FILED
DEC 23,2014
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
IN THE MATTER OF THE )
PARENTAGE OF A.L., ) No. 31711-1-111
)
STATE OF WASHINGTON, )
)
Respondent, )
) PUBLISHED OPINION
v. )
)
ERIN LEIGH ZASSO, )
)
Appellant, )
)
and )
)
LETICIA LOPEZ, )
)
Defendant. )
FEARING, J. - Must a parent who equally shares residential placement of his child
with the other parent be excused from paying child support when the parent earns more
than the other parent and the other parent receives public assistance for the child? The
trial court answered in the negative. We affirm.
Erin Zasso, father of A.L., appeals the trial court's order directing him to pay $336
per month for child support. He claims he should pay no support since he shares
residential placement of the child with the mother, Leticia Lopez, who agreed he need not
No.31711-I-II1
In re Custody ofA.I.
pay support. The State of Washington provides Lopez, with Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families (TANF) to support A.L., and the State initiated this petition for
modification of support.
FACTS
On April 11, 2004, Leticia Lopez gave birth to A.L. For the first seven months of
his life, A.L. lived in three different homes. He ultimately resided with his maternal
grandmother after Erin Zasso, the father, assaulted Lopez, and Lopez served time in jail
for drug crimes. Following the domestic violence incident, Zasso had no contact with
A.L. for a year and a half, despite being permitted supervised visitation. Since released
from jail, Lopez has lived in a household with her mother and A.L.
On February 27, 2006, the State of Washington, who provided TANF support to
Leticia Lopez, filed a parentage action to establish Erin Zasso as A.L.' s father. A.L.'s
maternal grandmother filed a third-party custody action, which the trial court
consolidated with the parentage action. On February 23, 2007, the trial court granted
summary judgment, finding that Zasso fathered A.L., ordering Zasso to make a support
transfer payment, and ordering Zasso to pay back child support in the amount of
$7,138.00.
On March 2, 2007, the trial court entered a temporary parenting plan that awarded
Erin Zasso residential time with A.L. three nights per week in an alternating pattern with
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A.L.'s maternal grandmother. The temporary plan afforded Zasso 43 percent of the
residential time with A.L.
On March 23, 2007, Erin Zasso filed a motion to terminate his support obligation.
The State did not object to the termination because it no longer provided TANF support
to Leticia Lopez. On April 13,2007, the lower court terminated Zasso's support
obligation. The temporary parenting plan remained in place. In January 2012, the State
resumed TANF payments to Leticia Lopez.
PROCEDURE
On April 25, 2012, based on Leticia Lopez's receipt ofTANF funds, the State of
Washington filed this petition to modify Erin Zasso's child support obligation. On
July 31, 2012, after the filing of this petition to modify, Leticia Lopez and Erin Zasso
entered an agreed parenting plan in a different case. The plan and attendant order equally
allocated A.L.'s residential time between Zasso and Lopez.
At the modification hearing in the present matter, Erin Zasso argued that his equal
residential time with A.L. precluded the court from naming him as the obligor. He also
complained that an imposition of a transfer payment would unfairly place the entire
burden of supporting A.L. on him, particularly in light of shared custody of the child. He
emphasized that Leticia Lopez had agreed that he owed no child support.
On August 21,2012, the trial court issued rulings imposing transfer payments on
Erin Zasso as a result of the TANF payments by the State of Washington to Leticia
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In re Custody ofA.I.
Lopez. In its orders, the court adopted the child support worksheets provided by the
State. The court determined Zasso's monthly net income at $1,911, and, because Lopez
was voluntarily unemployed, imputed her income at $1,351 per month. The trial court
determined Zasso's contribution for A.L.'s support at $336 and Lopez's contribution at
$187 per month. The trial court ordered no deviation from the standard calculation
because Zasso requested no deviation. The court ordered Zasso to make a support
transfer payment to the Washington State Support Registry in the amount of$336 per
month, effective May 1, 2012. The trial court later denied motions for revision and
reconsideration.
