[Cite as Rundo v. Rundo, 2013-Ohio-4305.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
GEAUGA COUNTY, OHIO
ELIZABETH RUNDO, : OPINION
Plaintiff-Appellee, :
CASE NO. 2013-G-3134
- vs - :
THOMAS RUNDO, :
Defendant-Appellant. :
Civil Appeal from the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 06DC000994.
Judgment: Affirmed.
Elizabeth Rundo, pro se, 4230 South East 20th Place, Unit 101, Cape Coral, FL 33904
(Plaintiff-Appellee).
Paul J. Mooney, Law Office of Paul J. Mooney, 3401 Enterprise Parkway, Suite 340,
Beachwood, OH 44122 (For Defendant-Appellant).
TIMOTHY P. CANNON, P.J.
{¶1} Appellant, Thomas Rundo, appeals the judgment of the Geauga County
Court of Common Pleas increasing appellant’s monthly child support obligation. For the
following reasons, we affirm.
{¶2} Appellant and appellee, Elizabeth Rundo, divorced in May 2007. Together
they have three minor children. In November 2008, the parties entered into an Agreed
Entry that resolved, inter alia, daycare expenses. The entry stated:
[D]efendant Thomas Rundo shall pay the amount based on the
percentage from the child support worksheet (currently 74%) of
daycare expenses as incurred by plaintiff for her employment
and/or work related purposes up to the current maximum amount of
$7,400 annually (based on a $10,000 annual daycare expense and
the current percentage.)
[D]efendant Thomas Rundo shall be billed only for his percentage
amount owed from the daycare facility and shall receive from the
daycare facility a statement or invoice. If the defendant is not
satisfied that the daycare is work related, he reserves his right to
file the appropriate motion with the Court.
{¶3} Appellant was ordered to pay $1,567.03 when private medical insurance
was available and cash medical support of $188 per month. Because of the parties’
agreement, daycare expenses were not taken into account when calculating appellant’s
child support obligation.
{¶4} Appellee and the parties’ three children moved to Florida in February
2009. The matter came before the Geauga County Child Support Enforcement Agency
(“CSEA”) for review of the child support calculation. As a result, appellant’s child
support was increased to the sum of $2,117.73 when private medical insurance was
available and cash medical support of $187.58. CSEA awarded an adjustment to
appellee for her childcare expenses for the parties’ three minor children of $6,486 based
upon correspondence and documentation submitted to CSEA by appellee.
{¶5} Appellant challenged this award, indicating it was inconsistent with the
agreed entry of November 2008. The matter came for Administrative Hearing on May
30, 2012, upon the request of appellant. After the hearing, the hearing officer
recommended that appellant’s child support obligation, when private medical insurance
is being provided, shall increase from $522.51 per child per month to $705.91 per
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month for each of the parties’ three children. The hearing officer also found that it was
reasonable for CSEA to include appellee’s daycare costs.
{¶6} Appellant timely filed objections to the administrative findings and
recommendations. The magistrate conducted a hearing on September 14, 2012.
Appellant was represented by counsel, and appellee appeared pro se.
{¶7} At the hearing, the parties testified regarding the arrangement for daycare
expenses. It is apparent from the record that the parties disagreed as to the essential
terms of the agreement. As found by the magistrate, there is no evidence that appellant
has ever paid any share of daycare expenses, at least since appellee moved to Florida.
Appellant testified that he had not received any statement for any daycare facilities
since the agreed judgment of November 2008, except a letter in October 2011.
Conversely, appellee stated that her former attorney had sent a letter to appellant
regarding reimbursement of daycare expenses; this letter, dated April 16, 2009, was
admitted into evidence. The letter dated October 2011 was also admitted into evidence.
To this letter, appellee attached documentation, to wit: a receipt from YMCA of $396 for
the children to be in a daycare during the 2011 Christmas recess; a receipt for $57.75
for a period in March 2012; and a receipt for $453.75 in April 2012.
{¶8} The October 2011 letter and supporting documentation stated that
appellee incurred $544.60 of daycare expenses for the children and requested
appellant’s portion of the payment. Consequently, appellant wrote appellee the
following letter:
I am requesting that you provide documentation from your
employer that shows you worked while the children were in daycare
at PVPV/Rawlings Elementary School Extended Day Program for
the month of October 2011. The documentation can be in a form of
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employee paystubs, employee timesheet, etc from the employer.
