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Date: 06-04-2024

Case Style:

GALAUNDRA MYLES v. TYRONE LEWIS A/K/A TRONE LEWIS

Case Number: 2022-CA-01192-COA

Judge: Deborah McDonald

Court: IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

Plaintiff's Attorney: Travis T Vance, Jr.

Defendant's Attorney: RICK D. PATT

Description:

Jackson, MS Paternity lawyer represented the appellant with filing a paternity action against Tyrone Lewis



¶3. Myles and Lewis lived together off and on for several years until 2021. Together,
they had two children. The older child was over the age of twenty-one when Myles filed the
paternity action on November 1, 2021, to establish that Lewis was the father of her younger,
fourteen-year-old daughter, JDM.2
Of Lewis’s ten children, four, including JDM, were
minors, but he was under court order to pay $200 per month support for only one child.
Lewis said this other child turned twenty-one years old in December 2022, and he (Lewis)
was almost finished paying the back child support he owed for that child.
¶4. Lewis had been a self-employed truck driver since 2013. He did business as Lewis
Trucking LLC, and his Rule 8.05 financial statement filed in June 2022 showed he claimed
2
According to Myles, she had filed an application with the Mississippi Department
of Human Services in 2017 to obtain child support for JDM. However, MDHS did not serve
Lewis, and the case was dismissed.
2
his gross personal income of $1,733.34 per month. See UCCR 8.05. Lewis testified that he
calculated this amount by taking his 2021 adjusted gross taxable income of $24,464, dividing
it by twelve to get roughly $2,000 per month, and then subtracting the $200 per month courtordered child support payment. On the Rule 8.05 statement, he listed living expenses of
$1,804.67, including the $200 court-ordered child support payment. Lewis testified that he
paid all his living expenses through the business account and that he also wrote himself a
check for $400 per week from that account.
¶5. During the pre-trial proceedings, Myles sought to verify Lewis’s income and expenses
by requesting him to produce bank statements, tax returns, checks, ledgers, and titles to any
asset for the last two years. When Lewis failed to provide this information, Myles filed a
motion to compel. At the hearing on her motion, the court granted Myles the relief she
sought but ultimately allowed Lewis’s attorney to withdraw.3
Lewis retained new counsel
on August 30, 2022, a month before trial.
¶6. Lewis provided tax returns for 2020 and 2021. In 2020, his business reportedly
grossed $68,623. But after expenses totaling $57,992, Lewis’s preliminary net profit was
$10,631. He then deducted expenses for the use of his home in his business and his final net
business profit was $9,131. However, on the tax return, he reported personal income of
$8,161, deducted the standard exemption, and paid no taxes that year. On his 2021 tax
return, Lewis reported gross business income of $76,742, with $52,247 in expenses, and net
3
Although no formal order on the motion to compel appears to have been entered,
the transcript of the hearing reflects that the court clearly granted the motion to compel and
ordered Lewis to produce the material within thirty days. Lewis was represented by counsel
at that hearing.
3
business income of $24,494.4
Lewis reported this $24,494 as his personal income, and after
deductions, he calculated taxable income at $8,170. But his return reflected that Lewis owed
over $4,000 in federal taxes. These figures did not include the $92,000 PPP loan that Lewis
received from the federal government in 2021.5

¶7. Myles obtained eight months of bank statements (January through September 2022)
through a subpoena to Lewis’s bank. Lewis admitted that the January 2022 statement
included a personal withdrawal of $23,000. Lewis said that he owed this to his family but
he gave no explanation of why. He also withdrew $18,989 in April 2022 and $10,000 in May
2022. Lewis said that these amounts were to pay back loans “for the business.” But he
provided no specifics about these loans—when they were made, who was owed, and for
what—nor did he provide any documentation of these loans or his alleged pay-offs. The
eight months of 2022 bank statements reflected gross income to his business account of
$150,802.45 through September 23, 2022.
¶8. Lewis claimed that his business expenses were high. As an example, he said that
insurance on his truck cost $1,300 per month after an additional annual payment of $2,500.
Gas had risen from $2 to $5.36 per gallon. However, Lewis also paid all of his personal
expenses through his business account, which included purchases of furniture, clothes, child
support, groceries, and payment of his utility bill. Lewis also admitted that a few months
4
Lewis made no deduction for the use of his home in his business in 2021.
