In re Marriage of Usher , 210 Cal. Rptr. 3d 875 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • Filed 12/2/16
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    In re Marriage of KINKA USHER
    and FREDERIQUE BENHAMOU
    USHER
    B263721
    KINKA USHER,                           (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BD491961)
    Respondent,
    v.
    FREDERIQUE BENHAMOU
    USHER,
    Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County. Superior Court of Los Angeles County, No.
    BD491961, John W. Ouderkirk, Temporary Judge.
    (Pursuant to Cal. Const., art. VI, §21.) Reversed.
    Law Offices of Marjorie G. Fuller, Marjorie G. Fuller;
    Freid & Goldsman, Melvin S. Goldsman and Jon Summers
    for Appellant.
    Honey Kessler Amado and James A. Karagianides for
    Respondent.
    ____________________________________
    Pursuant to an agreement entered into at the time of
    dissolution, respondent Kinka Usher paid his ex-wife,
    appellant Frederique Benhamou Usher, child support of
    $17,500 per month, an amount commensurate with their
    wealth and lifestyle during the marriage, and the lifestyle
    respondent continued to live. In March 2015, the trial court
    granted respondent’s request to reduce the monthly child
    support payment to $9,842, finding a material change in
    circumstances based on a decline in respondent’s
    employment income. Appellant contends that the court
    abused its discretion in making that determination because
    respondent’s reduced income did not constitute a material
    change in circumstances in light of his extreme wealth.
    Appellant further contends the court imputed an
    unreasonably low rate of return to respondent’s substantial
    assets, valued at over $67 million.
    We agree. We conclude that substantial evidence did
    not support the trial court’s finding of a material change in
    respondent’s circumstances for purposes of meeting his child
    support obligation. Specifically, we conclude that in light of
    respondent’s overall wealth, the reduction in his employment
    2
    income did not materially impair his ability to pay the
    agreed upon child support. We further conclude that the
    trial court imputed an unreasonably low rate of return to
    respondent’s tens of millions of dollars in assets.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Appellant and respondent were married in 2006 and
    separated in 2008. Their child, Roman, was born in
    February 2006. Respondent was a successful director and
    producer during the marriage, earning approximately $4.25
    million per year, and owned substantial assets, including
    cash, investment funds, and real and personal property.
    A. Stipulated Judgment
    The marriage was formally dissolved in October 2009
    by stipulated judgment of dissolution (the Stipulated
    Judgment). The Stipulated Judgment provided for spousal
    support of $15,329 per month for two years (October 2009 to
    September 2011). Appellant waived all further right to
    spousal support.
    The Stipulated Judgment also provided that
    respondent was to pay child support of $12,500 per month
    and permit appellant and Roman to live in respondent’s
    Pacific Palisades home until June 2010. At the end of that
    period, appellant and Roman would vacate the house, and
    3
    respondent would pay an additional $5,000 in child support.1
    The Stipulated Judgment acknowledged: (1) that
    respondent was a “‘high earner’” within the meaning of
    Family Code section 4057, subdivision (b)(3);2 (2) that “the
    child support arrangement set forth . . . was not arrived at
    pursuant to the California Guidelines provided for in Family
    Code §§ 4055-4065”; (3) that the deviation from the child
    1     Under the child support heading of the stipulated
    judgment, respondent also agreed to pay Roman’s private
    school tuition of approximately $20,000 per year, to maintain
    a medical insurance policy for Roman, to pay one-half the
    cost of Roman’s extra-curricular activities, and to make
    appellant’s monthly automobile lease payments.
    2     Section 4057, subdivision (a) provides that the amount
    of child support established by the complex formula of
    section 4055 -- a formula that relies heavily on the parents’
    monthly disposable income -- is presumed correct. (See
    Mejia v. Reed (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 657
    , 670.) Under subdivision
    (b)(3) of section 4057, a parent with an “extraordinarily high
    income” need not pay child support commensurate with the
    formula if he or she establishes “the amount determined
    under the formula would exceed the needs of the children.”
    Under subdivision (b)(5), the parent may be required to pay
    more than the formula if its application “would be unjust or
    inappropriate due to special circumstances in the particular
    case.” A court may deem a party’s substantial non-income
    producing assets “a ‘special circumstance’ [citation] that may
    justify a departure from the guideline figure for support
    payments.” (Mejia v. 
    Reed, supra
    , at p. 671.) (Undesignated
    statutory references are to the Family Code.)
    4
    support guidelines was “in the best interest of [Roman],”
    whose his needs would be “adequately met” by the parties’
    agreement; and (4) that each party “had the opportunity to
    analyze (with his/her respective accountants and attorneys)
    the expenses and needs of their minor child.” The parties
    “waive[d] the right to seek modification of a non-guideline
    child support order without making a showing of a material
    change of circumstances . . . .”
    In June 2010, appellant and Roman vacated
    respondent’s Pacific Palisades house and rented a new
    residence in the same area at a cost of $7,500 per month.
