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Child Support Guidelines ruled Unconstitutional in Georgia
As a Group, we don't normally make an issue of "child
support", and try to keep our emphasis on our rights to be an equal parent.
The following was submitted by Greg Romeo (GRomeo747@aol.com) -- it is the
complete decision from a Georgia Judge who ruled that the state's Child Supports
guidelines were unconstitutional. It makes a lot of "sense", and
interestingly enough, it came in a case in which a non custodial mother was
appealing a support ruling. The Judge cites numerous cases in his decision and
this may supply a valuable resource to others. (Complete text follows):
------------------- IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ATKINSON COUNTY STATE OF
GEORGIA
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES ex. rel.
CHARLES R. REDDICK Special Assistant Attorney General o/b/o
ROBIN KAYLA SWEAT SAMUEL E. SWEAT, JR. CYNTHIA M. SWEAT Plaintiff
v.
MICHELLE L. SWEAT And SAMUEL SWEAT, SR. Defendants
* CIVIL ACTION NO. 2000 C 127 *
ORDER DECLARING GEORGIA'S CHILD SUPPORT GUIDELINES VOID AND UNCONSTITUTIONAL
WHEREAS, Defendant Michelle Sweat filed a Motion to Declare Georgia's Child
Support Guidelines Unconstitutional (hereinafter, the "Challenge"),
and
WHEREAS, sworn testimony, documentary evidence and both oral and written
argument of counsel has been presented thereon and duly considered by this
Court,
NOW, THEREFORE, this Court hereby declares the child support guidelines
codifed in section 19-6-15, O.C.G.A. (hereinafter, the "Guidelines")
to be null and void as the Guidelines violate numerous provisions of the
Constitutions of both the United States and the State of Georgia for the reasons
set forth below.
FACTS
The Case Sub Judice
In the case now before this court, the "family" consists of the
father, Samuel Ezell Sweat, Sr., who is the custodial parent ("CP"),
the mother, Michelle Lynn Sweat, who is the noncustodial parent ("NCP"),
and three minor children, to-wit: .Cynthia Marie Sweat, date of birth March 7,
1985; Samuel E. Sweat, Jr., date of birth October 11, 1990; and Robin K. Sweat,
date of birth March 30, 1983. The parents were married July 16, 1984. They
separated September 20, 1998. They were divorced in Civil Action Number 98-D-37
by this court on November 12, 1998, the Hon. Dane Perkins presiding. The parties
had agreed that the father would have custody of the minor children, the mother
would have visitation rights, and she would not be obligated to pay child
support. The parties' agreement was made the judgment of the court on November
12, 1998. On or about July 14, 2000, Monica Houseal, an agent with Child Support
Enforcement ("Agency") in Nashville, Georgia, forwarded a document to
the NCP advising her that the agency had received a written request for
"possible modification", and requesting she furnish certain financial
information to the agency. NCP responded by completing the questionnaire sent to
her. The only "special Circumstance" she indicated was the ages of the
children. Agent Houseal prepared a document entitled "Agency
Recommendation". This document found that the father's gross monthly income
was $2,647.50, and that the mother's gross monthly income was $1,585.95.
Subsequently, the mother's monthly gross income has risen to $1,862. Her
expenses totaled $2,127.00 at that time. Houseal found no "special
circumstances" to exist, and recommended the mother pay child support for
three children based on the child support guidelines which provide a range of
25% to 32% for three children. Her recommendation was further that the NCP pay
between $132.16 and $169.17 per child per month as support and that she provide
accident and sickness insurance if it was available to her " . . . at a
reasonable cost not to exceed 5% of NCP gross income". There was no
recommendation that the mother get credit for her medical insurance payment for
the children against the child support she was recommended to pay, nor was there
a recommendation that any "co-payments" be paid by the CP or at least
that he share such expenses. Agent Houseal recommended to this Court, less than
two years after approving the parties' agreement as stated above, to order the
mother to pay her former husband child support in the amount of $150.67 per
child, which is exactly midway between the percentages, but rounded up to
sixty-seven cents rather than leave it at sixty-six. Ms. Sweat was sought to be
obligated to pay $452.01 in child support and up to $79.29 per month for
insurance, or a total of $531.30 out of her before taxes income. Subsequent to
the initiation of this action, Ms. Sweat filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy
protection with payments to the Chapter 13 Trustee being set at $295.00 per
month. Agent Houseal stated that this factor was not considered when making a
recommendation for Ms. Sweat's child support obligation. After initiation of
this action, the Challenge was filed.
