Bachman v. McLinn, 2D15–2796.
Decision Date | 20 July 2016 |
Docket Number | No. 2D15–2796.,2D15–2796. |
Citation | 197 So.3d 123 |
Parties | Katy BACHMAN, Appellant, v. Michael McLINN, Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Matthew S. Toll and Stephen N. McGuire, II, of Toll Law, Cape Coral, for Appellant.
Renee Binns of Binns Family Law Associates, P.A., Cape Coral, for Appellee.
Katy Bachman, the former wife, appeals an order granting child support relief to Michael McLinn, the former husband. We reverse the portion of the order granting the former husband retroactive relief for child care costs.
The parties were married for twenty-five years before their marriage was dissolved in December 2005. The parties' only child was eight years old at the time of the divorce. In 2007, the parties filed petitions to modify the final judgment, and the former husband's petition was granted. This court reversed and remanded with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the former wife. Bachman v. McLinn, 65 So.3d 71, 75 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011). It is not clear from the limited record in this appeal, but it appears that on remand from that appeal, the trial court entered an amended supplemental judgment in favor of the former wife in August or September 2011.
In June 2012, the former husband filed a supplemental petition for modification of child support, claiming that he was entitled to a retroactive reduction in child support because $61.88 in monthly child care costs had not been incurred since April 2009. In September 2012, the former husband also filed a motion for relief, seeking credits against his child support arrears for the child care costs that had not been incurred since April 2009. On June 2, 2015, the trial court entered an order granting the former husband's motion for relief and crediting the former husband with “$61.88 per month from March of 2010 as child care which [f]ormer [w]ife did not incur.”1
On appeal, we find merit only in the former wife's claim that the trial court erred in crediting the former husband $61.88 per month in child care costs retroactive to March 2010. The former husband filed his supplemental petition seeking this relief in June 2012. Therefore, the trial court erred in granting relief for child care costs retroactive to March 2010. See § 61.14(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2011) (); Fayson v. Fayson, 482 So.2d 523, 525 (Fla. 5th DCA 1986) . Accordingly, we reverse the portion of the order on appeal relating to child care costs and remand for the trial court to credit the former husband for...
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Mirabella v. Mirabella, Case No. 2D18-4219
...imposing "a retroactive child support obligation ... prior to the filing of a petition seeking a modification"); Bachman v. McLinn, 197 So. 3d 123, 124 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016) (reversing a trial court's amended supplemental judgment that modified a child support obligation to a date prior to the......