Darcy L. Howard v. Patrick S. White , 2024 ME 9 ( 2024 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:  
    2024 ME 9
    Docket:    And-21-131
    Argued:    October 5, 2021
    Reargued:  April 6, 2022
    Decided:   January 25, 2024
    Panel:         STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, JABAR, HORTON, and CONNORS, JJ., CLIFFORD, A.R.J., and
    HUMPHREY, A.R.J.*
    Majority:      STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD and JABAR, JJ., and HUMPHREY, A.R.J.
    Dissent:       HORTON and CONNORS, JJ., and CLIFFORD, A.R.J.
    DARCY L. HOWARD
    v.
    PATRICK S. WHITE
    STANFILL, C.J.
    [¶1] Patrick S. White appeals from a judgment of the District Court
    (Lewiston, Archer, J.) establishing parental rights and responsibilities as
    between White and Darcy L. Howard concerning their minor child. White
    contends that the court erred by including his employer’s cost of providing
    health insurance to him in his gross income when calculating his child support
    obligation. See 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B) (2023). We agree, and we therefore
    * Although Justice Gorman participated in this appeal, she resigned before this opinion was
    certified. Justice Humphrey sat at both oral arguments and participated in the initial conferences
    while he was an Associate Justice and, as directed and assigned by the Chief Justice, is now
    participating in this appeal as an Active Retired Justice.
    2
    vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings.1
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] In December 2019, Howard filed a complaint against White to
    determine parental rights and responsibilities concerning their child. See
    19-A M.R.S. § 1653 (2021).2 On the day of the final hearing on the complaint,
    the parties resolved all issues by agreement except child support. The court
    held an evidentiary hearing on that issue only.
    [¶3] In a written child support order issued after the hearing, the court
    stated that White “receives an in-kind benefit from his employer in the form of
    employer-paid health insurance, the value of which the Court imputes to him
    as part of his gross income pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B).”3 For the year
    2021, the Court found that White’s gross income was $74,929, consisting of
    wages in the amount of $60,929 and “imputation of employer-paid health
    1 White also contends, in the alternative, that when the court calculated his child support
    obligation it did not fully credit him for the health insurance he provides for the child. Because we
    conclude that the court erred in calculating his gross income, we do not address this argument.
    Title 19-A M.R.S. § 1653 has been amended since the court issued the judgment challenged on
    2
    appeal, but not in a way that affects the appeal. See, e.g., P.L. 2023, ch. 298, § 2 (effective Oct. 25,
    2023) (to be codified at 19-A M.R.S. § 1653(6-D)).
    3 Title 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B) (2023) provides, “Gross income includes expense
    reimbursements or in-kind payments received by a party in the course of employment . . . if the
    expense reimbursements or in-kind payments reduce personal living expenses.”
    3
    insurance in the amount of $14,000.” The court used this gross income amount
    in its calculation of White’s child support obligation.
    [¶4] White moved for additional findings of fact and conclusions of law
    and to alter or amend the judgment, asking the court to find that his employer’s
    contribution toward the cost of his health insurance was not an in-kind
    payment because he would not receive additional wages were he to decline
    health insurance coverage. See M.R. Civ. P. 52(b), 59(e), 120. The court granted
    the motion in part, stating,
    [White] receives a generous in-kind benefit from his employer in
    the form of employer-paid health insurance . . . . This benefit serves
    to reduce his personal living expenses as it eliminates [his] need to
    obtain and pay for the full cost of health insurance for himself and
    for his children. His health, and the health of his family, is
    important to [him]. . . . In [his answers to Howard’s interrogatories,
    he] acknowledged that health insurance is a part of his living
    expenses. Those living expenses would be greatly increased if his
    employer were not providing the valuable fringe benefit to him. As
    such, the Court imputes the value of that benefit to [White] as part
    of his gross income pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B).
    (Citation omitted.)
    [¶5] White timely appealed.
    [¶6] After an initial oral argument and before holding a second oral
    argument, we invited amicus briefs on whether the value of an employer-paid
    health insurance benefit is included as gross income pursuant to 19-A M.R.S.
    4
    § 2001(5)(B). We specifically solicited a brief from the Department of Health
    and Human Services as the agency charged with establishing and collecting
    child support where appropriate. The Department agrees with White and
    contends that the plain language of section 2001(5)(B) does not support the
    court’s decision to include the cost of White’s employer-paid health insurance
    benefits in his gross income for purposes of calculating child support and that
    doing so “contradicts the statutory mandate that both parents have a shared
    responsibility to provide health insurance for their child(ren).”
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶7] We review the court’s calculation of White’s gross income and its
    supporting factual findings for clear error, and its award of child support for an
    abuse of discretion. McLean v. Robertson, 
    2020 ME 15
    , ¶ 10, 
    225 A.3d 410
    ;
    Petersen v. Van Overbeke, 
    2018 ME 104
    , ¶ 17, 
    190 A.3d 244
    .              A court’s
    determination of a party’s income “is clearly erroneous only if there is no
    competent evidence in the record to support it.” Payne v. Payne, 
    2008 ME 35
    ,
    ¶ 6, 
    942 A.2d 713
     (quotation marks omitted). Issues of statutory interpretation
    are questions of law, which we review de novo. McCarthy v. Guber, 
    2023 ME 53
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    300 A.3d 804
    . As we explained in Ehret v. Ehret, “[a]fter the entry of a
    judgment, if an affected party timely moves for findings pursuant to M.R. Civ. P.
    5
    52, the trial court must ensure that the judgment is supported by express
    factual findings that are based on record evidence, are sufficient to support the
    result, and are sufficient to inform the parties and any reviewing court of the
    basis for the decision.” 
    2016 ME 43
    , ¶ 9, 
    135 A.3d 101
     (footnote omitted).