STANDARD OF SCRUTINY ON CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
The only evidence before this Court regarding the impact of the Guidelines on
any cognizable group is the study of custody awards in 14 south Georgia counties
between 1995-97 conducted by Kent Earhardt, J.D., Ph.D., which found that, in
82.2% of contested cases, custody was awarded to the mother. It follows,
therefore, that a support obligation under the Guidelines was imposed on the
fathers in those cases. Ehlers v. Ehlers, 264 Ga. 668 (1994). There has been no
credible challenge to the methodology or the result of the Earnhardt study.
Therefore, this Court finds that men are adversely impacted by the Guidelines as
applied to a grossly disproportionate degree, which constitutes an impermissibly
discriminatory effect on a group based upon their gender.
Having found an impermissible impact based on gender, the standard of
scrutiny to be applied is the intermediate test, i.e., are the Guidelines
substantially related to an important governmental objective? Clark v. Jeter,
486 U.S. 456, 108 S. Ct. 1910, 1914 (1988).
All parties concede that providing a rational basis for the calculation of
the child support obligation of both parents as set forth in section 19-7-2,
O.C.G.A. is a legitimate governmental purpose. The question is whether it is of
such importance as to justify the vehicle chosen by the legislature, i.e., the
Guidelines? Because of the myriad of constitutional flaws in the Guidelines set
forth below, this Court finds that the State of Georgia has not satisfied this
test.
Further, if this Court were only to apply the lowest standard of scrutiny,
i.e., whether the Guidelines bore a rational relationship to a legitimate
government purpose, the Guidelines would still fail.
FINDING OF HARM
This Court finds that the Guidelines as applied to Defendant Michelle Sweat
in this case as well as every other parent in this State who is not granted
custody of his or her child is harmful and that the harm flowing from the
constitutional flaws in the Guidelines is suffered each and every time a payment
calculated thereunder is due.
ECONOMIC/FINANCIAL ISSUES
Inasmuch as the essential nature of the Guidelines is to allocate economic
and financial burdens and benefits, their validity must be determined primarily,
if not exclusively, on an economic analysis.
The purpose of the Guidelines is to conform to the federal mandate found in
42 U.S.C.A. section 651, et seq. and 45 CFR sections 302.55 and 302.56, that
govern the receipt of federal funds by states under the Social Security Act. The
regulations cited require an economically rational form of guideline for
apportioning child "costs" between parents obligated to support the
children in question with "appropriate" support awards. Therefore, the
intended purpose of Georgia's child support guidelines is to determine an
economically appropriate child support award. This Court finds that the
Guidelines fail to do so.
There having been no evidence, credible or otherwise, to contradict the
matters presented therein, this Court adopts as part of its findings of fact the
Economic Exhibit of R. Mark Rogers (hereinafter, the "Economic
Exhibit") as the cornerstone for its finding that the Guidelines are
economically unsound. A copy of the Economic Exhibit is attached hereto and
incorporated herein by this reference. Certain matters set forth in the Economic
Exhibit and articulated in greater detail in the hearings before this Court bear
highlighting, though this is not intended to overlook the importance of other
economic matters.
FINDINGS OF FACT
1.
The Guidelines adopted by Georgia as originally designed by the underlying
economic study were intended only for welfare situations - the current use for
all situations was not the intended purpose. The underlying facts of the
presumptions - their application only in welfare situations and with constraints
such as a low ceiling award limited in size to the amount of the welfare payment
to the custodial parent - no longer exist. The presumptive percentages were
based only on data for low-income cases and were extended without the benefit of
data for non-welfare cases. In the current case, the percentages are applied
beyond the amount needed for recovery of any welfare payment to the custodial
parent that might have been made.
2.
Georgia's presumptive awards rise as a share of obligor after-tax income. No
child cost studies show child costs rising as a share of after-tax income. All
child cost studies show child costs declining as a share of after-tax income.
