dissenting.
I respectfully dissent on the issue of child support. I concur with the rest of the majority opinion, but on the issue of child support I would affirm the trial court.
In 1983, respondent acknowledged paternity of a child and signed a stipulation agreeing to pay $200 a month child support. At the time respondent signed the stipulation, he was permanently disabled from a spinal condition. His only income was his social security and veteran’s dependent’s benefits, which, combined, to-talled $579 per month.
In the stipulation underlying the original divorce decree respondent agreed, against his attorney’s advice, to pay $200 a month in child support. This amount was in excess of the child support guidelines. When he signed the stipulation, respondent erroneously anticipated that his income would increase and that he would be able to make the $200 a month payment. This amount exceeded any amount that a judge might reasonably order respondent to pay, should *87the issue of child support have been tried to a conclusion, and was a product of respondent’s generosity.
In addition to his disability benefits, respondent anticipated income from performances as a country western gospel singer for Burning Bush Productions. Burning Bush is a non-profit corporation that handles singing tours. Respondent, despite being physically disabled, was able to pursue a career as a performer.
In 1986 respondent brought a motion to reduce child support. His disability benefits had increased by a modest amount to a net of $614 per month, but respondent realized, based on his lack of income over the past three years, that he could not pay the $200 per month child support he had agreed to in the stipulation. In fact, he had experienced difficulty making the $200 per month payments prior to making his motion, had accrued arrearages, and his financial straits necessitated his moving the court to reduce his support obligation. The family court referee heard the evidence, made a finding that respondent did not have the ability to pay $200 per month, and reduced child support to $86.60 per month. The district court judge who reviewed the matter did not expressly adopt each and every finding of the referee, but did so by implication because the district court accepted everything the referee found. The judge did adjust the referee’s figure of $86.60 upward to $104.38 per month, the exact guidelines amount.
Although the trial court used the word “reverse” as to the referee’s order, a reading of the referee’s order and the trial court judgment shows that the trial court acquiesced in the referee’s order in all respects except the trial court raised future child support $17.78 a month up to $104.38.
Respondent had argued that the three years since the dissolution have not produced the hoped-for income needed to make the generous amount he had volunteered to pay in 1983. Respondent had on file the standard Hennepin County family court affidavit as to income and expenses substantiating his claim that monthly living expenses, debt obligations, and $200 per month child support payments total $968.60, or $354 per month more than his total monthly disability benefits. Appellant did not take issue with respondent’s claimed monthly expenses but argued that he was misstating his income and made more per month than his affidavit disclosed. On that issue, the referee made a specific finding that respondent had no spendable income from gospel singing and thus ruled in respondent’s favor on the issue appellant presented. The trial court confirmed that finding of the referee: “ * * * there is little evidence that respondent has any financial benefits from this corporation.” Thus, on the one key disputed issue, the trial court ruled in favor of respondent, appellant did not raise that issue on appeal, and the majority does not attack the trial court findings that respondent’s income is limited to disability payments.
Respondent was not in court asking for a deviation downward from the guidelines. Respondent was in court arguing that he had promised to pay more than the guidelines amount based on some expectations of income which did not materialize. After suffering that situation for three years, respondent argues that he is entitled to a reduction to the guidelines amount as it is clear that he cannot both meet his basic needs and pay $200 per month child support.
The majority implies that respondent’s living expense figures are inaccurate:
His affidavit presented the briefest summary of current expenses. His fuel, food, and medical and dental care are paid through government assistance. Only a transportation expense of $358 per month pushes his expenses, including child support, above his reported income. In light of Bush’s frequent business travels and the use of a corporate-owned motorhome for these travels, this expense should be documented.
Since appellant never challenged respondent’s expenses at the trial level, and since appellant did not raise the issue of respon*88dent’s expenses on appeal, this statement by the majority is gratuitous. Respondent’s expenses are not an issue before this court.
