Tamas Fekete v. Gyorgyi Fekete ( 2021 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Humphreys, Huff and AtLee
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued by videoconference
    TAMAS FEKETE
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1012-20-4                                  JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS
    APRIL 13, 2021
    GYORGYI FEKETE
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
    Penney S. Azcarate, Judge
    Karen Leiser (The Leiser Law Firm, on brief), for appellant.
    No brief or argument for appellee.
    On November 8, 2019, following a hearing, the Circuit Court of Fairfax County (“circuit
    court”) ordered Tamas Fekete (“father”) to pay Gyorgyi Fekete (“mother”) $393 per month in
    child support. The circuit court also determined that father, who is self-employed, makes
    $120,000 in annual income after deducting his reasonable business expenses. On appeal, father
    argues that the circuit court’s determination of his reasonable business expenses was erroneous.
    He also asserts that the circuit court erred by crediting mother with child care expenses.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Father and mother were married on April 23, 2001, and divorced on June 22, 2018. They
    have two minor daughters together. The divorce decree stipulated that, in addition to paying for
    the children’s health care, mother paid $1,319 monthly for work-related child care and stated that
    the circuit court found father’s income from self-employment to be $5,000 a month or $60,000 a
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    year. The divorce decree also required father to pay $537 a month in child support to mother.
    However, for the purposes of calculating child support, the circuit court attributed only 127
    custodial days to father.
    On June 14, 2019, father filed a motion in the circuit court to terminate mother’s child
    support. On July 8, 2019, father filed a motion to receive child support. He argued that there
    had been a material change in circumstances—the youngest child had aged out of full-time
    daycare and, as a result, mother’s child care costs had decreased—and the joint effect of the
    material change and discrepancy between the parties’ incomes was that mother now owed him
    child support.
    On October 30, 2019, the circuit court held a hearing on father’s motions, during which
    father asserted that because he owned several businesses and was self-employed, his income had
    “always been kind of tricky to document.” His 2018 tax returns showed a gross annual income
    of $128,900; however, father claimed that his income was less than $4,000 a month after
    business expenses were subtracted and that he relied on “personal loans [from family and
    friends] just to stay above the water.” He stated that his primary income was from an audio and
    video equipment and installation company that he started in 2005. He testified that he owned
    several businesses but asserted most of them were not profitable. He previously applied for a job
    at Best Buy and subsequently turned it down when the company only offered him $40,000 a
    year.
    Father testified that he traveled to Slovakia with the parties’ daughters every summer, as
    well as every other Christmas, and that the tickets usually cost him approximately $3,000. He
    asserted that those purchase were not a reflection of his income because “[y]ou don’t need
    income for a credit card. You have to pay it off later.” Father admitted that he mixed business
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    and personal expenses and transferred money back and forth between “personal” and “business”
    accounts; he acknowledged that he used personal funds to pay business expenses and vice versa.
    Upon inquiry by the circuit court, father admitted that customers occasionally paid him
    via Venmo and that those funds were not reflected on the bank account or credit card statements
    he submitted into evidence. Father also testified to getting income through the crowd-sourcing
    website GoFundMe and to receiving cash payments and gifts. He did not submit records for
    either of those sources of funding to the circuit court. Father asserted that he had consistently
    paid his monthly child support until the hearing on October 30, 2019, but mother presented
    evidence that she had not received any child support payments from father since July 2019.
    The parties agreed that father’s custodial days with the children per year had increased
    and that mother was no longer paying $1,319 in child care costs. However, they disagreed about
    whether she was incurring a lesser amount of child care expenses. Because of her work
    schedule, mother stated that she still needed some child care help in the early morning and late
    afternoon hours. As a result, mother used the services of a babysitter, Gaby Budd (“Budd”), to
    ensure the children left and came home from school safely during her custodial weeks. She
    produced a contract signed by herself and Budd for bi-weekly child care at a rate of $400 a week.
    After mother’s testimony, father called a rebuttal witness, Bernice Alfonso (“Alfonso”)
    who testified that Budd was a part-time nanny for the Alfonso family, as well. Budd also took
    care of Alfonso’s children before and after school. Alfonso testified that she introduced Budd to
    mother and knew that Budd also worked for mother.
    The circuit court ultimately found that a material change in circumstances had occurred
    since the June 22, 2018 child support order because the number of days the children spent with
    each parent had changed and mother’s work-related child care costs had decreased. The circuit
    court used the factors in Code § 20-108.2 to determine how much support each party owed and
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    did not deviate from the statutory guidelines. The order regarding child support was entered on
    November 8, 2019.
