M.A. v. F.W.A. ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • J-A14006-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    M.A.                                     :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                          :
    :
    :
    F.W.A.                                   :
    :
    Appellant             :   No. 762 WDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered May 1, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County Domestic Relations
    at No(s): No. 361 DR 2008,
    PASCES No. 100109958
    BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.:                        FILED OCTOBER 28, 2020
    This appeal by F.W.A. (“Father”) is from a May 1, 2019 order of support
    for the parties’ three children. We affirm.
    Appellee, M.A., also known as M.M. (“Mother”), and Father married in
    2003, separated in 2008, and divorced in December of 2009. N.T., 2/20/18,
    at 6–7.    Three children were born of the marriage: A.A., presently age
    eighteen, R.A., presently age fifteen, and T.A., presently age fourteen. Id. at
    5–6.
    The original monthly support order of $2,200 was entered in 2008.
    Order, 10/16/08. A divorce stipulation in 2010 set child support and alimony
    on a specific schedule until July 1, 2011, when alimony terminated and support
    was converted solely into child support at $1,500 per month. Order, 1/7/11.
    J-A14006-20
    Mother filed a petition to modify support on September 8, 2017, and following
    a de novo hearing before a Hearing Officer on February 20, 2018, the Hearing
    Officer filed findings of fact and conclusions of law on March 8, 2018. Petition
    to Modify Support, 9/8/17; Findings of Hearing Officer, 3/8/18. Both parties
    filed exceptions: Father, on March 14, 2018, and Mother, on April 2, 2018.
    On May 16, 2018, the trial court entered an order remanding three of Father’s
    exceptions and two of Mother’s exceptions to the Hearing Officer.        Order,
    5/16/18. For reasons unexplained by the parties and the trial court, the trial
    court entered an amended order on May 24, 2018, that appears to be identical
    to the May 16, 2018 order.
    The Hearing Officer entered new findings on December 11, 2018.
    Findings of Hearing Officer, 12/11/18.     Both parties excepted to the new
    findings; Father filed nineteen exceptions on December 28, 2018, consisting
    of his original twelve exceptions to the March 14, 2018 Findings as well as
    seven new exceptions not previously discussed at the original February 20,
    2018 de novo hearing.     Mother filed one exception on January 17, 2019.
    Following a hearing on March 18, 2019, the trial court entered an order on
    April 8, 2019, and an amended order on May 1, 2019, denying all of Father’s
    exceptions and granting Mother’s one cross-exception. Father filed this appeal
    on May 20, 2019. Both Father and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P.
    1925.
    -2-
    J-A14006-20
    In its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion, the trial court assailed the large
    number of issues Father raised in his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement and
    observed, “While attorneys have a duty to advocate on behalf of their clients,
    there is a point where a line must be drawn and zealousness must be
    restrained.” Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/19, at 3. In addition, the trial court
    determined that Father’s Rule 1925(b) statement was not concise or clear and
    erroneously required the court to attempt to guess what issues were appealed.
    Id. at 4. In holding some issues waived, the trial court stated:
    [F]ive (5) Exceptions were remanded to the Hearing Officer. The
    Hearing Officer was instructed to adhere to the remanded
    issues[,] and no other issue could be presented in front of the
    Hearing Officer other than the specific issues remanded. The
    remand was explicit and was not another opportunity for either
    party to re-litigate the entire case. Any issues not related to these
    five (5) issues remanded to the Hearing Officer have been
    improperly brought as they were waived when [Father] and
    [Mother] failed to Except to the issues in their March 14, 2018 and
    April 2, 2018 Exceptions and then failed to appeal this [c]ourt’s
    May 16, 2018 order. Therefore, the rulings made by this [c]ourt
    are no longer appealable and [Father’s] only basis for appeal can
    be based upon the Findings. Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 302(a), “issues
    not raised in the lower court are waived and cannot be raised for
    the first time on appeal.” (Current with amendments received
    through September 15, 2019). Therefore, this [c]ourt should not
    have to address issues untimely brought and outside the scope of
    the remand.
    Id. at 4–5 (footnote omitted). Thus, the trial court addressed only the issues
    that related to the five claims remanded to the Hearing Officer on May 16,
    2018.
    On appeal, Father raises the following issues:
    -3-
    J-A14006-20
    [A.] Did [Father] waive his issues on appeal by failing to raise
    concise statements of error or by failing to otherwise preserve his
    issues for appeal?
