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2020 PA Super 132
TAGHREED M. ILEIWAT : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
MOHANNAD A. LABADI :
:
Appellant : No. 59 EDA 2019
Appeal from the Order Entered December 20, 2018
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Domestic Relations
at No(s): 8469 March Term 2015
TAGHREED M. ILEIWAT : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
MOHANNAD A. LABADI :
:
Appellant : No. 266 EDA 2019
Appeal from the Order Entered December 20, 2018
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Domestic Relations
at No(s): D15038469, PASCES 110115190
BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.
OPINION BY BOWES, J.: FILED JUNE 03, 2020
This Court sua sponte consolidated the above-captioned appeals from
the trial court’s December 20, 2018 entry of a final order resolving the
economic issues related to the Jordanian divorce decree that terminated the
marriage of Taghreed M. Ileiwat (“Wife”) and Mohannad A. Labadi
(“Husband”). Husband contests the trial court’s determination that it had
subject matter jurisdiction to entertain these claims, while Wife challenges the
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September 5, 2018 order that denied her exceptions to the master’s
calculation of alimony pendente lite (“APL”). We affirm the jurisdictional
ruling, reverse the order denying Wife’s APL exceptions, and remand for entry
of an APL award consistent with this opinion.
Husband and Wife married in New Jersey in 1989. They have dual
citizenship in Jordan and the United States. The parties and their three
children lived in various places within the United States until 2003. That year,
Husband’s employment took the family to Saudi Arabia, where they continued
to reside until 2014. Throughout this time, the parties periodically returned
to Jordan, where they owned real property and where members of Wife’s
family resided. Husband obtained a contract through his Saudi Arabian
employer to work on a ten-month project in Philadelphia. The family relocated
there on July 30, 2014, purchasing a condominium in which to live. The
parties’ two adult children attended college in Philadelphia, and their minor
child went to boarding school in Connecticut.1
In December 2014, the family traveled to Saudi Arabia to renew their
visas for Husband’s work. Husband and the children returned to Philadelphia
at the beginning of January 2015, while Wife detoured to visit family in Jordan.
During her stay in Jordan, Husband called her to give her notice of a unilateral
divorce under Muslim law. Wife was subsequently served by a process server
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1 At no point has Wife been employed, and, for purposes of APL, the parties
stipulated that she has no earning capacity. See Trial Court Opinion (59 EDA
2019), 3/18/19, at 4.
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with written notice of revocable divorce, which became final and irrevocable
after ninety days. No economic claims related to the dissolution of the parties’
marriage were litigated or decided in Jordan.
Wife returned to the United States in March 2015 and filed a complaint
in Pennsylvania for divorce, equitable distribution, and support. Husband was
duly served with the complaint in Philadelphia. Husband filed preliminary
objections challenging the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. By order
of August 4, 2015, the court concluded that the objections were untimely, “but
in the interest of judicial economy, since both parties testified that they
consent to a divorce,” the court decreed its recognition of the Jordanian
divorce. Order, 8/4/15. The order further provided the court was retaining
jurisdiction over Wife’s ancillary economic claims pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S.
§ 3104 (“Bases of jurisdiction”). Husband persisted with his jurisdictional
challenge through various motions and petitions, including an attempt to
obtain an interlocutory appeal, but the ruling did not change.
Meanwhile, Wife’s economic claims proceeded. After an initial hearing
on APL and support, an interim APL order was entered requiring Husband to
pay Wife $3,300 of his $13,200 monthly income. 2 See Order, 8/6/15, at
unnumbered 1. Both parties filed exceptions; Wife’s resulted in a remand to
the master. See Order 10/22/15. A second interim APL order was based
upon a finding that Husband’s monthly income was $24,000, and required him
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2 We use approximate numbers for ease of discussion.
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to pay Wife $8,100 per month, which reflected the guideline APL amount of
$9,500 less the guideline support amount Wife owed Husband because
Husband had custody of their minor child. See Order, 3/18/16, at
unnumbered 1.
Husband again filed exceptions, as well as a petition to modify support
due to a decrease in his income. The parties resolved the exceptions, but not
Husband’s modification request, by an agreed-upon order pursuant to which
Husband was obligated to pay Wife $6,300 per month based upon income of
$21,800. See Order, 10/13/16, at 1. Thereafter, Husband filed an amended
petition to modify, which culminated in a third interim APL order. The master
determined Husband to have monthly income in excess of $35,000, but
required him to pay Wife only $5,500 because that amount was sufficient to
meet her expenses. See Report of Master in Support, 5/4/18, at 3. Wife filed
exceptions, which the court consolidated with a de novo trial on Husband’s
jurisdictional challenge.