The state has presented no evidence that child costs rise as a percantage of
household net income. Georgia's Guidelines are arbitrary and are not rational
since there is no economic foundation for presumptive awards that rise as a
share of household net income. In the current case, the presumptive percentage
results in a significantly higher obligation than one based on actual child
costs that decline as a share of net income.
3.
There are no baseline components to the Guidelines. It is not clear what is
being rebutted, therefore they are arbitrary and a due process violation.
4.
The Guidelines do not take into account the large tax-related child cost
offsets the custodial parent receives. Custodial parents typically receive $200
to $350 per month in extra after-tax income just for having custody. These
child-related tax benefits are head of household status, child exemptions, child
tax credits, child care credits, and earned income credits. Both parents have an
equal duty of support for the costs attributable to the children. Both parents
are equally entitled to the cost offsets attributable to the same children but
in proportion to their obligation. Not sharing the child-related tax benefits
violates equal protection. Not sharing the tax benefits with both parents is an
extraordinary benefit for the custodial parent and an extraordinary burden for
the non-custodial parent. In this case, Mr. Sweat, the custodial parent,
receives approximately $300 per month in extra after-tax income from having
custody and as a result of current income tax law. This is a cost offset benefit
that Ms. Sweat is denied by the Guidelines. The original study by Jacques van
der Gaag upon which the Guidelines were based was done in 1982 when the parent
that contributed the most support for the children was given rights to claim the
tax exemptions of the child. The original study also was limited to low-income
households with incomes averaging $12,000 in 1982 dollars, or $21,426 in year
2000 dollars.
5.
The presumptive award results in the custodial parent receiving a huge
financial windfall - or profit - in excess of child costs. For typical income
situations, the custodial parent ends up with a higher standard of living than
the non-custodial parent - even when the non-custodial parent earns
significantly more than the custodial parent. This is an extraordinary benefit
for the custodial parent and an extraordinary burden for the obligor. In the
current case, expert testimony has shown that the custodial parent's profit
(presumptive award less an economics based award) is substantial.
6.
The Georgia presumptive award does not allocate the child support burden
according to the parents' relative ability to pay. This is because the obligor
has a rising after-tax percentage of income paid to the custodial parent for
child support. These percentages exceed actual child costs and the custodial
parent uses the profit as an offset to the custodial parent's implied
contribution to child costs. Additionally, the custodial parent receives
substantial child-related tax benefits that the non-custodial parent does not
receive. The outcome is that the custodial parent does not contribute to child
costs at the same rate as the non-custodial parent and, often, not at all.
7.
Evidence presented based on presumptive after-tax, after-child support awards
and the standard of living benchmark of the U.S. government's poverty thresholds
show that the Guideline presumptive awards include such large amounts of hidden
alimony (presumptive award less an economics based award) that a non-custodial
parent is unable to provide for a child when in the non-custodial parent's care
to the same extent as in the custodial parent's household. Presumptive awards
have been shown to typically exceed total actual costs according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. This violates equal protection standards for both the
child and the non-custodial parent. Such excessive child support awards are not
in the best interest of the child because the non-custodial parent is not able
to sufficiently provide for the children while in the non-custodial parent's
care. In the current case, the presumptive award leaves the non-custodial parent
in poverty while the custodial parent enjoys a notably higher standard of
living.
8.
The Guidelines are biased toward including hidden alimony for the custodial
parent even when the custodial parent earns substantially higher gross income
than the non-custodial parent. The Guidelines do not meet standards of fairness
even for alimony. If the Guidelines did, there would be a narrowing of the
standard of living gap for the non-custodial parent when the custodial parent
has a higher gross income. Instead, the Guidelines boost the standard of living
of the custodial parent relative to non-custodial parent in both circumstances -
when the custodial parent earns either substantially less or substantially more
than the non-custodial parent. The Guidelines bear no relationship to the
standards for child support of requiring each parent to have an equal duty in
supporting the child.
9.