LA W AND ANALYSIS
STATE AUTHORITY FOR MODIFICATION PETITION
Erin Zasso first contends that the State of Washington lacks the prerogative to
seek a modification of child support obligations because Leticia Lopez, the party
receiving TANF benefits, is not the primary residential parent, since he equally shares
custody of the minor child. We disagree.
If the State pays public assistance for the care and maintenance of a child, the
State may pursue a support action or a petition to modify support to obtain
reimbursement of monies expended, in a process known as "subrogation." In re
Parentage ofIA.D., 131 Wn. App. 207, 217,126 P.3d 79 (2006). In what could be
considered excess, at least seven statutes confirm this authority. RCW 74.20A.030
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provides, in pertinent part:
(I) The [Department of Social & Health Services (DSHS)] shall be
subrogated to the right of any dependent child or children or person having
the care, custody, and control of said child or children, ifpublic assistance
money is paid to or for the benefit of the child, or for the care and
maintenance of a child ... , to prosecute or maintain any support action or
execute any administrative remedy existing under the laws of the state of
Washington to obtain reimbursement of moneys expended, based on the
support obligation of the responsible parent established by a child support
order. Distribution of any support moneys shall be made in accordance
with RCW 26.23.035.
RCW 74.20.330 demands that the recipient of public assistance assign any rights he or
she has to collect child support to DSHS. RCW 74.20.330 prescribes:
(1) Whenever public assistance is paid under a state program funded
under Title IV-A of the federal social security act as amended by the
personal responsibility and work opportunity reconciliation act of 1996, and
the federal deficit reduction act of 2005, each applicant or recipient is
deemed to have made assignment to the department of any rights to a
support obligation from any other person the applicant or recipient may
have in his or her own behalf or in behalf of any other family member for
whom the applicant or recipient is applying for or receiving public
assistance.
(2) Payment of public assistance under a state-funded program, or a
program funded under Title IV-A, IV-E, or XIX of the federal social
security act as amended by the personal responsibility and work
opportunity reconciliation act of 1996 shall:
(a) Operate as an assignment by operation oflaw; and
(b) Constitute an authorization to the department to provide the
assistance recipient with support enforcement services.
The State may initiate "an action in superior court to obtain a support order or
obtain other relief related to support for a dependent child on whose behalf the
department is providing public assistance." RCW 74.20.220(1). Under RCW
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74.20A.030(l):
The department shall be subrogated to the right of any dependent
child or children or person having the care, custody, and control of said
child or children, if public assistance money is paid to or for the benefit of
the child, or for the care and maintenance of a child.
(Emphasis added.)
The State of Washington's authority to seek subrogation extends to the right to file
a petition to modify support. RCW 26.09.170 reads:
(9) The department of social and health services may file an action
to modify or adjust an order of child support under subsections (5) through
(7) of this section if:
(a) Public assistance money is being paid to or for the benefit of the
child.
RCW 26.09.l75 reads:
(3) As provided for under RCW 26.09.170, the department of social
and health services may file an action to modify or adjust an order of child
support if:
(a) Public assistance money is being paid to or for the benefit of the
child.
Washington's version of the Parentage Act, chapter 26.26 RCW, prohibits the trial
court from limiting or affecting the right of the State to seek reimbursement for support
and services provided to the child. The relevant provision reads:
The court shall not limit or affect in any manner the right of
nonparties including the state of Washington to seek reimbursement for
support and other services previously furnished to the child.
RCW 26.26.130(5).
When the State pays TANF to one parent, but the court still requires the other
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parent to make a monthly support transfer payment, the money collected is used to
reimburse the State for its expenditures for public assistance. State ex reI. Sigler v.
Sigler, 85 Wn. App. 329, 337, 932 P.2d 710 (1997) (citing RCW 74.20A.030). The
policy behind subrogation is to lessen the burden on the taxpaying public by demanding
that parents help pay for the child's maintenance. Sigler, 85 Wn. App. at 337 (citing
RCW 74.20A.OlO). The State has an interest in placing the primary responsibility for the
care and support of children on parents rather than on the taxpayers. State v. Wood, 89
Wn.2d 97, 100,569 P.2d 1148 (1977), abrogated on other grounds by, Sw. Wash.