    [B.] Did the trial court err in permitting the inclusion of retroactive
    support for over six (6) years preceding the filing of the Petition
    for Modification of Support?
    [C.] In including and calculating retroactive support, did the trial
    court err in failing to include substantial retroactive income of
    [Mother] while simultaneously including the retroactive income of
    [Father]? Restated; did the trial court err in failing to calculate
    both parties’ incomes for the Basic Support Obligation as required
    under the Support Code?
    Father’s Brief at 7.
    Father first issue assails the trial court’s determination that any claims
    made in Father’s first round of exceptions are now waived. Contrary to the
    trial court, Father maintains that he could not have appealed the trial court’s
    May 16, 2018 order remanding those exceptions because it was not a final
    order “dispos[ing] of all claims as a related to child support.” Father’s Brief
    at 26–27. In support, Father cites Deasy v Deasy, 
    730 A.2d 500
     (Pa. Super.
    1999), wherein this Court stated, “The Superior Court has ruled that an order
    that remands some claims for hearing before a hearing officer is by definition
    an interlocutory order because it does not resolve all issues related to an
    award of child support.” 
    Id. at 503
    .
    Father also takes issue with the trial court’s position that Father’s appeal
    concerns matters that are outside the scope of the remand hearing, asserting
    that such fact is irrelevant because the trial court’s denial of his March 14,
    2018 exceptions and December 28, 2018 exceptions are reviewable in this
    -4-
    J-A14006-20
    appeal. Father’s Brief at 28. He posits that while the remand hearing was to
    be limited in scope, the effect of the trial court’s remand order was to reject
    the existing findings of the Hearing Officer. Id. at 29. Thus, Father contends
    the Hearing Officer “returned to the trial court a significantly different set of
    findings, to which Father also excepted. Id.
    Finally, in his first issue, Father maintains that he did not raise an
    “outrageous” number of issues in his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement, thereby
    challenging the trial court’s reliance on case law finding such statements to be
    waived for failing to be identified in a concise manner. Father’s Brief at 30–
    31.
    We conclude that we need not determine whether Father failed to
    preserve issues during the exception process because he otherwise waived
    the majority of his errors complained of on appeal by failing to include a
    concise statement of each matter in his Statement of Questions Involved in
    his appellate brief. Pa.R.A.P. 2116 (“The statement of the questions involved
    must state concisely the issues to be resolved. . . . No question will be
    considered unless it is stated in the statement of questions involved or is fairly
    suggested thereby.”). Moreover, we must ensure that both substantive issues
    raised on appeal likewise were included in Father’s Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)
    statement.    See Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4)(vii) (“Issues not included in the
    Statement and/or not raised in accordance with the provisions of this
    paragraph (b)(4) are waived.”).
    -5-
    J-A14006-20
    As Mother avers, we are able to categorize Father’s issues into two
    succinct topics: “namely, (1) retroactivity; and (2) [Mother’s] 2014 income
    and earning capacity.”         Mother’s Brief at 10; Father’s Brief at 7.      Because
    Father has included only two substantive issues in his Statement of Questions
    Involved   in   his   brief,    they   are    the   only   issues   before   the   court.
    Commonwealth v. Dunphy, 
    20 A.3d 1215
    , 1218 (Pa. Super. 2011) (Issues
    raised in Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement that are not included in appellate brief
    are abandoned).
    The standard of review for modifications to a child support award is well
    settled.
    When evaluating a 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 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.
    Rich v. Rich, 
    967 A.2d 400
    , 405 (Pa. Super. 2009) (citations omitted).
    Further, “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.” Hogrelius v. Martin, 
    950 A.2d 345
    ,
    348 (Pa. Super. 2008) (citation omitted).
    -6-
    J-A14006-20
    Thus, we examine the second and third issues in Father’s brief. Father
    argues the trial court erred in permitting the inclusion of retroactive support
    for over six years preceding the filing of Mother’s Petition for Modification of
    Support. Father’s Brief at 33. Father asserts that the trial court’s order to
    the Hearing Officer to take into consideration Father’s earnings since October
    10, 2008, effectively resulted in a determination that support should be
    retroactive to a time preceding the filing of Mother’s petition to modify.1
    Father’s Brief at 33–34. Father contends this was error because child support
    should be retroactive to the date of filing unless specific and appropriate
    justification is shown. 