    On November 27, 2019, father filed a motion to reconsider and asked the circuit court to
    recalculate his income and “eliminate the work-related child care expense.” On the same day,
    November 27, 2019, the circuit court suspended the November 8, 2019 child support order,
    pending resolution of the motion to reconsider. On December 6, 2019, father noted an appeal to
    this Court regarding the modified child support order. On December 11, 2019, the circuit court
    denied father’s motion to reconsider. On May 29, 2020, this Court dismissed his appeal for lack
    of jurisdiction because the suspension order was still in effect and a final order had not yet been
    entered by the circuit court. On August 17, 2020, the circuit court dissolved the order of
    suspension and entered its November 8, 2019 child support order nunc pro tunc. Subsequently,
    father filed this appeal.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Standard of Review
    Code § 20-107.2 vests authority in the circuit courts to determine the appropriate amount
    of child support owed by each parent upon divorce. See Code § 20-107.2 (“Upon entry of a
    decree providing . . . for a divorce . . . the court may make such further decree as it shall deem
    expedient concerning the . . . support of the minor children of the parties . . . .”). This Court
    reviews circuit court decisions awarding child support for an abuse of discretion and will not
    reverse on appeal unless the award is plainly wrong or unsupported by the evidence. See Young
    v. Young, 
    3 Va. App. 80
    , 81 (1986). There is a rebuttable presumption that if the circuit court
    followed the guidelines set forth in Code § 20-108.2(B) in determining a child support award, the
    award is correct. See Code § 20-108.2(A)-(B).
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    After a child support amount is determined, the circuit court has jurisdiction to revise and
    alter it. See Code § 20-108; see also Mayhood v. Mayhood, 
    4 Va. App. 365
    , 369 (1987).
    “However, the court may alter its prior decree only if a material change in condition and
    circumstances has occurred, and the burden of proof is on the party moving for an increase or
    decrease in the support amount.” Mayhood, 4 Va. App. at 369. On appeal, we review the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party in the circuit court. See Hughes v.
    Gentry, 
    18 Va. App. 318
    , 321-22 (1994).
    Father’s Income and Reasonable Business Expenses
    Code § 20-108.2 governs calculation of child support awards and states, inter alia, that,
    “‘gross income’ means all income from all sources” and that “gross income shall be subject to
    deduction of reasonable business expenses for persons with income from self-employment . . . .”
    Code § 20-108.2(C) (emphasis added). If the circuit court found that a material change had
    occurred and a revised support award was necessary, every factor relevant to calculating child
    support under Code § 20-108.2 was reviewable, including each party’s income. Here, father
    argues that the circuit court erroneously found that $8,900 was a reasonable deduction of
    business expenses from his gross income.
    At the hearing, father introduced his 2018 tax returns—his most recent tax documents at
    the time of the hearing—into evidence. Because he is self-employed, he filed as a sole
    proprietor. On Schedule C of Form 1040, father’s gross income and gross profit were listed as
    $128,900. However, father claimed that after business expenses were deducted, he made less
    than $4,000 a month, or $48,000 annually, but refused to state an exact amount of net pay or
    otherwise document his business expenses.
    Both father and the circuit court used the term “imputed” to describe the circuit court’s
    determination regarding father’s income in the November 8, 2019 support order. This was
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    misleading. In actuality, the circuit court was simply tasked with reviewing the evidence
    presented and making a factual determination regarding father’s gross income and “reasonable”
    business expense deductions under Code § 20-108.2(C). Similarly, the parties’ divorce decree
    from June 22, 2018, did not impute income but instead stated, “[t]he [c]ourt finds that the
    [f]ather’s income from self-employment is $5,000 per month.”
    On appeal, “[w]e give great deference to the trial court’s factual findings.” See Friedman
    v. Smith, 
    68 Va. App. 529
    , 543 (2018) (quoting Blackson v. Blackson, 
    40 Va. App. 507
    , 517
    (2003)). Here, the circuit court made a factual finding that father’s income after reasonable
    business expenses was $120,000. Because “[c]ourts are presumed to act in accordance with the
    law and orders of the court are entitled to a presumption of regularity,” we presume that the
    circuit court reviewed all the evidence entered at the hearing before validly exercising its
    discretion to determine what deductions were reasonable. See Napert v. Napert, 
    261 Va. 45
    , 47
    (2001); see, e.g., Milot v. Milot, 
    62 Va. App. 415
    , 424 (2013) (“[T]here is a presumption ‘in
    favor of the regularity [in] the proceedings of courts [that] extends to every step . . . and the
    burden is on him who alleges irregularity to show affirmatively by the record that the irregularity
    exists.’” (quoting Dove v. Commonwealth, 
    82 Va. 301
    , 305 (1886))).
