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06/27/2017 09:09 AM CDT
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Nebraska Court of A ppeals A dvance Sheets
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MOHAMMED v. ROJAS
Cite as 24 Neb. App. 810
Imad K. Mohammed, appellee, v. Claudia D. Rojas,
appellee, and State of Nebraska,
intervenor-appellant.
___ N.W.2d ___
Filed June 20, 2017. No. A-16-295.
1. Modification of Decree: Child Support: Appeal and Error.
Modification of child support payments is entrusted to the trial court’s
discretion, and although, on appeal, the issue is reviewed de novo on the
record, the decision of the trial court will be affirmed absent an abuse
of discretion.
2. Judgments: Words and Phrases. An abuse of discretion occurs when
the trial court’s decision is based upon reasons that are untenable or
unreasonable or if its action is clearly against justice or conscience,
reason, and evidence.
3. Appeal and Error. An appellate court will not consider an issue on
appeal that the trial court has not decided.
4. Modification of Decree: Child Support: Proof. A party seeking to
modify a child support order must show a material change in circum-
stances which (1) occurred subsequent to the entry of the original decree
or previous modification and (2) was not contemplated when the decree
was entered.
5. Modification of Decree: Child Support. A material change in cir-
cumstances must exist at the time of the modification trial because the
court’s decision to modify child support must be based upon the evi-
dence presented in support of the complaint to modify and because the
change in circumstances cannot be temporary.
6. Modification of Decree: Child Support: Proof. The party seeking the
modification has the burden to produce sufficient proof that a material
change of circumstances has occurred that warrants a modification.
7. Judgments: Appeal and Error. Where the record demonstrates that the
decision of the trial court is correct, although such correctness is based
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on a ground or reason different from that assigned by the trial court, an
appellate court will affirm.
Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: Darla
S. Ideus, Judge. Affirmed.
Joe Kelly, Lancaster County Attorney, and Jessica A. Murphy
for intervenor-appellant.
Mark T. Bestul, of Legal Aid of Nebraska, for appellee Imad
K. Mohammed.
Pirtle, Bishop, and A rterburn, Judges.
Pirtle, Judge.
INTRODUCTION
The State of Nebraska, on behalf of the State of California,
appeals from an order of the district court for Lancaster
County, Nebraska, which found that no material change in cir-
cumstances had occurred to warrant a modification of Imad K.
Mohammed’s child support obligation for his and Claudia D.
Rojas’ two minor children. Based on the reasons that follow,
we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Mohammed and Rojas were married in February 2001, and
two children were born of the marriage—one in October 2002
and one in April 2004. In August 2011, a decree was entered in
Maricopa County, Arizona, dissolving their marriage, granting
Rojas sole custody of the children, and entering a child sup-
port order. The Arizona court approved a downward deviation
in child support from the guidelines’ amount of $92.13 to $0,
based upon an agreement of Mohammed and Rojas. The par-
ties agreed to deviate “because of [Mohammed’s] economic
circumstances and state of health, and because the guide-
line amount is relatively small.” At the time of the decree,
Mohammed had income of $1,274 per month and Rojas had
income of $1,560 per month.
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MOHAMMED v. ROJAS
Cite as 24 Neb. App. 810
In December 2012, Rojas and the children moved to
California, and sometime thereafter, they began receiving pub-
lic assistance. In July 2014, the State of California noti-
fied Nebraska that the children were receiving “Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families” (TANF) and requested that
Nebraska register the Arizona decree and file a complaint to
modify child support.
After the decree was registered in Nebraska, the State filed
a complaint to modify child support. The complaint alleged
that “there has been a material change in circumstances that
has lasted three months and can reasonably be expected to last
for an additional six months.” The matter was heard by the
district court referee for Lancaster County. During the trial,
the State offered the “general testimony” of Rojas, which was
an affidavit form filled out by Rojas. Rojas indicated that her
gross monthly income was $607 in family assistance and $648
in food stamps. She failed to fill out the section of the form
which asked for the first and last month and year that she
received TANF. She indicated only that the total amount of
TANF she received was $607 as of March 2015. Rojas reported
no income other than the public assistance received from the
State of California.