The use of a range of percentages allows substantial opportunity for
similarly situated individuals to receive dissimilar treatment. That is,
different obligors with the same income can end up with presumptive obligations
that differ by hundreds of dollars per month. The difference between upper and
lower bound presumptive awards is substantial. The upper bound presumption is
higher than the lower bound presumption by as much as 35 percent. The guidelines
give no guidance on how to choose the presumption within the ranges, resulting
in arbitrary decisions. Georgia is the only state to use a range of presumptive
percentages. This conflicts with the intent of 45 CFR 302.56 that intends the
presumptive formula result in a single presumptive figure for a given case in
order to reduce uncertainty of what the presumptive award is. For the current
case, the presumptive award range varies by $130 (upper bound award less lower
bound award). This is seven percent of the obligor's gross income - a
substantial variation in the presumptive award.
10.
The presumptive award for low-income obligors (for example, minimum wage
workers) pushes low-income obligors below the poverty level. A presumptive award
that leaves the obligor with less income than needed for basic living needs
creates an extraordinary burden for the obligor and, potentially, an additional
burden on taxpayers. This violates equal protection. This is contrary both to
public policy and common sense.
11.
The Guidelines do not take into account custodial parent income. The
presumptive child support award does not vary with family income - only obligor
income. This is not economically rational and violates equal protection. The
custodial parent is not held to the same standard for contributing to child
costs. In most cases, the custodial parent's obligation of support ends up being
largely or entirely paid by the non-custodial parent. In the current case, the
child support case worker for the case gave testimony specifically stating that
the custodial parent's income had no bearing on the recommended award. This case
worker stated there is no formula in their official procedures by which case
workers can determine how the custodial parent's income affects the presumptive
award.
12.
Child costs of only the custodial parent are covered by the Guidelines.
Similar costs incurred when the child is with the non-custodial parent do not
receive similar consideration. Yet, parents are similarly situated when child
costs are incurred by either parent. Each parent has an equal duty to provide
financially for the children when in the care of the other parent. The
Guidelines were based on welfare situations in which the obligor parent was
absent, did not require the custodial parent to support the children financially
(the custodial parent did not work and had no earned income), did not take into
account the custodial parent receiving large child-related tax benefits, and did
not take into account the obligor paying substantial income taxes (with the
obligor outside the assumed very low income level). However, in actual practice,
typically the non-custodial parent is not absent and incurs substantial child
costs that the guidelines do not require the custodial parent to contribute.
This violates equal protection and does not meet the financial needs of the
children when they are in the care of the non-custodial parent. In the current
case, the obligor provides housing, food, clothing, entertainment and other
needs for the children when in her care. The Guidelines do not require that the
custodial parent share in the costs of the non-custodial parent.
13.
Medical insurance costs are not treated the same for all obligors. The
presumptive award includes typical medical expenses. The Guidelines allow the
court to either treat an obligor's payment of the children's medical insurance
as an add-on or as a credit toward the presumptive award. This dissimilar
treatment violates equal protection. Additionally, there is different treatment
for obligors depending on whether insurance is available through employers.
Obligors with medical insurance coverage available through employers are held to
a higher standard than those without availability of medical insurance through
employers. For the current case, the obligor pays approximately $70 dollars each
month to provide health insurance for the children. The Guidelines allow the
court to either subtract this $70 as a credit for the obligor against a
presumptive cash award or to add $70 to the presumptive cash award as an add-on.
The difference between these alternatives is $140 per month for the obligor.
14.
The Guideline criteria for deviation do not give any guidance on how to apply
the deviations in a consistent manner. This is unconstitutionally vague and
generally results in no deviations in most cases - even when the circumstances
to deviate exist.
15.
The Guidelines are arbitrary and bear no relationship to the intended federal
purpose of determining an economically appropriate child support award. The
Guidelines have no rational relationship to child cost data. Among other
considerations, first of all, the Guidelines were implemented for all cases
(beyond just welfare cases) without the benefit of any supporting economic data.
Additionally, the presumptive awards rise as a share of net income - which
conflicts with all child costs studies. The Guidelines do not take into account
where the actual child costs are incurred - that is, which parent incurs what
costs. The Guidelines do not take into account child costs net of tax benefit
offsets.
16.
The Guidelines bear no relationship to the constitutional standards for child
support of requiring each parent to have an equal duty in supporting the child.
17.