5
The Paycheck Protection Program was an SBA-backed loan that helped businesses
during COVID-19. Lewis’s PPP loan amount is not reflected in any document entered into
evidence and only testified to by Lewis.
4
before trial, he had borrowed $45,000 from Ford Motor Credit to purchase a 2022 Ford
Expedition. He said he bought this vehicle for one of the mothers of his other children who
needed transportation. Lewis said that she pays him half of the $771 monthly note that is
being drafted from his business account. He said this purchase was not reflected in his Rule
8.05 financial statement in June 2022 because he bought the vehicle after he filed his
statement.
¶9. Myles worked at Alcorn State University as Director of Academic Support and
Facilities. Her Rule 8.05 financial statement reflected a gross monthly income of $3,862.50
and a net monthly income of $2,704.44. Myles totaled her living expenses, including JDM’s
expenses for private school, at $4,814. Myles paid a monthly premium of $114.00 for
medical insurance on JDM, which is deducted by her job from her gross earnings.6
Myles
also paid $25 per month for the child’s asthma medication. Other expenses for the child that
Myles listed on the Rule 8.05 financial statement included JDM’s school and sports expenses
(detailed below). In addition, Myles said JDM needed braces that cost $2,800. Myles said
Lewis told her that he would pay for these, but he did not and Myles was paying $295 per
month on this bill.7
Myles also paid $100 per week for JDM to see a counselor for
behavioral problems, and she gave JDM an allowance of $100 per month.
¶10. JDM had attended private school when she was younger and then public school from
6
Myles said this was not part of the personal major medical insurance policy she had
through her employer. Rather, it was a premium that she paid for a separate medical policy
for JDM, which was cheaper than adding family coverage to her own work-related policy.
7
Myles said she was delinquent on her payments, which meant that JDM could not
see the dentist for her regular follow-up appointments.
5
the fifth to the eighth grade. Just before the hearing, Myles enrolled the child in Adams
County Christian School where she was active in sports, especially softball and basketball.
Myles testified that she moved the child because JDM was very athletic and that she was not
receiving the coaching in public school that she needed to reach the next level to get a
scholarship to college. The school recruited JDM for her athletic ability but did not provide
any scholarship and did not transport athletes to and from games. Myles said that her parents
and siblings paid the $6,200 tuition but that she planned to pay them back when she received
her tax return. In addition to the $550 registration for school, Myles paid a $100 workbook
fee and $600 per year for uniforms. Altogether, the total costs averaged $820 per month.
On her Rule 8,05 financial statement, Myles also said she paid $155 per month for JDM’s
extracurricular activities. JDM also participated in a travel softball team, the Diamond Dolls,
for which Myles paid $400 per month for travel to and from games and tournaments. This
team traveled around the state, as well as to Louisiana and Alabama. Myles also said she had
to borrow money from her brother to file this action and she had incurred a $1,200 bill for
attorney’s fees. She asked the court to order Lewis to reimburse her for this expense.
¶11. Lewis testified that neither he nor Myles could afford private school and that he did
not agree to JDM’s enrollment at Adams Christian. In his opinion, a private school did not
necessarily offer a better education than a public school. He said this because JDM had gone
to private school up to the fourth grade, but when he downloaded a worksheet for JDM to
complete, she could not answer the questions. Yet the private school was giving her As and
Bs. Lewis said that is when he stopped helping to pay for private school and JDM went to
6
public school. He also said that if he were ordered to pay hundreds of dollars a month for
private school, he would go out of business.
¶12. According to Myles, over the child’s lifetime, Lewis provided little to no support,
noting Lewis’s purchases of four or five pairs of tennis shoes and payment of small sums of
money ($100 once or twice) and on one occasion $500 for school uniforms. Lewis pointed
out that the couple lived together off and on over the years and that he had contributed to the
household and supported JDM during those times.
¶13. The chancery court tried the matter on September 29, 2022. The parties stipulated that
Lewis was JDM’s father,8
and only Myles and Lewis testified.