    Pursuant to the Stipulated Judgment, child support
    increased to $17,500 per month. Spousal support
    terminated in September 2011.
    B. Request to Reduce Child Support Payment
    In June 2014, when Roman was eight, respondent filed
    a request for an order reducing his monthly child support
    payment to $5,184, plus a percentage of any income he
    earned above $841,272 annually.3 The sole basis for his
    3     As explained in In re Marriage of Kerr (1999) 
    77 Cal. App. 4th 87
    , 95, the family court may award as spousal
    or child support “a percentage of uncertain earnings” in
    order to avoid “an indefinite number of future hearings at
    which the details of income, expenses, investment success or
    failure, tax consequences and fairness must be reevaluated.”
    These awards are referred to as “Ostler-Smith” payments
    after In re Marriage of Ostler & Smith (1990) 223 Cal.App.3d
    (Fn. continued on next page.)
    5
    request was that he was then “earn[ing] significantly less
    than when [the] Stipulated Judgment was negotiated in
    2009.” He stated that his monthly income had decreased
    from approximately $350,000 when the parties entered into
    the Stipulated Judgment to $70,106.4 The proposed reduced
    monthly child support figure was obtained by use of the
    DissoMaster program, inputting $70,106 as respondent’s
    monthly income, deducting for health insurance and
    33, 42, the first appellate decision to recognize the family
    court’s discretion to make such awards.
    4     According to the income and expenses statement
    prepared at the time of the dissolution, respondent’s 2009
    income included $144,831 per month in salary and over
    $200,000 per month in other income (dividends, interest,
    location fees, residuals, profit from his production company,
    pension contributions and perquisites). In 2014, respondent
    reported a salary of $41,666 per month and other income
    (dividends, interest and K-1 income) of $28,440 per month,
    which he later revised upward to $34,791. Respondent’s
    attached declaration explained that he had shut down his
    production company at the end of 2013 and was working as
    an employee for another company. Respondent later
    explained that he closed his company in 2013 because
    business and profit had fallen significantly, and asserted
    that he was earning approximately the same amount
    working for a third party in 2014 as he had in 2013 from
    operating his business.
    6
    property tax on his primary residence, and presuming
    custodial time of 30 percent.5
    Appellant filed opposition, contending that the
    decrease in respondent’s income from employment was not a
    material change of circumstances warranting modification of
    the existing child support payment, and that respondent had
    numerous alternative sources of income and assets from
    which to pay the agreed upon child support.6 Her expert,
    5     “The DissoMaster is a privately developed computer
    program used to calculate guideline child support under the
    algebraic formula required by section 4055.” (In re Marriage
    of Williams (2007) 
    150 Cal. App. 4th 1221
    , 1227, fn. 5
    (Williams).) Respondent attributed zero income to appellant
    who, although possessing a realtor’s license and working ten
    to 40 hours per week, had reported no income in 2013 or
    2014.
    6     Appellant explained that child support funds were used
    to pay, among other things, Roman’s travel expenses when
    she took him to Europe in the summer to visit his maternal
    grandparents and to drop him off at respondent’s home in
    Italy. Appellant estimated that Roman’s travel expenses
    averaged $3,300 per month, and that total expenses for the
    boy were more than $21,000 per month, excluding her one-
    half share of rent and utilities for their residence. Her
    estimate included 100 percent of the cost of Roman’s
    extracurricular activities and private school tuition, as she
    claimed respondent had not paid anything toward the tuition
    since 2010 and had “consistently failed” to make the
    stipulated contributions toward extra-curricular activities.
    Respondent filed a reply declaration criticizing appellant for
    (Fn. continued on next page.)
    7
    Michael T. Miskei, a certified public accountant, pointed out
    that according to respondent’s income and expense
    statement, he had assets of over $67 million -- approximately
    $37.5 million in liquid assets, and nearly $30 million in real
    and personal property.7 After deducting approximately $2.1
    million from respondent’s assets to account for the value of
    the Santa Barbara home Miskei believed to be respondent’s
    primary residence, Miskei opined that conservatively
    invested in a blend of treasury notes, triple A bonds, and
    bond funds, respondent’s assets could generate income at a
    rate of 4.5 percent and provide him a monthly cash flow of
    $260,826, including his salary. Miskei prepared a
    DissoMaster calculation based on this income, expenses
    similar to those deducted by respondent, and an estimated
    continuing to employ a nanny, but acknowledging that
    historically the family had spent the summers in Europe and
    that since the divorce, appellant had borne the expense of
    bringing Roman to meet respondent there.
    7     Respondent owned a home in Montecito valued at
    approximately $19.2 million, a Santa Barbara home on two
    lots valued at approximately $2.1 million, another Santa
    Barbara property valued at $528,000, and a home on the
    island of Capri, Italy valued at over $6.6 million.