Which parent is the obligor and which is the obligee should be determined
only after examination of the relevant factors - not before. The financial
circumstances should determine which parent is obligor. The Guidelines
arbitrarily presume that the obligor is always the non-custodial parent when the
financial circumstances may indicate just the opposite. Importantly, mere
classification before-hand of the obligor does not provide sufficient
information to determine the economically appropriate award. The classifications
of obligor and obligee are not rationally related to the intended purpose of the
Guidelines of determining the economically appropriate award.
18.
The Guidelines interfere with a non-custodial parent's constitutional right
to raise one's children without "unnecessary" government interference.
The Guidelines are so excessive as to force non-custodial parents to frequently
work extra jobs for basic needs - detracting from parenting without state
justification. Low-income obligors are frequently forced to work in a cash
economy to survive as a result of child support obligations that if paid push
the obligor below the poverty level. This is the result of automatic withholding
of child support with payroll jobs and use of guidelines that presumptively push
minimum wage obligors below the poverty level. As these workers are forced to
"disappear" into unofficial society, these obligors are deprived of
the constitutional right to raise their children without unnecessary government
intrusion. In fact, any government mandate beyond basic child costs interferes
with this right to privacy as occurs with the current guidelines.
For the current case, the presumptive award pushes Ms. Sweat, the obligor, to
just above the poverty level and below the poverty level if she pays court
ordered bankruptcy payments. This is an extraordinary burden imposed on the
obligor by the Guidelines.
19.
In the present case, the earnings of the obligee, Samuel Sweat, significantly
exceed those of the obligor. Nonetheless, the guidelines require the obligor,
Michelle Sweat, to pay out a significant amount of her before tax income to the
obligee, to whom this money will be tax free. The income of the obligee will be
considerably increased, and he will have the tax advantages attendant to being a
custodial parent. Additionally, the obligee will have the additional benefit of
his new spouse's earnings. In the meantime, the obligor's net earnings will
probably put her at or below the poverty line, and will in any event leave her
with less than half of her earnings to live on. This scheme thus constitutes a
windfall to the obligee and financial disaster to the obligor.
Thus, any calculation of a support award under the Guidelines would be so far
removed from any economically rational and appropriate award that it constitutes
a gross error well beyond any "mere imprecision."
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
This Court hereby incorporates by this reference the authorities cited in the
Challenge as well as the Findings of Fact set forth above. As with certain of
the matters contained in the Economic Exhibits, some highlights are in order.
Due Process
The United States' Constitution provides that no state may "deprive any
person of life, liberty or property without due process of law." U.S.
Constitution, Am. 5, Am. 14, section 1. The Constitution of the State of Georgia
contains an almost identical guarantee at Ga. Const., Art. I, section I,
paragraph 1. Protection from arbitrary state action is the very essence of
substantive due process. Slochower v. Bd. of Higher Educ. of the City of New
York, 350 U.S. 551, 76 S. Ct. 637 (1956).
Given the very nature and purpose of the Guidelines, this Court finds that
there is an overriding governmental pecuniary purpose involved. D.H.R. v. Ofutt,
217 Ga. App. 823 at 825 (1995).
This Court finds that the Guidelines were hastily enacted and left unchanged
without sufficient examination of relevant economic data and for those reasons
as well as the gross deviation from all child cost studies as noted previously,
finds them to be arbitrary and capricious. See, Sierra Club v. Martin, 168 F. 3d
1 (11th Cir., 1999).
With all due respect to the members of the Governor's Commissions on Child
Support (hereinafter, the "Commission") in both 1998 and 2001, it is
clear that only one member in 1998, Mr. Mark Rogers, and none in 2001 were
properly qualified by education, background and experience to accurately assess
the economic and financial intricacies of the Guidelines. This, too, the Court
finds to be indicative of arbitrary state action.
This Court also finds that Mr. Rogers, as well as other economists well
versed in child support matters, testified in 1998 as to the many flaws in the
Guidelines. Mr. Rogers again testified before the Commission in 2001. In
addition, this Court takes Judicial notice pursuant to section 24-1-4, O.C.G.A.
and, further, has heard evidence of the publication of an article in the October
2000 issue of the Georgia Bar Journal discussing at some length the equal
protection and due process violations with which the Guidelines are rife.
William C. Akins, Why Georgia's Child Support Guidelines are Unconstitutional.