    [¶8] The court’s finding that White’s annual wage income is $60,929 is
    supported by the record. The court’s finding that the annual cost to White’s
    employer of providing health insurance is $14,000 is also supported by the
    record. Indeed, neither party argues that these findings are erroneous. The
    issue is whether the court erred by including in White’s gross income, under
    19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B), the employer’s cost of providing health insurance to
    White without evidence that the receipt of insurance actually reduced White’s
    personal living expenses. After considering the specific statutory language, the
    statutory scheme as a whole, our precedent, and decisions from other
    jurisdictions, we conclude that a court cannot simply infer that the cost to the
    employer of providing health insurance coverage equals the amount by which
    the employee’s personal living expenses are reduced.          Instead, the party
    seeking the inclusion of an in-kind payment has the burden to prove the amount
    by which the payment actually reduces the employee’s living expenses, if at all.
    It is the value to the employee, not the cost to the employer, that matters.
    6
    A.    Maine’s Child Support Statutory Scheme
    [¶9] In Maine, the statutory method for calculating child support takes
    into account both the obligor parent’s ability to pay and the obligee parent’s
    capacity to support the child. 19-A M.R.S. § 2006 (2023); see Levy, Maine Family
    Law § 6.5[1] at 6-43 (8th ed. 2013) (“The financial support of a child of divorced
    parents is the equal responsibility of each parent to be discharged in
    accordance with each parent’s capacity and ability to support the child . . . .”);
    cf. Twomey v. Twomey, 
    2005 ME 124
    , ¶ 13, 
    888 A.2d 272
     (tying, in part, the
    showing of a substantial change in circumstances that may support a
    downward modification of a child support order to the obligor parent’s
    diminished ability to contribute to the child’s financial support); Absher v.
    LaCombe, 
    432 A.2d 1241
    , 1242-43 (Me. 1981) (requiring a party seeking an
    upward modification of a child support order to prove that the obligor parent
    had “sufficient financial resources to meet the requested increase”); 10-144
    C.M.R. ch. 351, ch. 7, § 1(A)-(C) (effective July 6, 2016) (ensuring that, when
    imputing income based on a parent’s voluntary unemployment or
    underemployment, the amount ordered for support is based on evidence of the
    obligor’s ability to pay).
    7
    [¶10] Child support is calculated under an “income share formula.” Levy,
    Maine Family Law § 6.5[2][a] at 6-45 (quotation marks omitted). Under this
    approach, a support figure is “based upon an estimate of the share of each
    parent’s income that would have been allocated to the child if the parents of the
    child were living in an intact household.” Id. (quotation marks omitted); see
    also 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(1), (4). Accordingly, although increasing an obligor
    parent’s gross income results in a greater payment to the obligee parent, the
    same reasoning is applied in calculating the obligee parent’s income: an
    increase to the obligee parent’s income results in a lower child support
    payment by the obligor parent.
    [¶11] With that understanding, we turn to the statutory language at issue
    in this case, which we construe “to give effect to the intent of the Legislature,
    first by examining its plain language.” Narowetz v. Bd. of Dental Prac., 
    2021 ME 46
    , ¶ 24, 
    259 A.3d 771
     (quotation marks omitted). “All words in a statute are
    to be given meaning, and no words are to be treated as surplusage if they can
    be reasonably construed.” Cent. Me. Power Co. v. Devereux Marine, Inc., 
    2013 ME 37
    , ¶ 8, 
    68 A.3d 1262
     (quotation marks omitted). “Surplusage occurs when a
    construction of one provision of a statute renders another provision
    unnecessary or without meaning or force.” Home Builders Ass’n of Me., Inc. v.
    8
    Town of Eliot, 
    2000 ME 82
    , ¶ 8, 
    750 A.2d 566
    . “We also examine the whole
    statutory scheme of which the section at issue forms a part so that a
    harmonious result, presumably the intent of the Legislature, may be achieved.”
    Walker v. Walker, 
    2005 ME 21
    , ¶ 11, 
    868 A.2d 887
     (quotation marks omitted).
    [¶12] Title 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B) provides:
    Gross income includes expense reimbursements or in-kind
    payments received by a party in the course of employment . . . if the
    expense reimbursements or in-kind payments reduce personal
    living expenses.
    (Emphasis added.) The statute does not state that all employer-provided fringe
    benefits received by a parent constitute gross income. It also does not state that
    the amounts an employer pays for the parent’s benefits are included in the
    parent’s gross income. Rather, it expressly and unambiguously includes in
    gross income only “expense reimbursements or in-kind payments” and then
    only if the employee’s personal living expenses are thereby reduced. Id. This
    is consistent with the statutory scheme as a whole, as discussed above, because
    in-kind payments that reduce personal living expenses save the parent money,
    which then becomes available for support of the child.          See 19-A M.R.S.
    § 2006(1), (4); Levy, Maine Family Law § 6.5[1] at 6-43.          To ignore the
    conditional clause in the second half of the sentence would render that portion
    of the statute “unnecessary or without meaning or force,” Home Builders Ass’n
    9
    of Me., Inc., 
    2000 ME 82
    , ¶ 8, 
    750 A.2d 566
    . The statute thus has two related but
    separate requirements for any amount to be included in gross income: (1) it
    must be an expense reimbursement or in-kind payment received in the course
    of employment and (2) it must reduce personal living expenses. If both
    requirements are met, determining the parent’s gross income involves still
    another inquiry: by how much did receipt of the benefit reduce the parent’s
    personal living expenses?
    B.    Review of Prior Maine Decisions
    [¶13]   Although some of our prior decisions have touched on the
    application of section 2001(5)(B), we have not squarely “address[ed], as a
    general matter, whether a court may include the amount an employer
    contributes to an employee’s health insurance plan when calculating gross
    income.” Carolan v. Bell, 
    2007 ME 39
    , ¶ 15, 
    916 A.2d 945
    . In Walker, we broadly
    asserted that “[r]eading section 2001(5) in its full context reveals that gross
    income for the purposes of child support calculations generally includes all
    payments received by a parent in the scope of employment.” 
    2005 ME 21
    , ¶ 12,
    
    868 A.2d 887
    .     While that could be read as suggesting that the cost of
    employer-provided health insurance is to be included in gross income, that was
    not the issue in the case. Rather, Walker presented the question whether a
    10
    single lump sum severance payment from a former employer should be
    included in gross income for the purposes of child support calculations under
    19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(A), not section 2001(5)(B). Id. ¶¶ 9-10.
