ property distribution. Chris also argues in support of his second point
    that the circuit court should have considered extraordinary medical expenses that Chris was
    ordered to pay for the children. We reverse and remand.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    Chris filed for divorce on February 26, 2021. His complaint set out that the parties
    were married on October 21, 2010, and two children were born during the marriage: MC1
    (female, born 2011) and MC2 (male, born 2014). In his complaint, Chris requested full
    physical and legal custody of the children, with Jill being awarded supervised or conditional
    visitation. That same day, Chris filed a verified motion for ex parte emergency custody,
    supported by his own affidavit as well as the affidavits of two people who worked at his
    company—TG&H Industrial Energy Services. That motion was granted on March 2, 2021.
    The circuit court awarded Chris temporary custody of the children and set a hearing for
    April 19.
    On March 22, Jill answered and counterclaimed. Within her counterclaim, she
    requested primary physical custody of the children subject to Chris’s reasonable visitation,
    child support, and alimony. That same day, she moved to strike the ex parte custody order
    and for an immediate hearing. On March 23, Chris answered the counterclaim, generally
    denying its allegations.
    On April 14, an “agreed order of protection, consolidation, and for mediation” was
    entered. The order reflected that this case was being consolidated with another Sharp
    County case,1 that the parties had agreed to mediation, and that an attorney ad litem (AAL)
    1
    Chris had also filed a petition for an order of protection in a separate case on March
    19 in which an ex parte order of protection was entered. The substance of that motion,
    affidavit in support, and order is the same as that filed in this case. The April 14 order of
    consolidation appears to be in reference to that proceeding.
    2
    had been appointed. The court modified the order of protection, lifting it as to the children
    to facilitate whatever reasonable visitation on which the parties could agree, leaving intact
    the other provisions regarding Chris.
    On May 10, the court entered an order reflecting that Chris had temporary legal and
    physical custody of the children, pending final adjudication.
    On July 21, Jill filed a motion to continue the final hearing set for August 9. She
    asserted that the continuance was necessary because she had encountered difficulties
    completing her mental evaluation as well as her own valuation of TG&H due to a lack of
    funds. She alleged that the lack of funds was caused by TG&H’s reporting an incorrect
    amount of income for her to the IRS—resulting in the termination of her SSD—and Chris’s
    failure to pay her the monthly temporary spousal support upon which they had agreed.
    A. November 8, 2021 Hearing
    A hearing was held on November 8, 2021. Relevant to the issues on appeal, Chris’s
    attorney informed the court that Jill had supervised visitation until August 2021, when they
    began unsupervised visitation, with Jill getting the children every Wednesday beginning at
    school pick up until school drop off on Thursday and every other weekend. Jill’s daughter-
    in-law, Amber Tipton, testified that the children were with Jill for extended periods of time
    from August to October 2021 due to Chris’s traveling out of state for work. Jill withdrew her
    counterclaim.
    3
    A “partial temporary order”—signed November 18, 20212—reflects that the issues of
    custody, visitation, and support were only partially heard “on this day” and that the final
    hearing would be held on December 13, 2021. It further specified that Chris would have
    temporary custody of the children, and the parties by agreement would follow the AAL’s
    recommendation regarding visitation. It ordered Chris to continue paying Jill $1300 a
    month in temporary alimony.
    B. December 13, 2021 Hearing
    Another hearing was held on December 13, 2021. Chris resumed his testimony, going
    into greater detail regarding his income as well as the various ways in which money flowed
    through TG&H. Jill testified that her entire income consisted of a monthly SSD payment of
    $1394, which had stopped when TG&H incorrectly reported that it had paid her $100,00
    the previous year. She testified further that she needed continued alimony. Chris’s attorney
    responded that they had already “stipulated that.”
    Sometime between December 13 and January 31, the parties engaged in mediation
    but were unable to resolve any issues. The parties were divorced by decree on January 13,
    2022. The decree reserved ruling on “[a]ll other issues” until the final hearing on February
    24.
    C. February 24, 2022 Hearing
    2
    This order was not filed until May 16, 2022.
    4
    What was to have been the final hearing occurred on February 24, 2022, via Zoom.
    Because everyone was having technical difficulties, the hearing was continued until April 4.
    Prior to concluding the hearing, a great deal of discussion was had regarding alimony,
    including whether it had been properly pled. During the discussion, Chris’s counsel argued
    that Jill’s counsel had represented at a prior hearing that she was not pursuing alimony
    beyond the final hearing because she would be getting money from the business buyout, and
    her request for it had been withdrawn. The circuit court ultimately stated, “Let’s just clean
    it up, Mr. Graham. If you’re going to pursue it, plead it, and let’s just clean up the record.