After the trial, the court entered orders that confirmed its jurisdiction
over the economic claims ancillary to the Jordanian divorce, denied Wife’s
support exceptions, and provided for alimony and the equitable distribution of
the parties’ marital property. Both parties timely appealed, and they and the
trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925. This Court consolidated the appeals
sua sponte and entertained oral argument on the parties’ various claims of
error, which are now ripe for our disposition.
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Husband presents the following questions for our review:
1. Did the trial court err as a matter of law in holding
that both Husband and Wife were “bona fide residents” of
Pennsylvania for six months immediately preceding the
commencement of the action as required by 23 Pa.C.S. § 3104(b),
when the court’s recognition of the Jordanian divorce decree
required it to conclude that Husband was domiciled in Jordan in
February 2015 -- one month before this action was filed?
2. Did the trial court err as a matter of law in concluding
that it had subject matter jurisdiction under 23 Pa.C.S. § 3104(b)
where, when Wife filed the divorce complaint on March 13, 2015,
Wife was already divorced from Husband under Jordanian law,
Wife was living in Jordan and visiting family in New Jersey, Wife
only lived in Pennsylvania for less than five months in 2014, Wife
did not live in Pennsylvania for six months immediately preceding
the filing of the complaint on March 13, 2015, and Wife never took
any actions consistent with an intent to change her domicile from
Jordan to Pennsylvania?
3. Did the trial court err as a matter of law in concluding
that it had subject matter jurisdiction under 23 Pa. C.S. § 3104(b)
where Husband moved to Pennsylvania in 2014 solely to fulfill a
ten-month assignment for his employer in Saudi Arabia, Wife
failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Husband
ever intended to change his domicile from Jordan to Pennsylvania,
Husband did not remain in Pennsylvania at the end of the work
assignment, and Husband has not lived in
Pennsylvania since 2015?
Husband’s brief at 6-7.
We address Husband’s issues before considering those raised by Wife,
which concern the APL award, for if the trial court lacked subject matter
jurisdiction, all of the orders in question are nullities. See, e.g., In re Estate
of Huber, 197 A.3d 288, 292 (Pa.Super. 2018) (“Jurisdiction . . . is the right
to adjudicate concerning the subject matter in a given case. Without such
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jurisdiction, there is no authority to give judgment and one so entered is
without force or effect.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). “[W]here the
issue for review centers on the question of subject matter jurisdiction, this
question is purely one of law, our standard of review is de novo, and our scope
of review is plenary.” B.J.D. v. D.L.C., 19 A.3d 1081, 1082 (Pa.Super. 2011)
(cleaned up).
Husband’s attacks upon the trial court’s jurisdiction to entertain Wife’s
complaint are based upon his belief that the court’s jurisdiction is limited by
23 Pa.C.S. § 3104(b). See Husband’s brief at 6-7. Specifically, Husband
contends that the record does not support a finding that either he or Wife had
been domiciled in Pennsylvania for the six months immediately preceding the
filing of Wife’s complaint, and that the domicile of one of the parties was
essential for jurisdiction to attach. Id. at 27-29.
Section 3104 states not one basis, but several bases, for a trial court to
exercise jurisdiction over domestic relations matters. In pertinent part, the
statute provides as follows:
§ 3104. Bases of jurisdiction
(a) Jurisdiction.--The courts shall have original jurisdiction in
cases of divorce and for the annulment of void or voidable
marriages and shall determine, in conjunction with any decree
granting a divorce or annulment, the following matters, if raised
in the pleadings, and issue appropriate decrees or orders with
reference thereto, and may retain continuing jurisdiction thereof:
(1) The determination and disposition of property rights and
interests between spouses, including any rights created by
any antenuptial, postnuptial or separation agreement and
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including the partition of property held as tenants by the
entireties or otherwise and any accounting between them,
and the order of any spousal support, alimony, alimony
pendente lite, counsel fees or costs authorized by law.
....