    [¶14] In contrast, in Payne, we stated that the definition of gross income
    reflected in sections 2001(5)(A) and 2001(5)(B) “speaks to ongoing cash
    benefits actually received” and “makes no provision for directly imputing
    income beyond monies actually received based on a party’s tax situation.”
    
    2008 ME 35
    , ¶ 11, 
    942 A.2d 713
    . As with Walker, however, we were not
    addressing whether the amount an employer contributes to an employee’s
    health insurance plan is includable in gross income. See id. ¶¶ 8, 12-14. Rather,
    we held that section 2001(5) did not permit the court to add additional sums
    to the parent’s income because the wages were tax free, nor did it permit the
    court to impute to the obligor’s gross income the cost to the obligee of replacing
    the insurance she had been receiving as the spouse of the obligor. Id.
    [¶15] Carolan, 
    2007 ME 39
    , 
    916 A.2d 945
    , was more directly concerned
    with the inclusion of the value of employer-provided benefits in gross income.
    There, we stated that section 2001(5)(B) “provided the authority for the court
    to include the value of Bell’s rent-free housing, use of vehicles, and other
    payments for his living expenses in calculating his gross income, because the
    11
    value of these items was received by Bell in lieu of wages in the course of his
    employment and reduced his personal living expenses.” Id. ¶ 15. With regard
    to health insurance, there was specific evidence that Carolan received
    employer-paid health insurance in lieu of a wage increase. Id. ¶ 16. We then
    affirmed the manner in which the trial court calculated the value of the benefit
    to be added to Carolan’s wages. Id. ¶ 17. In affirming the trial court, we
    expressly determined that “we need not address, as a general matter, whether
    a court may include the amount an employer contributes to an employee’s
    health insurance plan when calculating gross income.” Id. ¶ 15.
    [¶16] Next in our line of decisions related to this issue was Young v.
    Young, 
    2009 ME 54
    , 
    973 A.2d 765
    . There, the trial court declined to include the
    value of the plaintiff’s employer-provided health insurance in gross income,
    concluding that in that case, “it would be unjust to do so.” Id. ¶ 7. When the
    defendant challenged the exclusion on appeal, id. ¶¶ 9, 15, we addressed a very
    specific question:
    whether it is within a court’s discretion to exclude the value of a
    parent’s employer-provided health insurance benefit in calculating
    that parent’s gross income pursuant to section 2006(5)(E),[4] when
    the other parent receives a government-subsidized healthcare
    benefit that is not included in that parent’s gross income.
    4 The statute governs the determination of each party’s theoretical child support obligation when
    each party has primary residence of at least one child involved. 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(5)(E) (2023).
    12
    Id. ¶ 10. We answered that question in the affirmative:
    [A]lthough the court could have added the value of [the plaintiff’s]
    health insurance to her gross income, the court did not have a
    corresponding value for [the defendant] to add to his gross income.
    The court specifically found that it would be unjust to include
    [the plaintiff’s] health benefit in her gross income . . . because it
    would be unfair to increase [the plaintiff’s] income for this benefit
    when [the defendant] is receiving the same benefit. . . . Given that
    both [the plaintiff] and [the defendant] receive a healthcare benefit,
    the court’s decision to exclude the value of [the plaintiff’s] benefit
    from her gross income was an appropriate deviation and within the
    bounds of judicial discretion . . . .
    Id. ¶¶ 16-17 (citing 19-A M.R.S. § 2007(3)(C) (2008)) (quotation marks
    omitted).5 Because the issue was whether the trial court could exclude the value
    of the plaintiff’s health insurance from her gross income, id. ¶ 15, we had no
    need to explain the reasoning behind our assumption that the value could also
    have been included in her gross income.
    [¶17] Moreover, our suggestion in Young that the court has discretion to
    exclude from gross income the amount by which an in-kind payment actually
    reduces living expenses is contradicted by our most recent decision in this area.
    5 Notwithstanding our language quoted above, the question whether the value of
    employer-provided health care should be included in gross income is separate from the question
    whether to deviate, under 19-A M.R.S. § 2007 (2023), from a support order based on the guidelines.
    According to the statutory scheme, the court should first determine what is included in gross income
    under section 2001, then calculate support under the guidelines in accordance with section 2006,
    and only then decide whether “a child support order based on the support guidelines would be
    inequitable or unjust,” 19-A M.R.S. § 2007(1).
    13
    In McLean, we examined whether the trial court erred in failing to include the
    value of a parent’s various fringe benefits in her gross income when calculating
    her child support obligation. 
    2020 ME 15
    , ¶¶ 1, 3, 9, 
    225 A.3d 410
    . The trial
    record included evidence that the parent’s employer “ma[de] her payments on
    her vehicle loan and pa[id] for fuel for the vehicle, health insurance, and her cell
    phone, for a total personal benefit to her of $1,590 per month or $19,080 per
    year.” Id. ¶ 3. The trial court had not included the value of any of those benefits
    in its determination of the parent’s gross income. Id. ¶ 6. We vacated the
    judgment because despite a motion requesting that the court make additional
    findings, the judgment “contain[ed] no explanation of how the court
    determined [the parent’s] gross income,” and thus we could not assume that
    the court found facts sufficient to support its determination of gross income. Id.
    ¶¶ 12-14. In doing so, we noted that, in contrast to Young, “[i]f a court finds
    that a party receives . . . in-kind payments from his or her employer and that
    those . . . payments ‘reduce personal living expenses,’ the court must include the
    value of those . . . payments in calculating that party’s gross income.” Id. ¶ 10
    (emphasis added) (quoting 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B)). Importantly, we did not
    distinguish among the various benefits the parent received, some of which
    14
    appear to have fallen squarely within the definition of “in-kind payments” that
    would “reduce personal living expenses,” 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B).