When asked by the referee what material change in cir-
cumstances had occurred, the State specified, “[T]he material
change in circumstances is that [Rojas] and [the children]
moved from Arizona to California and began seeking pub-
lic assistance.”
Mohammed testified that he lives in Nebraska with his
current wife and her five children, three of whom are his bio-
logical children. He also testified that he was working 26 to 27
hours per week, making $9 an hour.
The referee found that there had been a material change
in circumstances since the entry of the original order in that
the State of California was providing public assistance to
the children and was seeking an order of support for reim-
bursement of a portion of that public assistance. The referee
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recommended that child support be set using Mohammed’s
actual income at the time of the hearing, resulting in an order
of $89 per month.
Mohammed filed an exception to the referee’s recommenda-
tions, and a hearing was held before the district court. The dis-
trict court found that the State had failed to produce evidence
to show that Rojas was not receiving public assistance at the
time of the original decree and failed to produce evidence that
public assistance was not in the contemplation of the parties
at the time of the decree. Accordingly, the district court deter-
mined that a material change in circumstances did not exist to
warrant a modification of child support and it dismissed the
State’s complaint to modify.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
The State assigns that the district court erred in (1) failing
to find a material change in circumstances had occurred when
the State of California began providing Rojas public assistance
for the benefit of the minor children and (2) failing to order
child support as recommended by the referee.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] Modification of child support payments is entrusted
to the trial court’s discretion, and although, on appeal, the
issue is reviewed de novo on the record, the decision of the
trial court will be affirmed absent an abuse of discretion.
Pearson v. Pearson, 285 Neb. 686, 828 N.W.2d 760 (2013).
An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court’s decision
is based upon reasons that are untenable or unreasonable or
if its action is clearly against justice or conscience, reason,
and evidence. Kibler v. Kibler, 287 Neb. 1027, 845 N.W.2d
585 (2014).
ANALYSIS
[3] Although the State’s first assignment of error is specific
to the public assistance being a material change in circum-
stances, the State argues that there was a material change in
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that Rojas’ income had decreased and the State of California
was providing public assistance for the minor children. The
State did not argue to the referee or to the district court that
her decrease in income was a change in circumstances, and
therefore, it cannot argue it now. See Pearce v. Mutual of
Omaha Ins. Co., 293 Neb. 277, 876 N.W.2d 899 (2016) (appel-
late court will not consider issue on appeal that trial court has
not decided). The only material change argued was that Rojas
began seeking public assistance in California.
[4] A party seeking to modify a child support order must
show a material change in circumstances which (1) occurred
subsequent to the entry of the original decree or previous
modification and (2) was not contemplated when the decree
was entered. Sellers v. Sellers, 23 Neb. App. 219, 869 N.W.2d
703 (2015). The referee found, and the dissent agrees, that a
material change in circumstances occurred when the State of
California became an interested party and sought an order of
support for reimbursement of a portion of the public assistance
it provided Rojas. The district court concluded that a material
change in circumstances did not exist because the State failed
to produce evidence to show that Rojas was not receiving
public assistance at the time of the original decree and failed
to produce evidence that public assistance was not in the con-
templation of the parties at the time of the decree. The record
does not indicate if Rojas was receiving public assistance in
Arizona at the time the decree was entered. The Arizona court
determined Rojas’ monthly income at that time was $1,560,
but we do not know if that money was from employment
or state aid. The Arizona proceedings are not in the record
before us.
[5] Assuming without deciding that Rojas’ receiving pub-
lic assistance was a material change in circumstances, as
the referee found and the dissent concludes, the State failed
to meet its burden because it did not prove that the change
existed at the time of the modification trial. In Collins v.