(b) Residence and domicile of parties.--No spouse is entitled
to commence an action for divorce or annulment under this part
unless at least one of the parties has been a bona fide resident in
this Commonwealth for at least six months immediately previous
to the commencement of the action. Both parties shall be
competent witnesses to prove their respective residence, and
proof of actual residence within this Commonwealth for six months
shall create a presumption of domicile within this Commonwealth.
....
(d) Foreign forum.--After the dissolution or annulment of a
marriage in a foreign forum where a matter under subsection (a)
has not been decided, a court of this Commonwealth shall have
jurisdiction to determine a matter under subsection (a) to the
fullest extent allowed under the Constitution of the United States.
23 Pa.C.S. § 3104. The term “bona fide resident” means one who is domiciled
in Pennsylvania, i.e., one who has established “actual residence coupled with
the intention to remain there permanently or indefinitely.” Sinha v. Sinha,
834 A.2d 600, 603 (Pa.Super. 2003) (internal quotation marks omitted).
A close examination of the statute reveals that § 3104(b) requires
domicile of at least one of the spouses in Pennsylvania to grant a Pennsylvania
court subject matter jurisdiction to terminate a marriage. However,
§ 3104(d) provides a different basis for a court to exercise jurisdiction over
claims related to a marriage that was dissolved by a court outside of
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Pennsylvania—one limited only by the strictures of the federal constitution
regarding the exercise of personal jurisdiction.3
This difference reflects the distinct rights at issue in the two actions and
the forum state’s interests therein. As one treatise aptly explains:
Jurisdiction to permit the entry of a decree dissolving a
marriage is founded upon the domicile of either of the parties and
is quasi in rem jurisdiction. Jurisdiction to enter an order affecting
title to property is based on the presence of that property or res
in the jurisdiction of the court entering the order and is in rem
jurisdiction. Title to property beyond the jurisdiction of the court
and over which it therefore does not have in rem jurisdiction may
be affected by ordering a party over whom the court has in
personam jurisdiction to perform some act, such as a conveyance
of the property. Jurisdiction to bind a defendant personally as in
an order or judgment for support or alimony must be in personam.
....
Because different tests must be met to establish jurisdiction
to terminate the marriage, a quasi in rem proceeding, and the
economic claims that may be brought ancillary to a divorce
proceeding, all of which require in personam jurisdiction, the
concept of “divisible divorce” arose. A court has jurisdiction to
enter a divorce decree when either of the parties is a domiciliary
of the forum state. The domicile of only one of the parties gives
the court jurisdiction over the marriage. An ex parte divorce
decree may therefore be entitled to full faith and credit even
where the forum state does not have personal jurisdiction over
the defendant. That same court is without jurisdiction to enter
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3 Compare 23 Pa.C.S. § 3104(d) (“After the dissolution or annulment of a
marriage in a foreign forum . . . a court of this Commonwealth shall have
jurisdiction to determine [undecided ancillary matters] to the fullest extent
allowed under the Constitution of the United States.” (emphasis
added)), with 42 Pa.C.S. § 5322(b) (“[T]he jurisdiction of the tribunals of this
Commonwealth shall extend to all persons [who, inter alia, are not domiciled
in, served with process in, or consented to personal jurisdiction in
Pennsylvania] to the fullest extent allowed under the Constitution of
the United States[.]” (emphasis added)).
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orders regarding incidents of the marriage, such as alimony and
equitable distribution, that require personal jurisdiction over the
defendant.
17 West’s Pa. Prac., Family Law §§ 19:2-19:3 (Joanne Ross Wilder, et al.,
eds., 8th ed.) (footnotes omitted).
Applying the foregoing reasoning to the case sub judice, it is clear that
once the parties agreed that the Jordanian divorce decree was valid and to be
recognized by the Pennsylvania court,4 there was no longer a pending request
for the Pennsylvania court to terminate a marriage, and the domicile
requirement of § 3104(b) was no longer applicable. Instead, under § 3104(d),
the Pennsylvania trial court had jurisdiction to determine ancillary claims not
decided by the Jordanian court, including property rights and support, so long
as Husband’s federal constitutional rights were not thereby infringed upon.
Accord Stambaugh v. Stambaugh, 329 A.2d 483, 489 (Pa. 1974) (holding
Florida divorce decree was entitled to be recognized by Pennsylvania court
because the husband, who maintained contacts with Pennsylvania, was
nonetheless domiciled in Florida, but affirming Pennsylvania trial court’s award
of APL).