    C.    Out-of-State Authority
    [¶18] Some states explicitly exclude the cost of employer-paid health
    insurance from gross income for purposes of determining child support. See,
    e.g., North Carolina Conference of Chief District Judges, North Carolina Child
    Support Guidelines 3 (2023) (excluding “from income . . . amounts that are paid
    by a parent’s employer directly to a third party or entity for health, disability or
    life insurance or retirement benefits and are not withheld or deducted from the
    parent’s wages, salary or pay”). Other states expressly include the cost or value
    of employer-paid health insurance. See Halberg v. Halberg, 
    777 N.W.2d 872
    ,
    878 (N.D. 2010) (stating that “[e]mployee benefits are gross income for
    purposes of child support” under North Dakota’s administrative definition of
    gross income); Bellinger v. Bellinger, 
    847 N.Y.S.2d 783
    , 785 (App. Div. 2007)
    (concluding that before-tax health insurance deductions were includable in
    income for child support purposes under a New York statute defining income
    to include “fringe benefits provided as part of compensation for employment,”
    
    N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 240
    (1-b)(b)(5)(iv)(C) (McKinney effective Oct. 1, 2007 to
    Sept. 3, 2008)).
    15
    [¶19] More to the point are states that follow the “income share formula”
    approach to child support and have statutes similar to Maine’s.6 Those states
    have generally concluded that an employer’s cost of health insurance is not
    includable in gross income. For example, in Alabama, the governing rule
    provides that “in-kind payments received by a parent in the course of
    employment . . . shall be counted as income if they are significant and reduce
    personal-living expenses.” Ala. R. Jud. Admin. 32(B)(4). Applying that rule, the
    Court of Civil Appeals rejected an argument that the $458 per month that an
    employer paid for a parent’s health insurance coverage should be included in
    the parent’s income for child support purposes. Woods v. Woods, 
    851 So. 2d 541
    , 547 (Ala. Civ. App. 2002); accord Valentine v. Valentine, 
    394 P.3d 129
    ,
    131-32 (Idaho Ct. App. 2017) (reaching the same result under a very similar
    rule and noting that “[g]iven that [health] benefits are common, if it was
    intended that they be included in income calculations as a fringe benefit, the
    guidelines would have so specified”); In re Marriage of Davis, 
    252 P.3d 530
    , 535
    (Colo. App. 2011) (“Employer contributions on an employee’s behalf to
    insurance plans are not income for child support purposes.”).
    6 See David Betson et al., Trade-Offs Implicit in Child-Support Guidelines, 11 J. Pol’y Analysis &
    Mgmt., no. 1, 1992, at 6 n.8 (listing the states using the income share formula); James A. McKenna,
    Housekeeping Ain’t No Joke: How Maine’s Child Support Guidelines can be Biased Against Mothers,
    
    49 Me. L. Rev. 281
    , 302 n.69 (1997) (same).
    16
    [¶20] We are governed by Maine’s statutory language, not by other
    states’ court decisions or by public policy. Nonetheless, it is apparent that
    automatically adding the cost of employer-provided health insurance to either
    parent’s gross income, without determining the amount by which the provision
    of health insurance actually reduces the parent’s personal living expenses, will
    generally result in a child support obligation that does not align with the
    parent’s available cash resources, contrary to the statutory scheme as a whole.7
    As the North Carolina Court of Appeals stated in addressing the issue,
    contributions made by an employer to an employee’s . . . insurance
    premiums[] may not be included as income for the purposes of the
    employee’s child support obligations unless the trial court, after
    making the relevant findings, determines that the employer’s
    contributions immediately support the employee in a way that is
    akin to income. We place particular relevance on a determination
    concerning whether the employee may receive an immediate
    benefit from the employer’s contributions, such that the
    employee’s present ability to pay child support is thereby
    enhanced. For example, if the employee could elect to receive cash
    7Consider the following hypothetical of parents with two young children. Parent One and
    Parent Two each make $35,685 annually. Parent One’s employer contributes $11,350 to the cost of
    Parent One’s health care costs. Using the most recent child support table, if each parent makes
    $35,685 annually ($71,370 combined), the weekly support obligation would be $168 each, assuming
    no expenses for childcare, medical insurance for the children, or extraordinary medical expenses.
    See 19-A M.R.S. §§ 2001-2012 (2023); 10-144 C.M.R. ch. 351, ch. 6 (effective Feb. 13, 2023). If the
    $11,350 cost of health insurance were added to Parent One’s income, however, that would increase
    Parent One’s gross income by almost one third, raising Parent One’s obligation to $204 weekly and
    reducing Parent Two’s obligation to $154 weekly. See 19-A M.R.S. §§ 2001-2012; 10-144 C.M.R. ch.
    351, ch. 6. If both parents had the same employer-provided health insurance and $11,350 were
    therefore added to each parent’s gross income, then each would have an obligation of $188 weekly.
    See 19-A M.R.S. §§ 2001-2012; 10-144 C.M.R. ch. 351, ch. 6. For most families, the provision of health
    insurance does not change the available income. When parents can barely make ends meet, this
    higher support amount may be impossible to fulfill.
    17
    instead of retirement or life insurance contributions from the
    employer, those employer contributions might properly be
    considered as income for child support purposes.
    Caskey v. Caskey, 
    698 S.E.2d 712
    , 718 (N.C. Ct. App. 2010) (citation omitted)
    (construing the relevant child support guideline before it was amended to
    expressly exclude the cost of employer-paid health insurance from gross
    income for purposes of child support, see supra ¶ 18). Consistent with the
    language of section 2001(5)(B), we agree that the critical consideration is the
    “immediate benefit” to the employee in reducing living expenses, not the cost
    to the employer.
    D.    The Cost of Employer-provided Health Insurance as an “In-kind
    payment”
    [¶21]   White and the Department both assert that the cost of
    employer-paid health insurance is not an “in-kind payment” under section
    2001(5)(B) because it is not received in lieu of monetary compensation or
    wages. See Carolan, 
    2007 ME 39
    , ¶ 15, 
    916 A.2d 945
     (holding that the value of
    rent-free housing, use of vehicles, and other payments for a parent’s living
    expenses could be included in gross income where it was received in lieu of
    wages); Payne, 
    2008 ME 35
    , ¶ 11, 
    942 A.2d 713
     (stating that the definition of
    gross income in section 2001(5)(A) and (B) “speaks to ongoing cash benefits
    actually received”). At least one court has held that employer-provided health
    18
    care was not an in-kind payment. See Woods, 
    851 So. 2d at 547
     (“[T]he record
    contains no evidence indicating that [the employer’s contribution toward the
    cost of the parent’s health insurance coverage] constitutes an ‘expense
    reimbursement or in-kind payment’ to the husband.” (quoting Ala. R. Jud.
