Court Opinion

ID: 9895870
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-08 20:10:44.303695+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:12:15.468433
License: Public Domain

J-S35045-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

  DIANA CERVANTES                              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
  ANTHONY DELGADO                              :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 447 MDA 2023

             Appeal from the Order Entered February 21, 2023
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Domestic Relations at
                           No(s): 01099-DR-18

  DIANA CERVANTES                              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                       Appellant               :
                                               :
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
  ANTHONY DELGADO                              :   No. 458 MDA 2023

             Appeal from the Order Entered February 21, 2023
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County Domestic Relations at
                          No(s): 01099-DR-18,
                           PACSES 976117234

BEFORE:      PANELLA, P.J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and COLINS, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY COLINS, J.:                           FILED NOVEMBER 08, 2023

       These matters are consolidated cross-appeals filed by Anthony Delgado

(Father) and Diana Cervantes (Mother) from a child support order. For the

reasons set forth below, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-S35045-23

     Mother and Father, who were married in 2013 and divorced in 2018,

have a son who was born in 2012 (Child). Mother and Father share physical

custody of Child on a 50/50 basis. Father was ordered in September 2020 to

pay $422.39 in child support per month.      Trial Court Order, 9/14/20.   On

December 30, 2020, Father filed a petition for modification of child support,

and the Dauphin County Domestic Relations Office, following a child support

conference, issued an order reducing Father’s support obligation, other than

payment of arrears, to zero. N.T., 10/18/22, at 3-5. Mother filed a timely

appeal for a de novo hearing and the trial court granted Mother’s request to

take discovery concerning Father’s income.

     The trial court held hearings on October 18, 2022 and November 22,

2022, at which Mother and Father testified and introduced documents

concerning their income. Mother testified that she is employed as a home

healthcare worker, that she works 84 hours per week, and is paid $9.50 per

hour for 40 of the hours that she works and a $14.25 per hour overtime rate

for the remaining 44 hours. N.T., 10/18/22, at 7-8, 25-26. Father testified

that he is a self-employed truck driver, that he was paid $146,145 in 2021,

that he reported on his 2021 federal and state tax returns expenses of

$85,619 for fuel, truck maintenance and repair, license plate fees, and

insurance in earning that income, and that in 2022 he was paid $105,919

through October 13. N.T., 10/18/22, at 33-34, 38-40, 44-49. Father did not

introduce any evidence of 2022 business expenses. Appellant’s Brief at 9 n.1.

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J-S35045-23

      On February 21, 2023, the trial court entered a child support order

ordering Father to pay $442.00 per month in child support effective January

1, 2022. Trial Court Order, 2/21/23. The trial court based this child support

amount on its determinations that Father’s gross monthly income was $6,930

and Mother’s gross monthly income was $5,242. Trial Court Opinion at 4-5 &

attached calculations. Father filed a motion for reconsideration of the child

support order, which the trial court denied on March 8, 2023. Father and

Mother timely appealed the child support order on March 17, 2023 and March

20, 2023, respectively. On June 13, 2023, this Court sua sponte consolidated

the appeals.

      The only claims of error that the parties assert in these appeals concern

the trial court’s determination of their gross income, which the trial court used

as their earning capacity in calculating child support. Father raises as his sole

issue in his appeal the contention that the trial court incorrectly calculated his

gross income by not subtracting all of his claimed business expenses from the

amount that he was paid as an independent contractor for his work.

Appellant’s Brief at 8, 14-15. Mother contends that the trial court did not err

in its calculation of Father’s income and raises as her single issue the claim

that the trial court incorrectly calculated her monthly gross income.

Appellee/Cross-Appellant’s Brief at 4. Neither Father nor Mother claims that

the trial court erred in calculating child support in any respect other than the

gross income that it used in those calculations.

