Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.
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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
SHELLEY FREDRICKSON, )
) Supreme Court No. S-15857
Appellant, )
) Superior Court No. 3AN-13-04681 CI
v. )
) OPINION
FOREST J. BUTTON, )
) No.7289 – September 14, 2018
Appellee. )
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
Judicial District, Anchorage, Erin B. Marston, Judge.
Appearances: Allison Mendel, Mendel Colbert & Associates,
Inc., Anchorage, for Appellant. Maurice N. Ellis, Law Office
of Maurice N. Ellis, Anchorage, for Appellee.
Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, and
Bolger, Justices. [Fabe and Carney, Justices, not
participating.]
STOWERS, Chief Justice.
BOLGER, Justice, dissenting.
I. INTRODUCTION
Forest Button and Shelley Fredrickson never married, but they had one
child together. Button and Fredrickson separated in September 2006. From September
2006 until January 2013 neither sought a formal custody order or a child support order.
Instead, they had an informal arrangement to share their son’s expenses. Button filed a
complaint for custody in January 2013. The parties participated in a settlement
conference and entered into an agreement resolving all custody issues, but the parties
reserved issues of prospective and retrospective child support for later resolution by the
court.
The superior court found that Fredrickson was the obligor parent from
September 2006 through August 2010, and calculated her child support obligation based
on Alaska Civil Rule 90.3. The court then used the shared custody child support rules
in Rule 90.3 to calculate the parties’ respective child support obligations from September
2010 until 2013. For purposes of these calculations the court included as income
$300,000 Fredrickson received from the Japanese government in connection with the
death of her brother, who died in the 2011 Japanese tsunami. The court also calculated
a prospective child support award. It found that from 2014 onward Fredrickson had been
voluntarily unemployed, and it imputed income to her to calculate this prospective
award. Following the court’s orders, Button filed a motion for attorney’s fees, which the
court granted.
Fredrickson appeals. We hold that (1) the court’s finding that the money
from the Japanese government was paid out in three annual installments was clearly
erroneous; (2) there is insufficient evidence to determine whether the money should be
considered income for purposes of calculating a retrospective child support award; (3)
the court did not err in finding that a deviation from retrospective child support
calculations under Rule 90.3 was unwarranted; and (4) the court’s decisions to impute
income to Fredrickson and not to impute income to Button were not clearly erroneous.
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II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
Forest Button and Shelley Fredrickson never married, but they had one son
in 2003. Button and Fredrickson lived together from November 2002 until they
separated in September 2006.
From September 2006 until Button filed his complaint for child custody in
January 2013 neither party sought a formal custody order. Instead, upon separation they
agreed to a schedule where Fredrickson cared for their son every Saturday when she
finished work until his bedtime the following Monday — at that time, Fredrickson
worked as a delivery driver five days a week, beginning at 5 a.m. — and Button cared
for him the rest of the week. Fredrickson also had visitation on Thursday evenings. In
2010 Fredrickson’s brother volunteered to care for their son when Fredrickson was at
work in the early mornings. Button and Fredrickson later agreed to a week-on/week-off
schedule, beginning in the summer of 2010.
There was no child support order in effect from 2006 until 2014; the first
child support order was the superior court’s Order Regarding Child Support Payments,
one of the orders at issue in this appeal. Before the litigation began the parties had an
informal agreement to share their son’s expenses, and they executed an agreement
providing that neither party owed the other child support. After moving out of their
shared home Fredrickson made monthly payments of $660 to Button to cover their son’s
expenses. Fredrickson also included their son on her medical insurance as a dependent,
and she paid the co-pays related to his medical needs. Fredrickson also paid for his other
activities, such as karate classes, swimming lessons, and football team expenses. In the
spring of 2007 Fredrickson stopped paying Button a fixed dollar amount, but continued
to pay some of their son’s expenses directly.
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In March 2011 Fredrickson’s younger brother went missing in Japan; he
had been killed in the 2011 tsunami. Fredrickson quit her delivery job when her brother
went missing. She testified that she was unable to work due to her grief and depression.
In early 2012 Fredrickson felt well enough to work part-time as a bartender and also
became heavily involved in charity work.
Fredrickson worked as a bartender for less than a year, working one to two
days per week at the beginning of the year and three to four days per week toward the
end of the year. Since leaving her bartender position Fredrickson has not worked for
pay, instead appearing to support herself mainly from payments issued from a family
trust — the annual amount she received from this trust varied from year to year, and
Fredrickson had no control over the amount or timing of the distributions — and from
a $300,000 payment she received from the Japanese government in 2012 relating to her
brother’s death. At the time of trial Fredrickson still had approximately $200,000 of the
Japanese government funds, and she planned to put the money toward a nonprofit she
hoped to start “to help organizations in Japan in [her brother’s] memory.”
In 2012 Fredrickson also began thinking about returning to school to study
nursing. She did not feel that bartending or truck driving was something she had a
passion for, because her brother’s death caused her to realize that she wanted to do
something to make a difference. It was also difficult for her to find childcare for her son
because of her hours while working in bartending and truck driving.
Since the parties’ separation Button has received income from rentals, a
consulting business, employment, a time share, and the sale of a duplex; he also has
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received income as well as large losses from stock trading. Button’s income varied
greatly from year to year between 2006 and 2013.1
B. Proceedings
Button filed a complaint for custody in January 2013. The parties
participated in a settlement conference in June. Button was represented by counsel
during that conference but Fredrickson was not. During the conference the parties
entered into an agreement resolving all custody issues. The final agreement specified
that the parties would exercise joint legal custody and shared physical custody of their
son, and the parties agreed to a week-on/week-off schedule. The parties also agreed to
bear their own attorney’s fees and costs. The court approved the settlement in November
2013.
However, Button also raised issues related to prospective and retrospective
child support at the settlement conference. The parties reserved those issues for later
resolution by the court. Superior Court Judge Erin B. Marston conducted a trial on the
child support issues in June 2014. The court applied the guidelines set forth in Civil
Rule 90.3 to determine child support obligations.
The court ultimately found that Fredrickson was the obligor parent from
September 2006 through August 2010 and calculated her child support obligation based
on Rule 90.3. The court then applied the shared custody child support rules in Rule 90.3,
using the parties’ actual income to calculate their respective child support obligations
1
For example, in 2007 Button reported about $114,000 as income from his
consulting work. Then, Button lost this position and was forced to live off of his savings
and a credit card, among other sources. In 2010 Button reported no employment or
business income, but he did sell a duplex he owned in May of that year. In 2013
Button’s income rose substantially to nearly $120,000. At the time of trial Button
estimated that his income was about $125,000. However, Button also reported large
losses on stock trades throughout this time period.
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from September 2010 until 2013 (when the parties shared custody on a week-on/week
off schedule). The court included the $300,000 payment from the Japanese government
as a part of Fredrickson’s income for purposes of its child support calculations. Because
of perceived difficulties tracking the exact amount and timing of the compensation
payment, the court split the $300,000 payment into three annual installments. Therefore,
for 2011, 2012, and 2013, the court determined that Fredrickson’s income consisted of
the income she reported on her taxes plus $100,000 per year for each annual installment.
The court concluded that Fredrickson owed Button approximately $76,231
in child support from September 2006 through the end of 2013. It deducted around
$14,027 from this sum as a credit for the amount Fredrickson had paid toward their son’s
expenses between 2006 and 2013, and it also offset the total amount by the four months
in 2010 for which Button owed Fredrickson child support. This left Fredrickson owing
Button around $61,233 in past child support for September 2006 through 2013.
Fredrickson moved for reconsideration, and Button supported Fredrickson’s motion and
raised additional points for reconsideration. Upon reconsideration, the court corrected
several errors in its calculations, reducing the total amount Fredrickson owed Button to
approximately $56,861.
With regard to future child support obligations, the court found that from
2014 onward Fredrickson had been voluntarily unemployed. Based on this finding the
court imputed income to Fredrickson in the amount of approximately $57,395, an
average of Fredrickson’s adjusted gross income from her tax returns for 2006 through
2010. The court did not impute income to Button. Based on Button’s 2014 income, the
court concluded that he owed Fredrickson approximately $431 per month from January
2014 onwards.