    Admin. 32(B)(4))).
    [¶22] An “in-kind payment” is typically in lieu of a direct monetary
    payment. See In kind, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “in kind”
    as “[i]n goods or services rather than money” (emphasis added)); Robers v.
    United States, 
    572 U.S. 639
    , 645 (2014) (citing a federal statute that defines, for
    purposes of restitution, “in-kind payment” as including “replacement of
    property” as opposed to periodic payments (quotation marks omitted)); cf.
    California State Rest. Ass’n v. Whitlow, 
    129 Cal. Rptr. 824
    , 825, 828 (Cal. Ct. App.
    1976) (holding that a restaurant could not require minimum wage employees
    to accept in-kind meals in lieu of a portion of their monetary compensation). As
    White observes, employees usually cannot opt to receive the value of
    employer-paid health insurance premiums as cash or wages.
    [¶23] In the context of child support, “in-kind payments” that reduce
    personal living expenses within the meaning of section 2001(5)(B) classically
    include benefits such as meal reimbursements, free housing, or a company car.
    19
    See Judiciary Comm. on Child Support Guidelines, Recommendations on
    Adoption of Child Support Guidelines 27 (Sept. 1988); U.S. Dep’t of Health & Hum.
    Servs. Office of Child Support Enf’t, Development of Guidelines for Child Support
    Orders: Advisory Panel Recommendations and Final Report II-45 (Sept. 1987);
    In re Ankeny, No. 89-CA-83, 
    1990 WL 187511
    , at *2 (Ohio Ct. App. Nov. 19,
    1990) (stating that “free military housing is a significant in-kind payment that
    should be considered as gross income” for purposes of child support, and
    concluding that a trial court abused its discretion by failing to include in gross
    income either the value of the housing “or [the] monetary benefits” a parent
    received “in lieu of” the free housing); In re L.K.Y., 
    410 P.3d 492
    , 493-94
    (Colo. App. 2013) (affirming a determination that military housing and food
    allowances were in-kind payments that relieved a parent of living expenses and
    were includable in income for child support purposes).
    [¶24] The form child support affidavit used in Maine’s family cases does
    not identify the cost of employer-paid health insurance as an “in-kind payment”
    that reduces living expenses. See State of Maine Judicial Branch, Form FM-
    050: Child Support Affidavit, https://mjbportal.courts.maine.gov/CourtForms/
    FormsLists/DownloadForm?strFormNumber=FM-050 (last visited Jan. 22,
    2024) [https://perma.cc/P3PH-ANB6]. Rather, the form asks the parent to
    20
    identify the “[t]otal value of employment benefits you expect to receive this
    year that reduce your living expenses (car, housing, cell phone, meals, etc.).” 
    Id.
    The form also does not ask the parent to identify all amounts paid by an
    employer for fringe benefits, presumably because what an employer pays for
    benefits does not necessarily equate to a dollar-for-dollar increase in income or
    reduction in the employee’s living expenses. See id.; Widman v. Widman, 
    619 So. 2d 632
    , 634 (La. Ct. App. 1993) (holding that a trial court could not include
    the amount of employer-paid health insurance premiums—as opposed to
    insurance benefits—in gross income).
    [¶25] We also note that unlike most fringe benefits that are taxable as
    income, see 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 61
    (a)(1) (Westlaw through 
    Pub. L. No. 118-30
    );
    
    26 C.F.R. § 1.61-21
    (a) (2023), neither the federal government nor the State of
    Maine includes employer contributions to health insurance plans in gross
    income for income tax purposes, see 
    26 U.S.C.A. § 106
    (a) (Westlaw through
    
    Pub. L. No. 118-30
    ); 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.106-1
    (a) (2023); 36 M.R.S. §§ 5102(1-C), 5142
    (2023).
    [¶26] In short, while all in-kind payments by employers are benefits, it
    may not be true that all fringe benefits are in-kind payments. If the Legislature
    intended to include all fringe benefits as gross income, presumably it would
    21
    have said so. See Valentine, 
    394 P.3d at 132
     (observing that “if it was intended
    that [health insurance benefits] be included in income calculations as a fringe
    benefit, the guidelines would have so specified”). Assuming that the receipt of
    health insurance may constitute an in-kind payment, however, the real issue is
    whether and to what extent it reduces personal living expenses, which it must
    do in order for it to be included in gross income under section 2001(5)(B).
    E.    Evidence of the Amount by which the Employer-provided Health
    Insurance Reduced White’s Living Expenses
    [¶27] The party seeking the inclusion of the value of a benefit as gross
    income has the burden of proof on that issue.          Cf. State v. Armstrong,
    
    2019 ME 117
    , ¶ 21, 
    212 A.3d 856
     (“[T]he proponent of the evidence[] had the
    burden to develop the foundation that would allow the court to admit the
    evidence.”); Mitchell v. Krieckhaus, 
    2017 ME 70
    , ¶ 17, 
    158 A.3d 951
     (stating,
    with respect to another issue affecting a child support calculation, that “[t]he
    party contending that he provides substantially equal care bears the burden of
    proof on that issue”); Dickens v. Boddy, 
    2015 ME 81
    , ¶ 12, 
    119 A.3d 722
     (same);
    19-A M.R.S. § 2007(2) (2023) (“A party in a court action proposing deviation
    from the application of the support guidelines shall provide the court with
    written proposed findings showing that the application of the presumptive
    amount would be inequitable or unjust.”). Specifically, the parties here agree
    22
    that Howard—the party seeking to include the value of an employer-provided
    benefit in White’s gross income—had the burden to show (1) that the benefit
    reduced White’s personal living expenses and (2) the amount of money by
    which White’s personal living expenses were reduced. At trial, Howard simply
    produced evidence of the cost to White’s employer of White’s health insurance
    and argued that under section 2001(5)(B), the full amount of the employer’s
    cost is automatically included in White’s gross income. White, on the other
    hand, asserts that Howard failed to prove the amount, if any, by which White’s
    personal living expenses were reduced.
