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Will
I still have to pay support if I my income decreases?
by
April E. Oliver, Esq.
Spouses who have been
ordered to pay child or spousal support sometimes wonder if they
can find relief from making support payments by taking a lower
paying job. What these payors must realize is that taking a pay
cut may not mean a lower support payment.
The Court has the
discretion to calculate support using a partys earning capacity
rather then their actual income. In these situations, the Court
can tell a party that even though they are no longer making $300,000
because they have changed careers and are now making $70,000,
the court may still calculate support as if that party were making
$300,000. This is especially true where the court believes that
a party has elected to take a decrease in pay in order to shirk
their support responsibilities. A CEO who has a revelation within
months of filing for divorce and decides that his true calling
is to be starving artist may be disappointed to find that he will
still have to pay support at his CEO rate.
The earning capacity
standard may even be applied in situations where a payor has left
a high-paying position in good faith. For example, in Marriage
of Ilas, the supporting spouse quit his job as a pharmacist to
enroll in medical school. The Court held that although the payor
did not quit his job in bad faith, he was nonetheless held to
the earning capacity standard and the Court considered his earning
capacity when calculating support. One case where the payor was
able to take a lower paying position was Marriage of Meegan, in
which the Court held that where the payee was capable of supporting
herself, the Trial Court properly terminated the payors
obligation when he voluntarily resigned a high-paying job to enter
the monastery.
The Meegan case states
that there are no clear rules for these cases and each situation
must be analyzed on an individual basis. It has been suggested
that the courts, in what seems to be an act of self-preservation,
would expand the holding of Meegan to allow a highly paid attorney
to accept a position on the bench and reduce support accordingly.
Payors who are not considering entering the monastery or taking
a position as a judicial officer, should seriously consider consulting
their attorney before making career changes because even though
their income may be significantly reduced, their support obligations
could remain the same.
For more information,
contact The Reape - Rickett Law Firm, at 661-288-1000, located
at 23929 West Valencia Boulevard, # 404 in Valencia.
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