Chapter, Nat 'I Elec. Contractors Ass 'n v. Pierce County, 100 Wn.2d 109,667 P.2d 1092
(1983); Sigler, 85 Wn. App. at 337.
Erin Zasso contends two Washington regulations circumscribe the State's
authority to petition for a support modification under his circumstances. WAC 388-l4A
2030(1) reads: "A custodial parent applying for or receiving cash assistance on behalf of
a minor child assigns the family's rights to support as provided in WAC 388-14A-2035."
In tum, WAC 388-14A-l020 defines a "custodial parent" as "the person, whether a
parent or not, with whom a dependent child resides the majority of the time period for
which the division of child support seeks to establish or enforce a support obligation."
Zasso reads the two regulations together to argue that the State's subrogation rights
extend only when the parent receiving the benefits resides with the child more than half
of the time. Based on a reading of the Washington statutes and other regulations, we
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disagree.
RCW 26.09.170 and .175 allow the State of Washington to request to modify an
order of child support whenever public assistance is paid to benefit the child. We may
admit that, under WAC 388-14A-1020, Leticia Lopez, the TANF recipient, is not the
custodial parent, or at least not the sole custodial parent, because of shared placement of
A.L. Nevertheless, Washington statutes do not limit the State's authority to file a
modification to instances when the sole custodial parent is the recipient of the assistance.
Because of the statutes demanding subrogation, in order for Zasso to prevail on his
argument, he must show that some other statute or regulation precluded Lopez from
receiving TANF assistance from the State. WAC 388-14A-1020 and WAC 388-14A
2030 do not expressly preclude the assistance. Other regulations allow, rather than
disallow, public assistance even when the recipient shares residential placement with
another parent. Under the WAC child support scheme, assistance unit (AU) refers to "the
group of people who live together and whose income or resources [the State] count[s] to
decide ... eligibility for [TANF] benefits and the amount of benefits." WAC 388-408
0005(1)(c). Pursuant to WAC 388-454-0005(2)(b) "[i]frelatives share physical custody
of the child in equal amounts, [the State] include[s] the child in the AU of the parent or
relative that first applies for assistance for the child." This latter regulation disassembles
Zasso's contention. The parent who first applied here is Leticia Lopez. Erin Zasso
disregards the explicit language of WAC 388-454-0005(2), which permits TANF
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In re Custody ofA.L.
payments when parents share equal custody of their children. The language of WAC
388-454-0005(2) indicates the drafters contemplated the type of shared custody parenting
situation in the current case.
Washington statutes and regulations directing the State of Washington to collect
support from a parent whose child receives T ANF benefits fulfill federal T ANF
requirements under 42 U.S.C. § 608(a)(3). The federal statute demands that a state, as a
condition to participating in the T ANF program, require each recipient to assign rights to
collect child support. The statute does not condition assignment on the amount of time a
child spends with his or her parents.
The State child support system, including the administrative scheme, statutory
scheme, and public policy considerations, all negate Erin Zasso's argument that only
custodial parents or parents who reside with the child more than half of the time can
subrogate support rights to the State of Washington. The State had the authority to file
the petition to modity the support obligations of Erin Zasso.
ZASSO AS OBLIGOR WHEN SHARING RESIDENTIAL PLACEMENT
The State of Washington may be subrogated to Leticia Lopez's rights to collect
child support only if Lopez held the right to collect child support from Erin Zasso.
Therefore, Zasso identifies the principal question raised by his appeal to be whether the
father should be required to make a transfer payment to the mother when the two share
custody of the child? Stated differently, may the court declare a parent who shares
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residential placement with the other parent to be an "obligor" for purposes of support
transfer payments? Zasso claims Washington has yet to clearly articulate standards for
determining who the obligor parent should be in cases of shared custody.