    And your client, she’s gonna do it. Whatever it is.”
    D. April 4, 2022 Hearing
    A final hearing was held on April 4, 2022. At the outset of the hearing, the court
    inquired regarding the “need for an amended counterclaim” and if that had occurred. The
    following colloquy occurred between Chris’s counsel, Robin Vail, and Jill’s counsel, Luke
    Graham:
    GRAHAM:              Did not, Your Honor. Ms. Tumey’s social security has since
    been—They fixed it. I guess. It was an issue about social security—
    and her social security had gotten cut off. Now it’s back on.
    THE COURT:           So the issue is moot?
    GRAHAM:              Yes.
    THE COURT: Okay. Everybody’s in agreement in regard to that?
    VAIL:                Yes, Your Honor.
    5
    Testimony then began. Jeremy Watson, a certified public accountant as well as a
    certified valuation analyst, testified that the value of the parties’ 50 percent ownership
    interest in TG&H was $300,000 as of October 31, 2021. He also explained the method by
    which he arrived at that conclusion. His report was introduced into evidence.
    Brad Hopkins, the CFO of TG&H, testified regarding TG&H’s assets, debts,
    operating expenses, liabilities, and clientele. He further testified that TG&H did not have
    the funds to write Jill a check for $150,000.
    Chris also testified that TG&H could not write a check for $150,000. He further
    testified that while he understands Jill is entitled to one-half of their share of TG&H, he
    would like Jill’s portion offset by its debts and that a fair and equitable settlement would be
    $1000 a month over sixty to sixty-five months, for a total of $60,000 to $65,000. Regarding
    the children, he testified that, at a minimum, he had sole custody of them from February to
    August 2021.
    Jill testified that she receives $1500 a month in SSD. She explained that she is unable
    to work full time due to physical and mental-health issues, and she cannot make more than
    $1200 a month and keep her SSD. Regarding her marital interest in TG&H, she testified
    that she does not want to be paid in monthly installments only but would like at least a
    partial lump sum followed by more than $1000 a month. She also testified that most of the
    debt is Chris’s; she cannot pay it; and she would like the court to distribute the debt
    unequally with Chris being responsible for the debt.
    6
    The parties made closing arguments. Chris requested that $290 a week in income be
    imputed to Jill because she testified that is what she could earn and keep her SSD. He further
    argued she should receive somewhere around $60,000 for her share of TG&H. Jill argued
    that she would like child support to be retroactive to July 2021, which is when the parties
    began joint custody. She argued that she should receive somewhere around $310,000 for her
    share of TG&H. Chris responded that retroactive child support had not been pled, and Jill’s
    not receiving child support was one of the factors considered in reaching their prior
    agreement for rehabilitative alimony. She responded that they agreed to rehabilitative
    alimony until the buyout was paid, which had nothing to do with child support, which is
    always an issue.
    On April 8, 2022, the court issued a letter to the parties setting out its rulings.
    Regarding all financially related decisions, the court considered Jill’s financial need, Chris’s
    ability to pay, the lifestyle afforded them by Chris’s income during the marriage, the length
    of the parties’ marriage, the parties’ ages, the amount of child support that will be paid to
    Jill, the child-support arrearage, and the TG&H distribution. The court also considered the
    way the parties conducted their financial business, finding that Chris had earned a significant
    income during the marriage, which the parties appeared to have spent, causing there to be
    no savings or assets available to distribute in lump sum to Jill.
    The court awarded joint physical custody with Chris having “final say in any
    disagreements that may arise.” The court ordered that the children continue with counseling.
    The court imputed a weekly income of $290 to Jill, determined that Chris’s annual income
    7
    was $317,413, and directed that the parties’ counsel determine the child-support obligation
    with those incomes, using the current Administrative Order No. 10 formula. The court also
    ordered that child support be retroactive to July 1, 2021, with the arrearage being paid as a
    lump sum to Jill within three months of entry of the “final decree.”
