Anderson v. Anderson , 414 P.3d 1069 ( 2018 )


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    2018 UT App 19
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    LYNESSA MICHELLE ANDERSON,
    Appellee,
    v.
    LOREN PRICE ANDERSON,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20160507-CA
    Filed February 1, 2018
    Fourth District Court, Provo Department
    The Honorable Samuel D. McVey
    No. 084400367
    Rosemond G. Blakelock, Attorney for Appellant
    Jill L. Coil and Luke A. Shaw, Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE KATE A. TOOMEY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES
    MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN and JILL M. POHLMAN concurred.
    TOOMEY, Judge:
    ¶1     Following a bench trial for Loren Price Anderson’s
    petition to modify child support and alimony, the district court
    awarded Lynessa Michelle Anderson $1,900 per month for
    alimony, $714.64 for child support, and $16,403.44 in attorney
    fees. Loren 1 appeals these awards, contending the district court
    abused its discretion by (1) imputing income to him in the
    amount of $6,662 per month; (2) awarding Lynessa alimony in
    excess of her actual needs; (3) awarding child support to Lynessa
    1. “As is our practice in cases where both parties share a last
    name, we refer to the parties by their first name with no
    disrespect intended by the apparent informality.” Smith v. Smith,
    
    2017 UT App 40
    , ¶ 2 n.1, 
    392 P.3d 985
    .
    Anderson v. Anderson
    based on the improperly imputed income; and (4) awarding
    Lynessa attorney fees without “appropriate consideration of the
    relevant attorney fees factors.”
    ¶2     We agree with Loren that the court abused its discretion
    in awarding Lynessa alimony in the amount of $1,900 per
    month, but only to the extent that it erroneously considered
    retirement fund contributions in Lynessa’s monthly expenses,
    because they were not enjoyed during the marriage, and we
    remand solely for removal of that amount from the alimony
    award. But we conclude there was no abuse of discretion when
    the district court included anticipated car loan payments and
    health insurance in Lynessa’s monthly expenses, because
    alimony need not be based solely on current expenses.
    ¶3      We decline to address Loren’s claims of error with respect
    to his imputed income and the award of child support based on
    his imputed income because he failed to support his argument
    with reasoned analysis using legal precedent.
    ¶4    Finally, the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    awarding attorney fees to Lynessa based on her need and
    Loren’s ability to pay them.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶5     Loren and Lynessa were married from 1989 to 2008.
    During their marriage, Lynessa stayed home to raise their four
    children while Loren worked as a contractor installing carpet
    and countertops. According to Lynessa, during the marriage
    Loren was “a workaholic,” “always looking for the next job,”
    and was a great provider for the family. Indeed, there was
    money for extras: two of their sons, Tyler and Steele, were on
    hockey teams that traveled for games, which could cost more
    than $7,000 in fees and other expenses per year, which the family
    was able to pay. Loren also “sometimes [paid] for other kids’
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    hockey tuition fees because their families couldn’t afford it
    themselves.” Tyler recounted that while his parents were
    married, “we never went without. . . . We had everything we
    needed.”
    ¶6     After working for different companies for a few years
    early on in the marriage, Loren started his own contracting
    business. He primarily submitted subcontracting bids to Action
    Target, a construction company that provided installations for
    military, law enforcement, and commercial gun ranges. The
    money he earned was deposited into a checking account
    separate from Lynessa’s checking account, and whenever
    Lynessa needed to pay bills or required funds for the children,
    Loren gave her cash. Lynessa was never privy to what Loren
    earned for each project and was rarely made aware of the
    identity of the contractor. But Tyler, Steele, and Lynessa each
    observed Loren carrying a great deal of cash. After a project’s
    completion, Loren paid cash to his workers.
    ¶7     In 2006, the Andersons’ marriage started to break down.