The employer’s name along with the dates and time of work need
to be clearly marked.
{¶9} Appellee did not respond, and appellant did not pay anything toward the
daycare costs. Appellant testified that appellee did not follow the procedure in the
agreed judgment entry, i.e., that appellant is to be billed directly from the facility.
Appellee, however, maintained that the daycare facilities will not directly bill another
party, but require payment in full for daycare services. Consequently, appellee must
seek reimbursement from appellant for his share of the daycare expenses. Appellant
testified he required documentation that it was “actual” daycare “that is needed versus
having Ms. Rundo having a break or to the mall or to the beach or anything like that.”
{¶10} In interpreting the November 2008 agreement, the magistrate stated:
[T]he November 2008 agreed judgment is not ambiguous as to the
issue of how Defendant must pay his share of Plaintiff’s daycare
expenses. It does not say that Defendant can withhold payment of
his share of Plaintiff’s child care expenses until she has proved
those expenses are work-related. To the contrary, the plain
language puts on him the burden of moving the Court for relief if he
believes she is asking him to pay expenses that are not work-
related. Defendant’s interpretation of the order is incorrect. In
addition, the parties struck out the provisions in the original draft
version of the November 2008 order that would have required
Plaintiff to provide him ‘supporting documentation’ verifying that her
daycare expense is in fact work-related, and replaced it with the
actual language in the order. By implication, therefore, he must pay
his share of the expenses first, and pursue his remedies later if he
chooses.
The [CSEA] appropriately recommended that Defendant should pay
his share of Plaintiff’s work-related daycare costs as part of his
monthly child support payment, rather than directly to the providers,
as the parties had agreed in November 2008. The order for direct
payment of child care expenses is a term of the Court’s child
support order, a method of carrying into effect a support obligation
the law imposes and that the parties recognized. Like any other
term or element of child support it is subject to further order of the
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Court. The evidence now before the Court shows that direct
payment of Plaintiff’s daycare expenses results in nothing being
paid, because Defendant interprets the order as requiring Plaintiff
to prove she is actually working at the times the children are in
day[care] as a precondition to his having to pay her anything. The
provision for direct payment is, in any event, a deviation or
departure from the method the law favors, payment of those
expenses as part of the total monthly obligation. Nothing in the
November 2008 agreed judgment suggests that the Court has no
jurisdiction to modify the order for direct payment, and nothing now
shows that it is appropriate or in the best interest of the children to
maintain that provision.
{¶11} The magistrate calculated the daycare expenses based on the evidence
submitted by appellee and determined that appellee’s annual expense for work-related
daycare is $6,486.
{¶12} Appellant filed objections to the magistrate’s decision, which were denied
by the trial court. Appellant timely appealed and, as his first assignment of error,
asserts:
{¶13} “The trial court committed prejudicial error by the child support calculations
to include daycare expenses as a credit when prior court order as agreed upon by the
parties specifically excluded the line item for annual child care expenses.”
{¶14} Under this assigned error, appellant maintains the trial court erred by
including daycare expenses in the child support calculation as the parties had agreed, in
the November 2008 judgment, that appellant would pay for his portion of the daycare
expenses separate from his child support obligation.
{¶15} R.C. 3119.63 requires a child support enforcement agency to review a
court child support order. An obligor or obligee may request an administrative hearing
on the revised child support order. R.C. 3119.63(E). R.C. 3119.63(E) also requires the
agency to give notice that an obligor or obligee may request a court hearing on any
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revised child support amount resulting from the administrative hearing. Following such
a request, the court shall conduct a hearing in accordance with R.C. 3119.66:
A court that conducts a hearing pursuant to section 3119.66 of the
Revised Code shall do both of the following:
(A) If the court determines at the hearing that the revised child
support amount calculated by the child support enforcement
agency is the appropriate amount, issue a revised court child
support order requiring the obligor to pay the revised amount;
(B) If the court determines that the revised child support amount
calculated by the agency is not the appropriate amount, determine
the appropriate child support amount and, if necessary, issue a
revised court child support order requiring the obligor to pay the
child support amount determined by the court.
{¶16} The calculation of child support is governed by R.C. Chapter 3119.