The legislature's stated intent in enacting legislation imposing child support
transfer payments is "to insure that child support orders are adequate to meet a child's
basic needs and to provide additional child support commensurate with the parents'
income, resources, and standard of living." RCW 26.19.001 (emphasis added). The
legislature also intended that the child support obligation be "equitably apportioned
between the parents." RCW 26.19.001 (emphasis added).
In Washington, both biological parents have an obligation to support their children
regardless of marital status. Linda D. v. Fritz c., 38 Wn. App. 288, 300,687 P.2d 223
(1984). A parent's obligation for the care and support of his or her child is a basic tenet
recognized in this state without reference to any particular statute. State v. Wood,89
Wn.2d at 100.
When entering an order of child support, the trial court begins by setting the basic
child support obligation. RCW 26.19.011(1); State ex rei. MMG. v. Graham, 159
Wn.2d 623, 627, 152 P.3d 1005 (2007). This obligation is determined from the statute's
economic table, which is based on the parents' combined monthly net income, as well as
the number and age of their children. RCW 26.19.011(1), .020. The trial court next
allocates the child support obligation between the parents based on each parent's share of
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the combined monthly income. RCW 26.19 .080( 1). The court then determines the
standard calculation, which is the presumptive amount of child support owed by the
obligor parent to the obligee parent. RCW 26.19.011(8); Graham, 159 Wn.2d at 627.
Erin Zasso emphasizes that RCW 26.19.011 fails to identify or establish any
standards for who becomes the obligor or the obligee. We concede the statutory scheme
could be clearer in answering the question of under what circumstances one may become
an obligor. Nevertheless, we conclude the trial court held authority, under statutory
sources as well as recent Washington precedent, to nominate Zasso as the obligor since
he accrued the higher income and the mother received TANF benefits for the child,
despite shared residential placement.
After determining the standard calculation and nominating the obligor, the trial
court, if requested, considers whether it is appropriate to deviate upward or downward
from the standard calculation. RCW 26.19.011 (4), (8). The court has discretion to
deviate from the standard calculation based on such factors as the parents' income and
expenses, obligations to children from other relationships, and the children's residential
schedule. RCW 26.19.075(1). If the court considers a deviation based on residential
schedule, it must follow a specific statutory analysis:
The court may deviate from the standard calculation if the child
spends a significant amount of time with the parent who is obligated to
make a support transfer payment. The court may not deviate on that basis
if the deviation will result in insufficient funds in the household receiving
the support to meet the basic needs of the child or if the child is receiving
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temporary assistance for needy families. When determining the amount of
the deviation, the court shall consider evidence concerning the increased
expenses to a parent making support transfer payments resulting from the
significant amount of time spent with that parent and shall consider the
decreased expenses, if any, to the party receiving the support resulting from
the significant amount of time the child spends with the parent making the
support transfer payment.
RCW 26. 19.075(l)(d).
The trial court must enter written findings of fact supporting the reasons for any
deviation or denial of a party's request for deviation. RCW 26.19.075(3); Graham, 159
Wn.2d at 627-28. A court's decision to deviate from the standard calculation for child
support based on residential time is discretionary, but the court cannot deviate if it will
result in insufficient funds in the household receiving the support, or if the child is
receiving TANF. RCW 26.19.075(1)(d); In re Marriage ofRusch, 124 Wn. App. 226,
236,98 P.3d 1216 (2004), abrogated on other grounds by, In re Marriage of
McCausland, 159 Wn.2d 607, 152 P.3d 1013 (2007). After determining the standard
calculation and any deviations, the trial court then orders one parent to pay the other a
support transfer payment. RCW 26.19.011(9).
Erin Zasso never sought a deviation from the standard calculation. Granting a
deviation may have been an abuse of discretion because of the mother receiving TANF
benefits and having no other income.