    Loren admitted he was “having some troubles at that time” and
    began using drugs. By Lynessa’s account, Loren was no longer
    “in his right mind set” and he became “very promiscuous” and
    she “didn’t want him around anymore.” Loren’s drug use
    rendered him incapable of earning an income for a time and it
    ultimately led to their divorce.
    ¶8     In 2008, the district court entered a default decree of
    divorce after Loren failed to respond to Lynessa’s petition.
    Because Loren did not respond and failed to assist the court with
    financial documents, the court relied on his 1099 Form from 2007
    showing an annual income of $219,246 “or $18,271 per month” to
    determine his ability to pay child support and alimony. The
    court imputed income to Lynessa in the amount of $1,014 per
    month. Ultimately, Loren was ordered to pay $2,945 per month
    for child support and $2,719 per month for alimony. The child
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    support obligation was to be reduced as each child reached the
    age of eighteen, and the alimony obligation was to continue for a
    period equal to the length of the marriage.
    ¶9      Beginning around the time of the divorce, Loren pleaded
    guilty to drug and fraud related crimes and was in and out of jail
    for three years. Though he was obligated to pay Lynessa a total
    of $5,664 each month for alimony and child support, he rarely
    paid and never in the full amount. When he did pay, it was
    always in cash, until the Office of Recovery Services (ORS)
    became involved. Lynessa testified, “We would go long periods
    of time without anything from [Loren]. For the longest time he
    was paying 200 a month, and he just recently changed it to
    paying [550].” Even after ORS became involved, Lynessa
    received only $600 per month for combined child support and
    alimony. This required Lynessa to receive financial assistance
    from her church, friends, and family. She also sold some of her
    gold, jewelry, and other items to provide for herself and the
    children. But even with this help, she was always behind on
    bills, and neither she nor the children lived a lifestyle similar to
    what they enjoyed during the marriage. Tyler testified that their
    living conditions changed after the divorce, that Lynessa could
    not fix things around the house, that they relied on their church
    for food, and that without the money for alimony or child
    support, Lynessa worked as often as she could “even if it meant
    not seeing [the children] as often.”
    ¶10 In 2011, Loren filed a petition to modify child support and
    alimony (the Petition) based on a substantial change in
    circumstances that resulted in a decrease in income from the
    time the divorce decree was entered. He alleged that he could
    not afford to pay child support or alimony because the amount
    he was ordered to pay was “in excess of [his] income.” Loren
    claimed he had no income during his incarceration and a
    decreased ability to earn an income similar to what he had
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    earned during the marriage because he could no longer maintain
    his own construction business.
    ¶11 Lynessa and Loren each filed financial declarations and
    other documents related to their respective incomes and
    expenses. Lynessa provided her 2014 tax return and pay stubs
    from 2015, which supported her net monthly income of $2,572.01
    as purported in her financial declaration, and claimed monthly
    expenses in the amount of $5,496.21. Loren provided incomplete
    tax returns for the years he had actually filed them and monthly
    pay stubs from one employer with hourly rates that varied from
    about $20 per hour to $33 per hour. But Loren claimed he was
    earning only $11 per hour, or $2000 per month.
    ¶12 The district court held a bench trial in 2015 to resolve the
    issues Loren raised in the Petition. At trial, most of the testimony
    related to Loren’s ability to earn income, whether he was
    actually earning only $2,000 per month, and whether he or his
    new wife (New Wife) owned a construction company.
    ¶13 Around the time Loren filed the Petition, he had initiated
    a romantic relationship with New Wife and helped her to
    register a construction company, Steelcoat. New Wife had never
    owned a business before, let alone a construction company, and
    both New Wife and Loren admitted that she relied on Loren to
    operate Steelcoat. Loren claimed he was only an employee of
    Steelcoat and made just $11 per hour, or $2,000 per month, but
    also admitted at trial that he was the “face [of Steelcoat] to a lot
    of people at Action Target”—the construction company that
    subcontracts most of Steelcoat’s work and with which Loren has
    had a long professional relationship.