    [¶28] We return to the plain language of the statute: “Gross income
    includes . . . in-kind payments received by a party in the course of employment
    . . . if the . . . in-kind payments reduce personal living expenses.” 19-A M.R.S.
    § 2001(5)(B) (emphasis added). There is no presumption in the statute that
    employment benefits reduce personal living expenses. To the contrary, the
    statute plainly recognizes that such benefits may not reduce personal living
    expenses at all. Thus, the party seeking to include a fringe benefit in gross
    income must offer proof, beyond the existence of the benefit, that a benefit
    actually reduces the other parent’s personal living expenses and the amount of
    that reduction.
    23
    [¶29] In its initial decision, the trial court stated that White “receives an
    in-kind benefit from his employer in the form of employer-paid health
    insurance, the value of which the Court imputes to him as part of his gross
    income pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B).” Upon White’s motion for
    additional findings of fact and conclusions of law and to alter or amend the
    judgment, the court added that the health insurance benefit “serves to reduce
    [White’s] personal living expenses as it eliminates [his] need to obtain and pay
    for the full cost of health insurance for himself and for his children.”
    [¶30] There is no record evidence, however, supporting the court’s
    finding that the employer-paid health insurance reduced White’s living
    expenses by $14,000 or, indeed, at all. The trial court stated that White
    “acknowledged that health insurance is a part of his living expenses” in his
    answers to interrogatories. The cited interrogatory asked White to list his
    monthly living expenses, including health insurance. White responded that he
    was contributing $456.30 per month ($5,475.60 annually) out of pocket toward
    his medical, dental, and vision insurance.8 It was Howard, not White, who
    8 The full interrogatory was a typical question concerning out-of-pocket expenses:
    13. Describe your estimated living expenses prorated by month, and include
    in your description, rent, purchase or mortgage payment, utilities, clothing, food,
    laundry, dry cleaning, transportation (including loans and repairs), medical, dental,
    optometrical and pharmaceutical care (itemized), education, insurance, including,
    24
    classified health insurance as a “living expense” and asked what White was
    paying for health insurance. White appropriately responded by listing what he
    was currently paying, not what his employer paid. White’s response said
    nothing about whether he would spend money on health insurance, or in what
    amount, absent his employer’s contributions. Thus, the interrogatory answer
    could not have supported a finding that the employer-provided health
    insurance reduced White’s living expenses by $14,000.
    [¶31] The trial court also found that White’s employer-provided benefit
    “eliminate[d his] need” to purchase a policy and that he would be required to
    obtain health insurance for his child if his employer did not offer that benefit.
    Maine’s child support statute, however, provides that courts must require
    “private health insurance [to] be provided for the benefit of the child” only if
    but not limited to, health insurance, recreation, payments on bills or debts owed,
    taxes other than state or federal income tax.
    ....
    SUPPLEMENTAL ANSWER: Defendant is currently paying approximately
    $250.00 per month for food, $180.00 per month in transportation expenses, $80.00
    per month in automobile insurance, $45.00 per month for his cell phone, $456.30 for
    medical, dental and vision insurance, $434.00 per month for child support for his
    daughter from a previous marriage, $600.00 per month for child support to Plaintiff,
    $544.00 per month to Plaintiff for mortgage payment and $250.00 per month on
    miscellaneous items (clothing, grooming, entertainment, etc.).
    (Emphasis added.) It is a bridge too far to conclude from this interrogatory answer that the cost to
    White’s employer of the health insurance reduced White’s expenses by $14,000.
    25
    such insurance is “available at reasonable cost.” 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(8)(H).
    “Reasonable cost means the cost of private health insurance[9] to the parent
    responsible for providing medical support that does not exceed amounts
    adopted by the Department of Health and Human Services in a rule
    implementing a cost-reasonableness standard.”                       19-A M.R.S. § 1501(4-C)
    (2023) (quotation marks omitted). The rules adopted by the Department
    provide that health insurance is “presumed to be reasonable in cost if the cost
    to the parent responsible for providing medical support does not exceed 6% of
    his or her gross income.” 10-144 C.M.R. ch. 351, ch. 25, § 1(D) (effective Aug. 9,
    2017). By that standard, the most that White could be required to spend for his
    child’s insurance on the open market (if he had no employer-provided benefit)
    is $3,655.74, six percent of his gross income.10
    [¶32] The record contains no evidence of the cost to White of an
    alternative policy and no evidence that a policy was available at a reasonable
    cost that he could be compelled to spend. Without a policy available at a
    9 “Cost of private health insurance means the cost of adding the child to existing coverage or the
    difference between self-only and family coverage, unless that cost is determined to be unjust by a
    court or the Department of Health and Human Services.” 19-A M.R.S. § 1501(4-C) (2023) (quotation
    marks omitted); see also 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(3)(C) (adopting the same definition in the context of
    calculating the total basic support obligation).
    10 The court found that absent the $14,000 his employer paid for health insurance, White’s gross
    income is $60,929. Six percent of that amount is $3,655.74. White is already spending more than
    that out of pocket. See supra ¶ 30.
    26
    reasonable cost as defined by the Department—a maximum of $3,655.74
    annually—White could choose to forgo health insurance and still comply with
    the support order.11
    [¶33] Moreover, it is unlikely that health insurance would cost White
    $14,000 on the open market because he would be eligible for a substantial
    subsidy under the Affordable Care Act toward the cost of health insurance.12
    See CoverME.gov, 2024 Health Plan Comparison Tool for Individuals and
    Families, https://me24.checkbookhealth.org/#/ (last visited Jan. 22, 2024)
    [https://perma.cc/GA9X-CHC8]. This serves to further illustrate that the cost
    to an employer of providing health insurance cannot stand in for evidence of
    the amount by which the employee’s personal living expenses are thereby
    reduced.13
    11 Paragraph 11 of the standard Child Support Order, which was used here, requires a party to
    “obtain and maintain private health insurance for the benefit of the minor child(ren) if it is presently
    available at reasonable cost.” See State of Maine Judicial Branch, Form FM-132: Child Support Order,
    https://mjbportal.courts.maine.gov/CourtForms/FormsLists/DownloadForm?strFormNumber=FF
    -132 (last visited Jan. 22, 2024) [https://perma.cc/WT85-D37A].