After the court issued its child support orders, Button filed a motion for
Alaska Civil Rule 82 attorney’s fees. Thereafter the court entered an amended final
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judgment awarding Button approximately $56,360, consisting of approximately (1)
$48,963 for child support from prior years less Button’s monthly obligation to
Fredrickson beginning in January 2014 and (2) $7,396 in attorney’s fees. Fredrickson
appeals on multiple grounds.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether the superior court used the correct method of calculating child
support2 and whether it applied the correct legal standard in calculating child support3
poses questions of law we review de novo. “Whether an item qualifies as income for the
purposes of Rule 90.3 is a question of law that we review de novo, adopting the rule that
‘is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason and policy.’ ”4
A trial court’s decision whether to impute income to a child support obligor
is reviewed for abuse of discretion, and the amount of income to impute is reviewed for
clear error.5 “A finding is clearly erroneous if we are ‘left with a definite and firm
conviction that the trial court has made a mistake.’ ”6 But “[w]hether there are sufficient
2
Caldwell v. State, 105 P.3d 570, 573 (Alaska 2005).
3
Rosenblum v. Perales, 303 P.3d 500, 503 (Alaska 2013) (citing Koller v.
Reft, 71 P.3d 800, 804 (Alaska 2003)).
4
Robinson v. Robinson, 961 P.2d 1000, 1002 (Alaska 1998) (quoting Nass
v. Seaton, 904 P.2d 412, 414 (Alaska 1995)).
5
Reilly v. Northrop, 314 P.3d 1206, 1212 (Alaska 2013).
6
Heustess v. Kelley-Heustess, 259 P.3d 462, 468 (Alaska 2011) (quoting
Inman v. Inman, 67 P.3d 655, 658 (Alaska 2003)).
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findings for informed appellate review is a question of law.”7 We “determine de novo
whether an award of attorney’s fees is governed by a rule or an exception to a rule.”8
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Court Made Insufficient Findings To Support Its Determination
That Fredrickson’s $300,000 Payment From Japan Should Be
Considered Income For Purposes of Calculating Child Support.
1. It was clear error to find that Fredrickson received the $300,000
in three annual installments.
The superior court found that Fredrickson received $300,000 from the
Japanese government in three annual installments of $100,000 disbursed in 2011, 2012,
and 2013. But the court acknowledged that the record was unclear on this point. While
Button provided Fredrickson’s monthly bank statements from 2011 to 2013, this did
“little to dispel the confusion” because the payments from the Japanese government were
not identified. Despite this confusion, the court found that the disbursement was not a
one-time payment and therefore it must be calculated as spread out over several years.
The court based this finding on the fact that “[n]owhere in the bank statements is a
deposit for $300,000” and that at trial, “Fredrickson testified that she received money
beyond what was reported in her taxes to live on from 2011-2013,” which the court
determined was “clearly a reference to the settlement from the Japanese government.”
We conclude that the court’s finding of three annual installments of $100,000 was clearly
erroneous for several reasons.
First, at the evidentiary hearing on child support, the only evidence
presented as to the timing of the Japanese government’s payment was Fredrickson’s
7
Horne v. Touhakis, 356 P.3d 280, 282 (Alaska 2015) (quoting Hooper v.
Hooper, 188 P.3d 681, 685 (Alaska 2008)).
8
Rosenblum, 303 P.3d at 503.
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uncontradicted testimony that she received $300,000 in 20129 from the Japanese
government for her brother’s death in the tsunami. Neither party specifically argued that
Fredrickson received more than one payment from the Japanese government, and the
court made no finding that Fredrickson was not a credible witness. Instead, the court’s
final order was the first time it was explicitly suggested that Fredrickson received the
funds as three annual payments. While it is true that Fredrickson answered in the
affirmative when opposing counsel asked Fredrickson whether she had “received other
moneys from 2011 through 2013” beyond what was reported in her taxes, opposing
counsel did not ask further questions to clarify what “other moneys” Fredrickson was
referencing or to distinguish specific dates. Fredrickson’s answer to this question is not
inconsistent with receiving the entire $300,000 payment in 2012; 2012 falls within the
2011 to 2013 range. In addition, opposing counsel never asked Fredrickson to identify
which deposit or deposits were Japanese funds, nor was she ever asked why there was
not a $300,000 deposit on her statements. No other witnesses or evidence contradicted
Fredrickson’s testimony that she received $300,000 in 2012.
Second, while it is true that the trial court did not find a $300,000 deposit
in the bank records Button submitted, these bank statements also fail to show any fixed,
recurring deposits of $100,000 or any other amount that would suggest regular payments
from the Japanese government. As Fredrickson states in her brief, “[t]he reasonable
conclusion from the evidence presented is that the payment from the Japanese
government was maintained in a separate account.” There is evidence supporting this
position. Fredrickson’s bank statements submitted at trial show multiple transfers from
9
The superior court correctly noted that, contrary to her testimony,
Fredrickson stated “in her closing argument . . . that she received the $300,000 in 2011.”
But in her closing argument, Fredrickson also argued, consistent with her testimony, that
the settlement funds were “a large one-time payment.”
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a bank account numbered *94. As Fredrickson argues, this evidence is “consistent with
all of the settlement funds being placed in an account numbered *94 and being
transferred into [Fredrickson]’s checking and savings accounts as needed.”
Third, if the payments were spread out over three years, Fredrickson would
have had to receive payments in 2012, 2013, and 2014. But the beginning balance of
account *94, which likely held the Japanese funds, was $240,142.06 in January 2014.
This suggests that Fredrickson received all of the funds prior to January 2014, as the
account’s beginning balance is higher than the amount of two $100,000 payments, or
$200,000, and she does not appear to have received a $100,000 payment into this
account during 2014. It is more likely that Fredrickson received the entire Japanese
payment in 2012 as she testified, placed the $300,000 in the account in 2012, and
withdrew from the account between 2012 and January 2014, resulting in a balance of
$240,142.06 in January 2014.
And while Button cites McDonald v. Trihub to argue that “[w]hen a party
fails to present sufficient evidence necessary to clarify an issue, the trial court is tasked
with making its determination on the best evidence that it has available,”10 this case is
easily distinguishable. In contrast to McDonald, in which questions were raised as to the
adequacy of the evidence of a party’s income before the court’s decision on the matter,11
Fredrickson would not have known that her evidence was inadequate because the
argument that the funds were received in installments was never made at trial.12 We
10
See 173 P.3d 416, 426 (Alaska 2007) (holding that a party “who fail[s] to
present sufficient evidence to the court cannot later object on the basis of inadequate
evidence”).
11
Id. at 425-26.
12
See also Caldwell v. State, 105 P.3d 570, 574 (Alaska 2005) (rejecting
(continued...)
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therefore conclude that it was clear error to find that Fredrickson’s payment from the
Japanese government occurred in $100,000 installments over three years from 2011 to
2013.
2. The superior court made no other findings that could support
a determination that Fredrickson’s $300,000 payment should be
considered income for purposes of child support.
Because the superior court’s finding that Fredrickson received money from
the Japanese government in three installments was clearly erroneous, and because it
relied on that finding to treat the money as income rather than a one-time gift, its decision
to include the money as income for purposes of calculating child support is called into
question. Yet the exact nature of the payment remains unknown. We note that
Fredrickson has referred to the $300,000 payment both as a gift and as a settlement,
though she argues that as a one-time gift the payment should not be considered income.
And while Button relies in part in his briefing to this court on cases dealing with gifts,
he consistently refers to the payment as settlement funds. The precise nature of the
Japanese payment was not established in the superior court and remains unclear.
