IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE FILED
September 22, 1999
BRENDA F. SANDUSKY )
) Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Appeal No. Appellate Court Clerk
) 01A01-9808-CH-00416
v. )
DANNY J. SANDUSKY ) Wayne County Chancery
) No. 7900
Defendant/Appellee. )
)
COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT
FOR WAYNE COUNTY
THE HONORABLE JIM T. HAMILTON PRESIDING
W.C. KEATON
102 NORTH COURT STREET
HOHENWALD, TENNESSEE 38462
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT
JAMES Y. ROSS, SR.
102 PUBLIC SQUARE NORTH
WAYNESBORO, TENNESSEE 38485
ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE
REVERSED AND REMANDED
PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, JUDGE
CONCUR:
CANTRELL, J.
KOCH, J.
OPINION
This post-divorce proceeding involves questions of child support,
payment of college expenses for a child over the age of majority, and payment
of attorney fees and costs. Brenda Sandusky ("Mother") brought the underlying
contempt action alleging her former husband, Danny Sandusky ("Father"), failed
to pay the previously ordered amount of child support. Father asserted a counter-
petition seeking a reduction in his child support payments. After several
hearings, the trial court substantially reduced Father's child support obligation,
ordered Father to pay the specific college expenses of his daughter, ordered
payment of child support arrearage at $100 per month, and declined to award
Mother attorney fees. Mother appealed this disposition. For the following
reasons, we reverse and remand.1
When the parties were divorced on April 18, 1988, on the ground of
irreconcilable differences, Father was the sole owner of Sandusky Trucking
Company and an independent timber contractor. At that time, the parties' two
children, a son and a daughter, were minors. The parties' Marital Dissolution
Agreement ("MDA") specifically addressed their care and support, granting
Mother physical custody while Father agreed to reimburse Mother for all
reasonable expenditures associated with the support and maintenance of the
children.
This arrangement gave rise to Mother's first contempt petition. It was
1
As a preliminary matter, we observe that less than the entire record below was
designated to be part of the record on appeal. See Tenn. R. App. P. 24 (a). Even so, Father
unsuccessfully objected to the extent of the record so designated, arguing that it should be
limited to only those issues raised in his July 1997 counter-petition for modification and
Mother's June 1997 contempt petition. Nevertheless, Father attached some additional,
uncertified documents to his brief. It should be noted that this court's review is limited to the
record presented to the trial court and designated for inclusion in the appellate record. See id.
No motion to supplement the record on appeal was filed. See Tenn. R. App. P. 24 (e).
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filed in January 1994, alleging that Father refused to reimburse Mother for more
than $15,000 in reasonable child care expenses. Father filed a counter-
complaint seeking modification of his child support obligation. After a hearing,
the trial court ordered Father to reimburse $10,000 of Mother's expenditures and
set his child support obligation at a definite monthly payment of $2,666.67.
This court affirmed the trial court's decision, including, specifically, the trial
court’s attributing to Mr. Sandusky’s income from the trucking company he had
transferred upon inadequate consideration to his father. Sandusky v. Sandusky,
Appeal No. 01-A-01-9605-CH-00209, 1996 WL 730288 (Tenn. App. December
20, 1996) (no Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed).
Mother filed a second successful petition for contempt for nonpayment
of child support in March 1996, resulting in a finding of contempt on April 22,
1996. In March 1997, Father was again held in contempt for failure to comply
with the 1996 order requiring him to pay child support. After noting that Father
had effectively stated in open court that he had no intention of complying with
the orders to pay the amounts he owed Mother, the court found him in contempt
and ordered him to pay $46,864.96 in arrearage.
After an April 1997 hearing, the court determined that Father still owed
$23,648.27 and again ordered him to pay the arrearage immediately. The court
found that Father had conveyed all of his interests in real property to his new
wife and to relatives. The court agreed that when the oldest child, who had
reached her majority, graduated from high school, Father’s child support
obligation would be reduced and ordered said reduction from $2,666.67 to
$1,750. The court also continued the case for later consideration of Father’s
petition to reduce child support payment, stating that if any reduction were later
granted, it would be applied retroactively.