    ¶14 Loren’s claimed income and whether New Wife was
    indeed the sole proprietor of Steelcoat were called into question
    when New Wife admitted that Loren helped create all of the bids
    Steelcoat sent to different companies and that she was not sure
    whether the bids needed to be signed before submission. In
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    addition, a representative from Action Target testified that
    submitting bids is “pretty specific” and “detailed” work that
    requires a bidder to have “at least done some [installation] work
    before, or be guided in what it takes to do it.” The representative
    also testified that Action Target works closely with its
    subcontractors during projects and that when it accepts
    Steelcoat’s bids the company communicates with Loren and not
    with New Wife. Further, Loren admitted that Action Target has
    hired him, personally, to complete certain of its projects, but he
    did not provide any information related to the payments he
    received for those projects.
    ¶15 In addition to Loren’s failure to provide the court with a
    complete tax return, other than a 2004 tax return, to support his
    claimed monthly income of $2,000 per month, Lynessa’s attorney
    elicited testimony from Steele that further negated Loren’s claim
    about his income. Steele testified that when he asked Loren for
    financial help for hockey fees just before the trial, Loren
    responded that if Lynessa “would stop coming after him [for]
    money” that “it would be easier for him to not have to hide what
    he’s doing.” And when the court asked about his ability to earn a
    better income, Loren admitted he had not applied for
    employment that would pay more than $11 per hour “in the last
    three or four years” prior to the trial.
    ¶16 After trial, the district court entered findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. It found that there had been a “material and
    substantial change in circumstance” with respect to the incomes
    of both parties that allowed for modification of the divorce
    decree. Because Loren failed to provide complete financial
    documents or tax returns, the court had to determine an
    appropriate amount of income to impute to him. It found
    incredible the testimony regarding Loren’s income and New
    Wife’s sole ownership of Steelcoat. Loren admitted that Action
    Target employed him personally for specific projects, yet
    provided the court with no documentation to show what he was
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    paid or invoice records “from his prior relationship with Action
    Target” to give the court a general idea of the income Loren was
    making and could continue to make. The court also found that
    Steele’s testimony that Loren was “hid[ing] things” from
    Lynessa was a “refer[ence] to unreported income.” The court
    therefore relied on Loren’s 2004 tax return, which represented a
    period when Loren owned and operated a company similar to
    Steelcoat, to impute income to him. In 2004, Loren’s adjusted
    gross income was $41,317. The court added $20,000 to this
    amount based on what Loren paid for his sons’ hockey expenses
    and his ability to pay for other team members’ fees. The court
    also considered inflation rates and ultimately imputed income to
    him in the amount of $79,948 annually, or $6,662 monthly.
    ¶17 When determining the amount of alimony to award
    Lynessa, the court addressed her claimed monthly expenses.
    These amounted to $5,496.21, but the court removed “the
    amount spent on adult children, school fees which can be
    waived[,] and pet care” and found that her reasonable monthly
    expenses were $4,400. Based on these expenses and her monthly
    income of $2,513, the court awarded $1,900 per month for
    alimony. This amount was to be applied retroactively,
    subsuming the original $2,954 monthly award, starting from the
    time the divorce decree was entered and lasting for a period
    equal to the length of the marriage. The court also reduced the
    award of child support to $714.64 per month for the parties’
    remaining minor child.
    ¶18   Loren timely appealed.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶19 Loren raises four issues on appeal. First, he contends the
    district court abused its discretion in imputing his monthly
    income at $6,662. In a divorce action, the district court “‘is
    permitted considerable discretion in adjusting the financial and
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    property interests of the parties, and its actions are entitled to a
    presumption of validity.’” Rayner v. Rayner, 
    2013 UT App 269
    ,
    ¶¶ 4, 26, 
    316 P.3d 455
     (quoting Goggin v. Goggin, 
    2013 UT 16
    ,
    ¶ 44, 
    299 P.3d 1079
    ). We will reverse only if “(1) there was a
    misunderstanding or misapplication of the law resulting in
    substantial and prejudicial error; (2) the evidence clearly
    preponderated against the finding; . . . (3) such a serious inequity
    has resulted as to manifest a clear abuse of discretion”; or (4) the
    district court “abuse[d] its discretion by failing to enter specific,
    detailed findings supporting its financial determinations.” 
