Frey v. Best

Citation659 S.E.2d 60, 189 N.C. App. 622, 2008 N.C. App. LEXIS 715
Date Filed2008-04-15
DocketCOA07-703
Cited13 times
StatusPublished

Syllabus

<bold>1. Divorce — alimony — reduction — findings</bold> <block_quote> The trial court erred by reducing a husband's alimony obligation to zero without making findings regarding the wife's reasonable needs or the husband's ability to pay. A finding that the wife's income increased is not alone sufficient to warrant modification of an alimony order, and the court may not use the husband's capacity to earn as the basis of its alimony award unless it finds that he deliberately depressed his income or indulged in excessive spending.</block_quote> <bold>2. Child Support, Custody, and Visitation — child support — reduction —</bold> <bold>findings</bold> <block_quote> The trial court's findings were not sufficient to reduce a husband's child support obligation where the husband had remarried and had another child (that alone is not sufficient) and findings about the husband's decreased income were not sufficient to determine whether the modification of support was<page_number>Page 623</page_number> based on a substantial change in circumstances supported by competent evidence.</block_quote> <bold>3. Child Support, Custody, and visitation — moving out of state —</bold> <bold>findings conclusive on appeal</bold> <block_quote> The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying a wife's request to modify the parenting agreement to allow her to relocate with the children to the State of Washington. The court's findings are conclusive on appeal if there is evidence to support them, even if the evidence might sustain findings to the contrary.</block_quote> <bold>4. Child Support, Custody, and Visitation — visitation increased —</bold> <bold>findings</bold> <block_quote> The trial court erred by increasing a husband's visitation with the minor children without sufficient findings to support its conclusion. The conclusion about the husband's custodial time was not supported by findings of fact indicating that those changes affected the welfare of the parties' minor children.</block_quote>

Full Opinion (html_with_citations)

Case ID: 1334963