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After the daughter graduated, instead of paying $1,750, Father began
paying $688 per month, which he asserted was 21% of his income. Mother then
sought contempt sanctions on the ground that Father was behind in his child
support payments.
When the daughter chose to attend Columbia State Community College
and Father limited his support to tuition, books and $600 per month in living
expenses, Mother added a claim that Father had breached the MDA, which
contained a provision obligating Father to pay the reasonable expenses
associated with the children's college educations.
In December 1997 and January 1998, the trial court held hearings on
the various outstanding issues. After the hearings, the court reduced Father's
child support payment from $1,750 to $865. The court ordered Father to pay for
tuition and books and $600 per month toward his daughter’s college education
pursuant to the MDA. The trial court permitted Father to pay his $6,372
arrearage in $100 per month payments. The court did not award any attorney
fees. After the trial court denied Mother's motion to alter and amend the
judgment, she commenced this appeal.
I.
Ordinarily our review of a trial court's findings of fact is de novo with
a presumption of correctness. Tenn. R. App. P. 13 (d). Here, the trial court made
no factual findings when disposing of this case, which leaves nothing to trigger
the presumption of correctness. See Archer v. Archer, 907 S.W.2d 412, 416
(Tenn. App. 1995). Accordingly, our review is plenary.
II.
The first issue arising from the order under appeal is whether the trial
court correctly determined the monthly amount of support due after May 1997.
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In April of 1997, the court recognized that Father’s support obligation would be
reduced as of the June 1997 payment, because the 18-year old daughter would
be graduating from high school, leaving only one minor child for whom child
support was due. Therefore, the court reduced Father’s monthly payment to
$1,750. This amount constituted 21% of Father’s net income as of the last order
setting support ($100,000). The court, however, delayed ruling on Father’s
pending motion to reduce the support on the basis of his reduced income, but
stated that if the court were to later reduce the amount of the award below
$1,750, Father would be given credit back to May of 1997. In the order under
appeal, the trial court reduced Father's monthly child support payments to $865.2
Mother argues that the evidence preponderates against the trial court's decision.
As the party seeking modification of the previous child support award,
Father had the burden of demonstrating that there existed a significant variance3
between the amount previously set and currently ordered and the amount which
would be due under the Child Support Guidelines based on current
circumstances. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(a)(1) (Supp. 1998); Turner v.
Turner, 919 S.W.2d 340, 342-343, 345 (Tenn. App. 1995).
Father asserted such a variance because his income had been reduced
since the prior setting of child support. He testified that his 1996 income, as
reflected in his W-2 form was $33,000. His salary from Sandusky Trucking
Company, of which he is the sole stockholder, was reduced in 1996. The record
does not include Father’s petition to modify child support. The transcript of the
2
The court made no finding regarding Father’s specific income. According to the
Guidelines, this figure would indicate a net annual income of $49,451.76 or a gross annual
income of $70,200. We can find no basis for the court’s implicit determination that Mr.
Sandusky’s net income had decreased by a little over 50%.
3
A significant variance is defined as “at least 15% if the current support is one hundred
dollars ($100.00) or greater per month”. Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. ch. 1240-2-4-.02(3) (1994).
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hearing and the briefs, however, make it clear that Father’s argument that he is
entitled to a reduction is based solely on his reduced salary. Father’s salary from
his company was $50,000 in 1991, and at the time of entry of the previous order
of support, it was $41,600. It is now $31,800, and he receives $1,200 per year
from another position. Thus, his earned income has decreased only $8,600.
Father’s child support obligation was set by the court in October 1995.