    Regarding TG&H, the court credited Watson’s testimony and found that the value
    of the parties’ 50 percent TG&H interest was $300,000. The court then ordered Chris to
    pay Jill $1500 a month for one hundred months—$150,000—as payment for her marital
    portion of TG&H. The court also ordered Chris to pay Jill alimony in the amount of $1000
    a month from and after the last TG&H payment.3
    The court ordered that Chris would take all the marital debt due to Jill’s inability to
    earn, given the evidence put on—largely by Chris—of her long history of mental and physical
    health issues. The parties were directed to divide their personal property prior to entry of the
    final decree, with anything they were unable to agree on to be sold at auction. The marital
    home and acreage were ordered sold, with the proceeds being split evenly. Jill’s attorney was
    directed to draft the order.
    On May 16, Chris’s attorney sent the court a letter and proposed precedent with
    blanks for child support. The letter stated that Chris was objecting to Jill’s child-support
    calculations because she did not include the following in her calculations: (1) the $375 a
    month Chris paid for the children’s counseling, (2) the $1500 a month Jill would be
    3
    There was no termination provision regarding the alimony.
    8
    receiving as part of their property distribution, and (3) her monthly $1500 SSD. Chris
    believed that the correct amount of child support should be $1563. Chris asked that the
    court reconsider the retroactive application of the child support.
    On May 20, 2022, the court issued a letter ruling reflecting that the court, having
    considered the equities, would include half of the TG&H property distribution as part of
    Jill’s income for child-support purposes. The court explained that it had also considered that
    it was unable to award a lump sum to Jill for her equitable portion of TG&H; the property
    award was available to her to spend as income; and the award was not child support and thus
    did not carry the same enforcement tools.
    On May 24, 2022, the “order after final hearing” was filed, setting out the court’s
    rulings contained in the April 8, 2022 letter, as modified by the May 20, 2022 letter. The
    circuit court awarded Jill $1712 a month in child support as well as a child-support arrearage
    of $18,832. The court ordered that the arrearage be paid within three months of entry of the
    final order.
    On June 7, Chris moved for reconsideration, arguing, in part, that the circuit court
    had incorrectly calculated his child-support obligation; the court should not have ordered
    alimony; and the court should not have ordered retroactive child support. Jill moved to strike
    Chris’s motion for reconsideration as untimely that same day, arguing that it was not filed
    with the requisite ten days.4
    4
    It was timely. See Ark. R. Civ. P. 6(a).
    9
    Chris filed his notice of appeal on June 23, 2022. On July 11, Chris filed an amended
    notice of appeal, specifying that he was appealing the May 24, 2022 order and the July 7,
    2022 deemed denial of his motion for reconsideration.
    II. Discussion
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-12-312(a)(1) (Repl. 2020) requires that “when a
    decree is entered, the court shall make an order concerning the care of the children, if there
    are any, and an order concerning alimony, if applicable, as are reasonable from the
    circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case.”
    A. Alimony
    Chris first contends that the circuit court erred in awarding Jill permanent alimony
    after she disclaimed it. A circuit court’s decision regarding alimony is a matter that lies within
    its sound discretion and will not be reversed on appeal absent an abuse of that discretion.
    Chekuri v. Nekkalapudi, 
    2020 Ark. 74
    , at 18, 
    593 S.W.3d 467
    , 477. An abuse of discretion
    means discretion improvidently exercised, i.e., exercised thoughtlessly and without due
    consideration. Carr v. Carr, 
    2019 Ark. App. 513
    , at 6–7, 
    588 S.W.3d 821
    , 826.
    Jill requested temporary alimony in her March 22, 2021 answer and counterclaim.
    However, her counterclaim was withdrawn on the record at the November 8, 2021 hearing.
    At some point, the parties agreed that Chris would pay Jill $1300 a month in alimony, with
    the understanding that it was temporary and would cease upon the business buyout. Jill
    never requested permanent alimony.
    Alimony was discussed at the December 13, 2021 hearing:
    10
    GRAHAM:             —we’re just requesting until she gets her buyout from business.
    Temporary alimony from now until she gets the buyout from
    the business.
    THE COURT:          So you think that the buyout from the business is restorative
    enough that she—that temporary alimony is all that is necessary?
    GRAHAM:             Yes.
    THE COURT: Is she currently getting any alimony?
    GRAHAM:             Thirteen hundred a month.
    ....
    THE COURT:          I just found the typical considerations, ability to pay and need,
    and I mean until somebody shows me otherwise that I
    specifically have to make some sort of special finding in regard
    to child support I’m not going to because it’s pretty clear that
    over and over again the Court has ruled that there is a series of
    factors and those are the ones I’m going to use, period.
    GRAHAM:             She either needs it or she doesn’t. He can either pay it or he
    can’t.