The residential schedule deviation was added to the child support schedule in
1991. LAWS OF 1991, 1st Spec. Sess., ch. 28, § 6. Before 1991, the Washington Child
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Support Guidelines allowed for a residential credit if the child resided overnight with
both parents more than 25 percent of the time. Helen Donigan, Calculating and
Documenting Child Support Awards Under Washington Law, 26 GONZ. L. REv. 13,45
(1991). A separate worksheet provided space for determining the residential credit for
each parent. Donigan, supra, at 45. This special worksheet also applied to cases where
parents split residential time. Donigan, supra, at 45-46. The legislature did not retain
this formula for residential credit against child support with the 1991 addition of statutory
deviations. See RCW 26.19.075(l)(d); In re Marriage ofSchnur man, 178 Wn. App. 634,
639-41,316 P.3d 514 (2013), review denied, 180 Wn.2d 1010,325 P.3d 914 (2014). The
change in legislation suggests an intent to afford wider discretion to the trial court when
considering a deviation for residential credit.
This court reviews a trial court's order of child support for abuse of discretion. In
re Marriage ofGriffin, 114 Wn.2d 772, 776, 791 P.2d 519 (1990); In re Marriage of
Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 638. A trial court abuses its discretion if its decision rests
on unreasonable or untenable grounds, or if it bases its ruling on an erroneous view of the
law or involves incorrect legal analysis. Dix v. ICT Grp., Inc., 160 Wn.2d 826, 833, 161
P.3d 1016 (2007); Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 638. The legislature intended to allow
judicial discretion in appropriate circumstances when calculating child support payments,
and a reviewing court must defer to the sound discretion of the trial court unless the lower
court abused its discretion. In re Marriage ofGriffin, 114 Wn.2d at 776.
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Recently, both the Washington Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals addressed
the applicability of the standard child support schedule to cases of equally shared
custody, such as the one currently at issue. The well-reasoned decisions compel denial of
Erin Zasso's appeal.
In State ex reI. MMG. v. Graham, 159 Wn.2d 623, 152 P.3d 1005 (2007), the
Washington Supreme Court decided a custody case in which the parents evenly shared
residential placement of their children. The father's income exceeded the mother's
revenue by over $4,000 per month, and the trial court named the father as the obligor,
requiring that he make a transfer payment to the mother.
On appeal, the father in Graham argued that chapter 26.19 RCW did not
adequately guide trial courts in determining parents' child support obligations when the
parents shared equal custody and urged the court to adopt a new standard. The Supreme
Court disagreed, and stressed that RCW 26.19.075 already provided trial courts with the
discretion to deviate from the standard calculation, based on the residential schedule
deviation found in RCW 26.19.075(l)(d). Graham, 159 Wn.2d at 636. Relying on RCW
26. 19.075(l)(d), the Supreme Court explained, "[b]ecause the statute explicitly gives the
trial court discretion to deviate from the basic child support obligation based on the facts
of a particular case, a specific formula is neither necessary nor statutorily required to
ensure the parents' child support obligation is properly allocated." Graham, 159 Wn.2d
at 636. The court in Graham clarified that the trial court must still use the standard child
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No. 31711-1-II1
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support schedule and statutory deviations in cases of shared custody. Graham, 159
Wn.2d at 636.
More recently, Division One of this court addressed a case of shared custody in In
re Marriage ofSchnur man , 178 Wn. App. 634,636,316 P.3d 514 (2013), review denied,
180 Wn.2d 1010,325 P.3d 914 (2014). In Schnurman, the parenting plan dictated that
the parents "share equal residential time with the children throughout the year."
Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637. The trial court first calculated the parents' child
support obligation and found that the father's monthly net income was $6,338 and the
mother's was $3,380. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637. Although the couple shared
custody of their children, the trial court named the father as the obligor and required that
he make a transfer payment to the mother. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637. The father
requested a downward deviation from the standard calculation, but did not characterize it
as a residential credit, instead arguing that the statutory deviations did not apply to cases
of shared custody. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637. The trial court dismissed the
father's argument, while noting the absence of evidence that the father's shared time with
the children would significantly increase his costs to support the children or reduce his
wife's expenses to support the children. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637.