    Id.
     at 33 (citing Christianson v. Ely, 
    838 A.2d 630
    (Pa. 2003)). We assume that Father is referring to the trial court’s disposition
    of Mother’s exceptions in its May 24, 2018 order, as follows:
    14. [Mother’s] Second Cross-Exception is hereby granted. This
    matter shall be remanded to the Master to clarify if [Father’s]
    change in earnings since the entry of the October 10, 2008
    Support Order were taken into consideration, and if not[,] the
    Master shall take the change in earnings into consideration.
    15. [Mother’s] Third Cross-Exception is hereby granted. This
    matter shall be remanded to the Master to clarify if [Father’s] two
    (2) lump sum payments received after the entry of the October
    10, 2008 Support Order were taken into consideration, and if
    not[,] the Master shall take the change in earnings into
    consideration.
    ____________________________________________
    1  Father does not clarify to what he is referring in making these broad
    statements, which apparently led to the trial court’s frustration in crafting its
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion and compels that we, too, must make assumptions
    concerning Father’s argument.
    -7-
    J-A14006-20
    Amended Order, 5/24/18, at ¶¶ 14–15.
    Of the nineteen claims of error listed in Father’s Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)
    statement, only one contention relates to retroactivity:         that is, issue six,
    which states, “The trial court violated 23 Pa C.S. §4352(e) when it awarded
    retroactive modification when there was no misrepresentation by [Father] or
    any other compelling reason to preclude the petitioner from filing a Petition
    for Modification, and no record existed to make a finding that such a reason
    existed.”    As this is the only preserved claim related to retroactivity, we
    confine our consideration of issue (B) to its identification in paragraph six of
    Father’s concise statement.          See Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(4)(vii) (“Issues not
    included in the Statement and/or not raised in accordance with the provisions
    of this paragraph (b)(4) are waived.”). Nexus Real Estate, LLC v. Erickson,
    
    174 A.3d 1
    , 4 (Pa. Super. 2017). All other arguments Father makes in his
    brief related to retroactivity are waived. 
    Id.
    In this regard, Father cites 23 Pa.C.S. § 4352(e),2 which governs
    retroactivity of a support order.        He contends that the trial court failed to
    ____________________________________________
    2   § 4352. Continuing jurisdiction over support orders
    * * *
    (e) Retroactive modification of arrears.--No court shall
    modify or remit any support obligation, on or after the date it is
    due, except with respect to any period during which there is
    pending a petition for modification. If a petition for modification
    was filed, modification may be applied to the period beginning on
    -8-
    J-A14006-20
    provide any analysis concerning whether Mother was precluded from filing for
    support earlier as a result of misrepresentation, disability, or other compelling
    factor as required by Section 4352. Father’s Brief at 35–36. Father also avers
    that the Hearing Officer and trial court erred in failing to determine at what
    point Mother no longer was precluded from filing a petition for modification,
    also as required by Section 4352. Id. at 36, 37.
    Father posits that the Hearing Officer failed to find that Father had
    violated his duty to notify the domestic relations office within seven days of
    any material change in circumstances relevant to a support order, pursuant
    to 23 Pa.C.S. § 4353.3 Father’s Brief at 38. He therefore suggests that the
    ____________________________________________
    the date that notice of such petition was given, either directly or
    through the appropriate agent, to the obligee or, where the
    obligee was the petitioner, to the obligor. However, modification
    may be applied to an earlier period if the petitioner was precluded
    from filing a petition for modification by reason of a significant
    physical or mental disability, misrepresentation of another party
    or other compelling reason and if the petitioner, when no longer
    precluded, promptly filed a petition.         In the case of an
    emancipated child, arrears shall not accrue from and after the
    date of the emancipation of the child for whose support the
    payment is made.
    23 Pa.C.S. § 4352.
    3   § 4353. Duty to report
    (a) Notice of changes affecting support.--An individual who
    is a party to a support proceeding shall notify the domestic
    relations section, the department and the other parties in writing
    or by personal appearance within seven days of any material
    -9-
    J-A14006-20
    sanction for a failure to give notice is a finding of contempt of court, not
    consideration of retroactive support as the trial court did herein. Id. at 38.