In its order, the trial court specifically stated that the child support award was
calculated as 32% of an income of $100,000, implicitly finding that amount to
be Father’s net income. Without determining the specific amount of Father’s
income, the trial court included Father’s admitted income, profits from Sandusky
Trucking Company and other income 4. On appeal, this court affirmed,
specifically holding that the solely-owned company’s income was attributable to
Mr. Sandusky. 5
In its 1996 opinion, this Court found that the trucking company had a
substantial net worth (the 1992 tax return showed the stockholder equity to be
$545,596) and had consistently paid Mr. Sandusky a salary of $40,000 to
$50,000 per year prior to 1995. Since his support obligation was originally set
on the basis of his salary and the income from his business available to him, we
must consider any decrease or offsetting increase in the business income. The
evidence at the hearing herein regarding Sandusky Trucking Company’s
4
A comparison of Father’s potentially income-producing assets at the time of the
original setting of child support with those at the time of the hearing on his petition to reduce
his support obligation reveals no significant change in those assets. Although Father had
transferred all the stock of Sandusky Trucking Company to his father for $1,000 at the time of
the original setting of the support amount, the court attributed income from that company to
Father. By the time of the hearing herein, ownership of the company had been transferred back
to Father. Similarly, Father testified that he had earlier transferred other assets, primarily real
estate, to his present wife and to relatives, and that those assets had been transferred back to
him before the hearing herein.
5
This Court held that Mr. Sandusky’s transfer to his father of all the stock of the
company for $1,000, was void to defeat the interest of his children in appropriate support.
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financial performance and Mr. Sandusky’s salary history is reflected in this table:
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
Gross $833,169 $861,690 $910,630 $904,701 $1,211,260
Receipts
Gross $784,366 $765,562 $819,963 $763,359 $811,475
Profits
Total $799,356 $797,649 $843,479 $772,331 $815,006
Income
Taxable $79,281 $83,810 $127,128 $397 $8,594
Income
Total $572,275 $607,583 $759,264 $710,515 $814,209
Assets
Retained $449,923 $516,338 $596,875 $596,875 $603,604
Earnings
Salary $41,600 $41,600 $40,800 $40,800 $31,200
Sandusky Trucking Company continues to have substantial worth. Its
total assets in 1996 were $814,209, with $181,347 in debt. Significantly,
retained earnings have increased from approximately $450,000 in 1992 to over
$600,000 in 1996. Included in the expenses and deductions were claims for
depreciation: Sandusky Trucking Company claimed $68,947 in 1992-1993,
$79,522, in 1993-1994, $105,164 in 1994-1995 and $96,926 in 1995-1996.
Father testified that his company’s net taxable income and cash on hand
had decreased because, on advice from his accountant, he had acquired and
maintained assets and investment properties, such as equipment and tracts of
timber, in order to avoid or reduce corporate income taxes. His accountant
testified that this type of reduction of taxable corporate income is normal in the
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course of business.
Father’s accountant defined retained earnings as “a cumulative profit
figure that has not been paid out in dividends. The corporation has just retained
those earnings.” He also stated that Father could not spend the corporation’s
earnings unless the money was first paid to Father as salary or dividend, and then
it would be taxable to Father as personal income.
In Koch v. Koch, 874 S.W.2d 571 (Tenn. App. 1993), this Court
acknowledged the difficulty in establishing income for child support purposes,
of a self-employed sole owner of a business. In that case, however, the court
discounted the father’s assertions that he had no income from his business, where
the father stated he had made only capital withdrawals. The court looked at the
gross receipts, gross income and other figures relative to the business and noted
that the gross income in excess of $165,000 per year should provide a nice
income to the proprietor. Koch, 874 S.W.2d at 578.
Self-employment requires a different method of calculating an obligor
parent’s income for child support purposes. The Guidelines require the court to
consider all income of the obligor parent, and define gross income as including:
all income from any source (before taxes and other deductions), whether earned
or unearned . . . and includes income from self-employment. Income from self-
employment includes income from business operations and rental properties, etc.,
less reasonable expenses necessary to produce such income. Depreciation, home
offices, excessive promotional [sic], excessive travel, excessive car expenses,
or excessive personal expenses, etc., should not be considered reasonable
expenses.
Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. ch. 1240-2-4-.03 (3)(a) (1994).
A self-employment situation where an obligor spouse or parent can
control the salary he or she receives may raise issues requiring the court to
examine “whether the potential exists for the obligor to manipulate his reported
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income either by failing to aggressively solicit business or by inflating his
expenses, thereby minimizing his income." Beem v. Beem, No. 02A01-9511-CV-
00252, 1996 WL 6364491 at *4 (Tenn. App. Nov. 5, 1996) (no Tenn. R. App.
P. 11 application filed). Another way to manipulate reported income is to pay
a lower salary and not pay dividends, allowing the corporation to accumulate as
retained earnings profits which would otherwise be distributed as dividends to
the sole shareholder.
Where a business is solely owned, the company’s accumulation of
retained earnings can be considered in determining the income available to the
sole shareholder who has set his or her own salary. See Higgs v. Higgs, No.
01A01-9702-CV-0057, 1997 WL 691530 at * 3 (Tenn. App. Nov. 7, 1997) (no
Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed) (in arguing his alimony obligation should
be reduced, husband relied upon his salary, ignoring the fact that the retained
earning of his corporation were available to him); Needham v. Needham, No.
03A01-9706-GS-00221, 1997 WL 789953 at * 7 (Tenn. App. Dec. 23, 1997)
(perm. app. denied June 22, 1998) (in determining whether husband’s solely
owned company’s value had increased, the court observed that had husband paid
himself dividends and larger salary, they would have been marital property).
The financial condition of Sandusky Trucking Company is such that it
could pay its sole shareholder a larger salary or issue dividends. Father’s
explanation for lowering his own salary was that he now needed additional help
with some of the labor involved in his business. No explanation was given for
the lack of dividend income.
We are unconvinced that Father’s reduced salary from the company he
owns demonstrates an actual reduction in income justifying a decrease in his
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child support obligation. An obligor parent cannot avoid a support obligation by
simply arranging a smaller salary while a solely-owned business prospers.
Further, Mr. Sandusky’s business decision to increase his company’s inventory
and assets resulted in the lowering of the company’s taxable income. While he
was certainly free to make those decisions as a business owner, that action, the
retention of earnings, and the lowering of his salary resulted in understating his
personal income. When, however, the money which would have been available
to him as personal income is considered, we are unable to find a reduction in his
income. See Craft v. Craft, No. 01A01-9609-CH-00417, 1997 WL 122809 at *
3-4 (Tenn. App. March 19, 1997) (no Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed).
This court and the trial court have previously determined that the
potential income from Sandusky Trucking Company is properly considered in
determining Mr. Sandusky’s income for purposes of setting child support. In
light of the financial condition of that company, as compared to its condition
when the award was originally set, we find no justification for the reduction of
Father's child support obligation and reverse that decision. Child support shall
remain at the amount set in the April 1997 order, $1,750 per month. Arrearage
shall be calculated from April 1997 and must be paid within thirty (30) days of
the entry date of this opinion. The interest rate set in Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-
101(a)(5) shall apply to the arrearage accruing between April 1997 and the
January 28, 1998 order modifying the child support. The trial court's order
permitting Father to pay $6,371 in arrearage arising after April 1997 in $100
monthly installments is vacated.
In light of this disposition, we need not reach Mother's contention that
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depreciation was improperly included in Father's income.6 But see Tenn. Comp.
R. & Regs. ch. 1240-2-4-.03 (3)(a) (providing that depreciation is not a
permissible deduction when calculating the gross income of self-employed
individuals for child support purposes); accord Burchfield v. Nave, No. 03A01-
9308-JV-00271, 1994 WL 13374 (Tenn. App. January 21, 1994) (Tenn. R .App.
P. 11 application denied). Our decision also obviates the need to address the
issues relating to the propriety of reducing child support while Father was in
contempt, the propriety of allowing Father to pay the arrearage at the monthly
rate of $100 and the amount of interest owed.