The father in Schnurman, like Erin Zasso, also argued that only parents with
whom children spend the majority of their residential time are entitled to a support
transfer payment. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 638. The court dismissed the father's
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contention, stating that RCW 26.19.075, the statute governing deviations, applies in
shared residential situations. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637 n.4. Relying on the
Supreme Court's holding in Graham, the Schnurman court specified "that the statutory
child support schedule applies in shared residential situations like here." Schnurman, 178
Wn. App. at 638 (citing Graham, 159 Wn.2d at 626). After describing the general child
support determination process, the court explained the deviation procedure. Schnurman,
178 Wn. App. at 640. The court noted that a trial court may deviate when children share
residential time equally between parents, but "a deviation would still be discretionary and
should focus on the legislature's primary intent to maintain reasonable support for the
children in each household." Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 641 (citing State ex rei.
MMG. v. Graham, 123 Wn. App. 931, 933, 99 P.3d 1248 (2004). As in Graham, the
court refused to set forth a formula for 50/50 shared custody obligation determinations.
Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 642. The court explained that the child support schedule
still applies in cases of shared custody; thus, RCW 26.l9.075(l)(d) already provides trial
courts with the discretion to deviate based on residential time, precluding the need for a
specialized formula. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 642.
As in Graham and Schnurman, this case involves a case of evenly split residential
placement. Consistent with both Graham and Schnurman, the superior court in this case
used the standard support schedule to allocate the support obligation between Erin Zasso
and Leticia Lopez, as well as to name Zasso as the support obligor. The trial court's
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determination of Zasso's support obligation was consistent with the statutory scheme and
Washington case law.
Despite these precedents, Erin Zasso argues that he cannot be the obligor because
Washington law lacks a procedure for identifYing the obligor in equal custody cases. The
father in Schnurman raised this same argument, claiming that he was not seeking a
downward deviation based on residential time. Division One explicitly rejected this
argument. Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 637 nA.
Erin Zasso contends that the holding of Schnurman is inapposite because the
father in Schnurman claimed that the support schedules simply did not apply under
shared placement circumstances. Zasso distinguishes his argument as one of
contending no transfer can be ordered because he is not an obligor. According to
Zasso, he does not maintain that the child support schedule does not apply. He simply
argues that when two parties share equal visitation, there must be a reasoned basis for
ordering one parent to make a support transfer payment to the other. We consider this
distinction to lack any legal relevance. Under both situations, the parent seeks to avoid
payment of child support because of shared custody. Anyway, the TANF benefits and
Zasso's higher income is a reasoned basis for isolating Zasso as the obligor.
Nowhere does the statutory scheme or supporting case law state the parent
receiving the support transfer payment must be the parent with whom the child resides a
majority of the time. There is also no statutory provision, or case law, which prohibits a
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transfer payment from the advantaged parent to the disadvantaged parent in an equally
shared residential arrangement.
Finally, Erin lasso relies on In re Marriage ofHolmes, 128 Wn. App. 727, 117
P.3d 370 (2005) to support his contention that chapter 26.19 RCW does not provide for
whether one parent should make a support transfer payment in shared custody cases. The
court in Schnurman resolved Holmes' applicability to cases of shared custody when it
stated:
[R]eliance on In re Marriage ofHolmes, 128 Wn. App. 727, 117
P.3d 370 (2005), does not compel a different conclusion. Holmes did not
involve a 50/50 shared residential situation like here. The Holmes court
simply held that the trial court acted within its discretion in terminating the
father's child support obligation. Though the father made significantly
more money than the mother, the residential schedule had changed and the
son resided a majority of the time with the father.
Schnurman, 178 Wn. App. at 642 n.6 (internal citations omitted). lasso's use of Holmes
is misplaced.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court's order compelling Erin lasso to pay a support transfer
payment to the State of Washington by reason of his child's receipt ofTANF benefits.
Fearing, J. .
w~~(~O= Siddoway, C. .
~)&
Brown, J.
18