Collins, 19 Neb. App. 529, 808 N.W.2d 905 (2012), we held
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that the change in circumstances must exist at the time of
the modification trial. We based our holding on two reasons.
First, because the court’s decision to modify child support
must be based upon the evidence presented in support of
the complaint to modify. Second, because the change in cir-
cumstances cannot be temporary. At the hearing before the
referee, held in May and June 2015, the evidence showed that
the total amount of TANF Rojas had received was $607 as of
March 2015. Rojas’ general testimony, which was filed on or
about March 31, 2015, showed that her monthly income at
that time included $607 in family assistance and $648 in food
stamps. There is no information in the record as to when the
assistance began or how long the assistance reasonably would
be expected to last. Most important, there was no evidence
that she was still receiving public assistance at the time of the
modification trial.
The dissent notes that the district court did not address the
rebuttable presumption set forth in Neb. Ct. R. § 4-217, which
supports a conclusion that a material change in circumstances
occurred. Section 4-217 provides that any 10-percent varia-
tion in the present child support obligation due to financial
circumstances, which have lasted 3 months and can reasonably
be expected to last for an additional 6 months, establishes a
rebuttable presumption of a material change of circumstances.
In concluding that a 10-percent variation exists, the dissent
states: “[T]here is no dispute that Mohammed was paying
no child support at all due to his agreement with Rojas in
the Arizona consent decree.” However, an analysis of the
10-percent variation provision under § 4-217 is not required
where, as here, the evidence produced at trial fails to dem-
onstrate that the purportedly changed financial circumstances
existed at the time of trial and can be expected to continue for
an additional 6 months.
The dissent also acknowledges that a district court “may
accept or reject all or any part of the [child support ref-
eree’s] report and enter judgment based on the court’s own
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determination,” pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-1613 (Reissue
2016). However, the dissent fails to acknowledge that Rules
of Dist. Ct. of Third Jud. Dist. 3-11(G) (rev. 2014) provides:
“[T]he hearing before the court on the exception shall be de
novo on the record before the referee. The court may ratify or
modify the recommendations of the referee and enter judgment
based thereon.” Therefore, the district court had broad latitude
in reviewing the referee’s recommendation.
[6,7] The party seeking the modification has the burden
to produce sufficient proof that a material change of circum-
stances has occurred that warrants a modification. Collins v.
Collins, supra. The State failed to meet its burden. It did not
present evidence to prove that a material change of circum-
stances existed at the time of trial or to show that the change
was not temporary. Therefore, albeit for a different reason than
that which the district court found, the district court did not
err in failing to find that a material change in circumstances
had occurred to warrant a modification of Mohammed’s child
support obligation. See Semler v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 268
Neb. 857, 689 N.W.2d 327 (2004) (where record demonstrates
decision of trial court is correct, although such correctness is
based on ground or reason different from that assigned by trial
court, appellate court will affirm). The State’s assignments of
error are without merit.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the district court did not err in determin-
ing that a material change in circumstances did not exist to
warrant a modification of Mohammed’s child support obli-
gation. Accordingly, the district court’s order dismissing the
State’s complaint to modify is affirmed.
A ffirmed.
Bishop, Judge, dissenting.
Modification of a registered child support order under the
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA), Neb. Rev.
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Stat. § 2-701 et seq. (Reissue 2016), “is subject to the same
requirements, procedures, and defenses that apply to the modi-
fication of an order issued by a tribunal of this state and
the order may be enforced and satisfied in the same man-
ner,” § 42-746(b). I am unable to join the majority opinion
because I agree with the child support referee’s determination
that a material change in circumstances occurred when the
State of California (California) became an interested party
and sought assistance from the State of Nebraska (the State)
to modify child support under UIFSA. The child support ref-
eree concluded:
The difference in circumstances today from the Order
in 2011 [Arizona decree] is that the State . . . has inter-
vened in this action to seek an order of support. That
intervention occurred after . . . California requested the
assistance of [the State] in securing a support order. The
UIFSA transmittal from California, which forms the basis
for the State’s complaint, indicates that the children of
this case are receiving TANF funds (f/k/a ADC). Whether
these funds were received at the time of the initial hear-
ing is unknown from the hearing and from the record
of the case. In any event, California is providing public
assistance to the children and now seeks an order of sup-
port for reimbursement of a portion of the public assist
ance. That is a material change in circumstances in and
of itself.