    Respondent’s brief refers to these values as his “equity,” but
    the record reflects the properties were evaluated by the court
    and the parties at their cost or “book” value, not their
    possibly higher market value. Nothing in the record
    indicates that any of the properties was mortgaged.
    8
    custodial time share of 20 percent.8 This generated a
    monthly child support payment of $17,244, nearly identical
    to the amount appellant was paying under the Stipulated
    Judgment.
    Prior to the hearing on the request for modification,
    respondent filed a reply, conceding that some income should
    be attributed to his assets. In separate declarations,
    respondent and his expert, Lawrence Goodfriend, a certified
    public accountant and respondent’s business manager,
    stated that respondent was a cautious investor who did not
    wish to tie up his assets in long term notes or bonds.
    Goodfriend opined that the 4.5 percent return estimated by
    Miskei was “excessive,” and that the “assumed rate of return
    should be 1%,” an amount Goodfriend described as
    “achievable in the current investment world . . . .” Although
    neither respondent nor Goodfriend disputed that treasury
    bonds would be “relatively safe[],” they contended investing
    in bonds would require respondent to “tie up” his money for
    decades. Respondent stated Miskei was mistaken in
    concluding his primary residence was the $2.1 million Santa
    Barbara home on two lots, and that he was in fact residing
    in the $19.2 million Montecito home, while making plans to
    sell the $2.1 million Santa Barbara property. In addition,
    respondent took the position that before attributing any
    income to his retirement account or his real property, the
    8    Miskei also presumed zero income for appellant.
    9
    cost of cashing in those assets should be deducted.9 Taking
    deductions for the cost of cashing in assets and the value of
    the Montecito home left respondent with investable assets of
    just under $42.7 million. Applying a one percent return to
    this amount resulted in imputed investment income of
    $35,583 per month, and increased respondent’s total
    monthly income (employment income plus investment
    income) to $91,609. Respondent further contended that
    assets owned by appellant should be expected to generate a
    similar return and that she should be contributing a share of
    the imputed income to Roman’s support.10 Utilizing $91,609
    for respondent’s income, $1,023 for appellant’s income, and
    continuing to assume respondent had custody 30 percent of
    the time and the same deductible expenses, respondent
    generated a revised DissoMaster child support amount of
    $6,926.
    9     For example, cashing in respondent’s retirement
    account would have incurred early termination expenses as
    well as state and federal taxes. Cashing in his real property
    would have incurred selling costs.
    10    Appellant’s assets, which included cash, investments
    and an $800,000 apartment in Paris, were valued at $1.227
    million. Respondent imputed income of $1,023 per month to
    respondent based on a one percent return.
    10
    C. Hearing
    At the January 2015 hearing, Miskei testified that
    after reviewing updated financial records, he had concluded
    respondent’s income from his employment was higher than
    originally estimated by the parties, viz., approximately
    $65,000 per month. He imputed income to appellant of
    $3,455 per month based on the value of her assets. Miskei
    continued to believe a 4.5 percent return was reasonable and
    that no more than $2.1 million should be deducted from
    respondent’s assets to account for his personal residence.11
    Inputting the new figures for employment income into the
    DissoMaster, Miskei calculated monthly guideline child
    support at $19,099.12 Miskei denied that his proposed
    11    As a general rule, “a supporting parent’s home equity .
    . . may not be considered for the purpose of calculating child
    support . . . .” 
    (Williams, supra
    , 150 Cal.App.4th at p. 1244.)
    The rule may be overcome by “a showing of special
    circumstances under section 4057, subdivision (b), that
    render guideline support unjust or inappropriate” (ibid.),
    such as a showing that the supporting spouse’s residence is a
    mansion located on substantial acreage. (In re Marriage of
    de Guigne (2002) 
    97 Cal. App. 4th 1353
    , 1362-1364 (de
    Guigne).) Respondent moved into the $19.2 million
    Montecito residence the month before the hearing.
    12    Appellant presented this calculation solely to
    demonstrate that the stipulated child support would be
    within or close to the guideline, even taking into account
    respondent’s reduced salary. She did not seek a change in
    child support payments.
    11
    investment strategy was risky or would tie up respondent’s
    investment funds, as the investments could be laddered by
    buying bonds and notes with different maturity dates.13 In
    addition, Miskei reviewed respondent’s investment accounts
    for three years and found that although the majority of the
    currently invested funds were in cash and money markets
    earning less than one percent, approximately $14 million
    (out of $34.7 million) were in Charles Schwab accounts,
    returning from 5.5 to 7 percent. For 2013, Miskei prepared a
    chart which showed that respondent had $35,060,966 in
    investment funds on which he earned $861,817, an overall
    rate of return of 2.46 percent.
    Goodfriend testified that respondent had employed a
    conservative investment strategy, which included having
    “[$]12 of [$]35 million of his capital in stocks and bonds,” and
    that this strategy had been in place for at least five years.