¶14. On October 25, 2022, the chancery court issued its judgment. The chancery court
adjudicated Lewis to be JDM’s father and awarded the child’s custody to Myles with specific
visitation to Lewis. The court considered Lewis’s monthly draw of $1,600 (the four $400
checks he wrote himself each month) as income in addition to the $1,730 Lewis claimed in
his Rule 8.05 financial statement.9
But the court reduced the $1,600 to $1,120 to account for
state and federal taxes and calculated Lewis’s child support obligation based on a monthly
income of $2,850 ($1,730 plus $1,120). Using the statutory percentage for one child (14%),
the court ordered Lewis to pay $399.00 per month in future support. Based on that monthly
amount, the court further ordered Lewis to pay $4,788 for one year’s back child support. The
chancery court did not order Lewis to pay for JDM’s private school tuition or for the child’s
8
DNA testing performed in January 2022 resulted in a 99.9999999% probability that
Lewis was JDM’s father.
9
Lewis actually claimed $1,733.34 as monthly income on his financial statement.
7
extracurricular activities. The court required Lewis to pay half of the medical and dental
expenses not covered by insurance, including dental and braces.
¶15. Myles appeals, arguing that the monthly amount of support is too low, that the
chancery court failed to make a finding on the amount of income Lewis had and thus erred
in assessing the amount of back child support, that the chancery court erred in not requiring
Lewis to pay half of the private school tuition, pay half of the insurance premiums, and pay
half of the child’s extracurriculars, and erred in failing to award Myles her attorney’s fees.
In his brief, Lewis contends that Myles is precluded from arguing these issues on appeal
because she filed no motion for reconsideration. In addition, Lewis has moved for payment
of his attorney’s fees.
Standard of Review
¶16. “The award of child support is a matter within the discretion of the chancery court,
and it will not be reversed unless the chancery court was manifestly wrong in its finding of
fact or manifestly abused its discretion.” Capocaccia v. Capocaccia, 372 So. 3d 1106, 1116
(¶26) (Miss. Ct. App. 2023) (quoting Green v. Green, 349 So. 3d 1187, 1201 (¶51) (Miss.
Ct. App. 2022)). “Manifest error is that error which is unmistakable, clear, plain, or
indisputable.” Collins v. Collins, 112 So. 3d 428, 431 (¶8) (Miss. 2013) (citing Magee v.
Magee, 661 So. 2d 1117, 1122 (Miss. 1995)). We review questions of law de novo.
Capocaccia, 372 So. 3d at 1115 (¶22).
Discussion
I. Whether Myles is procedurally barred from raising her issues on
appeal.
8
¶17. Lewis contends that Myles is procedurally barred from raising any issues on appeal
because she did not file a post-trial motion with the chancery court or request the court to
reconsider its ruling. Lewis cites Ainsworth v. Ainsworth, 139 So. 3d 761 (Miss. Ct. App.
2014), and Massey v. Massey, 148 So. 3d 35 (Miss. Ct. App. 2014), as support. However,
in both of those cases, the appealing parties had filed Rule 59 post-trial motions with the trial
court and were attempting to raise other new issues on appeal.10 See M.R.C.P. 59. These
cases are inapplicable here because Myles did not file a post-trial motion on any issue.
Moreover, because the chancery court had dealt with all issues in its final judgment, she was
not required to file a post-trial motion. Baumbach v. Baumbach, 242 So. 3d 193, 199 (¶20)
(Miss. Ct. App. 2018); see also Jackson v. State, 423 So. 2d 129, 131 (Miss. 1982) (“[I]t is
not necessary to make a motion for a new trial grounded upon errors shown in the official
transcript of the record, including the pleadings, transcribed evidence, instructions, verdict[,]
and judgment of the court.”). In Kiddy v. Lipscomb, 628 So. 2d 1355, 1359-60 (Miss. 1993),
even though the appellant had filed a post-trial motion, the Mississippi Supreme Court held
that “a motion for a new trial is only necessary to bring to the attention of the trial court
matters not embraced in the rulings during the trial.” The supreme court found this view to
10 In the Ainsworth divorce action, the husband filed a motion for reconsideration
that the chancellor had erroneously considered income from a vehicle sale in calculating
support. Ainsworth, 139 So. 3d at 765 (¶16). On appeal, the husband also argued that the
chancellor had erroneously considered his yearly bonus in its calculation, but he did not raise
this in his motion to reconsider. Id. Finding this issue was raised for the first time on
appeal, we found the husband’s argument procedurally barred. Id. Similarly, in the Massey
divorce case, the wife filed a motion to alter or amend the court’s judgment concerning the
amount of support her husband was ordered to pay. Massey, 148 So. 3d at 37 (¶6).