    Id.
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶20 Second, Loren contends the district court erred in
    awarding Lynessa alimony in the amount of $1,900 per month,
    “even if [Loren’s] income should be imputed at $6,662,” because
    the award was “hundreds of dollars in excess of [Lynessa’s]
    stated monthly needs” because it included anticipated expenses
    and was combined with the award of child support.
    ¶21 Third, Loren contends the district court erred in “setting
    [his] child support obligation in an amount based upon his
    imputed income of $6,662” per month. We review the district
    court’s “decisions regarding child support and alimony under
    the abuse of discretion standard.” Andrus v. Andrus, 
    2007 UT App 291
    , ¶ 9, 
    169 P.3d 754
    .
    ¶22 Finally, Loren contends the district court erred in
    awarding Lynessa attorney fees because it failed to consider the
    “relevant attorney fees factors.” Although the decision regarding
    attorney fees in divorce proceedings “rests primarily in the
    sound discretion of the [district] court,” we will reverse the
    award if the court fails to provide adequate findings of fact
    regarding the following factors: (1) the receiving spouse’s
    financial need, (2) the paying spouse’s ability to pay, and (3) the
    reasonableness of the requested amount of fees. See Oliekan v.
    Oliekan, 
    2006 UT App 405
    , ¶ 30, 
    147 P.3d 464
    .
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    ANALYSIS
    I. Imputed Income
    ¶23 Loren first contends the district court erred in imputing
    $6,662 in monthly income to him because the court used his 2004
    tax return to determine the amount he was capable of making,
    rather than using the pay stubs or more recent tax returns, and
    added $20,000 to that amount based on expenses incurred
    during the marriage that were discussed at trial. But Loren has
    provided no reasoned analysis to support this contention and we
    therefore affirm with respect to this issue.
    ¶24 Rule 24 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure
    identifies the briefing requirements on appeal. An appellant’s
    brief must assert contentions of error that occurred in the
    proceedings below and develop a reasoned argument for why
    the purported errors should be reversed. See Utah R. App. P.
    24(a)(8). The appellant’s argument must be supported with
    citations to the record and legal authority that governs the issues
    presented. See 
    id.
     An argument is inadequately briefed, and in
    violation of rule 24, when it “merely contains bald citations to
    authority [without] development of that authority and reasoned
    analysis based on that authority.” Bank of America v. Adamson,
    
    2017 UT 2
    , ¶ 11, 
    391 P.3d 196
     (alteration in original) (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶25 The Utah Supreme Court has recently clarified that the
    failure to comply with rule 24 is no longer “an absolute bar to
    review of an argument on appeal.” See Rose v. Office of Prof’l
    Conduct, 
    2017 UT 50
    , ¶ 64, petition for cert. filed, Dec. 4, 2017 (No.
    17-7003). But failure to adequately brief an argument will almost
    certainly result in the failure to “‘carry [the] burden of
    persuasion on appeal.’” See 
    id.
     (quoting Adamson, 
    2017 UT 2
    , ¶ 12).
    ¶26 Loren has marshaled the record facts he is challenging
    with respect to his imputed income—sixteen pages were
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    devoted to this issue, alone. See Utah R. App. P. 24(a)(6)(A); see
    also 
    id.
     R. 24(a)(8). Loren also provided citations to a few cases
    and a statute. But he has failed to apply the legal authority he
    cited to any of the facts.
