Lindsey M. Schuman v. Joshua C. Schuman ( 2020 )


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  •         IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS
    WESTERN DISTRICT
    LINDSEY M. SCHUMAN,                        )
    )
    Appellant,                   )
    )
    v.                                         )       WD83305
    )
    JOSHUA C. SCHUMAN,                         )       Opinion Filed: November 10, 2020
    )
    Respondent.                  )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CASS COUNTY, MISSOURI
    THE HONORABLE JASON M. HOWELL, JUDGE
    Division Three: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Presiding Judge,
    Alok Ahuja, Judge and Gary D. Witt, Judge
    Lindsey Schuman (“Mother”) appeals from a judgment entered by the Circuit Court of
    Cass County modifying child support and child custody following her divorce from Joshua
    Schuman (“Father”). We affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    Mother and Father were married on March 12, 2005, and two children were born during
    the union. On March 3, 2017, Mother and Father divorced. The judgment granting the dissolution
    provided for joint legal and physical custody of the children. The judgment also designated
    Mother’s address in Raymore as the children’s address for mailing and educational purposes. The
    parenting plan from the dissolution provided the parties with alternating holidays and summer
    parenting time with Father having overnight parenting time on every Tuesday and Friday as well
    as every other Saturday night. Father was given a 13% credit on the Form 14 for his parenting
    time, and he was ordered to pay monthly child support in the amount of $885.00.
    Mother and Father co-parented well and informally agreed to use Father’s address, the
    former marital home also located in Raymore, as the children’s address for mailing and educational
    purposes so the children could attend school in Father’s neighborhood. This arrangement worked
    satisfactorily until August of 2018, when Mother provided notice to Father that she was moving
    from her apartment in Raymore to a home in Overland Park, Kansas, with her boyfriend. Mother
    additionally expressed an intention to enroll the children in school in Kansas.
    Father objected to Mother’s relocation plan, preferring the children remain enrolled in their
    current school district. Father additionally filed a Motion to Modify the Judgment of Dissolution
    of Marriage through which he sought a modification to the custody arrangement, the termination
    of child support, and the designation of his address as the children’s for mailing and educational
    purposes.
    Both parties testified before the trial court and submitted their own parenting plans and
    Form 14 child support calculations.1 Mother offered three separate parenting plans, two of which
    designated her Kansas address as the children’s for mailing and educational purposes and one
    listing Father’s address in Raymore. Mother also submitted three Form 14s, each finding that she
    be the recipient of child support in differing amounts. Father offered his own parenting plan and
    Form 14. His parenting plan provided for his address to be used for mailing and educational
    purposes and afforded him additional parenting time. Father’s Form 14 produced a presumed child
    support amount of $28 to be paid each month by Mother to Father.
    1
    At the time of the hearing, the children were eight and five years old.
    2
    The trial court overruled Father’s objection to Mother’s relocation2 and granted his motion
    to modify, finding that Mother’s relocation was a change in circumstances warranting a change to
    the custody arrangement, child support obligation, and other provisions of the original dissolution
    judgment. The trial court adopted Father’s parenting plan, which resulted in almost equal parenting
    time, and adopted his Form 14 but found the presumed child support amount was “unjust and
    inappropriate under the circumstances and in light of the parties sharing of other expenses related
    to the raising of the boys[.]” The trial court ordered that neither party owed child support to the
    other and that Father’s previous child support obligation would cease on the date of the judgment.
    Mother appeals from that judgment, but only as to child support.
    Standard of Review
    “Our review of a modification of dissolution of marriage decree is limited to determining
    whether the judgment is supported by substantial evidence, whether it is against the weight of the
    evidence, or whether it erroneously declares or applies the law.” Blomenkamp v. Blomenkamp, 
    462 S.W.3d 429
    , 432 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015) (citing Selby v. Smith, 
    193 S.W.3d 819
    , 824 (Mo. App.
    W.D. 2006)). When conducting our review, “we view the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the judgment, disregarding all contrary evidence and giving deference to the trial court’s
    determinations of credibility.”
    Id. (citing Mehra v.
    Mehra, 
    819 S.W.2d 351
    , 353 (Mo. banc 1991)).
    Whether to modify child support is a decision that “lies within the discretion of the trial court,
    whose decision will be reversed ‘only for abuse of discretion or misapplication of the law.’”
    Id. (quoting Selby, 193
    S.W.3d at 824).
    2
    The trial court’s denial of Father’s objection to Mother’s relocation is not at issue in this appeal.
    3
    Discussion
    Mother raises two claims of trial court error on appeal. In Point I, she alleges that the trial
    court erroneously applied the law by terminating Father’s child support obligation arguing the law
    “should [ ] presume[ ] that the higher income parent is the party obligated to pay child support.”