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J-S35045-23

        Our review of the trial court’s order is limited to determining whether

the court abused its discretion and whether there is insufficient evidence to

support the order. M.E.W. v. W.L.W., 240 A.3d 626, 634 (Pa. Super. 2020);

Kimock v. Jones, 47 A.3d 850, 853-54 (Pa. Super. 2012).

        When evaluating a [child] support order, this Court may only
        reverse the trial court’s determination where the order cannot be
        sustained on any valid ground. We will not interfere with the broad
        discretion afforded the trial court absent an abuse of the discretion
        or insufficient evidence to sustain the support order. An abuse of
        discretion is not merely an error of judgment; if, in reaching a
        conclusion, the court overrides or misapplies the law, or the
        judgment exercised is shown by the record to be either manifestly
        unreasonable or the product of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will,
        discretion has been abused. In addition, we note that the duty to
        support one’s child is absolute, and the purpose of child support
        is to promote the child’s best interests.

M.E.W., 240 A.3d at 634 (quoting Brickus v. Dent, 5 A.3d 1281 (Pa. Super.

2010)). Moreover, where, as here, the trial court hears the evidence as fact

finder, its credibility determinations are binding on this Court. M.E.W., 240

A.3d at 634; Mackay v. Mackay, 984 A.2d 529, 533 (Pa. Super. 2009). This

Court

        must accept findings of the trial court that are supported by
        competent evidence of record, as our role does not include making
        independent factual determinations. In addition, with regard to
        issues of credibility and weight of the evidence, this Court must
        defer to the trial judge who presided over the proceedings and
        thus viewed the witnesses first hand.

        When the trial court sits as fact finder, the weight to be assigned
        the testimony of the witnesses is within its exclusive province, as
        are credibility determinations, and the court is free to choose to
        believe all, part, or none of the evidence presented. This Court is
        not free to usurp the trial court’s duty as the finder of fact.

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J-S35045-23

M.E.W., 240 A.3d at 634 (quoting Mackay).

        The trial court found that Father’s gross annual income was $83,160,

and that his gross monthly income was $6,930, one-twelfth of that annual

income. Trial Court Opinion at 5. The trial court based this determination on

the evidence that Father was paid $146,145 in 2021 and $105,919 in the first

91/2 months of 2022 and its conclusion that Father’s claims concerning the

amount of his business expenses were not credible and that the pay that

Father received could only therefore be reduced by a portion of the claimed

expenses. Id. at 3-5. Father argues that the trial court abused its discretion

in determining his gross income because it was allegedly required to deduct

all of his claimed $85,619 in business expenses from the $146,145 that he

was paid in 2021 in determining his gross income. We do not agree.

        Unreimbursed business expenses may be deducted in determining a

party’s monthly gross income where those expenses are supported by

appropriate itemizations and constitute bona fide expenses. Berry v. Berry,

898 A.2d 1100, 1107 (Pa. Super. 2006); Cramer v. Cramer, No. 1071 MDA

2019,    slip   op.   at   6   (Pa.   Super.   January   31,   2020)   (unpublished

memorandum).          A mere bald claim that particular amounts are business

expenses without itemization or documentation, however, is insufficient to

support deduction of those expenses in calculating gross income. Berry, 898

A.2d at 1107-08 (reducing gross income based on claimed business expenses

                                         -5-
J-S35045-23

that were not supported by itemization or documentation was abuse of

discretion).

      Here, Father did not introduce documents at the hearings that showed

actual payment of $85,619 in business expenses. Rather, Father based his

claim that he incurred business expenses in that amount on the fact that those

expenses were deducted from his income on his 2021 tax returns.           N.T.,

10/18/22, at 45-46. The document on which the tax deductions were based

was a list of categories of expenses that Father created himself. Id. at 46-

47. That list did not document or itemize any of the actual expenditures that

constituted over $79,000 of the claimed business expenses, lumping all fuel

expenses together as a total of over $37,000 and all truck maintenance and

repair expenses as a total of over $42,000. Id. at 47-49. Father’s claims that

he paid for his fuel and insurance were contradicted by documents that

showed that the pay that he received was calculated after some of those

expenses were paid by the company that hired him. N.T., 11/22/22, at 12-

13, 35-39, 51. In addition, Father introduced no evidence of the amount of

business expenses that he incurred in 2022.