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4 The principles of comity, rather than full faith and credit, govern recognition
of an international judgment. See 17 West’s Pa. Prac., Family Law § 19:1
(Joanne Ross Wilder, et al., eds., 8th ed.) (“The Full Faith and Credit Clause
of the United States Constitution requires recognition of judgments and
decrees of sister states. . . . Orders or decrees of foreign countries are not
entitled to full faith and credit but may be recognized in accordance with
principles of comity.” (footnotes omitted)). Since the parties agreed that the
Jordanian divorce was validly entered, we need not conduct a comity analysis.
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Husband does not dispute that he was subject to personal jurisdiction in
Pennsylvania, where he: (1) had obtained a driver’s license, (2) acquired
property acquired during the marriage that was subject to equitable
distribution, and, most importantly, (3) was living at the time he was served
with Wife’s complaint. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 5301(a)(1)(i) (providing that a
Pennsylvania court has personal jurisdiction over individuals who are present
in the Commonwealth when process is served). Rather, all of Husband’s
arguments are based upon an absence of § 3104(b) strictures regarding
domicile, which, for the reasons discussed above, have no bearing on
Pennsylvania’s subject matter jurisdiction over claims ancillary to a marriage
that has been terminated in a foreign forum. Therefore, even if Husband is
correct that the record does not support a finding that one of the parties was
domiciled in Pennsylvania, Husband has failed to present any argument that
warrants this Court’s reversal of the trial court’s determination that it had
jurisdiction to adjudicate Wife’s claims for equitable distribution and support.
Thus, Husband’s jurisdictional challenge is unavailing.
We now turn to the issues raised in Wife’s appeal:
1. Did the trial court commit an error of law and/or abuse
its discretion in (a) granting Husband’s petition to reduce [APL]
and (b) deviating from guideline APL in a standard-income case
based on an impermissible basis for downward deviation—that
Wife’s basic needs can be met with less than guideline support?
2. Did the trial court commit an error of law and/or abuse
its discretion in deviating downward from guideline APL without
establishment of, and specification of, any special needs and/or
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circumstances that would have made it unjust or inappropriate to
reject Husband’s petition to reduce, and to order support as
presumptively calculated under the guidelines?
Wife’s brief at 17 (footnote omitted).
We begin with the applicable law. “Our standard of review for awards
of [APL] is: If an order of APL is bolstered by competent evidence, the order
will not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion by the trial court.” Strauss
v. Strauss, 27 A.3d 233, 236 (Pa.Super. 2011) (cleaned up).
APL is based on the need of one party to have equal financial
resources to pursue a divorce proceeding when, in theory, the
other party has major assets which are the financial sinews of
domestic warfare. . . . APL focuses on the ability of the individual
who receives the APL during the course of the litigation to defend
her/himself, and the only issue is whether the amount is
reasonable for the purpose, which turns on the economic
resources available to the spouse.
Schenk v. Schenk, 880 A.2d 633, 644-45 (Pa.Super. 2005) (cleaned up).
“In ruling on a claim for [APL], the court should consider the following
factors: the ability of the other party to pay; the separate estate and income
of the petitioning party; and the character, situation, and surroundings of the
parties.” Childress v. Bogosian, 12 A.3d 448, 463 (Pa.Super. 2011)
(internal quotation marks omitted). If the court finds that APL is due, “there
is a rebuttable presumption that the guideline-calculated support amount is
the correct support amount.” Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-1(d). “The presumption is
rebutted if the trier-of-fact concludes in a written finding or states on the
record that the guideline support amount is unjust or inappropriate.”
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Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-1(d)(1). The following factors are applicable to a decision
to deviate from the guideline amount:
(1) unusual needs and unusual fixed obligations;
(2) other support obligations of the parties;
(3) other income in the household;
(4) ages of the children;
(5) the relative assets and liabilities of the parties;
(6) medical expenses not covered by insurance;
(7) standard of living of the parties and their children;
(8) in a spousal support or alimony pendente lite case, the
duration of the marriage from the date of marriage to the date of
final separation; and
(9) other relevant and appropriate factors, including the best
interests of the child or children.
Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-5(b).
Wife’s position is that the support guidelines set the amount of a party’s
reasonable needs, and that they must be applied unless one of the specifically-
enumerated bases for deviation warrants a different amount. See Wife’s brief
at 33-35. She contends that the fact that disparate costs of living between
the United States and Jordan render the guideline amount more than adequate
to meet her needs is not a valid basis for deviation. Id. at 49-53. Wife further
argues that none of the Rule 1910.16-5(b) factors was relied upon below in
deviating downward, and none is supported by the record. Id. at 60-68.
