This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A15-0439
In re the Custody of WNM:
Peter Edward Marxen, petitioner,
Appellant,
vs.
Janet Ruth Jacobs,
Respondent.
Filed November 30, 2015
Reversed and remanded
Bjorkman, Judge
Scott County District Court
File No. 70-FA-11-3676
Laurie Mack-Wagner, Mack & Santana Law Offices, P.C., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for
appellant)
Janet Jacobs, Lonsdale, Minnesota (pro se respondent)
Considered and decided by Kirk, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and Bjorkman,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
BJORKMAN, Judge
Appellant challenges the denial of his motion to modify child support, arguing that
the district court erred when it declined to deduct all of his depreciation expenses when
calculating his self-employment income, and when it failed to impute additional income
to respondent. Because the district court clearly erred in calculating appellant’s self-
employment income, we reverse and remand.
FACTS
Appellant Peter Marxen and respondent Janet Jacobs are the parents of W.N.M.,
born September 24, 2009. The parties share joint legal and physical custody of W.N.M.
and father is obligated to pay $771 per month in child support under a 2012 child-support
order. Father is self-employed as a farmer and landscaper. He also receives income from
a rental property. Mother is a self-employed house cleaner.
In September 2014, father moved to modify child support, asserting that the
existing award was unreasonable and unfair because his income, when adjusted to reflect
depreciation expenses from his farming and landscaping businesses, had substantially
decreased. As evidence of this, father submitted the report of certified public accountant
Thomas Harjes, who analyzed father’s business income, expenses, asset purchases, and
depreciation expenses between 2010 and 2013.
Harjes calculated father’s average combined income from all sources to be
$92,011. Harjes noted that father’s farming and landscaping businesses are “capital
intensive in nature,” requiring “significant annual expenditures” to repair or replace
machinery. During the analyzed period, the two businesses’ combined average annual
asset purchases net of sales was $81,659.
Harjes’s report also reflects the accelerated depreciation deductions the businesses
have taken for tax purposes between 2010 and 2013, as well as straight-line depreciation
expenses for the same period in the amount of $65,983. Harjes explained that the
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businesses’ “consistent pattern of equipment purchases,” shows that the claimed
depreciation expenses are sound because they are similar to and representative of the
actual asset purchases. Accordingly, Harjes opined that straight-line depreciation should
reduce father’s average annual income to $26,028, a significant reduction from the
$85,638 income figure upon which the existing child-support order is based.
The parties appeared for a hearing on the modification motion in late October. At
the conclusion of the hearing, the district court indicated that it had concerns regarding
the parties’ purported monthly cash flow, “since both parties work in nontraditional
businesses, where it is difficult to ascertain their actual incomes.” The district court
ordered both parties to provide bank records from the period of March 1, 2014 through
August 31, 2014.
After receiving the additional information, the district court denied father’s
modification motion, finding that father’s claimed depreciation expenses are not
“credible as an accurate reflection of his cash flow” or “an accurate reflection of income
after payment of ordinary and necessary expenses.” Based on its review of father’s bank
statements, the district court found that his primary account “carried an average month
ending balance of $12,423.” The district court also implicitly questioned the credibility
of father’s claim that he had “extremely limited financial means,” noting that he had
“persisted in multiple appeals and motions to modify and has hired attorneys, financial
experts and private investigators all with the goal of reducing his child support
obligation.”
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Notwithstanding these findings, the district court reduced father’s annual income
to $80,334, based in part on figures included in Harjes’s report. The district court
reached this figure by subtracting what it found to be father’s “claimed depreciation”
expenses, $69,982, from his average asset expenditures, $81,659. The district court then
concluded that the $11,677 reduction only decreased father’s income by 7%, which was
not a substantial change in circumstances warranting a child-support modification.
Father appeals.
DECISION
A district court is afforded broad discretion to determine child support. Stevens
Cty. Soc. Serv. Dep’t ex rel. Banken v. Banken, 403 N.W.2d 693, 697 (Minn. App. 1987).
The district court abuses this discretion when it reaches a clearly erroneous conclusion
that is against logic and the facts in the record. Id. Determinations of income and
expenses for child-support purposes are findings of fact, which we review for clear error.
Ludwigson v. Ludwigson, 642 N.W.2d 441, 446 (Minn. App. 2002); Rutten v. Rutten, 347
N.W.2d 47, 51 (Minn. 1984).
I. We decline to consider father’s argument that additional income should be
imputed to mother because he did not raise the issue in the district court.
