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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
TAIBA SULTANA : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
FARHAT M. MALIK :
:
Appellant : No. 904 EDA 2020
Appeal from the Order Entered February 19, 2020
in the Court of Common Pleas of Northampton County,
Domestic Relations at No(s): No. DR-0120118.
BEFORE: KUNSELMAN, J., NICHOLS, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 9, 2021
In this matter, Farhat Malik (Father) appeals the order establishing the
amount he must pay Taiba Sultana (Mother) for the support of their four
children. After review, we affirm.
The pertinent factual and procedural history may be summarized as
follows: After two false starts, Mother filed a third complaint to establish child
support in July 2019, and the parties appeared unrepresented for a support
conference in August 2019. Mother reported that she was a substitute teacher
until Spring 2018 when she ended her employment to attend college. She
reported earning $13.25 per hour, and working 35-40 hours per week, but
now receives cash assistance. For support purposes, the domestic relations
officer determined Mother had an earning capacity of $1,699.53 per month.
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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Father indicated he was a driver for the rideshare services Uber and Lyft. He
reported that he worked 35-40 hours per week, and he provided his 2018 tax
return and paystubs from 2019.
However, Father also reported that he had a letter from a physician’s
assistant, averring that Father’s physical ability to work was limited. Because
the letter did not indicate he was medically unable to work, the domestic
relations officer provided Father with a medical report form to be completed
by a doctor, and to be submitted within 14 days. Father complied and
submitted the completed medical form. The form indicated that Father could
only work between 12-15 hours per week, and that his reduction of ability
began on December 26, 2018 and would last “forever.”
Consequently, the domestic relations officer did not consider Father’s
2018 income, which pre-dated Father’s apparent medical issue; instead the
domestic relations officer only considered the income Father earned after the
diagnoses, i.e. Father’s 2019 paystubs. Based on those paystubs, the officer
determined Father’s monthly net income was $4,394.27, and recommended
Father pay Mother the guideline amount of support for four children: $1,430
per month, plus $143 per month for arrears. On September 10, 2019, the
court entered an order awarding the same, for a total obligation of $1,573 per
month.
Later in September, Father obtained counsel and filed a written demand
for a de novo hearing. Father then changed counsel, and after several
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continuances, the hearing finally occurred on February 10, 2020.1 At the de
novo hearing, Father submitted packet of financial documents to support his
position, including his 2019 federal income tax return, complete with the 1099
schedules from Uber and Lyft, as well as a list of expenses. However, the
court was not persuaded by the additional evidence, and its February 19, 2020
support order obligated Father to pay the same amount indicated by the
previous order from September - a total obligation of $1,573 per month for
the support of four children. Father filed this timely appeal.
Upon receipt of Father’s Concise Statement for Matters Complained of
on Appeal, the trial court concluded it could not decipher Father’s sprawling
statement and suggested to this Court that we find waiver. Notwithstanding
Father’s apparent noncompliance with the Rules of Appellate Procedure, the
trial court still attempted to address the substance of Father’s appeal by
explaining its decision. In his Brief, Father addresses the trial court’s waiver
suggestion in the first of his two issues presented for our review:
1. Whether the Statement of Errors filed by [Father] is
indefinite, vague, and results in waiver?
2. Whether the trial court abused its discretion by issuing
an order making the September 10, 2019 Order for
Support final when the order was entered without
comment, explanation, interpretation, or clarification
despite documentary evidence illustrating vast
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1In the interim, Father was found in contempt for non-payment of support.
He was sentenced to 60 days in prison, with immediate work release, but he
posted the $1,500 purge condition and was released.
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discrepancies in ways to compute net monthly
income?
Father’s Brief at 4.
We discuss these issues contemporaneously. We begin with whether
Father complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4). This Rule provides the list of
requirements an appellant must adhere to when fashioning a concise
statement, or else the appellant risks waiver:
(4) Requirements; waiver.
(i) The Statement shall set forth only those errors that
the appellant intends to assert.
(ii) The Statement shall concisely identify each error that
the appellant intends to assert with sufficient detail to
identify the issue to be raised for the judge. The judge
shall not require the citation to authorities or the record;
however, appellant may choose to include pertinent
authorities and record citations in the Statement.
(iii) The judge shall not require any party to file a brief,
memorandum of law, or response as part of or in
conjunction with the Statement.
(iv) The Statement should not be redundant or provide
lengthy explanations as to any error. Where non-
redundant, non-frivolous issues are set forth in an
appropriately concise manner, the number of errors
raised will not alone be grounds for finding waiver.