    ¶27 Because Loren failed to develop a reasoned argument
    with the use of legal authority to support his contention that the
    district court improperly imputed income to him, he has failed
    to meet his burden of persuasion on appeal with respect to this
    issue. See Adamson, 
    2017 UT 2
    , ¶ 12. We therefore affirm the
    district court’s decision to impute to Loren a monthly income of
    $6,662. As a result, we likewise do not address his contention on
    appeal that the district court erred in “setting [his] child support
    obligation in an amount based upon his imputed income of
    $6,662” per month.
    II. Alimony
    ¶28 Loren contends that “even if the court’s imputation of
    income” to him was correct, the alimony award of $1,900 per
    month was in excess of Lynessa’s needs. Loren makes two
    overarching arguments related to this contention. First, he takes
    issue with items listed in Lynessa’s financial declaration that
    “were not actual expenses,” “were not supported by any
    evidence,” and “did not exist” at the time of the marriage.
    Second, he argues the award was hundreds of dollars in excess
    of Lynessa’s needs because she was also awarded $714.64 in
    child support.
    ¶29 In divorce proceedings, the district court’s determinations
    related to financial interests of the parties “are entitled to a
    presumption of validity” and we will not reverse absent a clear
    abuse of discretion. See Goggin v. Goggin, 
    2013 UT 16
    , ¶ 26, 
    299 P.3d 1079
     (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). “The
    purposes of an alimony award include enabling the receiving
    spouse to maintain, as nearly as possible, the standard of living
    enjoyed during the marriage, and preventing the receiving
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    spouse from becoming a public charge.” Rudman v. Rudman, 
    812 P.2d 73
    , 76 (Utah Ct. App. 1991). The court must consider three
    factors when determining alimony: “(1) the financial condition
    and needs of the receiving spouse, (2) the ability of the receiving
    spouse to produce sufficient income for him- or herself, and
    (3) the ability of the responding spouse to provide support.” 
    Id.
    A.    Lynessa’s Monthly Expenses
    ¶30 Loren challenges the following three expenses identified
    in Lynessa’s financial declaration: (1) a retirement account
    contribution, (2) a car loan, and (3) health insurance. He argues
    that these were not “actual expenses” or needs because Lynessa
    testified they were anticipated expenses rather than what she
    was presently paying.
    ¶31 An award of alimony is intended to help the parties
    “maintain the standard of living established over the course of
    the marriage rather than the amount that is actually being
    spent.” Woolums v. Woolums, 
    2013 UT App 232
    , ¶ 9, 
    312 P.3d 939
    .
    We have previously defined “standard of living” as “a minimum
    of necessities, comforts, or luxuries that is essential to
    maintaining a person in customary or proper status or
    circumstances.” Howell v. Howell, 
    806 P.2d 1209
    , 1211 (Utah Ct.
    App. 1991) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). This
    court has therefore “disavowed the notion that ‘standard of
    living is determined by actual expenses alone.’” Woolums, 
    2013 UT App 232
    , ¶ 9 (quoting Howell, 
    806 P.2d at 1212
    ). Actual
    expenses “may be necessarily lower than needed to maintain an
    appropriate standard of living for various reasons, including,
    possibly, lack of income.” Howell, 
    806 P.2d at 1212
    . It necessarily
    follows that if the court determines the receiving spouse’s actual
    and anticipated needs are reasonable, that they are consistent
    with the standard of living enjoyed during the marriage, and
    that the paying spouse can afford to cover the shortfall of those
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    needs, then the alimony award should be in an amount to
    accommodate that shortfall.
    ¶32 Here, the anticipated expenses of the car loan and health
    insurance were reasonable anticipated expenses for basic needs
    that were established as standard during the marriage. Loren,
    Lynessa, and Tyler each testified at trial that Lynessa had a car
    during the marriage, but that it broke down and she was
    without a car for two years leading up to the trial. Lynessa
    testified that she would have purchased a car to replace the old
    one if she had been receiving the alimony she was entitled to.
    Therefore, it was reasonable for the court to include the car loan
    in Lynessa’s monthly expenses.
