DocketNumber: No. 77-2519-E-2, CA 19543
Judges: Hoomissen, Richardson, Thornton
Filed Date: 8/10/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Father appeals from an order denying his motion to require the noncustodial mother to pay child support for the two minor children of the parties, Kenneth, bom October 14,1968, and Darrell, bom May 1,1972. In denying the order, the trial court nevertheless required mother, an income tax auditor with the state, to pay one half the medical and dental bills not reimbursed by mother’s state paid health insurance.
On appeal, father argues that the evidence showed a material change of circumstances, namely, that mother has completed her education and is now earning a substantial salary as an income tax auditor and is well able to pay child support.
The parties apparently separated in March, 1977. Dissolution proceedings were filed by father in October, 1977. Father was awarded custody of the children in November, 1978, following the trial of the dissolution proceeding. At the time of that hearing, mother was a student at Southern Oregon State College. She was meeting her financial needs during the period of her schooling through $1,800 in lump sum spousal support (which the court ordered father to pay) student loans and the proceeds of the property settlement in the dissolution.
Father was, on November 6,1978, earning a salary of $17,200. At the time of the hearing involved in this appeal father was a general manager and part owner of a tire and oil business. His salary was nominally listed at $2,000 a month, although he testified that he had not yet received any salary from the business. He estimated that he expected that his monthly take home pay from the new business would be $1,450, and that his current expenses were $1,130.55. Father claimed that he had incurred an additional $246.64 in expenses during the past month for the children only. He testified that he did not expect to receive any income other than his salary from the business for the next four to five years. Father had remarried and was living in the same home he and the children had resided in at the time of the dissolution and was driving the same car he owned in 1978.
Mother argues that father’s financial position has greatly improved since the dissolution; that father is entitled to receive one third of the profits of his firm’s business, which totalled $111,000 last year; that father and his present wife had a combined net worth of $105,911 in August, 1980; and that last year father’s family had a disposable income of approximately $38,000 after payment of expenses, including the needs of the two children.
Both children are faced with the prospect of needing substantial orthodontic work. It was estimated that the cost of this work for just the oldest child would be in the vicinity of $2,000.
Reversed and remanded with instructions. No costs to either party.