The dissent argues that there is sufficient evidence on the record to support
a finding that the payments were a settlement, and that we should therefore affirm the
court’s determination that the payment should be treated as income. But the superior
court never made a finding that the payment was a settlement, nor any other finding
actually characterizing the payment. Rather, the court merely found that “as the money
was paid out over several years, it is not a one-time gift or inheritance,” and on that basis
12
(...continued)
superior court ruling that the sale of stock proceeds constituted a five-year revenue
stream for the purposes of determining prospective child support in part because “ [the
State] first raised its proposal to characterize the sale proceeds as a five-year revenue
stream at a late stage in the case,” leaving no opportunity to respond).
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concluded that it must be income. Rather than necessarily implying that the payment
must have been a settlement, the court’s reasoning could just as easily imply that it would
have been inclined to treat the payment as a gift or inheritance but for its finding that the
money was paid out in installments. Because we conclude it was clearly erroneous to
find that the payment was made over time, the court’s conclusion that the payment was
therefore not a one-time gift must be disregarded. Because the superior court made no
other findings that support its determination that the payment should be treated as
income, that determination must be vacated. We therefore remand to the superior court
to determine whether the payment was a gift, a legal settlement, or something else and
recalculate its child support award accordingly.
3. In the event the payment is determined on remand to be a gift,
it may be included as income for purposes of child support to
the extent it was treated as equivalent to other income.
Based on the assumption that the money from the Japanese government was
a gift, both parties advance arguments with respect to whether a gift should be treated as
income for purposes of calculating child support. This debate will be relevant in the
event the superior court on remand determines that the payment was a gift, so we address
it here. Fredrickson argues that because the “funds were a one-time gift, it was error to
treat [them] as income.” Button argues that “the court only included the . . . funds in its
retrospective determination of her child support obligation” and, therefore, the court did
not err in including the funds in Fredrickson’s income for the purposes of calculating the
child support award.
The Commentary to Rule 90.3 explains that “[t]he principal amount of one
time gifts and inheritances should not be considered as income.”13 In Nass v. Seaton, we
13
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. III(A). More specifically, the Commentary
(continued...)
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endorsed this approach because “any other approach blurs the easily administered and
well-established historical distinction between gifts and earned income.”14
However, our subsequent decision in Crayton v. Crayton deviated from the
strict rule set out in Nass.15 In Crayton a father brought a motion seeking reimbursement
of child support from the mother.16 The father argued that certain one-time monetary
gifts the mother had received should be included in her income when determining her
child support obligation for a period in which no child support order existed.17 The
superior court relied on our holding in Nass and rejected the father’s request.18 We
reversed, distinguishing Nass as relating to calculating support obligations for the
future.19 Because a gift will not necessarily be repeated in the future, we reasoned that
“the inclusion as income of a one-time gift or an inheritance would unfairly inflate” child
support obligations “beyond the obligor’s reliable future resources.”20 We concluded that
this logic does not apply where the mother’s “future payments [were] not at issue” and
13
(...continued)
suggests that courts should treat gifts and inheritances as capital assets when calculating
a child support award. The Commentary states that “[t]he principal amount of one-time
gifts and inheritances should not be considered as income, but interest from the principal
amount should be considered as income and the principal amount may be considered as
to whether unusual circumstances exist as provided by 90.3(c).” Id.
14
904 P.2d 412, 416 (Alaska 1995).
15
944 P.2d 487 (Alaska 1997).
16
Id. at 489.
17
Id.
18
Id. at 489-90.
19
Id. at 490.
20
Id.
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“the superior court will determine [the mother]’s income only in retrospect.”21 Because
“it [was] fair for the court to base the amount of reimbursement on the resources
available to [the mother],” we remanded, directing the superior court to consider gifts in
determining the mother’s retrospective child support obligation.22
Crayton offered no citation to authority for the apparent holding that gifts
should always be treated as income when making retrospective calculations,23 and Justice
Eastaugh wrote a concurring opinion taking issue with this court’s analysis.24 Justice
Eastaugh reasoned that “most one-time gifts and inheritances should be considered to be
capital assets. Such [funds] may represent the ability to earn income, an ability that
should be taken into account, but the gifts themselves are often treated as capital assets
by the donor and the recipient.”25 Thus, the touchstone of Justice Eastaugh’s analysis
was the treatment of the gift by the parties involved.
We are persuaded by Justice Eastaugh’s approach. The Commentary to
Rule 90.3 provides that the term “income” “should be interpreted broadly to include
benefits which would have been available for support if the family had remained
intact.”26 To that end, trial courts may include one-time gifts as income when calculating
retrospective child support awards to the extent that the principal amount of the gift was
21
Id.
22
Id.
23
Id. at 490.
24
Id. at 490-91 (Eastaugh, J., concurring).
25
Id. at 491 (Eastaugh, J., concurring).
26
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. III(A). Our opinion in Crayton mirrored this
language in holding that it was “fair for the court to base the amount of reimbursement
on the resources available.” Crayton, 944 P.2d at 490 (emphasis added).
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treated as the equivalent of income, i.e., as a resource to be used for general support and
family expenses. By contrast, to the extent a gift is treated as a capital asset, with its
principal kept separate and with only interest or rent derived therefrom treated as
disposable income, the principal of the gift should not be included as income for child
support purposes.27 On remand, should the superior court determine that money
Fredrickson received from the Japanese government was a gift, it may include those
funds in the income calculation to the extent Fredrickson treated the payment as
equivalent to a source of income rather than as a capital asset.
B. Fredrickson Is Not Entitled To An Exception To Rule 90.3.
1. To qualify for an exception to Rule 90.3, Fredrickson must
prove by clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice
would result from an application of Rule 90.3.
Rule 90.3(c)(1) provides that a “court may vary the child support award as
calculated under the other provisions of this rule for good cause upon proof by clear and
convincing evidence that manifest injustice would result if the support award were not
varied.”28 Fredrickson argues that the facts of her case warrant a deviation from the
normal application of Rule 90.3’s methodology for calculating child support for periods
in which no support order was in effect. She claims that the parties’ agreement to waive
child support and her reliance on the agreement, difficulties in proving past expenses and
27
Certain language in Justice Eastaugh’s concurring opinion in Crayton
suggests that the relevant question is whether the gift-giver intended the gift to be
equivalent to income. See Crayton, 944 P.2d at 491 (Eastaugh, J., concurring). But
looking to the intent of the gift-giver is at best an indirect and imperfect predictor of
whether gifted funds were available for support. And in a case like this, where the donor
was an abstract entity — a foreign sovereign government — determining the donor’s
intent is likely impossible. The simpler and more direct approach is to look at whether
the gift was actually treated as income and as a resource available for support.
28
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1).
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income, and her son’s adequate care during the period are unusual circumstances that
make the application of Rule 90.3’s regular methodology unfair. She asserts that this
unfairness is enough to avoid Rule 90.3’s application through an exception to the rule
she finds in its Commentary at VI(E)(1). Fredrickson argues that “[t]his section of the
Commentary makes no reference to Civil Rule 90.3(c)(1)[] and exists separate from the
Commentary interpreting Civil Rule 90.3(c)(1).” Therefore, Fredrickson asserts she does
not need to “include proof of ‘manifest injustice’ by ‘clear and convincing evidence’ ”
as typically required under Rule 90.3(c)(1). We disagree.
As we explained in Ruppe v. Ruppe, Rule 90.3(c)(1) “permits the court to
‘vary the child support award as calculated under the other provisions of this rule for
good cause upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice would
result if the support award were not varied’ ” and “[s]uch a variation may be particularly
appropriate when the superior court is examining parents’ conduct before any child
support order was entered.”29 We went on to note that while “we have held ‘that absent
extraordinary circumstances, courts should apply the calculation methodology of Rule
90.3 to determine amounts to be reimbursed to custodial parents for support of children
during periods not covered by support orders,’ the commentary [at VI(E)(1)] to Rule
90.3 notes that ‘in some circumstances unfairness may result from rigid [retroactive]
application of the rule.’ ”30
Our articulation in Ruppe of the prevailing standard for deviations from
Rule 90.3’s regular methodology made clear that its Commentary at VI(E)(1) does not
provide an independent exception to Rule 90.3’s application in this context, but rather
29
358 P.3d 1284, 1291 (Alaska 2015) (quoting Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1)).
30
Id. (alteration in the original) (first quoting Vachon v. Pugliese, 931 P.2d
371, 382 (Alaska 1996); then quoting Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. VI(E)(1)).