However, she did not raise this issue in her post-trial motion, and we held the issue was
procedurally barred from consideration on appeal. Id.
9
be consistent with the interpretation of the essentially identical Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 59:
The settled rule in federal courts, contrary to that in many states, is that a party
may assert on appeal any question that has been properly raised in the trial
court. He is not required to make a motion for a new trial challenging the
supposed errors as a prerequisite to appeal.
Kiddy, 628 So. 2d at 1360 (citing 11 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure,
§ 2812).
¶18. We followed the Kiddy ruling in Baumbach. In that divorce case, the wife contended
that the husband was procedurally barred from arguing the issue of custody on appeal
because he did not address it in his motion to amend the judgment. Baumbach, 242 So. 3d
at 199 (¶20). We disagreed and quoted Kiddy, stating:
Although it is clearly the better practice to include all potential assignments of
error in a motion for new trial . . . when the assignment of error is based on an
issue [that] has been decided by the trial court and duly recorded in the court
reporter’s transcript, . . . [an appellate court] may consider it regardless of
whether it was raised in the motion for new trial.
Id. (quoting Kiddy, 628 So. 2d at 1359). We proceeded to consider the issue of child custody
because it “was clearly decided by the chancery court at trial.” Id. Similarly, in this case, the
chancery court clearly decided the issues of child support and payment of JDM’s expenses
and Myles’s attorney’s fees in its final judgment and Myles is not procedurally barred from
raising those issues on appeal.
II. Whether the chancery court erred in computing the amount of
monthly child support.
¶19. Mississippi Code Annotated section 43-19-101 (Rev. 2021) sets forth the guidelines
10
for a chancellor to follow to calculate child support. Provisions of the statute relevant to this
case include:
(1) The following child-support award guidelines shall be a rebuttable
presumption in all judicial or administrative proceedings regarding the
awarding or modifying of child-support awards in this state:
Number of Children Percentage of Adjusted Gross Income
Due Support That Should Be Awarded For Support
1 14%
2 20%
3 22%
4 24%
. . . .
(2) The guidelines provided for in subsection (1) of this section apply unless
the judicial or administrative body awarding or modifying the child-support
award makes a written finding or specific finding on the record that the
application of the guidelines would be unjust or inappropriate in a particular
case as determined under the criteria specified in Section 43-19-103.
(3) The amount of “adjusted gross income” as that term is used in subsection
(1) of this section shall be calculated as follows:
(a) Determine gross income from all potential sources that may
reasonably be expected to be available to the absent parent including,
but not limited to, the following: . . . ; income from self-employment;
(b) Subtract the following legally mandated deductions:
(i) Federal, state and local taxes. Contributions to the payment
of taxes over and beyond the actual liability for the taxable year
shall not be considered a mandatory deduction;
(ii) Social security contributions;
(iii) Retirement and disability contributions except any voluntary
retirement and disability contributions;
11
. . . .
(e) Compute the total annual amount of adjusted gross income based on
paragraphs (a) through (d) of this subsection, then divide this amount
by twelve (12) to obtain the monthly amount of adjusted gross income.
Upon conclusion of the calculation of paragraphs (a) through (e) of this
subsection, multiply the monthly amount of adjusted gross income by the
appropriate percentage designated in subsection (1) of this section to arrive at
the amount of the monthly child-support award.
. . . .
¶20. “Deviations from the guidelines must be supported by written findings of fact.” Doe
v. Doe, 341 So. 3d 953, 977 (¶78) (Miss. Ct. App. 2021). Mississippi Code Annotated
section 43-19-103 (Rev. 2021) sets forth the statutory reasons that may justify deviation from
the guidelines, providing as follows:
The rebuttable presumption as to the justness or appropriateness of an award
or modification of a child support award in this state, based upon the
guidelines established by Section 43-19-101, may be overcome by a judicial
or administrative body awarding or modifying the child support award by
making a written finding or specific finding on the record that the application
of the guidelines would be unjust or inappropriate in a particular case as
determined according to the following criteria:
(a) Extraordinary medical, psychological, educational or dental expenses.
(b) Independent income of the child.
(c) The payment of both child support and spousal support to the obligee.
(d) Seasonal variations in one or both parents’ incomes or expenses.
(e) The age of the child, taking into account the greater needs of older children.
(f) Special needs that have traditionally been met within the family budget
even though the fulfilling of those needs will cause the support to exceed the
proposed guidelines.