The record and the law support the referee’s conclusion,
as will be discussed below. And although the district court
agreed that “[a]n application for public assistance may indeed
constitute a material change in circumstances,” the district
court further concluded that the State “failed to produce evi-
dence that [Rojas] was not receiving public assistance at the
time of the original order.” Further, the district court stated
that “there was no evidence offered by the State that public
assistance was not in the contemplation of the parties at the
time of the previous order.” However, whether either party
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was on public assistance at the time of the Arizona consent
decree, or whether they contemplated going on assistance at
a later time, is irrelevant to the fact that Rojas is now living
in California and receiving public assistance in that state. As
noted by the State in its argument to the referee, California
was never a party to the original Arizona agreement between
Rojas and Mohammed, and Rojas’ receipt of public assist
ance in California constitutes a material change, because
California is now a party with an interest in child support
being paid.
Since modifications of a registered child support order
under UIFSA are subject to the same requirements, proce-
dures, and defenses that apply to the modification of an order
issued by a tribunal of this state, we should consider the law
applicable in Nebraska when a party applies for services
under title IV-D of the federal Social Security Act. Upon
an application by a party for such services, child support
orders in such cases “shall be reviewed by the Department
of Health and Human Services to determine whether to refer
such orders to the county attorney or authorized attorney for
filing of an application for modification.” Neb. Rev. Stat.
§ 43-512.12(1) (Reissue 2016). The application “shall” be
referred when the verifiable financial information indicates
the present child support obligation varies from the Nebraska
Child Support Guidelines “by more than the percentage,
amount, or other criteria established by Supreme Court rule,
and the variation is due to financial circumstances which have
lasted at least three months and can reasonably be expected to
last for an additional six months.” § 43-512.12(1)(a). The per-
centage set forth in the guidelines is 10 percent. See Neb. Ct.
R. § 4-217. Additionally, any 10-percent variation in the pres-
ent child support obligation due to financial circumstances
which have lasted 3 months and can reasonably be expected
to last for an additional 6 months, “establishes a rebuttable
presumption of a material change of circumstances.” Id.
Notably, nothing in the statute or the Supreme Court rule
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requires proof of whether the parties may have been on title
IV-D assistance somewhere else or what the parties may have
previously contemplated with regard to public assistance.
Rather, the rebuttable presumption of a material change in
circumstances arises upon the variation in child support and
the reasonable expectation as to the duration of the changed
financial circumstances.
It is true that “upon receipt of the findings, recommenda-
tions, and exceptions,” a district court “may accept or reject
all or any part of the [child support referee’s] report and enter
judgment based on the court’s own determination.” Neb. Rev.
Stat. § 43-1613 (Reissue 2016). However, the reasons sup-
plied by the district court in its conclusion that there was no
material change in circumstances in this case does not address
UIFSA or the rebuttable presumption set forth in § 4-217 of
the child support guidelines. Accordingly, the district court
abused its discretion when concluding that the “State has
failed to meet its burden of proof that there has been a mate-
rial and substantial change of circumstances subsequent to
entry of the original decree which was not contemplated when
the prior order was entered.” As noted, modification of child
support does not always require proof of what the parties con-
templated at the time of entry of an original decree; rather, a
10-percent variation in the present child support obligation
due to financial circumstances which have lasted 3 months and
can reasonably be expected to last for an additional 6 months,
by itself, establishes a rebuttable presumption of a material
change of circumstances.