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is a component of the general standard governing deviations from Rule 90.3’s
methodology. In addition, the structure of the Commentary itself suggests that Part
VI(E)(1)’s instructive language is still subject to the requirements of Rule 90.3(c). Part
VI(A) of the Commentary provides information on exceptions in general. Parts
VI(B)-(F), including Part VI(E) that Fredrickson relies on here, discuss more specific
issues, all of which fall under the general category of exceptions to Rule 90.3. This
indicates that Part VI(E) is subject to the general standard applied to the broader category
of exceptions governed by Rule 90.3(c). In light of our recent case law and the structure
of the Commentary to Rule 90.3, we hold that Fredrickson, like all parents seeking a
variance from the application of Rule 90.3’s methodology, would be entitled to a
variation only “for good cause upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that
manifest injustice would result if the support award were not varied.”31
2. Fredrickson did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that
manifest injustice would result from an application of Rule 90.3.
Fredrickson argues that the superior court should have deviated from Rule
90.3 in calculating child support for the periods prior to Button’s complaint on several
grounds. We conclude that none of these grounds warrant a deviation from the
application of Rule 90.3’s regular methodology.
Fredrickson contends that it is unfair to use Rule 90.3 calculations in this
case because she relied on the parties’ agreement that no support was due, and if she had
known otherwise she would have kept careful track of her spending. She explains that
between 2006 and 2013 the parties “made informal agreements to cover [their son’s]
expenses as those expenses arose” and that “[i]n August of 2007, the parties executed an
agreement saying that neither party owed the other child support.” Button signed the
31
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1).
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agreement and both parties believed the agreement was fair and equitable at that time.
Fredrickson argues that “the agreement between the parties that no additional support
was owing is one of the unusual circumstances which makes the rigid application of Rule
90.3’s calculation methodology unjust on these facts.” She also offers the agreement as
evidence that she had no reason to be aware of her potential liability for retrospective
support obligations and that she therefore did not keep close records of her expenses
related to the child.
But we made clear in Cox v. Cox “that an agreement between the parties as
to child support is not an exceptional circumstance justifying deviations from the
guidelines, where the agreement requires support less than that called for by the
guidelines.”32 Cox involved a prospective child support award,33 but we have also
applied similar logic to child support arrearages, holding in Nix v. Nix that “a child
support waiver is not valid and enforceable until a court has reviewed and approved the
waiver’s substantive adequacy under Rule 90.3” and “a child support waiver presented
after the initial dissolution proceeding will be given only prospective effect from the date
of judicial approval.”34 Given these holdings, the superior court correctly ruled that the
existence of the parties’ child support waiver cannot by itself support a deviation from
calculations of child support awards required by Rule 90.3. In addition, the court
correctly recognized that Fredrickson was aware that she owed support, as indicated by
her payments to Button during this period. These payments suggest she knew she was
at least partially financially responsible for supporting their son. The fact that
32
776 P.2d 1045, 1049 (Alaska 1989).
33
Id. at 1045-46.
34
855 P.2d 1332, 1334 (Alaska 1993) (emphasis omitted); see also Rickmond
v. Pluid, 925 P.2d 251, 254-55 (Alaska 1996) (applying Cox to retrospective awards).
-18- 7289
Fredrickson might have done something different in the absence of the agreement
between the parties is not an extraordinary circumstance that would permit the superior
court to deviate from a calculation under Rule 90.3.
Fredrickson also contends that it is unfair to use Rule 90.3 calculations in
this case because she made substantial contributions to her child’s expenses that she
cannot prove. Fredrickson offered testimony and evidence about her actual spending
during the time period at issue. She claimed that these expenses included $660 per
month to Button for a time after they separated, including $400 for half the cost of the
child’s school; coverage of the child on her medical insurance; co-payments for medical
care that insurance did not cover; and payments for karate, swimming, football, and other
miscellaneous expenses. Fredrickson also testified that in the spring of 2007 she stopped
paying a fixed dollar amount directly to Button and began paying certain of the child’s
expenses on her own, including school fees, doctor’s bills, and extracurricular activities
like soccer, football, and swimming. Fredrickson submitted documentation showing
expenses she paid, including a partial check register for 2007 through 2009. But she was
only able to document “partial” “example[s]” of what she paid on the child’s behalf. She
argues that the child support award should be lower because there were many
expenditures she made that she could not prove.
However, the court credited Fredrickson $13,602 against her retrospective
support obligation for the contributions she was able to prove.35 The court properly
35
We held in Young v. Williams that when an obligor “is required by a
divorce decree to pay to the plaintiff money for the support of the children and the
unpaid and accrued installments become judgments in favor of the plaintiff, [the obligor]
cannot, as a matter of law, claim credit on account of payments voluntarily made directly
to the children.” 583 P.2d 201, 203 (Alaska 1978) (quoting Briggs v. Briggs, 165 P.2d
772, 777 (Or. 1946)). However, we have explicitly held that “[t]he Young rule does not
(continued...)
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based the amount it credited Fredrickson on the evidence presented, including
Fredrickson’s bank records and check book register. We conclude that Fredrickson’s
inability to prove additional claimed expenditures on her child in this context does not
establish by clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice would result if the
court did not vary the retrospective child support from what was required under Rule
90.3 for the period from 2006 through 2013.
Fredrickson further argues that the evidence suggests that the child was
well-supported financially and she would have paid more support if he needed it.
Fredrickson contends the court’s child support order “will only take support away from
[her child] in the present” and that “[t]he substantial arrearage will effectively mean that
the money available to [Fredrickson] to support [her child] will be greatly diminished
during the half of his life he spends with her.” And she asserts that a rigid application
of Rule 90.3 would result in exactly the type of unfairness we have attempted to avoid
— a “ ‘prolonged dispute’ about who paid for what” in the past.36
Fredrickson’s argument that the child support award will only take support
away from their son in the present is without merit. In addition to the retrospective
award, the superior court entered an award for prospective child support. Both of these
awards are meant to provide for their son’s needs, and the prospective award will ensure
that both parents continue to provide for his needs in the future. Finally, using Rule 90.3
to calculate the retrospective child support award will definitively end the dispute about
35
(...continued)
apply where . . . no child support order exists and the parties have not independently
reached a clear agreement as to custody and their respective support obligations.” Ogard
v. Ogard, 808 P.2d 815, 817 (Alaska 1991). Therefore, in this case where no child
support order existed during the relevant time period, Fredrickson was appropriately
credited with the expenditures she could prove.
36
See Vachon v. Pugliese, 931 P.2d 371, 381 (Alaska 1996).
-20- 7289
past child support, not result in a “prolonged dispute” about who paid for what in the
past.37
In order to qualify for an exception to calculating child support obligations
under Rule 90.3, Fredrickson was required to prove by clear and convincing evidence
that manifest injustice would result from an application of Rule 90.3. Because she failed
to do so, we hold that the superior court did not err in using Rule 90.3 to calculate
Fredrickson’s support obligations.
C. It Was Not Error To Impute Income To Fredrickson, Nor To Decline
To Impute Income To Button.
1. The court did not err in imputing income to Fredrickson.
Button argued in the superior court that it “should treat . . . Fredrickson as
voluntarily unemployed and . . . impute her past income” for the purposes of calculating
a future child support award. The court agreed, finding that from 2014 onwards
Fredrickson was voluntarily unemployed. Based on this finding, the court imputed
income to Fredrickson under Rule 90.3(a)(4), which allows the court to “calculate child
support based on a determination of the potential income of a parent who voluntarily and
unreasonably is unemployed or underemployed,”38 in an amount of $57,395.72 per
year.39
37
See id. (“Requiring proof of actual costs can lead to prolonged disputes
when the interests of custodial parents in maximizing support may encourage deception
and the interests of non-custodial parents in minimizing support may disadvantage the
children.”).