(v) Each error identified in the Statement will be deemed
to include every subsidiary issue that was raised in the
trial court; this provision does not in any way limit the
obligation of a criminal appellant to delineate clearly the
scope of claimed constitutional errors on appeal.
(vi) If the appellant in a civil case cannot readily discern
the basis for the judge's decision, the appellant shall
preface the Statement with an explanation as to why the
Statement has identified the errors in only general terms.
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In such a case, the generality of the Statement will not
be grounds for finding waiver.
(vii) Issues not included in the Statement and/or not
raised in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph
(b)(4) are waived.
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4).
Instantly, Father’s concise statement was nearly two full pages, largely
narrating the history of the case. Although the statement contained six full
paragraphs, Father did not clearly list the trial court’s alleged errors. Only in
his final sentence of the concise statement did Father articulate what might
be construed as an error:
In short, [the trial court] failed to address and explain the
vast discrepancy between the domestic relations’ calculation
of [Father’s] net income and the supporting data as to
[Father’s] income including the paystubs from Lyft and
Uber, their 1099s to him and his resulting 1040 federal 2019
tax return.
See Father’s Concise Statement, at 2 (superfluous capitalization omitted).
In his Brief, Father explains that he had no choice but to submit a
generic concise statement due to his inability to comprehend the trial court’s
decision. He submits that Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(vi) explicitly preserves his ability
to author a broad statement under these circumstance. See Father’s Brief at
9-10. The pertinent subsection provides:
(vi) If the appellant in a civil case cannot readily discern
the basis for the judge's decision, the appellant shall
preface the Statement with an explanation as to why the
Statement has identified the errors in only general terms.
In such a case, the generality of the Statement will not
be grounds for finding waiver.
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Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(vi).
We disagree with Father’s characterization that his concise statement
constituted an allowable “preface” due to the trial court’s ambiguous decision.
Rather, we conclude Father largely waived his appeal because his concise
statement was far too vague.
It is well-settled that this Court may find waiver where a concise
statement is too vague. See In re A.B., 63 A.3d 345, 350 (Pa. Super. 2013)
(“When a court has to guess what issues an appellant is appealing, that is not
enough for meaningful review.”) (citation omitted). We agree with the trial
court that Father does not actually allege an error of law or an abuse of
discretion. Rather, he mostly articulates his disapproval of the trial court’s
decision to finalize the September order without discussing whether the court
found Father’s February exhibits “wanting, irrelevant, misleading, incorrectly
prepared, not genuine, lacking in credibility [or] otherwise.” See Father’s
Concise Statement at 2. We cannot tell whether Father’s contention is that
the court failed to consider certain evidence or whether the court simply failed
to explain its decision.
Only after the issuance of the trial court’s 1925(a) opinion, which
discussed Father’s problematic concise statement, did Father fine tune his
substantive reasons for his appeal. Father argues:
While the trial court in the case at bar accepted documents
offered, including [Father’s] 2019 federal tax return and
earnings statements, this appears to have been the last time
the documents were considered by the court. As counsel
attempted to point out discrepancies between these
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documents and the prior computation of [Father’s] income
[from September 2019], the court merely ignored counsel
and sought input from [Mother].
Father’s Brief at 15.
Perhaps the essence of what Father’s asks is this: Did the trial court rely
on just 2019 paystubs utilized during the September 2019 hearing, but not
the updated financial documentation Father provided at the de novo February
2020 hearing? Why or why not? That answer was eventually answered by the
trial court:
[Father’s] documents and testimony were inconsistent, and
[Father] did not provide the [trial court] with any documents
or testimony sufficient to convince the undersigned that the
support obligation set forth in the September 10, 2019
[order] was incorrectly calculated.
Based upon a full review of the file, and after receiving
evidence and testimony on February 10, 2020, it was clear
to the undersigned that [Father’s] income was properly
calculated utilizing the paystubs submitted to [the domestic
relations staff] at the time of the conference, as they
reflected [Father’s] actual earnings subsequent to the
occurrence of his purported medical condition. Therefore, it
was not an error of law or an abuse of discretion to enter
[the] February 10, 2020 order making final the September
10, 2019 order in this matter.
Trial Court Opinion, 5/8/20, at 13.
Although the excerpted explanation was issued by the trial court only
after Father filed his concise statement, any issues Father could have raised
following the trial court’s Rule 1925(a) opinion were self-evident at the time
of the decision. For instance, Father could have alleged in his concise
statement that his monthly net income was miscalculated because it was
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based solely on the 2019 paystubs and not the more recent documentation,
which included the 2019 tax return and more itemized deductions. But Father
did not raise this issue.