    AAL:                Right.
    GRAHAM:             Well, there’s the need side too.
    ....
    VAIL:               And then after that, I just say that we continue on with the
    custody presentation because, I mean, we’ll stipulate that
    alimony, rehabilitative alimony, needs to continue until you’ve
    got other evidence. We don’t—that namely being the company
    buyout.
    THE COURT:          I don’t think I can make a final determination regarding child
    support, I’m sorry, alimony today without information either.
    Mr. Graham, do you have any argument otherwise?
    11
    GRAHAM:              And what we’re—all we’re arg—all we’re seeking, Your Honor, is
    rehabilitative alimony until that happens and she gets the
    buyout from the company.
    VAIL:                And we’ve agreed to it also.
    GRAHAM:              We’re only requesting it on a temporary basis anyway. So.
    THE COURT:           Do you disputing [sic] that amount currently being paid is not
    appropriate—
    GRAHAM:              No.
    THE COURT: —until then?
    GRAHAM:              No.
    THE COURT:           So can we stipulate that alimony is appropriate and—temporary
    alimony is appropriate. That the amount that is currently being
    paid is appropriate and that it shall be paid until the buyout of
    the company is made?
    GRAHAM:              I believe so, Your Honor. I think that’s fine.
    VAIL:                Thank you, Judge.
    The alimony issue was argued once more at the February 24, 2022 hearing. The
    takeaway at the conclusion of that hearing was that Jill would replead it. However, at the
    next and final hearing on April 4, Jill’s counsel made clear that he had not repleaded it,
    because the issue with her SSD had been resolved, and her benefits had resumed. Jill’s
    counsel affirmed that the issue was “moot.”
    As Chris recognizes in his brief, the cases he relied upon—Carty v. Carty, 
    222 Ark. 183
    , 
    258 S.W.2d 43
     (1953); McKay v. McKay, 
    340 Ark. 171
    , 
    8 S.W.3d 525
     (2000); and
    12
    Robertson v. Robertson, CA 96-935 (Ark. App. April 30, 1997)5—do not squarely address the
    issue. In those cases, to the extent alimony was at issue, the analysis revolved around whether
    alimony was properly requested before it was awarded. The issue here is whether the circuit
    court abused its discretion when the party who was awarded permanent alimony did not ask
    for it, and there was an agreement in place between the parties that any alimony would be
    temporary.
    Williams v. Williams, 
    2018 Ark. App. 79
    , 
    541 S.W.3d 477
    , and Artman v. Hoy, 
    370 Ark. 131
    , 
    257 S.W.3d 864
     (2007), are instructive. In Williams, the parties stipulated to the
    disposition of a car in appellee’s possession, which affected the marital property at issue.
    
    2018 Ark. App. 79
    , at 15, 541 S.W.3d at 485. On the basis of that stipulation, if appellee
    was awarded alimony, a portion of that alimony was to be used to make the car payment
    until the car was paid off. Id. However, the circuit court required appellant to pay alimony
    and pay for the car. Id. On appeal, appellant argued that the circuit court’s refusal to enforce
    the parties’ agreement regarding the car payments and alimony was an abuse of discretion.
    Id. Our court agreed, reversing the circuit court and holding that requiring the parties to do
    something other than that to which they had agreed constituted an abuse of discretion. Id.
    In doing so, we noted that oral stipulations made in open court that are taken down by the
    reporter and acted on by the parties and court are valid and binding, and such stipulations
    are in the nature of a contract. Id. We further noted that it was not necessary that an agreed
    5
    Chris recognizes that the case was not designated for publication and thus has no
    precedential value.
    13
    statement of facts, admitted by the parties to be true in open court, should be signed by the
    parties or their attorneys. Id.
    In Artman, the issue was whether the parties’ agreement regarding the duration of the
    alimony payment (ten years) was superseded by the plain language of the statute that provides
    for the cessation of alimony upon the remarriage of the recipient. 
    370 Ark. 131
    , 136, 
    257 S.W.3d at 868
    . There, our supreme court explained that the parties can enter into an
    agreement setting the terms of an alimony obligation such that it may continue beyond the
    alimony recipient’s remarriage. 
    Id.
     The court concluded that it was undisputed that the
    agreement between the parties was unambiguous and that it required one party to pay the
    other alimony for a period of ten years—it was an “agreement otherwise” as contemplated by
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-12-312(a)(1). 
    Id.