38
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(a)(4).
39
This amount represented an average of Fredrickson’s adjusted gross income
from her tax returns for 2006 through 2010. The superior court chose to use the years
from 2006 to 2010 for the purposes of calculating her imputed income because “[t]hese
(continued...)
-21- 7289
There are two aspects to the standard for imputing income in the child
support context. First, the superior court must find that the obligor is both voluntarily
and unreasonably unemployed or underemployed.40 Second, the superior court’s method
for calculating the obligor’s actual earning capacity must be supported by adequate
factual findings, “based upon the [obligor’s] work history, qualifications, and job
opportunities.”41 Fredrickson challenges the superior court’s findings on both issues.
a. There is sufficient evidence to support the court’s express
finding that Fredrickson’s unemployment was voluntary,
and the court’s implied finding that it was unreasonable.
Fredrickson argues that the superior court made inadequate findings to
support imputing income to her. Specifically, Fredrickson argues that before income can
be imputed to an obligor, the obligor’s unemployment or underemployment must be
“unreasonable” considering the totality of the circumstances and that the trial court made
insufficient findings to support a determination that she was unreasonably unemployed.
39
(...continued)
[were] the years that [Fredrickson] was working full-time” and because “[t]he years from
2011 onward are not a good indication of imputed income, as [Fredrickson]’s income
[was] skewed by the money from the Japanese government.”
40
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(a)(4); see Barlow v. Thompson, 221 P.3d 998, 1003
(Alaska 2009).
41
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(a)(4); see Horne v. Touhakis, 256 P.3d 280, 283-84
(Alaska 2015) (vacating order imputing income for lack of evidence and factual findings
supporting the superior court’s calculation); see also Barlow at 221 P.3d 998, 1003;
O’Connell v. Christenson, 75 P.3d 1037, 1041 (Alaska 2003); Koller v. Reft, 71 P.3d
800, 805 (Alaska 2003).
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We have held that “to be considered voluntarily unemployed, a parent must
engage in voluntary conduct for the purpose of becoming or remaining unemployed.”42
In Beaudoin v. Beaudoin we explained that “the relevant inquiry under Civil Rule 90.3
is simply whether a parent’s current situation and earnings reflect a voluntary and
unreasonable decision to earn less than the parent is capable of earning.”43 We have also
clarified that “[a] court may find that underemployment [or unemployment] [is]
voluntary even if the obligor acted in good faith.”44 “The key inquiry is whether the lack
of employment is the result of ‘economic factors’ or of ‘purely personal choices.’ ”45
To determine the reasonableness of a parent’s unemployment, the court
“must look to the totality of the circumstances, including ‘such factors as whether the
obligor’s reduced income is temporary, whether the change is the result of economic
factors or of purely personal choices, the children’s needs, and the parents’ needs and
financial abilities.’ ”46 So long as the superior court’s findings “encompass the totality
of the relevant circumstances,” it need not make specific findings on each of the
reasonableness factors.47
42
Bendixen v. Bendixen, 962 P.2d 170, 172 (Alaska 1998).
43
24 P.3d 523, 528 (Alaska 2001).
44
Robinson v. Robinson, 961 P.2d 1000, 1004 (Alaska 1998).
45
Reilly v. Northrop, 314 P.3d 1206, 1213 (quoting Nunley v. State, Dep’t of
Revenue, Child Support Enf’t Div., 99 P.3d 7, 11 (Alaska 2004).
46
Sharpe v. Sharpe, 366 P.3d 66, 69 (Alaska 2016) (quoting Sawicki v.
Haxby, 186 P.3d 546, 550 (Alaska 2008)).
47
Sawicki, 186 P.3d at 550-51.
-23- 7289
The burden to produce sufficient evidence to support the necessary findings
lies with the parties,48 pursuant to the burden-shifting mechanism for imputed income we
outlined in Sawicki v. Haxby,49 We explained that “[o]nce the primary custodian has
made out a prima facie case of voluntary and unreasonable underemployment the burden
of persuasion shifts to the obligor to rebut that claim.”50
The superior court here ruled that Fredrickson was “voluntarily
unemployed” because after receiving money from the Japanese government, she “quit
working and concentrated on charitable work and other projects.” Fredrickson appears
to have argued that her unemployment was not voluntary because her grief and
depression made it impossible for her to work. But while Rule 90.3(a)(4) states that
courts may not impute income to parents who are “physically or mentally incapacitated,”
Fredrickson offered no evidence — apart from her own conclusory testimony that she
could not work due to grief and depression — that she was “physically or mentally
incapacitated.” Furthermore, as the court noted, Fredrickson had been employed as a
bartender and had undertaken significant charitable work after her brother’s death.
Therefore, even if she were initially incapacitated due to her grief and depression, those
issues were no longer a barrier to her employment. In other words, Fredrickson failed
to offer evidence rebutting Button’s prima facie case that Fredrickson was voluntarily
unemployed based on the fact she quit working after receiving funds from the Japanese
48
Horne v. Touhakis, 356 P.3d 280, 284 (Alaska 2015) (remanding for more
detailed factual findings but noting that “the parties failed to provide evidence that would
have allowed the superior court to make more detailed findings,” and that “[t]he parties
bear responsibility for this dearth of evidence”).
49
186 P.3d at, 548-49.
50
Id. at 548-49.
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government. We therefore conclude that the superior court did not clearly err in finding
that Fredrickson was voluntarily unemployed.
The court made no explicit ruling on the unreasonableness of Fredrickson’s
unemployment. As discussed above, a court must find that an obligor’s unemployment
or underemployment is both voluntary and unreasonable. However, on the record before
us, the finding of unreasonableness is clearly implied. The court explicitly recognized
the requirement to find the obligor both voluntarily and unreasonably unemployed before
imputing income. Fredrickson argued that her unemployment was reasonable because
she wished to pursue a career in nursing. The court acknowledged this argument in its
December 2014 order, but found it unconvincing, noting that “Fredrickson has expressed
an interest in attending nursing school, but has yet to take any classes.” Fredrickson’s
argument that she could not work due to grief and depression is also relevant to the issue
of reasonableness. However, the court also considered and dismissed both of these
arguments, noting that Fredrickson had both been employed as a bartender and
undertaken significant charitable work, evidencing an ability to work. Because the court
recognized the need to find the unemployment unreasonable before imputing income,
addressed and rejected each of Fredrickson’s arguments on this issue, and ultimately
decided to impute income to Fredrickson, a finding of unreasonableness is clearly
implied. On this record, that finding is not clearly erroneous.51
51
We note that in Reilly v. Northrop, we stated that the court “must make
specific findings that the [obligor’s] underemployment [or unemployment] is both
voluntary and unreasonable.” 314 P.3d 1206, 1212 (Alaska 2013). To the extent this
implies both findings must be explicit, it is an incorrect statement of the law. In Reilly,
the superior court did make explicit findings on both elements, so we never directly
addressed the question of whether explicit findings were required. Id. at 1210. In
practice, however, we have permitted implicit findings in this context. In Barlow v.
Thompson, the superior court’s child support order incorporated a master’s report, and
(continued...)
-25- 7289
b. The court did not err in estimating Fredrickson’s earning
capacity based on her previous employment.
Fredrickson also argues that “income should not have been imputed to her
based solely on her income three or more years previously, in jobs she could no longer
obtain.” She argues that “[n]o evidence was presented to show that that job still existed
at the time of trial, or that she could find a similar job at the same pay level.” She claims
that the superior court did not make any findings “regarding [her] ability to obtain the
same work she did in 2006 through 2010, or what the job would pay if she did obtain it,”
and she criticizes the court for finding that “her income would likely be the same as it
was in those years” for the purposes of calculating the child support award.
The question presented here is whether, when the superior court has
determined that the obligor’s unemployment or underemployment is voluntary and
unreasonable, the court is required to make explicit findings regarding the availability
of jobs and the obligor’s ability to perform such jobs before imputing income. We
conclude that it is not.