Even if this Court generously construed Father’s concise statement to
encapsulate the subsidiary2 issue of the court’s reliance solely on the 2019
paystubs, we fail to see how the trial court’s use of Father’s paystubs to
calculate his income was an abuse of discretion. After all, “a person’s support
obligation is determined primarily by the parent’s actual financial resources
and their earning capacity.” See, e.g., Woskob v. Woskob, 843 A.2d 1247,
1251 (Pa. Super. 2004) (emphasis added). More precisely, when determining
a support obligor’s disposable income, it is the cash flow that ought to be
considered and not federally taxed income. Cunningham v. Cunningham,
548 A.2d 611, 612-613 (Pa. Super. 1988). “We have held repeatedly that
deductions or losses reflected on corporate books or individual tax returns are
irrelevant to the calculation of available income unless they reflect an actual
reduction in available cash.” Fennell v. Fennell, 753 A.2d 866, 868-869 (Pa.
Super. 2000).
Here, the trial court used Father’s 2019 paystubs, because they
demonstrated not only that he could work, but also that he had actually
____________________________________________
2See Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(v) (“Each error identified in the Statement will be
deemed to include every subsidiary issue that was raised in the trial court….”).
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worked beyond what Father’s medical averment suggested.3 Then, at the de
novo hearing in February 2020, Father’s submitted proof of further
deductions, evidenced by his completed 2019 tax return. But as our case law
informs, these claimed deductions alone do not affect the court’s calculation
of Father’s available net income for support purposes. And because Father’s
concise statement was so vague, he did not articulate how the court’s decision
to discount Father’s evidence at de novo hearing constituted an abuse of
discretion. Put plainly, even if Father preserved the issue regarding the court’s
sole reliance on the paystubs, he does not articulate how the same rose to the
level of an abuse of discretion or error of law.
The only other tentative issue we can discern from Father’s concise
statement and Brief was that the court erroneously failed to provide
“discussion or explanation” of its decision. See Father’s Brief at 12; 16. For
support, Father cites the line of “high income” cases that ultimately birthed
Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-3.1 (“Support Guidelines. High-Income Cases”). See
Father’s Brief at 14 (citing Calabrese v. Calabrese, 670 A.2d 1161 (Pa.
1996) (discussing the Melzer formula in Melzer v. Witsberger, 480 A.2d
991 (Pa. 1984))). Father acknowledges that Rule 1910.16-3.1 supersedes the
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3 We note that Father withdrew his disability argument at the February
hearing, because his doctor did not have sufficient time to review his case.
See Father’s Brief at 7. He said he planned to file a modification of support.
Id. Notwithstanding Father’s vague concise statement, we can safely assume
he did not mean to argue that his monthly net income should have been
reduced on account of his alleged disability.
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previous cases, but he avers their rationales still stand. Father reasons that,
like in Calabrese, the court erred when it did not “clearly spell out the
rationale of the cash flow, business/personal mixing of income.” See Father’s
Brief at 14. Father extrapolates this to mean that the trial court had an
obligation to address how it arrived at its support obligation. But because that
answer is quite clear – the 2019 paystubs – Father contends that the court
should go a step further and address why it did not rely on his other evidence.
Father’s argument is based on a misreading of the law.
High-income cases are unique not because of the financial status of the
parties, but because of the difficulty in computation of the awards – the
parties’ income is literally “off the charts” (i.e., the basic child support
guidelines schedule listed in Rule 1910.16-3). Thus, Pennsylvania case law
first adopted the Melzer formula, and then Rule 1910.16-3.1, in order to
determine the amount of child support for parties whose combined monthly
net incomes exceeded $30,000 per month. In these cases, the court must
make findings of fact on the record or in writing. However, a trial court has
no such obligation make such findings in a basic child support case, so long
as the court does not deviate from the guideline amount. See Pa.R.C.P.
1910.16-5 (requiring the court to make specific findings on the record or in
writing when deviating from the guidelines). Here, there was no deviation
from the basic child support guideline, and thus, contrary to Father’s
proposition, the court was under no obligation to explain its computation of
Father’s monthly net income.
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We discuss the nuance between high-income cases and basic support
cases only to highlight Father’s misplaced reliance on his cited case law.
Importantly, this nuance must not obfuscate the larger point of this case.
Here, the trial court’s reasoning was obvious and sufficient to allow Father to
raise a number of bona fide appellate issues in compliance with our Rules of
Appellate Procedure. Because, for the most part, his concise statement was
too vague, we must conclude that Father waived most of his issues on appeal.
To the extent that Father preserved his issue concerning the court’s reliance
on the 2019 paystubs or the court’s lack of explanation, we conclude the court
did not abuse its discretion nor commit an error of law in calculating Father’s
support obligation.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 2/09/2021
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