     The court held that the statutory
    automatic-termination provision regarding remarriage was thus not applicable and affirmed
    the trial court’s decision refusing to terminate the alimony obligation. 
    Id.
     While there was a
    written agreement in Artman—as opposed to here, where there was none—it can be
    extrapolated that parties to a divorce may contract both in and out of something to which the
    party may otherwise by entitled, and it is not an abuse of discretion for a circuit court to
    enforce such an agreement.
    The only request for alimony contained within a pleading was in Jill’s counterclaim,
    which she withdrew at the November 8, 2021 hearing and chose not to replead. Jill stipulated
    at the April 4, 2022 hearing that the issue of alimony was “moot.” Most importantly, the
    parties had an agreement that any alimony would be temporary. We have no opinion on the
    14
    validity of the award of permanent alimony had none of those things occurred. However,
    under the present circumstances, we believe the circuit court abused its discretion in
    awarding Jill permanent alimony. Accordingly, we reverse.
    B. Child Support
    Jill was awarded $1712 a month in child support. Chris contends that that amount
    is erroneous because the circuit court’s calculations were flawed. In support of this point,
    Chris makes three separate arguments: (1) Jill’s income was understated because her SSD
    was excluded from the court’s calculations; (2) the circuit court, in calculating Jill’s income,
    erred by not including the entirety of the monthly award Jill was to receive as her marital
    share of TG&H; and (3) the court failed to consider the extraordinary medical expenses paid
    by Chris—specifically the children’s counseling.
    Our standard of review for an appeal from a child-support order is de novo on the
    record, and we will not reverse a finding of fact by the circuit court unless it is clearly
    erroneous. Cathey v. Altazan, 
    2023 Ark. App. 314
    , at 5, 
    669 S.W.3d 614
    , 617. However, a
    circuit court’s conclusions of law are given no deference on appeal. Id. at 6, 669 S.W.3d at
    618. In reviewing a circuit court’s findings, we give due deference to that court’s superior
    position to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their
    testimony. Id., 669 S.W.3d at 617–18. In a child-support determination, the amount of child
    support lies within the sound discretion of the circuit court, and the court’s findings will not
    be reversed absent an abuse of discretion. Id. at 6, 669 S.W.3d at 618. An abuse of discretion
    generally occurs when the circuit court’s discretion is applied thoughtlessly, without due
    15
    consideration, or improvidently. Grynwald v. Grynwald, 
    2022 Ark. App. 310
    , 
    651 S.W.3d 177
    .
    Supreme Court Administrative Order No. 10 (Admin. Order 10) mandates that
    circuit courts use the “Income Shares Model” adopted by the Arkansas Supreme Court in In
    re Implementation of Revised Administrative Order No. 10, 
    2020 Ark. 131
     (per curiam), which
    became effective on June 30, 2020. This model considers the incomes of both parties instead
    of basing child support solely on the payor’s income. Under the revised “Family Support
    Chart,” each parent’s share is that parent’s prorated share of the two parents’ combined gross
    income, subject to certain deviations or adjustments.
    “‘Income’ means the actual gross income of the parent, if employed to full capacity,
    or potential income if unemployed or underemployed as allowed under Section III.7.” Id. at
    5. “‘Income’ is intentionally broad and designed to encompass the widest range of sources
    consistent with the State’s policy to interpret ‘income’ broadly for the benefit of the child.”
    Id. (quoting Evans v. Tillery, 
    361 Ark. 63
    , 70, 
    204 S.W.3d 547
    , 552 (2005). Gross income
    includes, but is not limited to, wages; earnings generated from a business, partnership,
    contract, self-employment, or other similar arrangement; SSD payments; or any money or
    income due or owed by another individual, source of income, government, or other legal
    entity. 
    Id.
    The court determined that Jill had a total gross monthly income of $2006.86 for
    purposes of child support. In arriving at that amount, the court imputed $290 a week gross
    income to her, in light of her testimony that this is the amount she can earn and still retain
    16
    her SSD. That amount, multiplied by 4.334 equals $1256.86. The court then added 50
    percent of Jill’s monthly TG&H property distribution award ($1500 divided by 2 equals
    $750; $1256.86 plus $750 equals $2006.86). The court did not consider Jill’s SSD in
    calculating her income. The court arrived at a total monthly income for Chris of $26,451.08,
    which was representative of the salary and benefits he receives as an employee of TG&H.
    The court considered neither the money expended by Chris on the court-mandated
    counseling for the children nor any portion of the value of Chris’s share of the TG&H
    property distribution.