    ¶33 The district court likewise did not abuse its discretion by
    including health insurance costs in Lynessa’s monthly expenses.
    Lynessa testified that she suffered from medical conditions both
    during and after the marriage for which she took medication and
    was under medical care. There was no suggestion at trial that her
    medical needs were not provided for during the marriage, and
    the original divorce decree indicated that Loren was providing
    some medical insurance at the time the marriage dissolved. 2 And
    although Lynessa was not asked at trial whether the parties had
    health insurance during the marriage, Loren was aware, prior to
    trial, that Lynessa identified health insurance as an expense in
    her financial declaration. He therefore left the issue for the
    district court to determine, using its broad discretion based on
    the evidence before it. See Woolums, 
    2013 UT App 232
    , ¶ 10
    (holding “[t]he district court’s evaluation of and reliance on
    Wife’s testimony, along with its own determinations of the
    reasonableness of the claimed expenses, fell squarely within its
    2. Our review of the record shows that the original divorce
    decree ordered Loren to continue to pay for the children’s health
    insurance.
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    broad discretion to determine an appropriate alimony award”).
    Given the medical conditions Lynessa testified she suffered from
    both during and after the marriage, and that health insurance
    was at least provided for the children during the marriage, as
    well as Loren’s failure to contest whether health insurance for
    Lynessa was established during the marriage, we conclude there
    was no abuse of discretion in considering anticipated health
    insurance costs in her monthly expenses.
    ¶34 As to Loren’s challenge regarding the retirement account,
    we agree that the district court exceeded the scope of its
    discretion when it included among Lynessa’s necessary monthly
    expenses $200 per month for retirement account contributions.
    ¶35 Utah Code section 30-3-5 allows the district court to
    address the needs of a spouse that did not exist during the
    marriage or at the time the divorce decree was entered only if
    “the court finds extenuating circumstances that justify that
    action.” Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(h)(ii) (LexisNexis Supp. 2017).
    This court has previously explained that retirement accounts
    “may not ordinarily be factored into an alimony determination,”
    unless “funds for post-divorce . . . retirement accounts are
    necessary because contributing to such accounts was standard
    practice during the marriage and helped to form the couple’s
    marital standard of living.” Bakanowski v. Bakanowski, 
    2003 UT App 357
    , ¶ 16, 
    80 P.3d 153
    . If this circumstance exists and the
    district court determines that the retirement account “should be
    taken into account as part of the needs analysis, then the court’s
    findings must be even more detailed than those in a standard
    needs analysis,” because this award “is the exception, rather
    than the rule.” Id.; see also Rudman v. Rudman, 
    812 P.2d 73
    , 76 n.1
    (Utah Ct. App. 1991) (explaining that in cases “where the
    evidence is severely conflicted, it is essential that the reviewing
    court clearly understand the findings on which the [district]
    court bases its conclusions”).
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    ¶36 Here, the district court made no findings related to
    Lynessa’s claim for $200 of monthly retirement contribution. At
    best, the order noted, “[Lynessa] included expenses that were
    reasonable, such as a car, insurance and health insurance, even
    though she does not presently have them but would have them
    if [Loren] paid support.” Though this statement could be read as
    a non-exhaustive list of reasonable expenses not yet incurred,
    failure to provide any factual findings related to the claimed
    retirement account expense is a violation of our explicit
    requirement that the court’s findings related to such accounts
    “must be even more detailed than those in a standard needs
    analysis.” See Bakanowski, 
    2003 UT App 357
    , ¶ 16. In addition,
    our review of the record shows that the initial divorce decree
    specifically stated, “Retirement and Savings. Neither party has a
    pension nor a profit sharing plan through his or her place of
    employment or otherwise.” The district court relied on this
    divorce decree for certain of its findings of facts and it was
    therefore an abuse of discretion to consider the anticipated
    retirement fund contribution in Lynessa’s monthly expenses.