    With that subsidy, the cost to him could be about $1,250 per year (for the most basic plan) or
    12
    as much as around $5,500 per year (for the most comprehensive plan available)—far less than
    $14,000. See CoverME.gov, 2024 Health Plan Comparison Tool for Individuals and Families,
    https://me24.checkbookhealth.org/#/ (last visited Jan. 22, 2024) [https://perma.cc/GA9X-CHC8].
    This is not to say that no one would ever pay $14,000 out of pocket for health insurance. A
    13
    higher-income individual with assets to protect may well be willing and able to pay that amount.
    Many working people in the United States, however, remain uninsured because coverage is not
    affordable for them. See Jennifer Tolbert et al., Key Facts About the Uninsured Population, Kaiser
    Family Foundation (Dec. 18, 2023), https://www.kff.org/uninsured/issue-brief/key-facts-about-
    27
    [¶34] Finally, even if it were appropriate to use the employer’s cost as a
    stand-in for the value of the benefit conferred, adding the employer’s entire cost
    for the health insurance to White’s income would fail to account for the portion
    of the employer-paid health insurance premiums presumably used to cover
    White’s other child. The court would instead need to determine what portion
    of the employer’s cost goes towards health insurance for White and Howard’s
    mutual child, and then update the child support worksheet and recalculate
    White’s child support obligation accordingly. See Foley v. Ziegler, 
    2007 ME 127
    ,
    ¶ 9, 
    931 A.2d 498
    ; 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(3)(C).                            Specifically, the amount
    attributable to White and Howard’s mutual child would be added to the
    out-of-pocket health insurance cost for the child, and the amount attributable
    to White’s other child would be added to the deduction for “[s]upport paid for
    other children under a pre-existing obligation.”14 See State of Maine Judicial
    the-uninsured-population/ (explaining that 73.3 percent of nonelderly uninsured individuals had at
    least one full-time worker in their family and the most common reason people cited for being
    uninsured was that coverage is not affordable) [https://perma.cc/S3M4-CB8Q].
    14 The statutory child support guidelines account for the cost of the parties’ mutual child’s health
    insurance in two ways. First, the court is required to calculate the total basic support obligation for
    the child—that is, “the weekly financial cost of caring for the child,” Foley v. Ziegler, 
    2007 ME 127
    , ¶ 9,
    
    931 A.2d 498
    , by adding the weekly cost of the child’s health insurance to the basic support
    entitlement from the child support table, see 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(1), (3)(C); 10-144 C.M.R. ch. 351,
    ch. 6. Second, the court is required to determine what portion of that total weekly support obligation
    must be paid by each parent and then deduct the cost of the child’s weekly health insurance from the
    support obligation of the parent who maintains that health insurance. See 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(3)-(4),
    (8)(C)(5); Bloom v. Bloom, 
    2021 ME 59
    , ¶ 4, 
    263 A.3d 491
    . In this way, the child support obligation
    28
    Branch,      Form      FM-040:       Child     Support      Worksheet,        https://mjbportal.
    courts.maine.gov/CourtForms/FormsLists/DownloadForm?strFormNumber=
    FM-040 (last visited Jan. 22, 2024) [https://perma.cc/TK9J-94QQ]; Chiovaro v.
    Tilton-Chiovaro, 
    805 P.2d 575
    , 578 (Mont. 1991) (“It is reasonable that if a value
    is assigned to the insurance benefit and added to income, then a value can be
    assigned to the children’s share of the premium and allowed as a deduction.”).
    [¶35] In sum, a court may include the value of an employer-paid in-kind
    payment in a parent’s gross income only to the extent that the payment actually
    reduces a parent’s personal living expenses. 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B). Because
    here there is no record evidence to support the court’s finding that White’s
    personal living expenses were reduced by his employer’s contributions to his
    health insurance premiums, we vacate the judgment and remand for the
    of the parent who maintains the child’s health insurance is offset by the full amount that that parent
    pays for the insurance.
    This process should be no different if the court is adding the value of employer-paid health
    insurance premiums to a parent’s gross income. If, in calculating child support, the court adds the
    amount of the parent’s employer-paid health insurance premiums to a parent’s gross income and
    that parent also maintains the child’s health insurance coverage through the employer’s plan, then
    whatever portion of the employer-paid premiums that was included as “income” for that parent and
    goes toward the child’s health care coverage must likewise be (1) added to the calculation of the
    child’s weekly support obligation, see 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(3)(C), and (2) deducted from the calculation
    of the parent’s portion of that weekly support obligation, see 19-A M.R.S. § 2006(4), (8)(C)(5). In the
    alternative, the court could choose to deduct from its gross income calculation the portion of
    employer-paid premiums that goes toward the children’s health insurance coverage so that only the
    portion of employer-paid premiums that relates to the parent’s own health insurance is added to
    gross income.
    29
    recalculation of White’s child support responsibility based on his gross income
    of $60,929.
    III. CONCLUSION
    [¶36] We conclude that (1) an employer’s contribution to the cost of an
    employee’s health insurance policy is not necessarily an “in-kind payment”
    under 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B); (2) even an employer’s contribution that
    constitutes an in-kind payment does not necessarily reduce the recipient’s
    personal living expenses; and (3) even a contribution that constitutes an
    in-kind payment and reduces personal living expenses does not necessarily
    reduce those expenses by the exact cost to the employer of providing the
    benefit. We also conclude that the record in this case does not support the
    court’s application of section 2001(5)(B) to increase the amount of White’s
    gross income based on his employment-related health insurance benefit.15 This
    is not to suggest, however, that the evidence in a particular case could never
    support a finding that the employee’s living expenses were significantly
    reduced. And generous fringe benefits may, in an appropriate case, result in a
    deviation from the application of the support guidelines under 19-A M.R.S.