Applied here, there is no dispute that Mohammed was
paying no child support at all due to his agreement with
Rojas in the Arizona consent decree. Mohammed did pro-
duce evidence of a limited income and a large family here
in Nebraska that he needs to support. Therefore, the referee
appropriately applied the rule for minimum child support set
forth in the Nebraska Child Support Guidelines, which rule
states:
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It is recommended that even in very low income cases,
a minimum support of $50, or 10 percent of the obligor’s
net income, whichever is greater, per month be set. This
will help to maintain information on such obligor, such
as his or her address, employment, etc., and, hopefully,
encourage such person to understand the necessity, duty,
and importance of supporting his or her children.
Neb. Ct. R. § 4-209. The purpose of § 4-209 is to provide some
support even in cases of very low income in order to reinforce
the duties and obligations of being a parent. Garza v. Garza,
288 Neb. 213, 846 N.W.2d 626 (2014). Further, when another
state is seeking this state’s assistance to establish or modify
child support under UIFSA, the procedures are designed to
help facilitate interstate cooperation and consistency.
The general purpose of UIFSA is to unify state laws relat-
ing to the establishment, enforcement, and modification of
child support orders. Hamilton v. Foster, 260 Neb. 887, 620
N.W.2d 103 (2000). The goal of UIFSA is to streamline and
expedite interstate enforcement of support decrees and to
eliminate the problems arising from multiple or conflicting
support orders from various states by providing for one tribu-
nal to have continuing and exclusive jurisdiction to establish
or modify a child support order. Id. UIFSA provides a system
where only one child support order may be in effect at any
one time. Id. UIFSA allows, under certain circumstances, a
Nebraska court to enforce or modify a support order issued in
another state. Id.
As it is allowed to do under UIFSA, California, as the initi-
ating tribunal in this case, filed a “Child Support Enforcement
Transmittal #1 - Initial Request” document (California peti-
tion) seeking to register the Arizona dissolution decree,
modify it, and establish income withholding. The California
petition has boxes checked for the following attachments:
“Uniform Support Petition,” “General Testimony/Affidavit,”
and “Support Order(s).” It lists Rojas as the petitioner and
Mohammed as the respondent. The California petition was
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sent from the “Merced County Department of Child Support
Services” to the “Clerk of the Court - Lancaster County.” The
California petition contains an “Initiating Tribunal Number,”
contains an “Initiating IV-D Case Number,” and is marked
as a “TANF” type of “IV-D Case.” It shows Mohammed and
Rojas’ children as dependent children who had been living in
California for 13 to 14 months. The California petition was
sworn to and signed before a notary public on July 17, 2014;
accordingly, this process was commenced 11 months prior
to the final hearing (June 17, 2015) before the child support
referee. Nothing in the record indicates that California ever
sought to terminate the proceedings it commenced as the initi-
ating tribunal in July 2014.
UIFSA permits a child support enforcement agency to file
a petition or comparable pleading directly in a tribunal of
another state which has or can obtain personal jurisdiction over
the respondent. See § 42-714(b). Upon receipt of such petition
or comparable pleading from an initiating tribunal (California),
the responding tribunal (the State), “shall cause the petition or
pleading to be filed and notify the petitioner where and when
it was filed.” § 42-718(a). The California petition was filed on
September 12, 2014, in the district court for Lancaster County.
The State, as “Intervenor,” filed a “Complaint to Modify” on
January 2, 2015, alleging that a registered “Foreign Support
Order” was confirmed by the district court for Lancaster
County on November 25, 2014. The State also alleged that the
registered order provided for no child support for the minor
children and that there had been a material change in circum-
stances that “has lasted three months and can reasonably be
expected to last for an additional six months.”