Pursuant to R.C. 3119.02, in any action in which a court child support order is modified,
a court or child support enforcement agency must calculate the amount of a child
support obligation according to the schedules and worksheets provided in R.C. 3119.02
through R.C. 3119.24. Although the amount of child support calculated using the
schedule and worksheet is “rebuttably presumed” to be the correct amount, the trial
court may deviate from the amount determined if, after considering the factors and
criteria set forth in R.C. 3119.23, it finds that the amount “would be unjust or
inappropriate and would not be in the best interest of the child.” R.C. 3119.22.
{¶17} It is well established that an appellate court reviews child support matters
under an abuse of discretion standard. Long v. Long, 162 Ohio App.3d 422, 2005-Ohio-
4052, ¶8, citing Booth v. Booth, 44 Ohio St.3d 142, 144 (1989).
{¶18} Here, appellant maintains the trial court erred by deviating from the
November 2008 agreed judgment. The exclusion of daycare expenses is, however, a
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departure from the statutory scheme for calculating child support. The record
demonstrates the parties were unable to comply with the November 2008 agreement;
appellant testified he was entitled to documentation verifying that any daycare expense
was in fact work-related, while appellee testified she was unable to comply with the
agreement because daycare providers were unwilling to bill appellant directly for
daycare expenses. As recognized in the trial court’s entry, although the court previously
entered an order and permitted such a deviation, “the Court is not required to continue
that deviation indefinitely.” This is especially true in this case where there is ample
evidence that the parties were unwilling or unable to comply with their previous
agreement.
{¶19} Additionally, we do not find the trial court abused its discretion in
calculating appellee’s daycare expenses. Appellant failed to offer any evidence with
respect to daycare expenses. Conversely, appellee admitted exhibits demonstrating a
monthly daycare expense of $544.60, which constitutes after-school care for the parties’
three children. Extrapolating this amount to span a year’s time, the trial court found that
appellee incurred yearly daycare expenses of $6,486. We do not find the trial court
abused its discretion with respect to this finding. In fact, the trial court utilized an
amount that calculated only after-school care. In reality, appellee may incur greater
monthly costs in the summer months, while the children are on summer recess.
{¶20} Appellant’s first assignment of error is without merit.
{¶21} As his second assignment of error, appellant alleges:
{¶22} “The trial court committed prejudicial error to the detriment of appellant by
assisting pro se appellee with presenting her case to the court.”
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{¶23} Appellant argues that at the hearing, the actions of the magistrate “fogged
the line of an impartial tribunal and clearly went beyond the scope of an independent
judiciary” by assisting appellee with her case. Appellant cites to portions of the
transcript where the magistrate asked questions of appellee and assisted appellee with
the handling of her exhibits.
{¶24} We begin by noting that appellant did not object to the magistrate’s
conduct during the hearing, and therefore, he has waived all but plain error.
{¶25} Evid.R. 611(A) provides that the trial court has discretion to control the
flow of trial including the questioning of witnesses, while Evid.R. 614(B) permits the trial
court to interrogate witnesses in an impartial manner.
{¶26} In regard to the examination of witnesses, the trial judge is
something more than a mere umpire or sergeant at arms to
preserve order in the courtroom. He has active duties to perform in
maintaining justice and in seeing that the truth is developed and
may for such purpose put proper questions to the witnesses, and
even leading questions.
Jenkins v. Clark, 7 Ohio App.3d 93, 97 (1982).
{¶27} The record reveals that although the magistrate did indeed ask questions
of appellee and assisted appellee in basic trial procedure, the trial court did not assume
the role of advocate. The magistrate sought clarification from appellee on the issue of
reimbursement of daycare expenses and her understanding of the parties’ November
2008 agreement. There is no evidence in the record that appellant was denied a fair
and impartial hearing. See Jenkins v. Clark, 7 Ohio App.3d 93, 98 (1982) (To overcome
the presumption of impartiality, the appellant must show bias, prejudice, or that the trial
judge prodded the witness to elicit partisan testimony.).
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{¶28} Upon the record before us, we do not find the trial court abused its
discretion. Further, we find no basis upon which to find plain error.
{¶29} Based on the opinion of this court, the judgment of the Geauga County
Court of Common Pleas is hereby affirmed.
CYNTHIA WESTCOTT RICE, J.,
COLLEEN MARY O’TOOLE, J.,
concur.
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