      Given the lack of supporting documentation and itemization, the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in not reducing Father’s gross income by the

amount of business expenses that he claimed. Berry, 898 A.2d at 1107-08.

The fact that an expense has been deducted from income on a party’s tax

returns is not dispositive of whether it can be deducted in determining the

                                     -6-
J-S35045-23

income on which child support is based. Labar v. Labar, 731 A.2d 1252,

1257 (Pa. 1999); Flory v. Flory, 527 A.2d 155, 157 (Pa. Super. 1987);

Cramer, No. 1071 MDA 2019, slip op. at 7-9. Moreover, the $85,619 figure

was based solely on Father’s assertions, in his tax returns, in his self-created

list, and in his testimony, that he incurred that amount of business expenses,

and the trial court found that Father was not credible. Trial Court Opinion at

3-5. Because Father did not prove the expenses that he claimed, the trial

court did not err in rejecting his claimed expenses. Father therefore has not

shown any error prejudicial to him in the trial court’s calculation of his gross

monthly income based on an annual gross income of $83,160, an amount over

$60,000 lower than the pay he received in 2021 and over $20,000 less than

he was paid for only 91/2 months of 2022.

      In her appeal, Mother argues that the trial court erred in determining

that her monthly gross income was $5,242 and in using that amount in

calculating child support because a $5,242 monthly gross income is

inconsistent with both the evidence introduced at the hearings and the trial

court’s finding concerning Mother’s weekly gross income. We agree.

      At the hearings, Mother testified that she works 84 hours per week and

is paid $9.50 per hour for 40 of those hours and $14.25 per hour for the

remaining 44 hours. N.T., 10/18/22, at 8, 25-26. Mother also introduced pay

stubs in evidence showing that her gross pay from her employer was $1,007

per week. Id. at 30-31. The trial court found Mother’s testimony credible

                                     -7-
J-S35045-23

and that her weekly earnings were 40 hours at $9.50 per hour and 44 hours

at $14.25 per hour, Trial Court Opinion at 4, which mathematically results in

a weekly gross income of $1,007. A weekly gross income of $1,007 would

yield a monthly gross income of $4,376, not a monthly gross income of

$5,242.    Thus, the trial court’s determination that Mother’s monthly gross

income was $5,2421 is unsupported by the evidence and inconsistent with its

own finding concerning what Mother was paid.           The trial court therefore

abused its discretion in using $5,242 as Mother’s monthly gross income.

       Because Father has not shown that the trial court abused its discretion

in its determination of his income, we affirm its finding that his gross monthly

income was $6,930.         Because the trial court’s determination that Mother’s

monthly gross income was $5,242 was a miscomputation or misstatement

unsupported by the evidence that the trial court found credible, we reverse

that determination and remand this case to the trial court for recalculation of

child support based on Father’s gross monthly income of $6,930 and Mother’s

gross monthly income calculated from the trial court’s supported finding that

her weekly gross income was $1,007.

____________________________________________

1 It appears that this error may be the result of accidentally importing Mother’s

gross monthly income at the time of the Domestic Relations Office conference
in January 2021, which was $5,242 because she was working 14 more hours
a week at $14.25 for a weekly gross income of $1,206.50 before her work
hours were later cut back to 84 hours per week. N.T., 10/18/22, at 3-4, 25-
26.

                                           -8-
J-S35045-23

      Order affirmed in part and reversed in part. Case remanded for further

further   proceedings   consistent   with   this   Memorandum.   Jurisdiction

relinquished.

Judgment Entered.

Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 11/8/2023

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