Our past cases indicate that when an obligor parent voluntarily leaves her
previous employment and unreasonably remains unemployed or underemployed, the
51
(...continued)
neither of those made an explicit finding of either unreasonableness or voluntariness.
221 P.3d 998, 1003 (Alaska 2009). On appeal, we found the voluntariness finding
implied and supported by the record, but vacated and remanded because the master’s
failure to address factors relevant to reasonableness left us “unable to determine whether
the implied imputation of income is clearly erroneous.” Id. We therefore now clarify
that we will not vacate a child support order merely because the findings of voluntariness
and unreasonableness are implied rather than explicit, so long as the record indicates that
the court properly considered both elements and there is sufficient evidence in the record
for us to determine whether the imputation of income was clearly erroneous. That being
said, best practice is for the trial court to make its findings explicit on both elements in
every case.
-26- 7289
court can impute income based on the obligor’s previous earnings unless the obligor
demonstrates that she would not be able to achieve a similar income. In Sawicki v.
Haxby, the obligor sought a modification and reduction of her child support obligation
after she left one job and took another that paid half as much.52 The superior court found
that she was voluntarily and unreasonably underemployed, imputed her prior income to
her, and denied her motion.53 The superior court did not make any specific findings in
order to calculate her child support obligation, because it did not need to: a child support
obligation had already been calculated previously, and the court simply denied Sawicki’s
motion to reduce it.54 On appeal, after determining that the superior court did not clearly
err in finding the obligor voluntarily and unreasonably unemployed, we held that
“[g]iven [the mother’s] extensive sales experience and savings, it was not error to impute
income to [her] at the salary she recently earned.”55 In Pugil v. Cogar, the obligor father,
who had previously been a commercial fisherman, moved to Texas shortly before trial
to change careers.56 The father asked the court to base his child support obligation on
his lower prospective earnings in his new career.57 The superior court declined, reasoning
that “it is [the obligor’s] earning capacity which [the court] should consider in setting his
52
186 P.3d at 547.
53
Id.
54
Id.
55
Id. at 551.
56
811 P.2d 1062, 1064 (Alaska 1991).
57
Id.
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child support obligation rather than what he actually chooses to make,”58 and computed
the father’s income by averaging three years of his fishing income.59 The trial court did
not make any specific findings that any particular fishing opportunity was available to
him. Rather, the court noted that the father “ha[d] made no showing that he [could ]not
continue to work part time as a fisherman.”60 On appeal, we affirmed, concluding that
“the superior court considered all of the relevant circumstances.”61 We have reached
similar results, affirming the superior court’s imputation of income based on previous
earnings without findings as to specific job opportunities, on several occasions.62
However, because we acknowledge that our decisions in other cases may have created
some uncertainty on this point, we take this opportunity to distinguish those cases and
clarify our holding.
In two cases, we vacated the superior court’s imputation of income for lack
of findings indicating the existence of real employment opportunities that would pay the
imputed amount. In O’Connell v. Christenson, the superior court had estimated imputed
income by assuming that a fast food employee would make $20,000 per year and then
doubling that figure because the obligor “was capable of doing work substantially more
remunerative than that.”63 Similarly, in Horne v. Touhakis, the superior court considered
the self-employed obligor’s estimate of his income, found that he had “underestimate[d]
58
Id.
59
Id.
60
Id. at 1066.
61
Id. at 1067.
62
See Silvan v. Alcina, 105 P.3d 117, 125 (Alaska 2005); Olmstead v. Ziegler,
42 P.3d 1102, 1106 (Alaska 2002).
63
75 P.3d 1037, 1041 (Alaska 2003).
-28- 7289
the market value of his skills and experience,” and without further explanation doubled
the estimate.64 In both of these cases, the imputed income was based not on previous
income, but on arbitrary multiplication and “the superior court’s intuitions”65 about the
obligor’s earning capacity, without any evidentiary support. This is distinguishable from
the case at hand, where the superior court based the imputation of income on concrete
evidence as to Fredrickson’s previous earnings.
In Petrilla v. Petrilla, we also found an abuse of discretion in the superior
court’s imputation of income to the obligor based on his prior salary.66 However, in that
case, the obligor’s specific earning capacity was not at issue. The obligor in Petrilla had
moved out of state, and after an extended period of unemployment — during which his
income was imputed at a level equivalent to his previous salary — he eventually found
a job with the State of Nevada.67 The obligor then filed a motion to modify his child
support obligation based on his new employment income.68 The superior court denied
this motion, reasoning that he had waited an unreasonable amount of time before
securing employment, and that “he could have been earning more than twice his
unemployment income had he made the effort.”69 On appeal, we vacated the order
denying the request for modification because “[i]n effect, the superior court concluded
that [the obligor] was voluntarily and unreasonably underemployed even after he secured
64
356 P.3d 280, 282 (Alaska 2015).
65
Id. at 283.
66
305 P.3d 302, 303 (Alaska 2013).
67
Id. at 304-05.
68
Id. at 305.
69
Id.
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full-time employment.”70 In other words, we did not conclude that previous earnings
were an inappropriate basis for determining the amount of imputed income, but rather
that the superior court in that case had failed to show that any amount of imputed income
was appropriate.
We reaffirm the burden-shifting mechanism for imputed income we
outlined in Sawicki v. Haxby,71 and conclude that that mechanism applies equally to
determining whether to impute income and to determining how much income to impute.
The obligor’s previous earnings can serve as prima facie evidence of her earning
capacity, and the burden is on the obligor to show that no job opportunities are available
to her that would pay an equivalent amount. The superior court may not, however,
impute as income an entirely arbitrary amount with no support in the record, or impute
income based on previous earnings where there is no indication that the obligor is
currently unemployed or underemployed.
In this case, Fredrickson points to evidence that she did in fact earn less
after 2011, and asserts that there is no indication in the record that either her previous job
or a similar job would be available. However, as we have explained, the burden was on
Fredrickson to show that a job of equivalent pay was not available, and we review the
amount of income imputed to a child support obligor only for clear error.72 Fredrickson
never provided any reason for the court to think that if she returned to work full time she
would be unable to earn as much income as she did previously in her work as a delivery
70
Id. at 307.
71
186 P.3d 546, 548-49 (Alaska 2008) (“Once the primary custodian has
made out a prima facie case of voluntary and unreasonable underemployment the burden
of persuasion shifts to the obligor to rebut that claim.”).
72
Reilly v. Northrop, 314 P.3d 1206, 1212 (Alaska 2013).
-30- 7289
driver. Thus, the superior court did not clearly err in relying on Fredrickson’s past
income to determine her earning capacity.
b. Fredrickson’s proposed return to school did not justify a change
to the imputed income calculation.
Fredrickson also argues that her plan to return to school justified a change
to her calculated imputed income, relying on our cases that instruct trial courts “to
consider all the circumstances of [a] change in employment to determine [child
support].”73 When a superior court makes decisions about how a parent’s plans to
change careers will impact a child support award, we have held that the court must
consider the needs of the child, the ability of the custodial parent to meet those needs,
and the parent’s work history, qualifications, and job opportunities.74 We have also
cautioned that “Rule 90.3(a)(4) does not rigorously command pursuit of maximum
73
Pugil v. Cogar, 811 P.2d 1062, 1066 (Alaska 1991) (second alteration in
original); see Beaudoin v. Beaudoin, 24 P.3d 523, 529-31 (Alaska 2001) (reversing
summary judgment where all circumstances surrounding mother’s decision to remain
unemployed even after reducing custody from full-time to only a third of the time raised
a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether she was “voluntarily and unreasonably
unemployed”); Pattee v. Pattee, 744 P.2d 658, 662 (Alaska 1987), overruled on other
grounds by Nass v. Seaton, 904 P.2d 412 (Alaska 1995) (“[T]he judge [is] to consider
the nature of the changes and the reasons for the changes, and then to determine whether,
under all the circumstances, a modification is warranted.” (quoting In re Marriage of
Rome v. Rome, 621 P.2d 1090, 1092 (Mont. 1981))); see also Flannery v. Flannery, 950
P.2d 126, 131, 133 (Alaska 1997) (remanding for the superior court to consider whether
reduced income from medical practice justified a change in child support obligations);
Arndt v. Arndt, 777 P.2d 668, 669-70 (Alaska 1989) (remanding for the superior court
to modify child support awards where father’s income decreased by more than 50%,
mother’s income increased, and child custody significantly changed); Curley v. Curley,
588 P.2d 289, 292-93 (Alaska 1979) (refusing to modify child support award where
father argued his income had decreased by about $400 per month and his expenses now
exceeded his income).