    1. SSD payments
    Chris argues that the circuit court should have included Jill’s SSD in calculating her
    monthly income. Jill’s monthly SSD is $1500. Administrative Order 10 and our caselaw
    make clear that SSD benefits (but not SSI) are considered income for purposes of
    determining child support. We hold that the circuit court erred in failing to include that
    amount in its calculations. See Vice v. Vice, 
    2016 Ark. App. 504
    , 
    505 S.W.3d 719
     (setting out
    that in Szabo v. Womack, 
    2011 Ark. App. 664
    , abrogated on other grounds by Szabo v. Womack,
    
    2013 Ark. App. 198
    , we held that a noncustodial parent was entitled to a credit against his
    child-support obligation for the SSD benefits his dependent minor received after we held
    that these benefits were considered income to the noncustodial parent); see also Ark. Office of
    Child Support Enf’t v. Hearst, 
    2009 Ark. 599
    , at 9–10, 
    357 S.W.3d 450
    , 455–56 (holding that
    SSD benefits paid to dependent children of a noncustodial parent based on the noncustodial
    17
    parent’s disability are considered income to that parent for the purpose of calculating child
    support).
    2. TG&H payments
    Chris argues that the monthly award to Jill for her marital share of TG&H is a
    “periodic form of payment due to [her], regardless of the source” as included in the definition
    of “income” in Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-14-201(4)(A). As such, the circuit court
    should have considered the entirety of the payment as Jill’s “income” for child-support
    purposes.
    No question has been raised that the parties’ 50 percent share of TG&H was marital
    property. The circuit court found that the parties’ share of TG&H was valued at $300,000.
    Chris was to be awarded the parties’ 50 percent share of TG&H. The testimony presented
    to the circuit court was that there were insufficient funds to award Jill the value of her half
    of the 50 percent share of TG&H in one lump sum. Thus, the circuit court ordered that her
    share of the marital property be awarded in monthly installments—$1500 a month for one
    hundred months.
    While income is broadly defined, we are aware of no instance in which the value of a
    marital asset awarded to a party as part of the parties’ property distribution was then utilized
    in determining the party’s income for purposes of calculating child support, nor has Chris
    cited any precedent for doing so. Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court erred in utilizing
    half of the monthly property-distribution award to Jill in calculating her income for child-
    support purposes.
    18
    3. Extraordinary medical expenses
    Chris expends approximately $375 a month on counseling for the children—
    counseling that was court ordered to be continued. This meets the definition of
    extraordinary medical expenses found in Administrative Order 10, and we hold that he
    should have been given the benefit of such by the circuit court when it made its child-support
    calculations.
    In summary, the circuit court erred in failing to consider Jill’s SSD and in utilizing
    half of her property-settlement award for purposes of calculating her income. The circuit
    court also erred in failing to consider Chris’s monthly counseling payments. Accordingly, we
    reverse the child-support determination and remand for the circuit court to recalculate each
    parties’ respective income in light of the holdings in this opinion. The circuit court shall
    then determine the proper child-support obligation pursuant to the dictates of
    Administrative Order 10.
    C. Retroactive Child Support
    The circuit court ordered that Chris pay Jill eleven months’ retroactive child support,
    a total of $18,832.00, to be paid in a lump sum within ninety days of the entry of the order.
    Chris contends that the circuit court erred when it ordered that the child support be
    retroactive to July 1, 2021, because Chris was the custodial parent until the May 24, 2022
    order was entered. Relying on Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-14-218(a)(1)(A) (Repl.
    2020), he argues that the custodial parent is not required to make child-support payments to
    the noncustodial parent. The record reflects that from the time the March 2, 2021 ex-parte
    19
    order was entered granting Chris temporary custody, all subsequent orders continued
    temporary custody with Chris. This was so until the final order was entered on May 24, 2022,
    awarding the parties joint custody.
    Thus, during the pendency of the divorce, Chris was the sole custodial parent, and
    the circuit court erred in ordering that the child support be retroactive. Accordingly, we
    reverse the award of retroactive child support.
    Reversed and remanded for the circuit court to take such action as necessary
    consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    GLADWIN and BARRETT, JJ., agree.
    Law Offices of Miller Vail, P.A., by: Robin M. Vail; and Brian G. Brooks, Attorney at Law,
    PLLC, by: Brian G. Brooks, for appellant.
    One brief only.
    20
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 3/6/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/6/2024