Thus, the State of Georgia can no longer contend that the Guidelines remain in
place out of "official ignorance." This Court finds that this
constitutes further proof of arbitrariness on the part of the State and, if left
in place, may rise to a volitional violation of the constitutional protections
afforded the citizens of this State.
In declaring that the Guidelines violate the aforesaid substantive due
process guarantees, this Court takes guidance from the very state upon whose
guidelines Georgia's are purportedly based. In Parrett v. Parrett, 146 Wis. 2d
830 at 842, 432 NW 2d 664 (6) (1988, the Court of Appeals of Wisconsin), a case
that did not raise constitutional issues, found that, particularly in higher
income situations, their guidelines, like Georgia's, would "result in a
figure so far beyond the child's needs as to be irrational." This is the
very sort of arbitrary result the due process clauses are designed to prevent.
Manley v. Georgia, 279 U.S. 1, 49 S. Ct. 215 (1929). Additionally, the
presumption is unconstitutional because the underlying facts (the Guidelines
application only in welfare cases for recovery of only up to the welfare payment
to the custodial parent) no longer exist. Leary v. United States, 395 U.S. 6 at
32-37 (1969).
Equal Protection
The United States' Constitution provides that no state may "deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." U.S.
Const., Am. XIV, section 1. Ga. Const., Art. I, section I, paragraph 2 provides
essentially the same protection.
The egregiously different burdens and benefits placed on persons similarly
situated but for the award of custody, i.e., parents with the obligation to
support their child(ren) and the same means for doing so as when they were
married, has been explained at length above. This Court finds that such
disparate treatment violates the guarantees of equal protection cited above.
Jones v. Helms, 452 U.S. 412, 101 S. Ct. 2434 (4,5) (1981), South Central Bell
Telephone Co. v. Alabama, 526 U.S. 160, 119 S. Ct. 1180 (1999), Romer v. Evans,
517 U.S. 620, 116 S. Ct. 1620 (1996) and Simpson v. State, 218 Ga. 337 at 339
(1962). The Guidelines do not result in awards based on the constitutionally
sound principles of equal duty and proportional obligation (proportional to
available financial resources such as each parent's income). See Smith v. Smith,
626 P 2d 342, 345-348 (Oregon, 1980); Meltzer v. Witsberger, 480 A.2d 991 (Pa.
1984); and Conway v. Dana, 318 A.2d 324 (Pa. 1985).
Right to Privacy
While the source of the right to privacy has been held to originate in
varying constitutional provisions, it has been long recognized to apply to
"family" concerns whether the family exists within the confines of
marriage or not. Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.S. 438, 92 S. Ct. 1029 (8) (1972),
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 93 S. Ct. 705 at 726-28 (1973).
This Court finds that, by requiring the non-custodial parent to pay an amount
in excess of those required to meet the child's basic needs, as the economic
analysis has shown, the Guidelines impermissibly interfere with parental
decisions regarding financial expenditures on children. Troxel v. Granville, 530
U.S. 57, 120 S. Ct. 2054 (2000) and 147 L. Ed. 2d 49 (U. S. 2000); Moylan v.
Moylan, 384 NW 2d 859 at 866 (Minn., 1986).
Unconstitutional Taking of Property
Georgia's guidelines as set out in OCGA Sec. 19-6-15 (b) are unconstitutional
per se and as applied to Michelle Sweat in that by reducing her to poverty
status she is thereby denied access to the courts in violation of the
Constitution of 1983, Art. 1, Sec. 1, Par. XII which reads, "No person
shall be deprived of the right to prosecute or defend, either in person or by an
attorney, that person's own cause in any of the courts of this State." In
this case Ms. Sweat has filed a separate motion for recordation of these
proceedings; however, as a result of the confiscatory nature of the guidelines
she will be unable to afford to pay the cost of transcribing the proceedings,
and as a result, may be denied her right to appeal. It is therefore ordered that
the State provide Michelle Sweat with a transcript at no cost to Michelle Sweat
in the event of an appeal.
Georgia's guidelines are also unconstitutional per se and as applied in that
they constitute an illegal taking in violation of the Constitution of Georgia of
1983, Art.1, Sec. 111, Par.1, because the plaintiff is seeking to impose an
award under the Guidelines against Ms. Sweat for the purpose of the state
continuing to receive federal funds under 45 CFR 302.56 and related federal
code. This constitutes a public taking for a public purpose. See also DHR v.