    Goodfriend explained that “tying up” capital in long term
    notes and bonds could lead to a loss if the investor needed to
    liquidate assets prior to the maturity dates of the notes and
    13    On cross-examination, Miskei acknowledged that the
    return on 10-year treasury notes had decreased from 2.49
    percent when he initially performed his calculations to 1.76
    percent as of the date of the hearing, and that the return 30-
    year treasury notes had decreased from 3.26 percent to 2.32
    percent. He said he would “probably” not use that same
    overall rate were he to perform the calculations at the time
    of the hearing.
    12
    bonds, but only if interest rates had risen substantially
    between the time of purchase and the time of sale.
    D. Order
    The court found a “material change in circumstances”
    warranting a modification of the monthly child support
    amount, despite respondent’s “substantial wealth” and
    “assets totaling over $67 million.” The court concluded
    respondent’s employment-related income was $58,471 per
    month. The court performed its own calculation for the
    income to be imputed to respondent’s substantial assets. It
    first took account of the cost of liquidating the real
    properties on which respondent did not reside (the two lots
    in Santa Barbara and the vacation home in Italy), deducting
    five percent for the “cost of a hypothetical sale . . . .” This
    left $8,807,604 to be invested. The court utilized Miskei’s 4.5
    percent to impute a rate of return on these funds based on
    the rationale that “these properties ha[d] not been previously
    treated as investment property under [respondent’s]
    conservative investment strategy . . . .” This resulted in
    imputed monthly income of $33,028. To respondent’s
    remaining assets -- $55,971,226 after deducting the value of
    the non-residential properties and the costs associated with
    early withdrawal of retirement funds -- the court imputed a
    one percent rate of return, which the court described as
    “[respondent’s] average” for “at least the last five years,”
    resulting in additional imputed monthly income of $46,642.
    13
    The court input respondent’s actual and imputed
    income ($140,141/month, according to the court’s calculation)
    and income it imputed to appellant ($3,343/month), and
    deducted property taxes for respondent’s Montecito
    residence ($6,765/month). This generated a child support
    amount of $9,842 per month.14 The court modified
    respondent’s child support to this amount, retroactive to
    July 2014, when his original request was filed, plus Ostler-
    Smith child support on any income he earned above
    $1,681,692 per year ($140,141 x 12). The court also ordered
    appellant to pay all of Roman’s tuition, all of his medical
    insurance premiums, and 85 percent of all mutually agreed
    upon extracurricular activities and medical expenses not
    covered by insurance.15 This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    A. Basic Principles Underlying Child Support and the
    Applicable Standard of Review for Child Support Orders
    “California has a strong public policy in favor of
    adequate child support.” (In re Marriage of Cheriton (2001)
    
    92 Cal. App. 4th 269
    , 283 (Cheriton).) The policy is expressed
    14    The court found in favor of appellant on the disputed
    issue of custody time, finding that respondent had Roman 20
    percent of the time, not 30 percent as he had claimed.
    15   The court permitted respondent to deduct 10 percent
    from his monthly child support payments to recover the
    “overpayment[s]” since July 2014.
    14
    in the statutes embodying the statewide uniform child
    support guideline, sections 4050 through 4076. The
    guideline “seeks to place the interests of children as the
    state’s top priority.” (§ 4053, subd. (e).) Section 4053
    provides that “[a] parent’s first and principal obligation is to
    support his or her minor children according to the parent’s
    circumstances and station in life,” that “[e]ach parent should
    pay for the support of the children according to his or her
    ability,” and that “[c]hildren should share in the standard of
    living of both parents.” (Id., subd. (a), (d) & (f).) The
    Legislature deems it “appropriate[]” that child support be
    used to “improve the standard of living of the custodial
    household” because this “improve[s] the lives of the
    children.” (Id., subd. (f).) Thus, courts have “consistently
    recognize[d]” that “‘where the supporting parent enjoys a
    lifestyle that far exceeds that of the custodial parent, child
    support must to some degree reflect the more opulent
    lifestyle even though this may, as a practical matter,
    produce a benefit for the custodial parent.’” (In re Marriage
    of Hubner (1988) 
    205 Cal. App. 3d 660
    , 668 (Hubner).) The
    complex statutory formula used to calculate guideline child
    support relies heavily on parental income and net monthly
    disposable income. (§ 4055; see Mejia v. 
    Reed, supra
    , 31
    Cal.4th at p. 670.) The guideline “is presumed to be the
    correct amount,” but the presumption “may be rebutted by
    admissible evidence showing that application of the formula
    would be unjust or inappropriate” under the “principles set
    forth in Section 4053 . . . .” (§ 4057, subd. (b).) It is clear
    15
    from the inclusion of “the broader concepts of station in life,
    ability to pay, and standard of living” in section 4053 that
    the Legislature did not intend trial courts to limit their focus
    “simply to parental income,” whether from “salary, return on
    investment, or any [other] particular source.” (de 
    Guigne, supra
    , 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 1366.)