(g) The particular shared parental arrangement, such as where the noncustodial
parent spends a great deal of time with the children thereby reducing the
financial expenditures incurred by the custodial parent, or the refusal of the
noncustodial parent to become involved in the activities of the child, or giving
due consideration to the custodial parent’s homemaking services.
12
(h) Total available assets of the obligee, obligor and the child.
(i) Payment by the obligee of child care expenses in order that the obligee may
seek or retain employment, or because of the disability of the obligee.
(j) Any other adjustment which is needed to achieve an equitable result which
may include, but not be limited to, a reasonable and necessary existing expense
or debt.
¶21. Chancery courts have used a variety of methods, based on the information presented,
to determine adjusted gross income for child support purposes when a salaried individual’s
income changes from year to year.11 However, more applicable to this case are those cases
that have dealt with determining the adjusted gross income of self-employed individuals like
Lewis. In such cases, the courts have examined the self-employed individual’s tax returns
and business income records to determine if the income claimed on the Rule 8.05 financial
statement should be accepted and used to calculate child support. From an examination of
these cases, several principles emerge that are relevant to the case at hand.
¶22. First, it is important that the trial court consider all evidence concerning income and
expenses that the parties present. This was critical in Collins v. Collins, 112 So. 3d 428
11 In Burge v. Burge, 851 So. 2d 384, 386 (¶4) (Miss. Ct. App. 2003), a husband
worked as an oceanographer, and between 1990 and 2000, his income had increased over
the years. Id. at (¶5). Rather than using the husband’s higher earnings between 1997 and
2000, which reflected gross income for tax purposes exceeding $60,000, the chancery court
fixed his adjusted gross income at $54,000. Id. This Court affirmed that for the first six
months of the year in which the case was tried, the husband’s gross income was $36,317.86,
id., which was consistent with the amount set by the chancery court. In another case,
Roberts v. Roberts, 924 So. 2d 550 (Miss. Ct. App. 2005), a husband was a pharmaceutical
salesman with a fluctuating income. Id. at 553 (¶5). The chancellor averaged the husband’s
income over three years (2000-2003) to determine the amount to use in calculating child
support. Id. On appeal, the wife contended that the trial court failed to consider the
husband’s income from the previous years as well as his current year’s income. Id. at 553
(¶6). However, this court noted that the chancellor is the trier of facts, and where those
findings are supported by substantial credible evidence, we do not reverse. Id.
13
(Miss. 2013). There, the divorcing parties owned and operated three businesses including
a childcare center run by the wife, a heating and air conditioning company (HVAC) run by
the husband, and a company managing eight rental properties. Id. at 430 (¶2). The husband
admitted that his Rule 8.05 financial statement was incorrect and contained omissions and
that he could not submit tax returns because he had not filed any for the two years prior to
trial. Id. at 430 (¶2). To evaluate the husband’s business income from the HVAC business,
the chancery court accepted the husband’s testimony that in 2009, he deposited a total of
$188,918.51 into the business account, but the trial court found “simply not credible” the
husband’s claim that the overhead of the business was $300,000. Id. at 433 (¶15). The
chancellor then split the amount of deposits in half and considered the husband’s income to
be $94,459.75. Id. On appeal, we affirmed, id. at 431 (¶5), but the Mississippi Supreme
Court reversed, stating that those same bank records showed business expenses such that the
husband’s income was “nowhere near” the amount set by the chancery court. Id. at 433
(¶16). The supreme court found that the chancery court was “manifestly wrong when she
arbitrarily determined [the husband’s] monthly income to the exclusion of the undisputed
evidence he provided.” Id. at (¶17). The supreme court held that “credible evidence related
to [the husband’s] heating and air conditioning business was ignored” and, for this and other
reasons, the case was reversed and remanded for a new calculation of the husband’s income.
Id. at 434 (¶20).
¶23. Second, tax returns are critical and are examined with discerning eyes. The
Mississippi Supreme Court has noted that although tax returns are one source of income
14
information, they are not necessarily determinative of gross income for purposes of child
support. Nix v. Nix, 790 So. 2d 198, 200 (¶5) (Miss. 2001). A party may challenge, and the
chancery court may consider, whether the expenses claimed are legitimate business expenses
in ultimately determining a self-employed party’s income available for payment of child
support. Id. “Computing one’s income for taxation is different than computing one’s income
for child support purposes. . . . Our statutes delineate what is to be considered as gross
income for the purposes of computing child support.” Branch v. Branch, 174 So. 3d 932,
940-41 (¶30) (Miss. Ct. App. 2015) (citing Bustin v. Bustin, 806 So. 2d 1136, 1140 (¶11)
(Miss. Ct. App. 2001)).