    In Point II, Mother asserts that termination of Father’s child support obligation was against the
    weight of the evidence, arguing that Father’s Form 14 contained a “mathematical error” and that
    the statutory factors contained in section 452.340, RSMo3 support a finding that Father should
    have been the party presumed to pay child support.
    “To determine child support, Section 452.340, RSMo,[ ] and Rule 88.01 mandate the use of
    the Form 14 guidelines.” Edwards v. Edwards, 
    475 S.W.3d 218
    , 222 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015) (citing
    Woolridge v. Wooldridge, 
    915 S.W.2d 372
    , 378 (Mo. App. W.D. 1996)). Those guidelines require
    the trial court to “calculate the presumed correct child support amount pursuant to Form 14, either
    by accepting one of the parties’ proposed calculations, or by rejecting the parties proposed Form
    14s and preparing its own.”
    Id. (citing Roberts v.
    Roberts, 
    391 S.W.3d 921
    , 922 (Mo. App. W.D.
    2013)). After considering all relevant circumstances,4 the trial court must then determine whether
    to rebut the presumed child support amount as unjust and inappropriate.
    Id. at 222-23.
    “If the [trial]
    court rejects the presumed amount as unjust and inappropriate, it then uses its discretion to
    determine the proper amount.” Richardson v. Richardson, 
    545 S.W.3d 895
    , 897 (Mo. App. E.D.
    2018) (citing Thorp v. Thorp, 
    390 S.W.3d 871
    , 882 (Mo. App. E.D. 2013)).
    3
    Statutory references are to the Missouri Revised Statutes, updated through the 2018 supplement.
    4
    Pursuant to section 452.340.1, the trial court is directed to consider 1) the financial needs and resources of the child;
    2) the financial resources and needs of the parents; 3) the standard of living the child would have enjoyed had the
    marriage not been dissolved; 4) the physical and emotional condition of the child, and the child’s educational needs;
    5) the child’s physical and legal custody arrangements, including the amount of time the child spends with each parent
    and the reasonable expenses associated with the custody and visitation arrangements; and 6) the reasonable work-
    related child care expenses of each parent.
    4
    While Mother’s points on appeal take different legal paths, at their core, both are directed
    at the same alleged error – that the trial court erred by accepting Father’s Form 14 because it
    designated her as the parent presumed to pay child support. Mother’s focus is understandable as
    the designation in the Form 14 as to which parent is presumed to pay child support (and which
    parent is presumed to received child support) impacts the presumed child support calculation
    generated by the Form 14. However, for the reasons explained below, we reject Mother’s claims
    of error.
    Point I
    In her first point, Mother asserts that the trial court erroneously applied the law when it
    found that she was the parent presumed to pay child support, arguing that “when parties are sharing
    joint legal and joint physical custody, exercising equal parenting time, and equally sharing
    expenses relating to the children, it should be presumed that the higher income parent is the party
    obligated to pay child support.”
    Mother fails to identify any specific statute or legal principle recognized under Missouri
    law establishing the presumption she now argues the trial court misapplied. In fact, such a
    presumption does not exist.5 This purely public policy-based argument does not reflect the current
    state of the law, and we will not find that the trial court erroneously applied a law that does not
    exist.
    We recognize that the court’s designation on Form 14 of one parent as the “Parent
    Receiving Support” and the other as the “Parent Paying Support” can dramatically affect the child-
    support calculation. For example, in this case the designation of Mother as the “Parent Paying
    5
    The lack of such binding precedent is plainly acknowledged by Mother’s point relied on that asserts that “it should
    be presumed that the higher income parent is the party obligated to pay child support.”
    5
    Support” resulted in a presumed child support amount payable to Father which was de minimis, or
    zero. On the other hand, if Father had been designated as the “Parent Paying Support,” and leaving
    the relevant numbers completely unchanged, Form 14 would have produced a presumed child
    support amount, payable to Mother, of almost $700 per month.
    Even though the designation of the parties as payor and payee on Form 14 can so
    dramatically affect the child support calculation, Form 14 and its supporting instructions and
    commentary fail to provide any explicit guidance to the court or to the parties as to how to choose
    the parent designated as the “Parent Paying Support,” and how to choose the parent designated as
    the “Parent Receiving Support.” The choice of payor and recipient may be particularly difficult in
    a case like this one, where the parties have been awarded equal parenting time. Section 452.340.8
    specifies that the Supreme Court’s child support guidelines “shall address how the amount of child
    support shall be calculated when an award of joint physical custody results in the child or children
    spending equal or substantially equal time with both parents.” In response to the statute, the Form
    14 guidelines were amended to discuss the impact of an award of equal parenting time on the line
    11 credit for periods of overnight visitation or custody exercised by the paying parent. The
    guidelines are silent, however, concerning the designation of the parents as payor or payee when
    substantially equal parenting time is awarded.