    The record shows that father introduced a jumbled and disorganized set of financial
    documents at the support hearing. He admitted to regularly commingling personal and business
    funds and methods of payment. Father had a variety of income sources but the evidence
    regarding his legitimate business expenses was sparse and consisted primarily of father’s
    statements without supporting documentation; any delineation between his personal and business
    funds was patently unclear. Father ultimately asked the circuit court to find—based on
    voluminous bank account and credit card statements replete with both personal and business
    purchases—that, although his gross income was $128,900, he had incurred over $80,000 of
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    business expenses and lived off of less than $48,000 a year. Additionally, evidence was
    presented that tended to prove that father traveled internationally at least once a year, took his
    children on vacation to Disney World, made monthly contributions to two different charities,
    owned multiple properties, and received personal loans that may or may not have required
    repayment.
    The circuit court explicitly explained its reasoning and review of the evidence, saying:
    The father’s income is very interesting. I did look through all the
    bank accounts . . . and I looked at the tax documents as well. He
    mixes his money together with business and his personal gains. He
    gets income in many different ways to include all his businesses, or
    to include loans that he doesn’t expect to repay—or he doesn’t
    have any guidelines to repay—GoFundMe to use for vacations,
    which is still income then. He has lease income. He has regular
    income, other business income. He has Venmo income. Based on
    that, I am going to impute $120,000 a year to father.
    Essentially, father argues that the circuit court erred by not crediting his testimony
    regarding his income and expenses. Given that any determination of father’s income and
    business expenses rests largely on the credibility that the circuit court as the fact-finder assigned
    to father’s testimony and the weight it chose to give it, we cannot say that the circuit court erred
    in reaching the factual conclusions that father’s gross income was $120,000 and that his
    reasonable business expenses amounted to $8,900. Therefore, we affirm its judgment in that
    regard.
    Mother’s Child Care Expenses
    Code § 20-108.2(G)(3)(b), part of the statutory guidelines for determining child support,
    states that shared child support may include work-related child care costs. Father claims that the
    circuit court erred because it credited mother with work-related child care expenses in the
    absence of “any credible evidence to support her claim that she incurred [the expenses].” Father
    asserts that mother “perpetuated a fraud” on the circuit court by claiming to pay Budd $400
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    every other week. Father contended that mother did not actually need or use any work-related
    child support since their five-year-old daughter had started kindergarten.
    On-brief, father re-argues the evidence regarding mother’s child care costs, essentially
    asking this Court to adopt the role of fact-finder and make a different determination than the
    circuit court. He contends that Alfonso’s testimony proved that mother’s assertions regarding
    her work-related child care expenses were “bogus.” He asks this Court to reverse the circuit
    court because it is a “paradox” that Budd could be getting the parties’ children ready for school
    while simultaneously getting Alfonso’s children ready as well.
    Father “cannot point to any legal mistake by the trial court, but merely argues that it
    should have weighed the evidence differently than it did. That is not a proper appellate
    argument.” Fadness v. Fadness, 
    52 Va. App. 833
    , 846 (2008) (discussing the circuit court’s
    discretion in making an equitable distribution award). “[D]ecisions concerning . . . child . . .
    ‘support rest within the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be reversed on appeal
    unless plainly wrong or unsupported by the evidence.’” Sargent v. Sargent, 
    20 Va. App. 694
    ,
    703 (1995) (quoting Calvert v. Calvert, 
    18 Va. App. 781
    , 784 (1994)). Further, because we are
    required to view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party below, here,
    mother, we grant her the benefit of any reasonable inferences and discard any evidence from
    father “which conflicts, either directly or inferentially, with the evidence presented by [mother]
    at trial.” See Congdon v. Congdon, 
    40 Va. App. 255
    , 258 (2003). At the hearing, evidence was
    presented that tended to show mother was continuing to incur work-related child care expenses.
    Mother testified under oath that she used a babysitter during her weeks with the children and
    introduced a written contract, signed by Budd, that promised bi-weekly child care at a rate of
    $400 a week. Because the circuit court was the finder of fact and there is evidence in the record
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    to support its determination regarding mother’s work-related child care costs, we cannot say that
    it erred.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, this Court affirms the circuit court’s judgment regarding father’s
    income and mother’s child care expenses.
    Affirmed.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 1012204

Filed Date: 4/13/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/13/2021