    The trial court did not address Father’s claim that it awarded retroactive
    modification of support to a time preceding the filing of Mother’s petition to
    modify. Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/19, at 8. Rather, the trial court held that
    the issue was “outside the scope of the remand to the Hearing Officer.” Id.
    Father responds that after the first remand, the Hearing Officer “returned to
    the trial court a significantly different set of findings and recommendations
    than it previously delivered, which included years of retroactive support
    obligations.” Father’s Brief at 29. Therefore, Father posits that he could not
    have excepted to findings that had not yet been made. Id. at 29.
    Father’s issue lacks merit. The trial court properly calculated Father’s
    net disposable income and corresponding support obligation retroactive to
    January 1, 2012.           While Father admittedly cites the law concerning
    retroactivity, 23 Pa. C.S. § 4352(e), and Pa.R.C.P. 1910.17(a)4, we agree with
    ____________________________________________
    change in circumstances relevant to the level of support or the
    administration of the support order . . . .
    23 Pa.C.S. § 4353.
    4   Pa.R.C.P. 1910.17(a) provides, in pertinent part:
    An order of support shall be effective from the date of the filing of
    the complaint or petition for modification unless the order specifies
    otherwise. . . . [A] modification of an existing support order may
    be retroactive to a date preceding the date of filing if the petitioner
    - 10 -
    J-A14006-20
    Mother that Father inappropriately attempts “to make the trial court’s ability
    to retroactively set the effective date of a support order dependent on whether
    the trial court finds an obligor in contempt of his duty to report pursuant to 23
    Pa.C.S.A. § 4353(a).”        Mother’s Brief at 14–15.   Such a claim is directly
    defeated by well settled case law. See, e.g., Albert v. Albert, 
    707 A.2d 234
    (Pa. Super. 1998) (retroactive modification of support justified where opposing
    party misrepresented income for child support purposes), and Krebs v. Krebs,
    
    944 A.2d 768
     (Pa. Super. 2008) (increased retroactive child support owed from
    date the appellant first failed to report increased income).
    Thus, Father’s failure to report a substantial and continuing change in
    circumstances satisfied the misrepresentation or compelling-reason burden
    necessary to warrant retroactive modification. Father admitted that he failed
    to inform Mother of any increase in his pay between the years 2008 until 2017,
    as follows:
    Q [By Mother’s counsel]: With regard to the increase in pay that
    you received between 2008 and 2017, did you ever report any of
    those to Domestic Relations?
    A [By Father]: Did I report them? No. I sent a letter out once
    in a while if you want to go back and review them.
    Q You never took them up on that or supplied additional
    information to Domestic Relations from 2008 until 2017?
    ____________________________________________
    was precluded from filing a petition for modification by reason of
    a significant physical or mental disability, misrepresentation of
    another party or other compelling reason and if the petitioner,
    when no longer precluded, promptly filed a petition.
    - 11 -
    J-A14006-20
    A No.
    N.T., 2/20/18, at 98.
    Moreover, while the trial court declined to address the issue of
    retroactivity, it pointed out that:
    [Father] received a lump sum payment in the amount of $68,000
    that he never reported to [Mother]. There was a purposeful
    omission on behalf of [Father] about receiving these payments. It
    is unknown why [Father] believes he should receive some sort of
    preferential treatment and why his lack of disclosure of this
    amount of money should be ignored.
    Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/19, at 8.
    Father’s own admission is evidence of misrepresentation and therefore,
    is a basis for retroactivity as explained in Pa.R.C.P. 1920.17(a) and 23 Pa C.S.
    § 4352(e). We do not find an abuse of discretion.
    In his final issue, Father argues in the alternative, that even if the trial
    court did not err in ordering retroactive support, the trial court erred in failing
    to include substantial retroactive income of Mother, while simultaneously
    including the retroactive income of Father. Restated, he suggests this question
    asks whether the trial court erred “in failing to calculate both parties’ incomes
    for the Basic Support Obligation as required under the Support Code.” Father’s
    Brief at 7. Father suggests this claim assumes, for purposes of argument, that
    the trial court did not err in ordering retroactive support, but rather, posits that
    the trial court did not include Mother’s income for the year 2014, which
    allegedly amounted to $137,000.       Father’s Brief at 41.    In addition, Father
    - 12 -
    J-A14006-20
    maintains that the trial court failed to assess Mother an actual earning capacity
    for the years 2012 through 2017. Id.