Father asserts that mother is voluntarily underemployed, and potential income
should be imputed to her for purposes of child support. See Minn. Stat. § 518A.32, subd.
1 (2014) (stating if a parent is voluntarily underemployed, child support must be
calculated “based on a determination of potential income”). But his modification motion
is devoid of any argument that mother is voluntarily underemployed or that income
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should be imputed to her on that basis. The affidavits accompanying the motion focus
almost entirely on the depreciation-expenses issue. And while father did argue that
mother’s claimed income is suspiciously small, he did not assert that this required the
district court to impute potential income to her pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 518A.32,
subd. 1. Because father did not raise this issue before the district court, we do not
consider it on appeal. See Thiele v. Stich, 425 N.W.2d 580, 582 (Minn. 1988).
II. The district court clearly erred in calculating father’s self-employment
income.
When determining a self-employed parent’s income, gross receipts are reduced by
the “ordinary and necessary expenses required for self-employment or business
operation.” Minn. Stat. § 518A.30 (2014). Excluded from ordinary and necessary
expenses are “amounts allowable by the Internal Revenue Service for the accelerated
component of depreciation expenses, . . . or any other business expenses determined by
the court to be inappropriate or excessive.” Id. “The person seeking to deduct an
expense, including depreciation, has the burden of proving, if challenged, that the
expense is ordinary and necessary.” Id. (emphasis added).
A district court must examine claimed depreciation expenses to determine whether
they reflect true depreciation or simply depreciation for tax purposes. Beltz v. Beltz, 466
N.W.2d 765, 767 (Minn. App. 1991), review denied (Minn. Apr. 29, May 23, 1991). If
the record contains support for legitimate depreciation deductions, the district court
should consider them in determining net income. Preussner v. Timmer, 414 N.W.2d 577,
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579 (Minn. App. 1987). A total disregard of depreciation expenses is reversible error.
Freking v. Freking, 479 N.W.2d 736, 740 (Minn. App. 1992).
Father argues that the district court overstated his income by disallowing nearly all
of his $65,983 straight-line depreciation expenses. This argument has merit. We first
note that this is not a case involving a total disregard for a party’s claimed depreciation
expenses. The district court’s order reflects that it considered and questioned several
aspects of Harjes’s report. The district court determined that father had used depreciation
expenses to “dramatically reduce his reported income for tax purposes and he [sought] to
do the same with his income for purposes of child support.” After concluding that
father’s claimed straight-line depreciation expenses were not ordinary and necessary, the
district court applied its own methodology—reducing father’s self-employment income
by the difference between annual asset expenditures and depreciation expenses.
We agree with father that the district court’s calculations are fundamentally
flawed. First, the district court used a depreciation figure of $69,982 that has no basis in
the record. Rather, the straight-line depreciation figure in the record was $65,983, which
appears in Harjes’s report. Second, the district court’s use of the difference between
father’s asset purchases and claimed depreciation expenses to calculate his self-
employment income is logically unsound. Comparison of actual asset purchases and
depreciation expenses merely provides a gauge of how closely claimed expenses
correlate to capital investments and expenditures. The difference between the two figures
is in no way probative of the extent to which specific depreciation expenses should be
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considered ordinary and necessary business expenses. Moreover, it is problematic that
the district court relied on father’s depreciation-deduction figure to calculate his income
even after it expressly found that the figure was not credible. Accordingly, remand is
necessary to properly determine father’s self-employment income.
For purposes of remand, we also note that several of the district court’s expressed
grounds for rejecting father’s claimed depreciation expenses lack support in the record.
For example, the district court found that father claimed 100% business use of his home
and inappropriately depreciated the cost of home improvements. In fact, Harjes’s report
shows that these specific depreciation expenses related to the rental property, which
Harjes excluded from his income calculation. The district court also noted that assets
were being depreciated on a seven-year schedule—shorter than the useful life of much of
the equipment. But there is little evidence in the record indicating the actual useful life of
the depreciated equipment. Finally, the district court discredited father’s assertion that he
has limited financial means based in part on its finding that his average monthly bank-
account balances were approximately $12,000. This finding is not clearly erroneous, but
it does not account for or address evidence in the record that a certain portion of that
balance represented businesses loans and receipts, which father could not rely on to pay
his personal expenses or child support.
In sum, because the district court’s income calculation contains clear error, we
reverse and remand for the district court to determine father’s income consistent with the
evidence.
Reversed and remanded.
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