74
See Beaudoin, 24 P.3d at 528 n.14; Pugil, 811 P.2d at 1066.
-31- 7289
earnings.”75 And the Commentary to Civil Rule 90.3 provides that “[w]hen a parent
makes a career change, this consideration should include the extent to which the children
will ultimately benefit from the change.”76
In Pattee v. Pattee we held that a non-custodial parent who voluntarily
reduced his income to return to school should not automatically receive a corresponding
reduction in his child support obligation because the children and custodial parent
“should not be forced to finance the noncustodial parent’s career change.”77 In Olmstead
v. Ziegler the superior court concluded that a father’s decision “to quit the private
practice of law and undertake training for a new career cannot be viewed as anything but
a voluntary move on his part.”78 We affirmed the superior court’s decision.79 And in
Pugil v. Cogar we upheld the superior court’s determination that the father’s support
obligation should be calculated based on his potential income as a commercial fisherman,
rather than his actual income, even though the father had plans to continue his education
and leave his fishing career.80 The father in Pugil asked the court to compute his child
support obligation based on his prospective earnings as a welder — the new career he
wished to pursue — but the superior court stated that it would instead consider his
earning capacity as a fisherman “rather than what he actually chooses to make” because
75
Beaudoin, 24 P.3d at 530.
76
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. III(C).
77
744 P.2d at 662.
78
42 P.3d 1102, 1105 (Alaska 2002).
79
Id. at 1107.
80
811 P.2d 1062, 1067 (Alaska 1991).
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“his unilateral decision to go to school should not affect his child support obligation.”81
We upheld the court’s decision, noting that the father could work part-time as a
commercial fisherman.82
At the same time, “we do not believe that an obligor-parent should be
‘locked in’ to a particular job or field during the minority of his or her children when
accepting a lower paying position may ultimately result in personal or professional
advancement.”83 We have ultimately explained that “[t]he [j]udge [is] to consider the
nature of the changes and the reasons for the changes, and then to determine whether,
under all the circumstances, a modification is warranted.”84
Fredrickson testified that she planned to return to school to study nursing
because she did not have a passion for bartending or truck driving, explaining that her
brother’s death caused her to realize that she should do something to make a difference
for others. She also explained that truck driving and bartending make it too difficult for
her to exercise shared custody. While acknowledging that she had not yet solidified
these plans to return to school, she argued that the ongoing litigation made it impossible
to plan her return. Fredrickson contends that the superior court failed to make sufficient
findings regarding her plans to return to school under Pattee’s requirement that the court
consider her “reasons for returning to school, the other income available to the parties,
and the reasonable needs of [her child]” when calculating her child support obligations.
81
Id. at 1064.
82
Id. at 1066-67.
83
Nass v. Seaton, 904 P.2d 412, 418 (Alaska 1995) (quoting Pattee v. Pattee,
744 P.2d 658, 662 (Alaska 1987)).
84
Id. (quoting Pattee, 744 P.2d at 662) (third alteration in original).
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But the superior court did take Fredrickson’s plans to return to school into
consideration. The court stated that Fredrickson “has expressed an interest in attending
nursing school, but has yet to take any classes.” It is clear from the court’s order that it
concluded that Fredrickson’s proposed return to school did not justify a change to the
imputed income calculation. This conclusion was not clearly erroneous. For this reason,
and for the reasons discussed above, we conclude that it was not abuse of discretion for
the court to impute income to Fredrickson based on her previous earnings from 2006 to
2010.
2. The superior court did not err by declining to impute income to
Button.
Fredrickson argues that the superior court erred in failing to impute income
to Button for 2010 through 2012. She argues that Button was “capable of earning well
over $100,000 per year” but that “in relevant years [between 2010 and 2012], he had
much less, or no[,] employment income, for very unclear reasons.” Fredrickson claims
that because Button’s “tax returns show him being almost totally unemployed from 2009
until sometime in 2011[] and earning far below his historic and future income in 2011
and 2012” and because “the [superior] court made no findings whatsoever regarding
whether he was voluntarily unemployed or underemployed during that time,” “it was an
abuse of discretion for the [superior] court not to consider imputing income to [Button]
during this period.”
Typically, “[i]n making retrospective rather than prospective child support
awards actual income rather than earlier predictions as to income should be used.”85 The
superior court followed this rule. It imputed income to Fredrickson based on her future
earning capacity to determine the prospective child support award, and it used Button’s
85
Spott v. Spott, 17 P.3d 52, 56 (Alaska 2001) (emphasis added) (citing
Crayton v. Crayton, 944 P.2d 487, 490 (Alaska 1997)).
-34- 7289
actual income from 2010 through 2012 to calculate the retrospective award.86 It would
have been improper to impute income to Button pursuant to Rule 90.3(a)(4) for past
years, and we conclude that the court did not err in not imputing income to Button for
the purposes of calculating the retrospective child support award.87 It therefore did not
need to make findings about Button’s unemployment during that period.
D. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Concluding That Attorney’s Fees
Should Be Awarded Under Rule 82.
After trial Button moved for an award of attorney’s fees as the prevailing
party under Rule 82(a) and (b)(1).88 Typically, Rule 82 permits the prevailing party to
be awarded attorney’s fees. However, we have held that attorney’s fees in divorce cases
86
For example, the superior court included in Button’s 2010 income a large
capital gain he received from the sale of his duplex. Specifically, the superior court
determined Button’s support obligation for 2011, 2012, and 2013 by relying on the
actual resources he had available, namely $33,057.40 in 2011, $49,158.04 in 2012, and
$80,882.48 in 2013, as his tax returns reflected. Button did not appeal the superior
court’s calculation of his income. Fredrickson only challenged the superior court’s
decision not to impute income to Button, as discussed in Section IV.C.2. Thus, we need
not consider whether the superior court otherwise erred in its income calculations.
87
Fredrickson raises a similar argument about the court’s imputation of
income to her for 2014, but she failed to raise it until her reply brief, and “we will not
consider issues raised for the first time in a reply brief.” Crane v. Crane, 986 P.2d 881,
887 n.14 (Alaska 1999) (citing Alaska R. App. P. 212(c)(3); McGee v. McGee, 974 P.2d
983, 989 (Alaska 1999); Petersen v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 803 P.2d 406, 411 n.8 (Alaska
1990)).
88
Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(a) (“Except as otherwise provided by law or agreed
to by the parties, the prevailing party in a civil case shall be awarded attorney’s fees
calculated under this rule.”); Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(1) (requiring the court to adhere to
a specific schedule in fixing the amount of attorney’s fees awarded).
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should be “based on the relative economic situations and earning powers of the parties”89
rather than prevailing party status, to ensure that “both spouses have the proper means
to litigate the divorce action on a fairly equal plane.”90 And we have extended this
divorce exception to quasi-divorce actions involving child custody and support
proceedings between unmarried couples.91
Fredrickson contends that the issue of child support was part of the initial
custody case but was reserved for later determination when the custody issues were
settled.92 She argues that Alaska law precludes a Rule 82 award of fees in this case, as
the facts resemble those in Bergstrom v. Lindback. The superior court disagreed, finding
that the “issues being litigated do not resemble a divorce case, but rather involve issues
relating to long past due child support” that were “strictly about money and arose long
after the parties split up as a couple.” The court therefore awarded Button attorney’s
fees.
89
Kowalski v. Kowalski, 806 P.2d 1368, 1372 (Alaska 1991).
90
Lone Wolf v. Lone Wolf, 741 P.2d 1187, 1192 (Alaska 1987).