III.
Mother maintains that the trial court erred in its calculation of Father's
obligation for his daughter's college education. Father responds that the trial
court properly construed the MDA in his favor, applying a reasonableness
standard which more accurately reflected the parties' intent than the actual
language of the agreement.
In the MDA, Father undertook voluntary contractual obligations to
support the children's education. See Penland v. Penland, 521 S.W.2d 222, 224-
225 (Tenn. 1975). The pertinent provisions of the MDA stated:
In the event that any or all of the parties' children should
desire to attend college or vocational school upon his or her
graduation from high school, the husband agrees to provide
a (4) four year college or vocational education for that child.
The expenses to be paid by the husband toward the college
or vocational education for each child shall include, but not
be limited to, tuition, room, board, fees, clothing, medical
and dental expenses, transportation to and from school,
books, supplies and a reasonable spending allowance. Each
child shall have the right after consultation with both parents,
to select the college or vocational institution he or she desires
to attend.
6
As set out earlier, Sandusky Trucking reported significant depreciation on its tax
returns.
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Father’s agreement to pay his children’s college expenses is
enforceable and, as with other contracts, will be enforced in accordance with its
terms. See Haas v. Haas, No. 02-A-01-9604-CV-00073, 1997 WL 194852 at *3
(Tenn. App. April 22, 1988) (no Tenn. R .App. P. 11 application filed). There is
no ambiguity in the terms of this agreement. Therefore, the courts will enforce
Father’s agreement to pay tuition, room, board, fees, clothing, medical and dental
expenses, transportation to and from school, books, supplies, and a reasonable
spending allowance. The only real issue, then, is the reasonable cost of those
items.
Both the daughter and the Vice President for Student Services at the
daughter's college testified as to the expenses involved in attending Columbia
State Community College. The daughter testified that her actual monthly
expenses during five months of attending college were $1,287.47 not including
her car payment, housing, or health or car insurance, all of which were provided
by Mother. Mother also paid for medical expenses not covered by insurance and
$50 per week spending money. The daughter's expenses included utilities,
phone, clothing and personal items, and spending money. The daughter testified
that Father paid $581 to cover tuition for one semester, paid a total of $290.52
for books, and gave her a used computer. She stated that Sandusky Trucking
Company wrote her a check in the amount of $300.
The vice president of the college testified that the predicted two-
semester (9-month) budget7 for an average in-state independent student was
$11,511, which included tuition, fees, books, supplies, room, board, clothing,
personal expenses, and transportation costs. The figure for attending without a
7
This is the budget submitted by Columbia State Community College to the U.S.
Department of Education.
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summer break was $14,414. The two-semester figure breaks down to
approximately $1,153 per month, excluding tuition. Tuition and fees were $1,132
for two semesters at the time of the hearing.
Father testified that, in addition to paying for tuition and books, he was
willing to make monthly payments of $500. The trial court set Father's
obligation for daughter's living expenses at $600 per month, in addition to tuition
and books. We are unable to find evidence in the record to support that figure
or for the conclusion that that amount was sufficient to cover the daughter's
expenses. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d).
We therefore reverse the trial court's decision on Father's obligations
regarding his daughter's college education. We find the figures presented by the
Vice President of Columbia State Community College to be reasonable. See
Moore v. Moore, 603 S.W.2d 736, 739 (Tenn. App. 1980). Father is therefore
ordered to pay the daughter's tuition, including fees, when it is due, and in the
amount billed by the college. In addition, Father is ordered to pay $1,153 per
month (which figure includes the allowance for books) in expenses for two
semesters (9 months) each year for a four year education, so long as she attends
college full time. We do not interpret Father’s agreement to include expenses for
attending year-round.
IV.