    Child support awards and a trial court’s determination
    of a request for modification of child support are reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. 
    (Cheriton, supra
    , 92 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 282; 
    Williams, supra
    , 150 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1233-1234.)
    However, in reviewing a child support order, courts
    recognize that “‘determination of a child support obligation is
    a highly regulated area of the law, and the only discretion a
    trial court possesses is the discretion provided by statute or
    rule. [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” 
    (Cheriton, supra
    , at p. 283;
    accord, 
    Williams, supra
    , at p. 1234.) “‘[T]he trial court has
    “a duty to exercise an informed and considered discretion
    with respect to the [parent’s child] support obligation . . . ”
    [citation],’” and its “‘discretion is not so broad that it “may
    ignore or contravene the purposes of the law. . . .
    [Citations.]” [Citation.]’” 
    (Williams, supra
    , at p. 1234; see In
    re Marriage of McTiernan & Dubrow (2005) 
    133 Cal. App. 4th 1090
    , 1106 [appellate courts review support awards for
    abuse of discretion “with the understanding that a
    sustainable exercise of discretion requires that the trial
    court have considered and applied all relevant [statutory]
    factors”].)
    16
    B. Material Change of Circumstances
    As a general rule, courts will not modify child or
    spousal support unless there has been a material change of
    circumstances following the previous determination. (In re
    Marriage of Cryer (2011) 
    198 Cal. App. 4th 1039
    , 1048 (Cryer);
    In re Marriage of Schmir (2005) 
    134 Cal. App. 4th 43
    , 47.)
    “‘[T]he reason for the change of circumstances rule is to
    preclude relitigation of the same facts’ and to bring finality
    to determinations concerning financial support.” (In re
    Marriage of Rosenfeld & Gross (2014) 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 478
    ,
    490, quoting In re Marriage of Baker (1992) 
    3 Cal. App. 4th 491
    , 501.) “‘Without a changed circumstances rule,
    “‘dissolution cases would have no finality and unhappy
    former spouses could bring repeated actions for modification
    with no burden of showing a justification to change the
    order. Litigants “‘are entitled to attempt, with some degree
    of certainty, to reorder their finances and life style [sic] in
    reliance upon the finality of the decree.’” [Citation.] Absent
    a change of circumstances, a motion for modification is
    nothing more than an impermissible collateral attack on a
    prior final order.’”’” (Rosenfeld & 
    Gross, supra
    , at p. 490,
    quoting In re Marriage of Stanton (2010) 
    190 Cal. App. 4th 547
    , 553-554.)
    The burden of proof to establish changed circumstances
    sufficiently material to support an adjustment in child
    support rests with the party seeking modification.
    
    (Williams, supra
    , 150 Cal.App.4th at p. 1234; 
    Cryer, supra
    ,
    198 Cal.App.4th at p. 1054.) “The ultimate determination of
    17
    whether the individual facts of the case warrant modification
    of support is within the discretion of the trial court.
    [Citation.]” (In re Marriage of Leonard (2004) 
    119 Cal. App. 4th 546
    , 556 (Leonard).) “[A]n abuse [of discretion]
    occurs when a court modifies a support order without
    substantial evidence of a material change of circumstances.”
    (In re Marriage of McCann (1996) 
    41 Cal. App. 4th 978
    , 983
    (McCann); accord, In re Marriage of Dietz (2009) 
    176 Cal. App. 4th 387
    , 398 (Dietz); In re Marriage of Brinkman
    (2003) 
    111 Cal. App. 4th 1281
    , 1292.)
    “There are no rigid guidelines for evaluating whether
    circumstances have sufficiently changed to warrant a child
    support modification.” (Hogoboom and King, Cal. Practice
    Guide: Family Law (The Rutter Group 2016) ¶ 17:40, p. 17-
    15.) However, in evaluating a request for modification of an
    existing support order, the focus is generally on whether
    there has been “a reduction or increase in the supporting
    spouse’s ability to pay and/or an increase or decrease in the
    supported [party’s] needs.” 
    (McCann, supra
    , 41 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 982; accord, 
    Dietz, supra
    , 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 396.)
    “Each case stands or falls on its own facts, but the overriding
    issue is whether a change has affected either party’s
    financial status.” (In re Marriage of Laudeman (2001) 
    92 Cal. App. 4th 1009
    , 1015; see 
    Leonard, supra
    , 119 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 556 [determination of request for modification of child
    support may properly rest on “‘ability to pay’”]; Hogoboom
    and King, supra, ¶ 17:26, p. 17-12 [“Ordinarily, a factual
    change of circumstances is required [to support a
    18
    modification of child support] (e.g., increase or decrease in
    either party’s income available to pay child support)” (Italics
    omitted)].) Moreover, when the existing support payment
    was the result of a marital settlement agreement, in
    determining whether a material change of circumstances has
    occurred, the trial court is required “‘to give effect to [the
    couple’s] intent and reasonable expectations . . . as expressed
    in the agreement.’” (
    Dietz, supra
    , at p. 399.)
    Appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion
    in modifying the monthly child support respondent
    stipulated to at the time of the dissolution, because
    respondent failed to meet his burden of showing a material
    change in circumstances. We agree. The Stipulated
    Judgment represented the parties’ mutual agreement
    concerning the amount necessary to meet Roman’s financial
    needs and to support him in accordance with his parents’
    circumstances, station in life and standard of living. The
    agreed amount ($12,500, increased to $17,500 after the sale
    of the Pacific Palisades house) was a small fraction of
    respondent’s then $350,000 per month income, but permitted
    Roman to continue to live in the neighborhood with which he
    was familiar, to attend a private school, to enjoy the extra-
    curricular activities of his peers, and to travel to Europe for
    his summer vacation as the family had done when it was
    intact. In moving for modification, respondent presented no
    evidence of a substantial change in his financial ability to
    pay the agreed support. His salary continued to place him in
    the top one percent of earners. His liquid assets exceeded
    19
    $34 million, not including his retirement accounts or the
    value of the multi-million home on two lots in Santa Barbara
    he was preparing to sell. As appellant noted, were
    respondent to continue to pay the agreed upon $17,500 from
    June 2014, when he filed the request for modification, until
    February 2024, when Roman turns 18, he would have paid a
    total of less than $2 million toward his son’s support.
    Payment of this amount will not materially impact his net
    worth. Moreover, despite the reduction in respondent’s
    employment income, he presented no evidence of a cutback
    in his own lifestyle. Rather, the evidence established that
    six months after respondent requested a downward
    modification of child support, he moved from a $2.1 million
    residence in Santa Barbara to a $19.2 million home in
    Montecito, while continuing to maintain his $6.6 million
    Italian vacation home.
    Respondent contends -- and the court apparently
    agreed -- that the reduction in his income, standing alone,
    constituted a sufficient change in circumstances to warrant a
    reduction in child support. We disagree. It is
    “inappropriate” for child support to be based on income alone
    where the supporting parent “shelter[s] and benefit[s] from
    substantial assets that produce[] no income . . . .” (de
    
    Guigne, supra
    , 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 1362.) The cases on
    which respondent relies do not support his contrary
    contention. In In re Marriage of Mosley (2008) 
    165 Cal. App. 4th 1375
    , the husband was terminated from a
    position paying $447,150 per year and accepted another that
    20
    reduced his net salary to approximately $10,000 per month,
    an amount that nearly equaled his support obligation. (Id.
    at pp. 1384-1385.) The appellate court specifically found
    there were no assets from which he could make up the
    difference (ibid.), and that “it exceeded the bounds of reason
    to require [him] to pay nearly 100 percent of his take-home
    pay in support payments . . . .” (Id. at p. 1386.) Similarly in
    In re Marriage of Milch (1975) 
    47 Cal. App. 3d 666
    , the
    husband’s already modest income was reduced to $604 per
    month, insufficient to make support payments of $343. (Id.
    at p. 670.) There was no evidence of any assets other than a
    parcel of property he had already quitclaimed to his former
    wife to settle support arrearages. (Id. at p. 668.) Here,
    respondent’s child support obligation of $17,500 did not come
    close to exhausting his monthly income ($91,609, according
    to respondent, $140,141, according to the court), and
    respondent had substantial liquid assets from which to pay
    any necessary expenses not covered by that monthly income.
    Multiple courts have held that where the supporting
    parent has substantial wealth, a trial court abuses its
    discretion in failing to adequately consider his or her assets
    before assessing child support. (See e.g., 
    Cheriton, supra
    , 92
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 284-292 [trial court abused its discretion
    in excluding from consideration father’s considerable assets,
    including stocks and options worth tens of millions of
    dollars]; 
    Hubner, supra
    , 205 Cal.App.3d at pp. 664, 667 [trial
    court abused its discretion in awarding $2,215 per month in
    child support where father was wealthy, enjoyed a standard
    21
    of living that greatly exceeded mother’s and child’s, and
    stipulated he could pay “any reasonable amount of child
    support”]; McGinley v. Herman (1996) 
    50 Cal. App. 4th 936
    ,
    945 [child support order reversed as abuse of discretion
    where trial court “did not give sufficient consideration to the
    child’s right to share in the standard of living of his
    extraordinarily high earning father”]; In re Marriage of
    Catalano (1988) 
    204 Cal. App. 3d 543
    , 555-556 [trial court
    abused its discretion in setting child support that failed to
    take into account father’s conceded wealth and assets,
    including a Rolls Royce and two residences]; County of Kern
    v. Castle (1999) 
    75 Cal. App. 4th 1442
    , 1454-1456 [trial court
    failed to adequately consider father’s improved standard of
    living resulting from his inheritance of a million dollars,
    used to pay off his mortgage]; see also 
    Cryer, supra
    , 198
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1049-1051 [affirming above-guideline
    child support award to mother temporarily deprived of
    custody where amount awarded had no significant
    detrimental impact on wealthy father’s financial situation,
    and mother was in danger of losing child’s longtime home
    while custodial issues were being resolved]; de 
    Guigne, supra
    , 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 1357 [affirming order awarding
    child support three times greater than guideline, where
    family lived on income from securities and family trusts
    during the marriage, and father inherited and lived in
    16,000 square foot family home set on 47.5 acres].) As the
    court stated in Cheriton, a refusal to consider supporting
    parents’ substantial wealth in setting child support
    22
    “effectively permits [them] to avoid [their] obligation[s] to
    support [their] children according to [their] ‘ability, [their]
    circumstances and station in life,’ and [their] ‘standard of
    living,’” and “offends the statutory policies of this state.”