Appellant’s expense affidavit was before the trial court. It was considered by the trial court, not raised as an appeal issue by appellant, and now the majority opinion somehow sits as a fact finder on the credibility of a trial court affidavit.
The majority holds that the record “conclusively” establishes no changed circumstances. The trial court did not use the exact words “changed circumstances,” but by substantially reducing appellant’s child support obligation to the guidelines level, the trial court impliedly reached that conclusion. The majority opinion reads as though respondent presented no evidence on his living expenses. It ignores respondent’s uncontested affidavit which was filed using the approved standard family court form. It is clear that the trial court accepted respondent’s contentions as to his expenses as it reduced respondent’s child support obligation by about fifty percent.
Given these facts, the district court reached the only reasonable conclusion possible, namely, that appellant was entitled to some relief from an unreasonable child support obligation.
I find no inequity to appellant in what the trial court did. At the time of the stipulation, appellant understood that respondent was basing his willingness to pay child support on projected, not actual income. Respondent was not in court seeking a deviation downward from the guideline level. Respondent was in court seeking a modification down to the guidelines amount, an amount which when added to his uncontested monthly expenses is still going to exceed his total net monthly disability payments. Even after the trial court’s reduction which, respondent is willing to accept, his combined monthly expenses and child support obligation are about $870 a month and his net income is $614 a month.
The referee made a specific finding that respondent did not have the ability to pay $200 a month. The trial court, without mentioning that specific finding, obviously accepted it as the trial court confirmed a substantial reduction in respondent’s obligation. I cannot say that the trial court “abused its discretion” in reducing child support.
The majority implies that the slight increase in respondent’s income justifies this court’s refusal to affirm the reduction. I note that since social security benefits and veteran’s benefits generally go up by a small percentage annually (COLA), under the majority’s reasoning respondent is forever barred from seeking any relief since his income next year and the year after and ten years down the road will always be more than the $579 in benefits he received when he signed the stipulation.
I would hold that when an obligor’s income consists solely of permanent disability benefits from the government, the mere existence of a slight annual COLA increase does not prevent a trial court from giving appropriate relief on motions to decrease child support or maintenance if the record otherwise establishes that relief is warranted.
The referee and the trial court, in combination, found, based on the evidence presented, that respondent did not have the ability to pay $200 per month support and ordered child support at the guidelines amount. The majority suggests that because respondent knowingly stipulated to the current level of support, the amount cannot be reduced. I cannot agree. Common sense dictates that blood cannot be taken from a turnip on the theory that someone once thought the turnip would bleed.
The majority cites Fifield v. Fifield, 360 N.W.2d 673 (Minn.Ct.App.) for the proposition that an “objective” change in circumstances must be shown. Fifield does not so hold, nor does Minn.Stat. § 518.64, subd. 2 (1984) or any case law so hold. This is not the proper standard. A trial court can, and in this case did, exercise discretion in determining whether a change of circum*89stances has occurred. It can take into account all relevant factors.
The majority also misstates the holding in Kehr v. Kehr, 375 N.W.2d 68 (Minn.Ct.App.1985). Kehr does not even address the issue of failure of projected income to materialize. Section 518.64 is also silent on projected income. Kehr holds that a stipulated child support award is subject to modification if the § 518.64 factors are met.
The proof offered by respondent to the trial court that he had “a substantial change of circumstances” was his three years of documentation reviewing his living expenses and income vis-a-vis the $200 per month child support obligation. Appellant did not challenge respondent’s position on his living expenses and debt obligations. Appellant challenged respondent’s claim that his income was limited to disability benefits, but on that issue appellant lost. Thus, our record for review includes the referee and trial court’s findings of $614 per month income, respondent’s unchallenged evidence on expenses, and a referee’s finding of inability to pay. I cannot say the trial court abused its discretion in modifying respondent’s child support obligation downward to reflect the guidelines amount.
I would have affirmed the judgment of the trial court.