Mother maintains the trial court abused its discretion by failing to order
Father to pay her attorney fees. Father responds that the ruling was proper
because Mother presented no evidence that she was unable to pay them.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-103(c) provides:
The plaintiff spouse may recover from the defendant spouse, and the spouse or
other person to whom the custody of the child, or children, is awarded may
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recover from the other spouse reasonable attorney fees incurred in enforcing any
decree for alimony and/or child support, or in regard to any suit or action
concerning the adjudication of the custody or the change of custody of any child,
or children, of the parties, both upon the original divorce hearing and at any
subsequent hearing, which fees may be fixed and allowed by the court, before
whom such action or proceeding is pending, in the discretion of such court.
With the adoption of this statute, awards for legal expenses in support
proceedings have become "familiar and almost commonplace" despite some
inconsistencies in their apportionment. Sherrod v. Wix, 849 S.W.2d 780, 785
(Tenn. App. 1992).
In addressing attorney fees, the trial court's sole finding was "that each
party pay their respective attorney fees, each being equally capable of paying
their attorney fees." However, “ability to pay should not be the controlling
consideration with regard to awards for legal expenses in . . . support
proceedings . . . The purpose of these awards is to protect the children's, not the
custodial parent's, legal remedies . . . Accordingly, requiring parents who
precipitate . . . support proceedings to underwrite the costs if their claims are
ultimately found to be unwarranted is appropriate as a matter of policy.” Id.; see
Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d).
Father's conduct in refusing to pay the court-ordered amount of child
support precipitated these proceedings. In contravention of a court order that he
pay $1,750 per month, Father unilaterally determined that his payment should be
lower and only paid $688 per month. Mother has prevailed on the dispositive
issues presented in this appeal -- the decision to reduce Father's child support
payment and on the calculation of the daughter's college expenses. We believe
it is appropriate for Father to pay Mother's legal fees incurred in pursuing this
matter. On remand, the trial court will determine the appropriate reasonable
amounts. We also believe Mother is entitled to such fees on appeal as the
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prevailing party, said fees to be set by the trial court. See Robertson v.
Robertson, No. 03A01-9711-CV-00511, 1998 WL 783339 at * 8 (Tenn. App.
November 9, 1998) (Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application pending).
In summary, we reverse the trial court's decisions reducing the amount
of Mr. Sandusky's child support obligation, calculating the amount of college
expenses due the daughter, and declining to award Mother attorney fees. This
case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs of this
appeal shall be taxed to Mr. Sandusky for which execution may issue.
_______________________________
PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, JUDGE
CONCUR:
________________________________________
BEN H. CANTRELL, PRESIDING JUDGE (M.S)
________________________________________
WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
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The record shows that the trial court held Father in contempt on March
24, 1997 for failure to pay child support found due and owing by the court. The
trial court ordered Father to pay $48,231.63 in arrearage by March 24, 1997 or
be incarcerated. At that hearing, Father stated he had no intention of complying
with the trial court's orders. (TR. 53)
The record before this court further shows that Father owed $23,648.27
in arrearage on April 23, 1997 and had conveyed all his real estate holdings to
his new wife and siblings. (TR. 57) The trial court again held Father in
contempt and ordered him to pay the arrearage or be placed in custody. The fact
that Father was not incarcerated during the December 8, 1997 and January 12,
1998 hearings indicates that he purged himself of the contempt by paying his
initial arrearage in child support.
While Father's unilateral decision to defy the court's order to pay the
full $1750 per month certainly supports a finding of contempt8, the trial court
did not choose to impose that sanction. Compare Mackey v. Cumerlato, 1997
WL 15084, * 4 (August 4, 1987); see also Ball v. Ball, No. 02A01-9709-GS-
00239, 1999 WL (Tenn. App. February 25, 1999). The well-established rule
providing trial courts with broad discretion on whether to impose contempt
sanctions precludes us from finding that that decision constituted an abuse of
discretion. See Robinson v. Air Draulics Engineering Co., 377 S.W.2d 908,
912, 214 Tenn. 30, 37, (1964).
8
Father's decision to pay less than the court-ordered amount of child support created
a new arrearage which the trial court addressed in its January 28, 1998 order.
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