    Father cites Pa.R.C.P. 1910.16-2 and asserts that Mother testified to
    receiving “lump sum payments totaling over $137,000.00 in 2014” resulting
    from an oil and gas lease. Father’s Brief at 44 (citing [N.T., 2/20/18, at 35,
    65]). Father argues that these payments should have been included when
    calculating Mother’s gross monthly income. Father’s Brief at 44–45 (citing
    Darby v. Darby, 
    686 A.2d 1346
     (Pa. Super. 1996)). Father contends that
    the Hearing Officer interpreted the trial court’s remand order as a directive
    not to consider additional income from Mother, and the trial court failed to
    correct this when exceptions were filed. Father’s Brief at 45.
    We initially note that any allegation that the trial court failed to assess
    Mother an earning capacity is waived. Not only is that issue omitted from the
    Statement of Questions Involved in Father’s appellate brief, it also was not
    included in Father’s Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement. We have stated:
    [I]t is well-settled that issues not included in an appellant’s
    statement of questions involved and concise statement of errors
    complained of on appeal are waived. Krebs v. United Refining
    Co. of Pa., 
    893 A.2d 776
    , 797 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citations
    omitted) (“We will not ordinarily consider any issue if it has not
    been set forth in or suggested by an appellate brief’s statement of
    questions involved, and any issue not raised in a statement of
    matters complained of on appeal is deemed waived.”). With
    respect to issues not included in a concise statement, our
    Supreme Court has instructed that this Court has no discretion in
    choosing whether to find waiver. Waiver is mandatory, and this
    Court may not craft ad hoc exceptions or engage in selective
    enforcement. City of Philadelphia v. Lerner, 
    151 A.3d 1020
    ,
    - 13 -
    J-A14006-20
    1024 (Pa. 2016) (quoting Commonwealth v. Hill, 
    609 Pa. 410
    ,
    
    16 A.3d 484
    , 494 (2011)).
    In re M.Z.T.M.W., 
    163 A.3d 462
    , 466 (Pa. Super. 2017). Because Father
    failed to include a challenge to Mother’s earning capacity in his statement of
    questions involved and concise statement, that aspect of the issue is waived.
    Our review of the record further compels the conclusion that Father also
    has waived any claim regarding Mother’s 2014 income. The trial court found
    this issue waived on a number of bases, including the fact that following the
    Hearing Officer’s issuance of her Findings of Fact on March 8, 2018, “this issue
    was never [e]xcepted to from the beginning[,] and so it was waived when
    [Father] did not [e]xcept to it in his March 14, 2018 Exceptions.” Trial Court
    Opinion, 11/5/19, at 10.
    Father attempts to counter this by suggesting he raised the issue in
    Paragraphs one and seven of his March 14, 2018 exceptions. However, those
    paragraphs relate, instead, to Mother’s photography income in 2017 in
    paragraph one, and impliedly, 2018 income in paragraph seven.          Father’s
    Exceptions, 3/14/18. They do not reference Mother’s 2014 income.
    Our review of the record makes clear that despite knowing that Mother
    had received $137,000 from Range Resources in 2014 for an oil and gas
    pipeline payment, Father did not file an exception regarding this omission from
    Mother’s income in his March 14, 2018 exceptions. Indeed, at the February
    20, 2018 hearing de novo, Father testified at great length that he was aware
    of Mother’s receipt of a lump-sum payment in 2014. N.T., 2/20/18, at 95–
    - 14 -
    J-A14006-20
    96. During cross-examination, Father admitted that he not only knew of the
    amount Mother received in 2014, he actually negotiated “on her behalf to get
    her the additional funds.” Id. at 96. The trial court’s finding of waiver for
    Father’s failure to include the issue in his March 14, 2018 Exceptions is
    justified, and we do not find that the trial court abused its discretion in so
    concluding. MacAleer v. MacAleer, 
    725 A.2d 829
    , 835 (Pa. Super. 1999)
    (Husband waived his right to appellate review of issue because he failed to
    first present it to the trial court by filing exceptions to master’s calculations);
    Pa.R.C.P. 1920.55-2(b) (“Matters not covered by exceptions are deemed
    waived unless . . . leave is granted to file exceptions raising those matters.”).
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/28/2020
    - 15 -