Court
News Ohio
Income
Calculations for
Child Support May Include Employer Benefits
By Kathleen Maloney
October 16, 2013
Certain
employer-paid
benefits may be included as gross income for the purpose of
calculating child support payments, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled
today.
The 6-1
decision, authored
by Justice Paul E. Pfeifer, affirms the judgment of the Ninth
District Court of Appeals that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion when it included the value of several benefits provided by
an employer in a decision whether to adjust a child-support
obligation.
In this
case, Jeffrey
Morrow and Sherri Becker, the parents of two children, separated, and
Morrow was ordered in 2006 to pay child support. A few years later,
Morrow asked the Medina County Domestic Relations Court to reduce his
child support payments because his salary had been significantly cut
following the 2008-2009 economic recession.
The trial
court concluded
that Morrow wasn’t entitled to a reduction in his monthly child
support obligation. In determining Morrow’s annual income, the
court included $16,756 worth of non-cash benefits he received from
his employer, including a company-owned car, company-paid car
insurance, a company-paid cellular phone service, and company-paid
season tickets to Ohio State University football games.
Morrow
appealed. The Ninth
District Court of Appeals, agreeing with the trial court, held that
the value of the non-cash benefits should be included in Morrow’s
gross income. The appeals court ruled that the trial court didn’t
abuse its discretion, because Morrow would have otherwise had to pay
for those benefits with his own money. The appeals court determined,
however, that the OSU football tickets shouldn’t have been included
in Morrow’s gross income because he didn’t receive the full value
of the tickets, but the court found that error was harmless.
Morrow
appealed the Ninth
District’s decision to the Ohio Supreme Court. Morrow appealed the
Ninth District’s decision to the Ohio Supreme Court. The Supreme
Court accepted Morrow’s discretionary appeal and the Ninth
District’s certified conflict question and consolidated the cases
for oral arguments.
Morrow
contended in his
appeal to the court that the law only references company cars and
other in-kind items in the context of “self-employment,
proprietorship of a business, joint ownership of a partnership or
closely held corporation.” Because he isn’t in one of those
employment categories, Morrow asserted that the General Assembly
intended to exclude such items from gross income when received
outside those types of jobs. The Supreme Court today found that
nothing in the statutes support that conclusion.
In his
opinion, Justice
Pfeifer also concluded that the definition of gross income is broad
enough to encompass the benefits described in this case. Because
Morrow had no car, car insurance, or phone other than the ones given
to him by his employer, the court determined it was reasonable to
include the value of these benefits in Morrow’s gross income.
“If his
employer did not
provide a car, Morrow would have had to purchase or lease one on his
own, using his own funds,” Justice Pfeifer wrote. “[T]he person
receiving the benefit effectively has a higher income. We reach the
same conclusion with respect to the car insurance and cell phone.”
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