¶24. In Holdeman v. Holdeman, 34 So. 3d 650 (Miss. Ct. App. 2010), we reviewed a
chancery court’s calculation of support required of a self-employed individual by scrutinizing
his tax returns. In that case, the husband owned a catfish-farming business and was the sole
stockholder in a trucking and dirt-moving company. Id. at 651 (¶4). He claimed that his
$55,000 annual management fee from the trucking company was his only income. Id. The
chancery court calculated child support based on the husband’s Rule 8.05 financial statement
in which he claimed a net monthly income of $3,314. Id. at 652 (¶6). However, on appeal,
we concluded that the husband’s income was significantly higher. Id. at 653 (¶10). We
examined several items on his tax return, including the $55,000 deduction for the
management fee, $18,151.50 for depreciation on the farming operation, and $127,520 in
depreciation for the trucking business. Id. at 654 (¶10). We noted that the husband provided
no explanation for how this depreciation was calculated. Id. The bottom line was that the
15
husband’s tax returns showed losses for both companies, id., but despite this, we concluded
that the husband still earned money and the question was how much. Id. at 654 (¶11). We
remanded the case and instructed the chancellor to “carefully scrutinize [the husband’s] tax
returns to determine if there is any income that should be considered in arriving at [his]
adjusted gross income, as specified in section 43-19-101(3)(a).” Id.
¶25. In addition, the chancery court should be cautious of personal expenses that may be
commingled with business expenses. “Generally, self-employment income amounts to gross
income less ordinary and reasonable expenses incurred in producing the income.” Faerber
v. Faerber, 13 So. 3d 853, 864-65 (¶43) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009). In Faerber, the chancery
court determined that the family business, College Auto Park, was the husband’s separate
property. Id. at 856 (¶6). The chancery court accepted the husband’s tax documents, which
reflected self-employment income as $1,880, but the court did not consider the potential
commingling of the husband’s personal and business expenses, among other things. Id. at
864 (¶43). We reversed and remanded the case for the chancery court to determine if any
commingling had occurred. Id. at 865 (¶44).
¶26. We have also held that a chancery court did not err when it included an additional
amount in a husband’s income to offset the large amounts he had withdrawn from his
business account even though his tax return reflected much less income. In Spahn v. Spahn,
959 So. 2d 8 (Miss. Ct. App. 2006), the husband owned M&R Construction and Supply
company, which he and his father had founded long before the husband married. Id. at 10
(¶2). The business grossed $1,421,973, but on his Rule 8.05 financial statement, the husband
16
claimed a net personal monthly income of only $2,796. Id. at 11 (¶5).12 The husband also
testified that in 2003 he had also withdrawn $50,302 and deposited it in his personal
checking account. Id. at (¶6). The court then appointed a CPA and accountant who testified
that according to the 2003 tax return, the husband had adjusted gross income of $45,248 and
taxable income of $34,398. Id. The chancery court added another $500 per month to the
husband’s income, determining it to be $3,296.14, and then calculating the amount owed.
Id. We found there was substantial credible evidence in the record that supported the income
the chancery court found, including the husband’s testimony, the accountant’s testimony, the
tax return, and the Rule 8.05 statement; we affirmed. Id. at (¶7).
¶27. Applying these principles to the case before us, we find there to be significant
evidence in the record that the chancery court ignored when determining Lewis’s adjusted
net income that warrants reversal and remand. Although Lewis claimed that he based the
monthly income that he reported on his Rule 8.05 financial statement on his 2021 tax return
($24,494), in that year his business grossed only $76,742.13 However, his 2022 bank
statements reflect a significant increase in his gross business income to $150,802.45 through
only eight months of the year. Moreover, as in Spahn, Lewis admitted that he withdrew
several large sums of money—$23,000; $18,989; and $10,000—during that time. He
12 The wife contended that the husband took improper deductions for vehicle
payments and entertainment expenses, but she offered no specific proof of the amounts of
the alleged improper deductions. Spahn, 959 So. 2d at 11 (¶5).