    ¶37 We remand to the district court for the limited purpose of
    removing the $200 retirement fund contribution from Lynessa’s
    necessary monthly expenses and to adjust the award of alimony
    accordingly.
    B.    Awarding Alimony and Child Support
    ¶38 Loren contends the district court abused its discretion in
    awarding Lynessa $1,900 for alimony because she was also
    receiving approximately $715 per month in child support, and
    these combined awards exceed her stated monthly expenses. We
    disagree.
    ¶39 Child support is a “basic and unalienable right . . . vested
    in the minor.” See Reick v. Reick, 
    652 P.2d 916
    , 917 (Utah 1982)
    (per curiam). This court has previously explained that “[i]t is
    typically best practice for [district] courts to analyze alimony
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    Anderson v. Anderson
    without factoring in child support obligations.” Dobson v.
    Dobson, 
    2012 UT App 373
    , ¶ 11, 
    294 P.3d 591
    . But we have held
    that “treating child support payments as the recipient spouse’s
    income is permissible where the recipient combine[s] her
    expenses with those of the children in her financial declaration.”
    Roberts v. Roberts, 
    2014 UT App 211
    , ¶ 17, 
    335 P.3d 378
     (alteration
    in original) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    “[W]hen at least some of the children’s expenses seem to have
    been factored into the alimony calculation already” then the
    district court must explain its decision not to include child
    support payments as income. See 
    id. ¶40
     Here, the district court specifically removed “the amount
    spent on adult children [and] school fees which can be waived”
    from Lynessa’s monthly expenses. Loren has not directed us to
    anything within Lynessa’s financial declaration that could be
    considered additional expenses spent solely on the minor child
    still residing with Lynessa. Without providing a reasoned
    analysis with respect to awarding child support in addition to
    alimony, Loren has failed to carry his burden of persuasion on
    appeal with respect to this issue. See Bank of America v. Adamson,
    
    2017 UT 2
    , ¶¶ 12–13, 
    391 P.3d 196
     (providing that a party who
    “fails to devote adequate attention to an issue is almost certainly
    going to fail to meet its burden of persuasion” on appeal).
    ¶41 The court also explained that “although her current living
    style does not match what she enjoyed during the marriage,
    there are insufficient funds after the divorce . . . between the
    parties to allow her to live that lifestyle.” The court appears to
    imply that the award of alimony could have been higher if
    Loren’s income was similar to what he earned during the
    marriage.
    ¶42 The district court did not abuse its discretion when it
    awarded alimony to Lynessa in addition to child support.
    20160507-CA                    15                
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    Anderson v. Anderson
    III. Attorney Fees
    ¶43 Loren contends the district court erred in awarding
    attorney fees to Lynessa without “an appropriate consideration
    of the relevant attorney fees factors.” We disagree.
    ¶44 In the context of divorce, “[t]he decision to award
    attorney fees and the amount thereof rests primarily in the
    sound discretion of the [district] court,” but the court must “base
    the award on evidence of the receiving spouse’s financial need,
    the payor spouse’s ability to pay, and the reasonableness of the
    requested fees.” Childs v. Childs, 
    967 P.2d 942
    , 947 (Utah Ct. App.
    1998); see also Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-3(1) (LexisNexis 2013)
    (providing that in an action to modify child support or alimony,
    “the court may order a party to pay the costs, attorney fees, and
    witness fees . . . of the other party to enable the other party to
    prosecute or defend the action”).
    ¶45 Here, the district court considered the required attorney
    fees factors when awarding fees to Lynessa. The court found that
    because Loren “has been able to get support and income
    modified from the [divorce] decree,” and “since [he] has not
    been paying adequate alimony or child support, [Lynessa]
    cannot afford attorney fees but [Loren] has the ability to pay
    them.” 3 Loren’s ability to pay was also based on the income
    imputed to him.