    15   Presumably, the Department established the current child support table based on the
    assumption that the cost of employer-provided health insurance is not automatically included in a
    parent’s gross income. See 19-A M.R.S. §§ 2001(5)(B), 2011 (2023).
    30
    § 2007. This issue is far more complex than it appears at first glance, and far
    more complex than we have previously suggested. It would be helpful if the
    Legislature more clearly delineated the manner in which such a significant
    fringe benefit should be treated for purposes of calculating child support
    obligations.
    [¶37] Because the trial court erred by increasing White’s income by
    $14,000 under section 2001(5)(B), we vacate the judgment and remand for
    recalculation of child support based on White’s annual gross income of $60,929.
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated. Remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    HORTON, J., with whom CONNORS, J., and CLIFFORD, A.R.J., joins, dissenting.
    [¶38] I agree with the Court’s conclusion that “a court may include the
    value of an employer-paid in-kind payment in a parent’s gross income only to
    the extent that the payment actually reduces a parent’s personal living
    expenses. 19-A M.R.S. § 2001(5)(B) [(2023)].” Court’s Opinion ¶ 35.
    [¶39] However, I respectfully dissent because I disagree with the Court’s
    conclusion that “the party seeking the inclusion of an in-kind payment has the
    31
    burden to prove the amount by which the payment actually reduces the
    employee’s living expenses, if at all.”                  Court’s Opinion ¶ 8.             Because
    Darcy L. Howard did not present such evidence, the Court’s order of remand
    requires that Patrick S. White’s support obligation be based on his income
    without regard to the effect of the employer’s in-kind payment on his living
    expenses.
    [¶40] That allocation of the burden fails to recognize that the parent who
    receives the in-kind payment is almost always in a much better position than
    the other parent to prove the effect of receiving the payment on the recipient
    parent’s own living expenses. A more rational allocation of the burden would
    be to require the recipient parent to prove that the parent’s living expenses are
    reduced by less than the amount of the in-kind payment. While facially neutral,
    the court’s allocation of the burden will often fall on lower-income parents who
    are less likely to have employer-subsidized health insurance and more likely to
    be self-represented and unable to meet the burden.16
    [¶41] Moreover, because we are clarifying our jurisprudence on how a
    16 Current Department of Labor statistics indicate that employer-subsidized health insurance
    coverage in the private sector is available to 95 percent of employees in the top 10% income category
    but available to only 28 percent of those in the bottom 10% income category. News Release, Bureau
    of Labor Statistics, Employee Benefits in the United States—March 2023 at 9 (Sept. 21, 2023),
    https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ebs2.pdf [https://perma.cc/VL2D-N3L9]. In this case,
    Howard has no employer-paid health insurance and earns about half of what White does.
    32
    parent’s receipt of an in-kind payment from an employer can affect child
    support, we should remand to enable the parties to apply our clarified
    formulation. In calculating child support, the family courts are not limited to
    the evidence presented by the parties and may take judicial notice of
    information outside the record, see M.R. Evid. 201, provided the information
    meets the standards for judicial notice, and the court affords the parties notice
    and opportunity to be heard. See Bard v. Lord, 
    2010 ME 48
    , ¶¶ 7-8, 
    997 A.2d 101
     (upholding trial court’s sua sponte consideration of Department of Labor
    statistics); Wrenn v. Lewis, 
    2003 ME 29
    , ¶ 23 n.4, 
    818 A.2d 1005
    ; see also 19-A
    M.R.S. § 2004(1)(E) (2023) (permitting the court to admit evidence of
    Department of Labor statistics).
    [¶42] That Howard did not present evidence of the amount by which
    White’s employer’s health insurance subsidy reduces White’s living expenses
    should not preclude the court on remand from taking judicial notice of
    information relevant to that determination. Ironically, the Court’s Opinion does
    what the court on remand will not be allowed to do: take judicial notice of what
    it would cost White to buy coverage under the Affordable Care Act17 and also
    17 The coverage provided by White’s employer-subsidized health insurance plan is likely far closer
    to the coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) comprehensive plan than the coverage under
    the basic ACA plan. Between White’s contribution of $5,475.60 and the employer’s contribution of
    33
    what White might have to pay to insure the child alone.18 Court’s Opinion
    ¶¶ 31-33. We should allow the court on remand to do likewise and determine
    the amount, if any, by which the employer’s $14,000 subsidy of White’s health
    insurance coverage reduces his living expenses.
    Scott F. Hess, Esq. (orally), The Law Office of Scott F. Hess, LLC, Augusta, for
    appellant Patrick S. White
    Amy Dieterich, Esq. (orally), Skelton Taintor & Abbott, Lewiston, for appellee
    Darcy L. Howard
    Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, and Alicia M. Cushing, Asst. Atty. Gen. (orally),
    Office of the Attorney General, Portland, for amicus curiae Department of
    Health and Human Services
    Lewiston District Court docket number FM-2019-676
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY
    $14,000, the total cost of White’s employer-provided insurance coverage is nearly $20,000. The
    Court has indicated that the most comprehensive ACA plan would involve a subsidy to White of
    $4, 104 and a cost of $5,500, for a total of $9,604. Court’s Opinion ¶ 33 & n.12; see CoverME.gov, 2024
    Health Plan Comparison Tool for Individuals and Families, https://me24.checkbookhealth.org/#/
    (last visited Jan. 22, 2024) [https://perma.cc/GA9X-CHC8].
    18 White pays $12.12 per week, or $630.24 annually for the child’s insurance, indicating that, even
    considering only the child’s coverage and not his own coverage, the employer subsidy has reduced
    his health insurance expense by the difference between $3,655.74, the amount he could and probably
    would be required to pay to cover the child only, see 10-144 C.M.R. ch. 351, ch. 25, § 1(D) (effective
    Aug. 9, 2017), and the $630.24 that he does pay.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: And-21-131

Citation Numbers: 2024 ME 9

Judges: Valerie Stanfill, Andrew M. Mead, Jospeh M. Jabar, Andrew M. Horton, Catherine R. Connors, Robert W. Clifford, Thomas E. Humphrey

Filed Date: 1/25/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/28/2024