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Wife supports her argument with prior appellate decisions in the context
of alimony and child support awards. Although the policies and rules regarding
the various forms of support are unquestionably distinct, 5 on the issue of the
application of the support guidelines, the courts have not distinguished among
them. In Ball v. Minnick, 648 A.2d 1192 (Pa. 1994), our Supreme Court
broadly stated that “the amount of support, whether it be child support,
spousal support or [APL], shall be determined in accordance with the support
guidelines,” which included the formula, grids, and deviation factors provided
in the rules. Id. at 1195. “The rules make clear that the amount of support
as determined from the support guidelines is presumed to be the appropriate
amount of support and that any deviation must be” determined through
application of the rules, which set forth “the only factors that a trier of fact
may consider in determining whether to deviate.” Id. at 1195-96. The Court
expounded:
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5 Child support is premised upon each parent’s “duty to provide for the
reasonable needs of his or her children to the best of his or her ability. This
support obligation is not limited to the basic necessities of life. The children’s
reasonable needs include any expenditure that will reasonably further the
child’s welfare.” Ball v. Minnick, 648 A.2d 1192, 1196-97 (Pa. 1994). APL
“is designed to be temporary and is available to those who demonstrate the
need for maintenance and professional services during the pendency of the
[divorce] proceedings.” See, e.g., Schenk v. Schenk, 880 A.2d 633, 644-
45 (Pa.Super. 2005). On the other hand, “alimony following a divorce is a
secondary remedy and is available only where economic justice and the
reasonable needs of the parties cannot be achieved by way of an equitable
distribution award and development of an appropriate employable skill.”
Llaurado v. Garcia-Zapata, 223 A.3d 247, 256 (Pa.Super. 2019) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
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The presumption is strong that the appropriate amount of
support in each case is the amount as determined from the
support guidelines. However, where the facts demonstrate the
inappropriateness of such an award, the trier of fact may deviate
therefrom. This flexibility is not, however, intended to provide the
trier of fact with unfettered discretion to, in each case, deviate
from the recommended amount of support. Deviation will be
permitted only where special needs and/or circumstances are
present such as to render an award in the amount of the guideline
figure unjust or inappropriate.
Id. at 1196.
Addressing the child support deviation at issue in that appeal, the Ball
Court stated:
In the instant matter, there was no evidence presented
which established any special obligations or special circumstances
justifying an award lower than the recommended guideline figure.
The trial court’s primary reason for deviating from the support
guidelines was that the basic needs of the children could be met
by a payment of less than the guideline amount. This is an
impermissible basis for deviating from the guidelines.
Id.
This Court extended Ball’s holding to spousal support cases in Terpak
v. Terpak, 697 A.2d 1006 (Pa.Super. 1997). Therein, this Court made it clear
that the fact that a spouse does not need the full guideline support amount is
not a valid basis to deviate downwards. Adapting the language of Ball, we
held:
the trier of fact need not, nor should he or she, consider in the
first instance, the actual expenses of the parties in an effort to
establish the reasonable needs of a particular child or spouse.
Instead, the trier of fact must assume initially that the guideline
amount constitutes the amount necessary to meet the reasonable
needs of the child or spouse. . . . [A] court may not deviate from
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the guidelines on the ground that the child or spouse does not
need this amount of money.
Terpak, supra at 1007 (cleaned up).
In maintaining that this precedent does not warrant a conclusion that
the master’s deviation in the instant case was erroneous, Husband and the
trial court rely upon this Court’s decision in Carney v. Carney, 167 A.3d 127
(Pa.Super. 2017). See Trial Court Opinion (266 EDA 2019), 4/5/19, at 5-6;
Husband’s brief at 8-10. In Carney, the wife was receiving $5,000 per month
in APL and sought a modification on the basis that her expenses were $5,800
per month. The guideline amount, based upon Husband’s monthly income of
nearly $57,000, was $22,000. The master granted Wife’s request and
increased the APL amount to $12,000 per month. The husband appealed,
arguing that $12,000 was twice the amount of the wife’s actual needs, and it
resulted in a windfall to her. This Court affirmed, stating as follows:
Although the trial court noted that the support guideline formula
. . . suggested that wife be awarded $22,227.00 in APL each
month, it found this amount was excessive under the
circumstances as wife did not testify to any additional expenses
or needs. Instead, the trial court modified wife’s APL award to
$12,000.00 each month, which it deemed appropriate to allow
wife to live independently and to provide her with the resources
to litigate this divorce action. As we find this award to be
reasonable, we reject husband’s claim that the trial court abused
its discretion in modifying wife’s APL award.