    3. The court also commented that Loren’s “hiding of income and
    failure to be forthcoming with complete records makes it
    inequitable to award him attorney[] fees” and that those same
    factors would allow an award of attorney fees to Lynessa “under
    the bad faith provision” of Utah Code section 78B-5-825. We
    agree with Loren that this was an incorrect application of section
    78B-5-825, which allows a court to award attorney fees to the
    prevailing party “if the court determines that the action or
    (continued…)
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    Anderson v. Anderson
    ¶46 The district court did not abuse its discretion in awarding
    attorney fees to Lynessa. 4
    ¶47 On appeal, Lynessa has requested that she be awarded
    attorney fees incurred in her defense of this appeal. “Generally,
    when the [district] court awards fees in a domestic action to the
    party who then substantially prevails on appeal, fees will also be
    awarded to that party on appeal.” Osguthorpe v. Osguthorpe, 872
    (…continued)
    defense to the action was without merit or not brought or
    asserted in good faith.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-825(1)
    (LexisNexis 2012). First, it is unclear who the prevailing party is
    in this situation. Although Loren was unable to persuade the
    court that he was making only $11 per hour, he successfully
    petitioned it to reduce his obligations of alimony and child
    support. Second, because of this success, we cannot agree that
    the action was without merit or brought in bad faith. Though we
    do not condone Loren’s failure to provide adequate financial
    documents to support his alleged income, we do not agree with
    the court that Lynessa deserves attorney fees under the bad faith
    provision of the attorney fees statute. But this analysis has no
    effect on the district court’s award of attorney fees under Utah
    Code section 30-3-3.
    4. The court awarded attorney fees in the amount of $16,403.44
    “as stated in Petitioner’s Affidavit of Attorney’s Fees.” This
    affidavit provided the various billing rates of attorneys from two
    law firms, and provided the total number of hours each firm
    spent on Lynessa’s case; the affidavit did not identify which
    attorneys spent what amount of time on the case in calculating
    the final amount. But Loren has not argued this was error and
    therefore we will not address whether it was an abuse of
    discretion for the district court to rely solely on this affidavit
    when determining the amount of attorney fees.
    20160507-CA                    17                
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    Anderson v. Anderson
    P.2d 1057, 1059 (Utah Ct. App. 1994) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted); see also Oliekan v. Oliekan, 
    2006 UT App 405
    , ¶ 32, 
    147 P.3d 464
     (“[W]e will generally award attorney
    fees on appeal to the prevailing party if the [district] court
    awarded attorney fees and the receiving party prevails on the
    main issues on appeal.”). Because the district court properly
    awarded attorney fees to Lynessa in the action below and
    because she has substantially prevailed on appeal, we
    accordingly award her attorney fees on appeal and remand to
    the district court to calculate the reasonable amount of fees and
    costs she incurred in connection with this appeal. See Osguthorpe,
    872 P.2d at 1059.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶48 We conclude the district court did not abuse its discretion
    when it included anticipated costs for health insurance and car
    loan payments in Lynessa’s necessary monthly expenses because
    they were reasonable expenses within the marriage standard of
    living and that she would have continued to incur if Loren had
    consistently paid her alimony and child support. The court also
    did not abuse its discretion in awarding child support in
    addition to alimony because child support is a vested right of the
    child and the court removed costs from Lynessa’s monthly
    expenses that related specifically to the children. The district
    court also did not abuse its discretion in awarding attorney fees
    to Lynessa under Utah Code section 30-3-3 because it gave
    appropriate consideration to the relevant attorney fees factors.
    ¶49 We further conclude the district court abused its
    discretion when it included retirement account contributions in
    Lynessa’s necessary monthly expenses because contribution to
    such an account did not exist during the marriage.
    ¶50 Accordingly, we remand to the district court for the
    removal of retirement account contribution expenses from the
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    Anderson v. Anderson
    alimony calculation and to calculate reasonable attorney fees
    incurred by Lynessa on appeal.
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