In the initial hearing before the referee on May 6, 2015, the
referee immediately noted that “this is actually an interstate
matter” and that California “has asked us to modify the order
that we have registered in Nebraska.” The State offered Rojas’
general testimony/affidavit under UIFSA, along with other
documents to which there were no objections. Section 42-729
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provides for special rules of evidence and procedure under
UIFSA, and subsection (b) specifically provides that
[a]n affidavit, a document substantially complying with
federally mandated forms, or a document incorporated by
reference in any of them, which would not be excluded
under the hearsay rule if given in person, is admissible in
evidence if given under penalty of perjury by a party or
witness residing outside this state.
Thus, the general testimony/affidavit signed by Rojas on March
27 was properly received in lieu of her attendance and testi-
mony at the hearing.
The State called Mohammed to testify; however, after some
difficulty in communication during the initial questions and
answers, the referee continued the hearing to June 17, 2015,
so that an interpreter could be present. At the June 17 hearing,
Mohammed testified that he and Rojas “both went to the court
and we agreed that I don’t pay child support at that time.”
And although Mohammed testified that he was on public
assistance in Nebraska (housing, food stamps, and Medicaid),
he did not say anything about receiving public assistance
in Arizona.
The State argued that California was never a party to the
original agreement between Mohammed and Rojas and that
Rojas’ receipt of public assistance in California constitutes a
material change, because California is now a party with an
interest in child support being paid. Further, “[N]ow there is
a third party, the State [on behalf of] California, seeking child
support to reimburse TANF funds, public assistance being
received for the children.” The State noted that the Arizona
decree did not mention public assistance being received by
the children, and the State also pointed out that the State of
Arizona was not a party to the marriage dissolution action.
The referee stated during the hearing that the first concern
was determining “whether or not the fact that the State is now
a party is a material change in circumstances.” Mohammed’s
counsel argued there were no cases where an “obligee began
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receiving benefits” constituted a change in circumstances.
Additionally, Mohammed’s counsel argued that even if it is
a material change in circumstances, there was no evidence
that the change was permanent, since “it’s called Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families. There’s no evidence of the dura-
tion that’s been presented to you today.” The State countered
that argument by noting that
the title of the public assistance should not mean that it
is not going to reach the requirement of lasting for six
months. This case was sent to us months ago. The mother
is still on public assistance. There is nothing to indicate
that that public assistance is going to stop in the next
month or two.
As previously noted, California initiated this proceeding in
July 2014. By the time it went to final hearing in June 2015,
11 months had passed. Approximately 3 months had passed
since Rojas signed her general testimony/affidavit indicat-
ing her unemployment. Whether she continued to remain
unemployed over the next 6 months is not relevant, because
more than 6 months had passed since California initiated
the action in July 2014. Additionally, the possible change
in Rojas’ future earnings in this case is not particularly rel-
evant, since any income she might receive would not change
Mohammed’s obligation to pay minimal child support. The
child support determined by the referee was not dependent
on Rojas’ earnings; rather, it was calculated based solely
on Mohammed’s net income. The referee’s report cites to
§ 4-209, the minimum support rule discussed previously. Ten
percent of Mohammed’s net income results in a minimum
child support obligation of $89 per month, which is precisely
what the referee recommended. The referee also recom-
mended that the child support should not be made retroactive
to the date of filing “due to [Mohammed’s] minimal earnings
and the absence of a request for retroactive modification from
the initiating State of California.”
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I conclude that the child support referee correctly deter-
mined that there had been a material change in circumstances
warranting a modification in child support from zero support
to minimal support. The determination of minimal child sup-
port was consistent with the record, the law, and the Nebraska
Child Support Guidelines. The district court had the authority
to reject the referee’s report; however, based on the record
and the law applicable to this case, it was an abuse of dis-
cretion to deny the State’s request, on behalf of California,
to modify child support in the amount recommended by the
referee. Therefore, I would have reversed the district court’s
order with directions to enter an order denying Mohammed’s
exceptions and putting into effect the referee’s findings and
recommendations.