Id. at 135 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
Hence, the issue before this Court in Carney was the husband’s claim
that APL in an amount that was more than twice the wife’s expenses was
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excessive. We were not presented with a claim that downward deviation from
the guidelines was erroneous based upon analysis of the enumerated factors
in the circumstances of that case. As such, to the extent that Carney offers
guidance in the instant appeal, it is to make it clear that APL in an amount
double a spouse’s actual needs is not ipso facto unreasonable.
In the case sub judice, the master specifically found that Husband’s
“expenses are not so unusual or extraordinary so as to warrant a deviation
from the guidelines.” Report of Master in Support, 5/4/18, at 6. The master’s
decision to deviate nonetheless was explained as follows:
Based upon [Wife’s] net monthly income of $0 and
[Husband’s] net monthly income of $36,804.08 effective 5/30/16
and $35,165.33 effective 1/1/17, the [Pennsylvania] support
guidelines recommend an [APL] order in the amount of
$14,721.00 effective 5/30/16 and $14,066.00 effective 1/1/17.
The evidence reflects [that Wife] has monthly expenses in
the amount of $4,918.00, including $2,000.00 in monthly legal
fees to litigate the instant divorce . . . .
Based upon [Wife’s] monthly expenses, the master finds a
downward deviation in the amount of $9,221.00 monthly effective
5/30/16 and $8,566.00 effective 1/1/17 is warranted.
Accordingly, the master concludes the monthly [APL] order shall
be set to $5,500.00 which will allow [Wife] to meet her monthly
expenses, including her costs to litigate the instant divorce action.
Id. at 3 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
The trial court offered the following analysis in denying Wife’s exception:
Wife argued that her expenses were not equivalent to reasonable
needs, and therefore the guidelines do not allow for a downward
deviation. Wife’s counsel asserted that Wife’s reasonable needs
under the guidelines were approximately $10,000.00 . . . but
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presented no evidence to substantiate that assertion.
Furthermore, there was no proof that Wife’s reasonable needs
were not being met by the prior order for APL. . . . The
$10,000.00 a month APL proposed by Wife’s counsel would be
excessive based upon the testimony presented at the master’s
hearing, and the evidence submitted and stipulated to by the
[p]arties.
Trial Court Opinion (266 EDA 2019), 4/5/19, at 5-6.
It is apparent from the foregoing that neither the master nor the trial
court applied the appropriate law, which mandates that the guideline
support amount is presumed to be the correct support amount. See
Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-1(d). The burden was not on Wife to prove that the
guideline amount of $10,0006 was appropriate; rather, Husband was required
to produce evidence to persuade the fact-finder that the guideline amount was
unjust or inappropriate, and that deviation was warranted under the statutory
factors. See Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-1(d)(1); Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-5(b). He failed
to do so. Furthermore, the only basis for deviation offered by the master or
trial court—that Wife does not need the guideline amount to meet her
expenses—has been soundly rejected by this Court. See Terpak, supra at
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6Wife contends that the income calculation of $35,000 per month for Husband
was erroneous, and that it should instead be $26,000. See Wife’s brief at 17
n.3, 47-49. At the exceptions hearing, the parties agreed that the master had
miscalculated Husband’s income. See N.T. Hearing, 9/5/18, at 137. To her
credit, Wife advocates for imposition of the lesser amount, rather than the
$14,000 indicated as the guideline amount by the master.
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1007. In the absence of any valid basis for deviation, we must conclude that
the trial court erred in denying Wife’s exception.
Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s September 5, 2018 order that
denied wife’s exceptions and entered the master’s proposed order of $5,500
per month in APL as an order of court. Upon remand the court shall enter an
order in the amount dictated by the support guidelines.7
Jurisdiction determination affirmed. September 5, 2018 order reversed.
Case remanded for entry of an APL award consistent with this opinion.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 6/3/2020
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7 The court may calculate the guideline amount based upon the proper
calculation of Husband’s 2016 income, rather than the amount utilized by the
master which the parties agree was incorrect.
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