91
Bergstrom v. Lindback, 779 P.2d 1235, 1238 (Alaska 1989) (holding that
because the case “between unmarried individuals was limited to issues of child custody
and support,” the award of attorney’s fees “should be governed by the standard used in
divorce actions” such that attorney’s fees are “based on the parties’ relative economic
situations and earning powers”).
92
Fredrickson also argues that the parties agreed to bear their own costs and
fees in the settlement agreement, and the superior court should have “honor[ed] the
parties’ express agreement that no attorney’s fees would be awarded.” However, as the
superior court found, “[w]hile the parties did agree to settle a portion of the case, the
issue of past child support was expressly excepted out of the agreement and has been
hotly litigated,” suggesting that the attorney’s fees agreement in the settlement document
applies only to the portion of the dispute settled there.
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We agree with the superior court’s analysis. Typically, we decline to apply
the divorce exception to cases involving child support issues between unmarried parties.
In Sanders v. Barth we explained that
the divorce exception to Rule 82 should remain an exception
to the rule, not the rule itself. If a case does not closely
resemble a divorce action or if it does not involve the kinds
of issues — such as the initial determination of custody and
child support — that generally arise in the immediate
aftermath of a long-term relationship break-up, the superior
court should not apply the divorce exception to the award of
attorney’s fees.[93]
We refused to apply the divorce exception in Sanders because the case was “strictly
about money” and the parties were “litigating child support issues more than ten years
after their relationship broke up.”94
Here, Button brought the underlying custody action in 2013, almost seven
years after the parties separated. Of greater significance, the child support portion of this
case is “strictly about money.”95 The parties participated in a settlement conference at
which they resolved the custody issues, but they expressly reserved issues of past and
present child support for later resolution by the court. This weighs in favor of not
applying the divorce exception. We conclude that the superior court did not err in
determining that Rule 82(a) and (b)(1) was the correct standard to apply in this case.
But because we are reversing one of the superior court’s decisions and
remanding for further proceedings, the court’s determination of the prevailing party and
93
12 P.3d 766, 768 (Alaska 2000).
94
Id. at 769.
95
Id.
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its fee award to Button must be vacated. The court can revisit the attorney’s fee issue
after it decides nature and appropriate treatment of the Japanese payment.
V. CONCLUSION
We VACATE the superior court’s decision to treat Fredrickson’s money
from the Japanese government as income when calculating the retrospective child
support award and REMAND for a determination of the exact nature of that payment and
a recalculation of the retrospective award consistent with this opinion. We AFFIRM the
court’s decision to apply Rule 90.3 in its calculation of retrospective child support. We
AFFIRM the court’s decision to impute income to Fredrickson, AFFIRM the court’s
decision not to impute income to Button, and VACATE the award of attorney’s fees to
Button. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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BOLGER, Justice, dissenting.
The superior court found that Shelley Fredrickson left her employment after
receiving $300,000 in settlement payments from the government of Japan. But this
court’s decision requires the superior court to reconsider whether Fredrickson’s
compensation payment should be considered income for child support purposes. In my
opinion, the evidence is sufficient to support the superior court’s conclusion. When
Forest Button’s counsel asked, “Did you receive a settlement from Japan for your
brother?” (Emphasis added.) Fredrickson responded, “Yes, I did.” She then confirmed
that the settlement was $300,000 and that she received it in 2012.
Many cases from other states hold that settlement payments should be
treated as income for child support purposes.1 These cases are consistent with
1
Stuart v. Stuart, 260 S.W.3d 740 (Ark. App. 2007) (holding that
class-action settlement fell within the definition of “income” for child support purposes);
Slaughter v. Slaughter, 867 A.2d 976 (D.C. 2005) (defamation settlement); Mayfield v.
Mayfield, 989 N.E.2d 601 (Ill. 2013) (workers’ compensation settlement); Carmer v.
Carmer, 45 N.E.3d 512 (Ind. App. 2015) (structured settlement payments from personal
injury settlement); Chapman v. Evans, No. 01-2060, 2002 WL 31528541 (Iowa App.
2002) (lump sum wrongful termination settlement); Guidry v. Guidry, 6 So. 3d 845 (La.
App. 2009) (payments from personal injury settlement); Good v. Armstrong, 554 N.W.2d
14 (Mich. App. 1996) (personal injury settlement); Sherburne Cty. Soc. Servs. ex rel.
Schafer v. Riedle, 481 N.W.2d 111 (Minn. App. 1992) (structured settlement payments);
Taranto v. State Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 962 S.W.2d 897 (Mo. App. 1998) (personal injury
settlement payments); In re State ex rel. Taylor, 904 A.2d 619 (N.H. 2006) (personal
injury settlements); Cleveland v. Cleveland, 592 A.2d 20 (N.J. Super. App. Div. 1991)
(personal injury settlement lump sum); Mirkin v. Mirkin, 842 N.Y.S.2d 548 (App. Div.
2007) (lawsuit settlement); Spicer v. Spicer, 607 S.E.2d 678 (N.C. App. 2005) (“income”
in child support guidelines included awards intended to compensate for non-economic
loss); Dupay v. Dupay, 782 N.W.2d 42 (N.D. 2010) (personal injury settlement);
Herrera v. Herrera, 298 P.3d 1209 (Okla. Civ. App. 2013) (sexual abuse settlement
payments); Arneson v. Arneson, 670 N.W.2d 904 (S.D. 2003) (medical malpractice
settlement proceeds); Lyman v. Lyman, 795 N.W.2d 475 (Wis. 2011) (wrongful
(continued...)
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Civil Rule 90.3(a)(1), which defines child support income to include “the parent’s total
income from all sources.” The commentary explains that “[t]his phrase should be
interpreted broadly to include benefits which would have been available for support if
the family had remained intact.”2 The settlement funds that Fredrickson received easily
fit within this broad definition. The superior court found, “After receiving the
disbursement, Ms. Fredrickson quit her job and lived solely on the $300,000.”
But even if these funds are characterized as a gift, they should be counted
as part of Fredrickson’s income. In Crayton v. Crayton, this court distinguished between
the treatment of one-time gifts and inheritances in actions involving retrospective
calculations of child support and the treatment of one-time gifts and inheritances in
actions involving prospective calculations of child support.3 More specifically, this court
distinguished between (1) reimbursement-type child support calculations where a court
is asked to retrospectively calculate a parent’s child support obligation for periods in the
past where no child support order existed and (2) prospective child support calculations
where a court is asked to determine a parent’s future obligations based on expected
future income.4
In Crayton, a father brought a motion for reimbursement of child support
from the mother for a period during which no child support order existed.5 At trial, the
father argued that certain one-time monetary gifts the mother had received should be
1
(...continued)
termination settlement).
2
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. III.A.
3
944 P.2d 487, 490 (Alaska 1997).
4
Id.
5
Id. at 488.
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included in her income for the purpose of determining her child support obligation for
that period.6 The trial court rejected the father’s request under Nass v. Seaton,7 but this
court reversed, holding that
[i]n cases such as Nass, where the court must establish a child
support obligation for the future, the inclusion as income of
a one-time gift or an inheritance would unfairly inflate that
obligation beyond the obligor’s reliable future resources.
However, in this case, [the mother]’s future payments are not
at issue and no question exists as to whether she will continue
to receive the gifts. Because the superior court will determine
[the mother]’s income only in retrospect . . . it is fair for the
court to base the amount of reimbursement on the actual
resources available to [the mother] during that period.[8]
This precedent permitted the trial court in this case to count the funds from Japan as
income, since the funds were used in calculating a retrospective, rather than a prospective
award. I see no reason to overturn that precedent in this case.
In my opinion, the trial court did not err when it included Fredrickson’s
settlement funds as income in its calculation of her child support obligation during a
period when no child support order existed. The funds were actual resources available
to Fredrickson, “which would have been available for support if the family had remained
intact.”9
6
Id. at 489.
7
904 P.2d 412 (Alaska 1995).
8
Crayton, 944 P.2d at 490 (citations omitted).
9
Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. III.A.
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