    
    (Cheriton, supra
    , at p. 292, quoting § 4053, subds. (d), (a) &
    (f).)
    Finally, respondent suggests that the reduced child
    support awarded by the court was adequate because
    appellant failed to substantiate that it would require Roman
    to live “at a . . . reduced level.” The parties agreed in 2009
    that Roman’s needs required support from respondent at a
    level of $12,500 per month as long as he and appellant were
    living in a home owned by respondent and $17,500 per
    month thereafter. As the party moving for modification,
    respondent bore the burden of proving that Roman’s
    financial needs had diminished. He failed to do so.
    Moreover, the statutory provisions do not require that “each
    dollar above guideline must in all cases be earmarked for a
    specific purpose,” particularly where the court is attempting
    to mitigate “an overall decline in the child[]’s standard of
    living.” (de Guigne, 97 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1364-1365.) The
    assumption that a child’s “historic expenses” define his or
    her needs “is erroneous in the case of wealthy parents,
    because it ignores the well-established principle that the
    ‘child’s need is measured by the parents’ current station in
    life.’” 
    (Cheriton, supra
    , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 293, quoting In
    re Marriage of 
    Kerr, supra
    , 77 Cal.App.4th at p. 96.)
    “‘Clearly where the child has a wealthy parent, that child is
    23
    entitled to, and therefore “needs” something more than the
    bare necessities of life.’ [Citation.]” 
    (Cheriton, supra
    , at
    p. 293, quoting White v. Marciano (1987) 
    190 Cal. App. 3d 1026
    , 1032.) In any event, it is clear from the evidence
    presented by appellant and not disputed by respondent that
    the reduced support will result in a reduction in Roman’s
    standard of living. The cost of rent and travel alone will
    consume the support provided, disrupting Roman’s life by
    requiring him to move from the neighborhood in which he
    has lived at least since the separation. (See 
    Cryer, supra
    ,
    198 Cal.App.4th at p. 1050 [support order that would result
    in child’s “spending time with his father in an opulent abode
    and time with his mother in a low-rent apartment” would
    “conflict[] with the principles of section 4053”].) In short, the
    court reduced child support without substantial evidence of a
    material change in respondent’s ability to pay, his standard
    of living, or the amount needed for Roman to maintain a
    lifestyle commensurate with his own, and which respondent
    had agreed was “in [Roman’s] best interest.” This was an
    abuse of discretion.
    C. Imputation of Income
    Even were we not convinced that the evidence below
    failed to demonstrate that respondent’s financial
    circumstances had changed sufficiently to warrant
    modification of his child support obligations, we would
    nevertheless find the court’s imputation of income to
    respondent’s assets inadequate. A court’s decision to impute
    24
    income at a particular rate of return is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion, but the figure for imputed return must be
    “reasonable” (In re Marriage of Pearlstein (2006) 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 1361
    , 1373-1374) and “‘have some tangible
    evidentiary foundation’”; it “‘cannot be drawn from thin air.’”
    (In re Marriage of Schlafly (2007) 
    149 Cal. App. 4th 747
    , 756.)
    Here, the court’s imputation of a one percent return to the
    bulk of respondent’s assets was not supported by substantial
    evidence.
    The court’s ability to impute income from assets
    derives from section 4058, which defines “annual gross
    income” as “income from whatever source derived,” and
    states that “[t]he court may, in its discretion, consider the
    earning capacity of a parent in lieu of the parent’s income . .
    . .” (Id. at subds. (a) & (b).) The provision has been
    consistently interpreted to include the parent’s ability to
    earn income from non-income producing or underperforming
    assets. 
    (Perlstein, supra
    , 137 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1373-1374;
    In re Marriage of Sorge (2012) 
    202 Cal. App. 4th 626
    , 644
    (Sorge); In re Marriage of Destein (2001) 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 1385
    , 1391-1395 (Destein); In re Marriage of Dacumos (1999)
    
    76 Cal. App. 4th 150
    , 154-155 (Dacumos); see In re Marriage
    of Scheppers (2001) 
    86 Cal. App. 4th 646
    , 650 [“The
    traditional understanding of ‘income’ is the gain or recurrent
    benefit that is derived from labor, business, or property
    [citation] or from any other investment of capital”].)