Ofutt above.
Recent Supporting Foreign Opinion
One issue of equal protection is taking into account all of an obligor's
dependents - not just those involved in the instant case. On January 29, 2002, a
Tennessee Court of Appeals issued an opinion that Tennessee's child support
guidelines not having a presumptive formula for ensuring that all of an
obligor's dependents received support on an equal basis violated equal
protection rights and is unconstitutional. See Dee Ann Curtis Gallaher v. Curtis
J. Elam, In the Court of Appeals of Tennessee at Knoxville, July 11, 2001
Session, Appeal from the Juvenile Court for Knox County, No. B-3443, filed
January 29, 2002, No. E2000-02719-COA-R3-CV. Georgia's Guidelines do not have a
presumptive formula for dependents of an obligor not in the instant case to
ensure their equal support. Any formula for deviation on this matter that
Georgia DHR may have is not presumptive, is not statutory, and is not applied
statewide in all cases in which an obligor has additional dependents other than
those in the instant case. For the reasons stated in Dee Ann Curtis Gallaher v.
Curtis J. Elam, Georgia's Guidelines without such presumptive formula likewise
violate equal protection requirements as related to multiple family situations
and are unconstitutional.
The Constitutionally Acceptable Child Support Standard
This Court finds, as a matter of law, that a constitutionally sound standard
for the determination of child support guidelines can readily be determined.
First, it must acknowledge the principle codified in section 19-7-2, O.C.G.A.,
that both parents are obliged to support their children in accordance with their
relative means to do so. The Supreme Court of the United States has provided
ample reason to conclude that any guideline discriminating against either parent
would be found constitutionally defective. See, for example, Orr v. Orr, 440
U.S. 268 (1979), Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718 (1982)
and the authorities cited in the equal protection section above. The decisions
of our sister States in holding unconstitutional statutory presumptions that
custody of children of "tender years" should be awarded to the mother
is also persuasive. State ex rel. Watts v. Watts, 350 N.Y.S. 2d 285 (N.Y. City
Fam. Ct., 1973), Commonwealth ex rel. Spriggs v. Carlson, 368 Atl. 2d 635 (Pa.,
1977). Procreation is both a joint act and a joint responsibility.
Secondly, it must conform to long-acknowledged limitations on government
intrusion into the rights of families articulated in Pierce v. Society of
Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925), Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972) and the
authorities cited in the section on the right to privacy, above. That is, the
government's interest in family expenditures on children, whether that family
exists before or after the dissolution of marriage, or even in the absence of
marriage, is limited to insuring that the children's basic needs are met. Not
extravagances, not luxuries, but needs. Once that occurs, government intrusion
must cease. Moylan v. Moylan, above.
The third and final criteria is that the means chosen for the purpose of
determining need and allocating each parent's respective responsibility in
meeting that need, whether in the form of a presumptive guideline or otherwise,
must be based on a rational relationship between the predicate facts and the
conclusion(s) directed. Leary v. U.S., Western & A.R.R. v. Henderson, above.
This standard is not dissimilar to the former needs vs. ability to pay
standard, but with the additional criteria that the needs are not excessive, the
ability to pay is that of both parents and that the method of calculation is
economically rational.
As explained above, the Guidelines fail miserably in meeting these standards.
CONCLUSION
In light of the Georgia child support guidelines being unconstitutional,
Michelle Sweat shall not be required to pay Samuel E. Sweat any child support
based upon her gross income of $1,862 per month, the father's gross income of
$2,647.50 per month, and the mother having parenting time with the children at
least 20 percent of the time. The mother shall, however, continue to provide
health insurance for the children which currently costs approximately $70 per
month for so long as it is available through her employer. The mother shall also
pay 14.3 percent of any unreimbursed medical expenses of the children that
exceed $250 per year. This percentage is based on her share of combined income
above self-support needs.
For the foregoing reasons, the Defendant's Motion to Declare Georgia's Child
Support Guidelines Unconstitutional is hereby GRANTED.
SO ORDERED this _25th___ day of __February_, 2002,
______________________________
HONORABLE C. DANE PERKINS Judge of Superior Court Alapaha Judicial Circuit
State of Georgia
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