D.W. v. W.C.
Decision Date | 27 July 2018 |
Docket Number | 2170208 |
Citation | 266 So.3d 1108 |
Parties | D.W. v. W.C. |
Court | Alabama Court of Civil Appeals |
Terinna S. Moon of Moon & Melvin, LLC, Prattville, for appellant.
Juraldine Battle-Hodge, Montgomery, for appellee.
D.W. ("the mother") appeals from a judgment entered by the Montgomery Circuit Court ("the trial court") to the extent that it awarded W.C. ("the father") visitation with B.W. ("the child"), whose date of birth is May 26, 2016, and determined the father's child-support obligation. We affirm the judgment in part and reverse it in part.
On May 18, 2017, the mother filed a complaint seeking a judgment awarding her custody of the child and requiring the father to pay child support. The father subsequently filed a letter responding to the mother's complaint; the father asserted that he should be awarded joint custody of, and visitation with, the child.
After an October 18, 2017, trial, the trial court entered a judgment that same day declaring that the father is the father of the child, awarding the parties joint legal custody of the child, awarding the mother sole physical custody of the child, awarding the father visitation with the child, and ordering the father to pay $509.28 per month in child support. With regard to child support, the trial court specifically stated:
On October 31, 2017, the mother filed a postjudgment motion. She withdrew that motion on November 1, 2017, and subsequently filed a new postjudgment motion on November 15, 2017. On November 17, 2017, the mother filed a notice of appeal; that notice of appeal was held in abeyance until February 5, 2018, when the trial court entered an order disposing of the mother's postjudgment motion.
The mother and the father were never married to one another. At the time the child was conceived, the father was married but was living separately from his wife. The father had subsequently reconciled with his wife, and they remained married at the time of the trial.
The mother has an older child in addition to the child. The father and his wife have two children together; one of those children is older than the child, and the other is younger. The younger of the father and his wife's children was born prematurely.
The evidence indicated that the mother had allowed the father to visit the child at her house and that the father had provided some support for the child. Approximately one month before the mother filed her complaint, the mother and the father had had an argument, and the father had not visited or provided support since that time.
The father submitted a Form CS-41 "Child–Support–Obligation Income Statement/Affidavit" indicating that he earns $2,581 per month. The mother submitted a Form CS-41 indicating that she earns $1,440 per month and that she incurs day-care costs for the child in the amount of $440 per month. The trial court completed a CS-42 form using those figures. The calculations on that form resulted in the father's monthly child-support obligation being $709.28.
The father testified that he earns $14.91 per hour and that he earns overtime pay once or twice per month. His most recent pay stub for the week of October 2 through October 9, 2017, was introduced into evidence. That pay stub indicated that his hourly salary is $14.90, that his gross salary for the period October 2 through October 9 was $619.18, and that his year-to-date gross salary was $31,798.69. The father testified that his wife does not work, that she is in school, and that she had been taking care of their youngest child. He testified that his monthly expenses include $800 for rent, $375 for utilities, $80 for diapers for his youngest child, $135 for formula for his youngest child, $400 for his wife's automobile payment, $300 for his automobile payment, $125 for insurance, and $300 for medical expenses for his youngest child.
The mother testified that she wanted the father's visitation to be phased in gradually and supervised because the father had not been around the child much, because she and the father have a history of getting into arguments, because the father works long hours, and because she has a "very bad history" with the father's wife and knows "nothing" about her.
V.C. v. C.T., 976 So.2d 465, 468 (Ala. Civ. App. 2007).
In the present case, the evidence at the trial indicated that the father had visited the child, albeit not regularly. There was no evidence indicating that the child would be harmed in any way by allowing the child "complete and unrestricted" visitation with the father. Therefore, we cannot conclude that the trial court exceeded its discretion by declining to require the father's visitation to be phased in gradually or to be supervised.
The mother also argues that the trial court erred in calculating the father's child-support obligation. She correctly notes that the father's pay stub for the period October 2 through October 9, 2017, which was introduced at the trial, indicates that he earns a higher monthly salary than he reflected on his Form CS-41. We note that the father's income as reflected on his Form CS-41 is approximately the amount he would earn working 40 hours per week at his hourly rate of pay. However, the father testified that he earns overtime pay once or twice per month; that overtime pay, along with...
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Edwards v. Edwards
...represented on the husband's pay stub were representative of the husband's overtime earnings throughout the year. See D.W. v. W.C., 266 So.3d 1108, 1112 (Ala. Civ. App. 2018) (concluding that overtime earned once or twice a month constitutes "substantial and continuing" overtime that should......