    Under current law, the circuit court was not required to designate Mother as the “Parent
    Receiving Support,” or to presume that she should be afforded that designation, simply because
    she had a lower income than Father. We have therefore rejected Mother’s first Point, which argues
    that the circuit court misapplied the law. Although not subject to any explicit legal standards, the
    circuit court was required to determine the appropriate designations of Father and Mother on Form
    14 in the exercise of its discretion. Mother has not argued that the circuit court abused its discretion,
    6
    in the circumstances of this case, in designating Father as the “Parent Receiving Support;” nor has
    she argued that the trial court abused its discretion in determining that the presumed child support
    amount calculated on Form 14 was unjust and inappropriate, and instead ordering that neither party
    pay child support. We therefore do not address either question.
    Point I denied.
    Point II
    In her second point, Mother asserts that the trial court’s judgment terminating Father’s
    child support obligation and finding that neither party was required to pay child support was
    against the weight of the evidence. Mother’s puts forth a dual-pronged argument claiming that the
    Form 14 adopted by the trial court contained “a mathematical error” and then contending that “all
    other evidence presented pursuant to the statutory factors of [section 452.340.1, RSMo] support
    the finding that [Father] should be the party presumed to pay child support.”
    “‘A judgment is against the weight of the evidence only if the trial court could not have
    reasonably found, from the evidence at trial, the existence of a fact that is necessary to sustain the
    judgment.’” Severn v. Severn, 
    567 S.W.3d 246
    , 255 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019) (quoting Hughes v.
    Hughes, 
    505 S.W.3d 458
    , 467 (Mo. App. E.D. 2016)). “This challenge assumes the ‘existence of
    substantial evidence supporting a proposition necessary to sustain a judgment, but, nevertheless,
    challenges the probative value of that evidence to induce belief in that proposition when viewed
    in the context of the entirety of the evidence before the trier of fact.’” Hopkins v. Hopkins, 
    449 S.W.3d 793
    , 802 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014) (quoting Sauvain v. Acceptance Indem. Ins. Co., 
    437 S.W.3d 296
    , 304 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014). An against the weight of the evidence challenge will be
    successful “‘only when [this] court has a firm belief that the judgment is wrong.’”
    Id. (quoting Pearson v.
    Koster, 
    367 S.W.3d 36
    , 43 (Mo. banc 2012)).
    7
    Preservation of claimed “mathematical error”
    A review of the record reveals that Mother did not object to the admission of Father’s Form
    14 or challenge its calculations at trial. When a party fails to make a proper and timely objection,
    the issue is not preserved for appellate review and can be reviewed only for plain error.6 See Smith
    v. White, 
    114 S.W.3d 407
    , 412 (Mo. App. W.D. 2003).
    Mother did raise in a post-trial motion that Father’s Form 14 contained an inaccurate
    figure7 relating to the amount paid by Father for the children’s health insurance premiums.
    However, the only relief requested by Mother relating to this alleged error was that “the Judgment
    and Order of Modification should be amended to reflect the correct ‘Line 6c’ amount of $233.95
    per month in health insurance premiums on behalf of the minor children.” Mother’s motion did
    not include a calculation quantifying how her proposed adjustment to Line 6c would have impacted
    the presumed child support amount produced by Father’s Form 14 or address the relationship
    between the alleged “mathematical error” and a recalculated presumed child support amount to the
    trial court’s ultimate finding rebutting the original presumed child support amount as being unjust
    and inappropriate. Mother perpetuates this failure to quantify the effect that use of the 2019 health
    insurance premiums would have had on the presumed child support amount produced by Father’s
    Form 14 on appeal. Nevertheless, Father does not dispute that the 2019 health insurance premium
    6
    Under plain error review, “[p]lain errors affecting substantial rights may be considered on appeal, in the discretion
    of the court . . . when the court finds that manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice has resulted therefrom.” Rule
    84.13(c). “Even then, the appellant may not invoke plain error ‘to cure the mere failure to make proper and timely
    objections.’” 
    Smith, 114 S.W.3d at 412
    (quoting Roy v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co., 43 S.w.3d 351, 363-64 (Mo. App. W.D.
    2001) (additional citation omitted).
    7
    Father’s Form 14 used the children’s health insurance premiums paid by him in 2018 ($369.00 per month) instead
    of the updated amount he was paying in 2019. Mother does not dispute the accuracy of the amounts paid in 2018, but
    argues that Father’s pay stubs from 2018 that would support the amount paid during that calendar year were not
    introduced into evidence.