    The court concluded that imputing a one percent
    return to the bulk of respondent’s assets was reasonable
    25
    because it represented “his average [return]” on actual
    invested funds for the preceding five years. The evidence
    does not support that finding. Goodfriend and Miskei both
    testified that at the time of the hearing, respondent had
    between $34 and $35 million in savings, money market
    accounts or various investment funds.16 Respondent
    presented no evidence of his actual return on these assets.
    Respondent protested that Miskei’s proposed strategy,
    although “relatively safe[],” would tie up his assets “to
    produce a 2% or 3% return,” without specifying the return he
    was attaining with his own strategy. Goodfriend said one
    percent was “achievable in the current investment world”
    and that respondent had employed a “conservative
    investment strategy” for the prior five years which involved
    having “[$]12 of [$]35 million of his capital in stocks and
    bonds” and the remaining amount in “cash and money
    markets.” But Goodfriend did not provide a figure for
    respondent’s average returns on this mixed portfolio. The
    only evidence in the record on this point was (1) Miskei’s
    testimony that the one-third of respondent’s portfolio not in
    money markets or cash returned between 5 and 7 percent,
    and (2) Miskei’s chart of respondent’s 2013 investment
    accounts showing an average return of 2.46 percent. The
    16   This amount did not include the over $4 million
    respondent maintained in retirement funds.
    26
    one percent respondent espoused was apparently “drawn
    from thin air.”17
    Moreover, even had respondent substantiated that his
    mixed investment portfolio returned only one percent, it
    would have been an abuse of discretion to limit child support
    based on that figure. “Just as a parent cannot shirk his
    parental obligations by reducing his earning capacity
    through unemployment or underemployment, he cannot
    shirk the obligation to support his child by under-utilizing
    income-producing assets” 
    (Dacumos, supra
    , 76 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 155), or “‘place . . . a possible source of income “off
    limits”’” through his or her choice of investment. (Destein,
    17    We observe that respondent reported actual income
    from investments (interest and dividends, not including the
    K-1 income from his business) of $28,208 per month at the
    time of the request for modification. Respondent
    acknowledged in his reply brief that some amount of income
    should be imputed to his considerable book of non-income
    producing assets. But because Goodfriend imputed a one
    percent return across the board, rather than limiting that
    minimal return to the portion of respondent’s assets that
    were not then producing income, Goodfriend’s proposed
    figure for respondent’s investment income barely rose, to
    $35,582. Although the court mitigated this by attributing a
    4.5 percent rate of return to respondent’s non-residential
    real estate holdings, because those properties represented a
    minor part of respondent’s assets, the calculation barely
    moved the overall rate of return on respondent’s assets to
    between 1.4 and 1.5 
    percent. 27 supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 1395.) A parent cannot
    “unilaterally, and voluntarily, arrange his business affairs in
    such a way as to effectively preclude his children from
    sharing in the benefits of his current standard of living” (In
    re Marriage of Berger (2009) 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 1070
    , 1082), or
    “‘take a break’” from his or her child support obligations in
    order to favor non-income producing business investments.
    
    (Sorge, supra
    , 202 Cal.App.4th at pp. 647-648, italics
    omitted.) Respondent and Goodfriend did not dispute that
    Miskei’s proposal represented a conservative investment
    strategy. They stated respondent did not follow it because
    he did not wish to tie up his assets in case he needed
    immediate access to his funds. But respondent had
    sufficient assets to allow him to keep a significant portion in
    cash or money market funds for emergencies while still
    earning more than a one percent return. Imputing an
    unreasonably low rate of return to appellant’s substantial
    assets, and using that figure to calculate child support would
    have deprived Roman of funds needed to maintain the
    lifestyle respondent had agreed was appropriate and which
    he remained fully capable of providing.
    D. Conclusion
    We conclude that substantial evidence did not support
    a finding that respondent’s reduction in employment income
    constituted a material change in his ability to provide the
    level of child support he had agreed was “in [the] best
    interest” of his son. The undisputed evidence established
    28
    that respondent, with assets in the tens of millions of
    dollars, had ample resources to continue to support his son
    in a lifestyle commensurate with his own, and that the
    reduction in respondent’s employment income did not
    materially affect his ability to provide for his child. We
    further conclude that the court’s utilization of a one percent
    rate of return on respondent’s non-real estate investments
    was unreasonably low. Accordingly, we reverse the order
    granting respondent’s request.
    29
    DISPOSITION
    The order modifying child support is reversed.
    Appellant is awarded costs.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    MANELLA, J.
    We concur:
    WILLHITE, Acting P. J.
    COLLINS, J.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B263721

Citation Numbers: 6 Cal. App. 5th 347, 210 Cal. Rptr. 3d 875

Judges: Manella, Willhite, Collins

Filed Date: 12/2/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024