    8
    costs should have been used on Line 6c of his Form 14 and, because we prefer to resolve appeals
    on the merits, we will review this claim of error ex gratia.
    Mathematical Error
    The “mathematical error” related to Line 6c of Father’s Form 14 appears to be the linchpin
    to Mother’s claim of trial court error in this point on appeal. However, as noted above, Mother has
    wholly failed to address the impact that use of the 2019 health insurance premium costs would
    have had on the presumed child support amount produced by Father’s Form 14 or, more broadly,
    how such a change would have affected the trial court’s finding rebutting the presumed child
    support amount and ordering that neither parent would be required to pay child support to the other
    based on the sharing of expenses related to the raising of the children. This failure by Mother is
    not insignificant. Based on this Court’s calculations, use of the 2019 health insurance premium
    cost would have generated only a de minimis deviation from the presume child support amount
    produced by Father’s Form 14 that, in the end, the trial court deemed unjust and inappropriate.
    Mother’s focus on this “mathematical error” to disturb her designation as the parent
    presumed to pay child support in the Form 14 accepted by the trial court suffers from a more
    fundamental flaw. Mother has not provided, and this Court has not independently found, the
    existence of a direct link between the amount of health insurance premiums paid by Father and
    which parent should be presumed to be the payor of child support in the Form 14. Indeed, the
    Court has been made aware of no statutory directive or guidance related to the preparation and use
    of a Form 14 that creates such a nexus.8 Absent such a relationship, we are not persuaded that an
    8
    As previously noted, this Court recognizes that use of the 2019 costs for the children’s health insurance premiums
    would result in a slight adjustment to the presumed child support amount generated by Father’s Form 14. However,
    Mother’s complaint is not specifically directed at the presumed child support amount. Instead, Mother’s grievance is
    more abstract – that it was against the weight of the evidence for the trial court to accept a Form 14 that listed her as
    the parent presumed to pay child support. Mother has failed to draw a linear connection between the complained about
    “mathematical error” and her being listed as the presumed payor of child support for Form 14 purposes. In fact, in her
    9
    alleged error related to the figure used on Line 6c of Father’s Form 14 would independently
    produce the result sought by Mother – that designation of her as the parent presumed to pay child
    support was against the weight of the evidence.
    Statutory Factors
    Mother further argues that the statutory factors contained in section 452.340.1, supported
    a finding that Father, and not her, should have been designated the parent presumed to pay child
    support and that the trial court’s adoption of Father’s Form 14 that designated Mother as the parent
    presumed to pay child support was against the weight of the evidence. On appeal, Mother
    substantially ignores the nature of an against the weight of the evidence challenge by leaning
    heavily on evidence she views favorable to her position while essentially disregarding contrary
    evidence.9 She additionally gives minimal recognition that the statutory factors that she now
    embraces are the same considerations that guided the trial court to rebut the presumed child support
    amount produced by Father’s Form 14. In this regard, the trial court explicitly ordered that neither
    party would pay child support to the other “in light of the parties sharing of other expenses related
    to the raising of the boys”—a finding that Mother does not directly challenge on appeal.
    Indeed, Mother must ultimately overcome the trial court’s finding that, under the attendant
    circumstances, neither party should pay child support to the other parent. We are not convinced
    that, in light of this record, the “mathematical error” identified by Mother, either independently or
    briefing to this Court, Mother acknowledges that “there is no explicit guidance on how it is decided who is the parent
    obligated to pay support and who is the parent entitled to receive it.”
    9
    Mother emphasizes the income disparity between the parents and broadly asserts that “all of the evidence presented
    pursuant to the factors of R.S.Mo. §452.340.1 contradict the trial court’s ruling and supports the opposite finding that
    [Father], not [Mother], should be the parent presumed to pay child support.” This characterization of the evidence is
    not accurate. For instance, Mother was relocating into the home of her boyfriend thereby reducing her living expenses,
    Father pays the health insurance premiums for the children, the parties equally share other costs associated with the
    raising of the children, and the trial court adopted Father’s parenting plan which increased Father’s parenting time and
    changed the children’s address for mailing and educational purposes to his residence, which is located within the
    school district the children will be attending.
    10
    in combination with the statutory factors contained in section 452.340.1, so tilted the probative
    force of the evidence to compel the conclusion that the trial court’s judgment was against the
    weight of the evidence. See 
    Hopkins, 449 S.W.3d at 803
    (“While [Mother] has pointed to evidence
    that might have supported a conclusion contrary to the trial court’s judgment, the conclusion
    argued by [Mother] is not the only conclusion that the trial court could have reached.”).
    Point II denied.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    ____________________________
    Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Judge
    All Concur
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: WD83305

Judges: Edward R. Ardini, Jr., Presiding Judge

Filed Date: 11/10/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021