13 Even the income figure on Lewis’s 2021 tax return is questionable because he
admitted that he paid all his expenses—personal and business—through his business
account.
17
claimed these were to pay his family back or to pay back loans “for the business.” But he
provided no specifics about these loans—when they were made, who was owed, and for
what—nor did he provide any documentation of these loans and his pay-offs. The chancery
court mentions nothing about this evidence.
¶28. In addition, as in Collins, Lewis admitted that his Rule 8.05 financial statement was
inaccurate because it did not reflect the $771 per month payment that was being deducted
from his business account for the purchase of a 2022 Ford Expedition. Moreover, it is
undisputed that Lewis paid all his personal expenses through his business account. Thus his
tax returns should be examined to account for this commingling of business and personal
expenses. In summary, the chancery court’s failure to address the significant increase in
Lewis’s income as reflected in his 2022 bank statements and his sizeable personal
withdrawals, as well as the inaccuracy of Lewis’s financial statement and his admitted
commingling of personal with business expenses, amounts to manifest error and warrants a
remand of this case to determine what funds Lewis actually has available to pay child
support. Upon remand, the chancery court should consider not only the guidelines for
determining child support in section 43-19-101, but also any of the statutory reasons for
deviation found in section 43-19-103.
III. Whether the chancery court erred in assessing the amount of back
child support Lewis owed.
¶29. Because we are remanding the case for a reassessment of the amount of monthly child
support Lewis should pay, we need not deal with the issue of the past child support that is
owed. On remand, the chancery court should recalculate back child support based on the
18
amount of support it determines Lewis should pay in the future.
IV. Whether the chancery court erred in not requiring Lewis to pay
half of JDM’s private school tuition, pay half of the insurance
premiums, and pay half of the child’s extracurricular fees.
A. Private School Tuition
¶30. In most cases where the courts have imposed an obligation to pay private school
tuition, the parties had both originally agreed to send their children to private school. For
example, in Bell v. Bell, 206 So. 3d 1254, 1259-60 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016), the husband
testified that the child had attended private school “since day one” and that the parties had
agreed in their irreconcilable differences custody and support agreement to factor the tuition
payment into the child support amount. The father also testified at a later modification
hearing that he wanted the child to continue to attend private school. Id. Similarly, in
Collins v. Collins, 722 So. 2d 596, 599 (¶9) (Miss. 1998), the Mississippi Supreme Court
noted that the parties had agreed that the child should continue to attend the private school.
¶31. “[P]rivate-school-tuition is considered part of child support.” Collado v. Collado, 282
So. 3d 1239, 1242 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2019). However, in Southerland v. Southerland
(Southerland I), 816 So. 2d 1004, 1007 (¶13) (Miss. 2002), the supreme court stated, “While
a father’s agreement prior to divorce to send a child to private school may be one legitimate
factor to be considered, it is by itself an inadequate basis for an award of support in excess
of that allowed by the statutory guidelines.”14 Likewise, in Cupit v. Cupit, 559 So. 2d 1035,
14 The Supreme Court reversed and remanded in Southerland I for the chancery court
to make specific findings if the amount set for child support deviated from the statutory
guidelines. Id. On remand, the chancery court set the support award in excess of the
guideline amount but made specific findings why it did so, among them being the father’s
19
1037 (Miss. 1990), the supreme court stated that “the chancellor should consider the
reasonable needs of the child as well as the financial resources and reasonable needs of each
parent.” In that case, the supreme court analyzed a truck-driver-husband’s income and found
that the $400 per month child support payment set by the chancellor to enable the children
to attend private school was excessive. Id. at 1038. The Court also concluded that the
chancellor had erred in finding that private school education was a reasonable need of the
children in view of the parents’ financial situation. Id. Although the primary concern is the
best interest of the child, the Court stated,
the chancellor should consider the reasonable needs of the child as well as the
financial resources and reasonable needs of each parent. Above that, the
chancellor is obliged to consider any other relevant fact shown by the
evidence.
Id. at 1037. Even though the parents had agreed during the marriage that the children should
go to private school, the information in the record showed a clear inability of the father to pay
that much. Id.
¶32. Another factor the chancery court may consider is whether the child has special needs
that require private schooling. For example, in Smith v. Smith, 318 So 3d 484, 488 (¶3)
(Miss. Ct. App. 2021), the child was diagnosed with dyslexia and an expressive/receptive
language disorder. The mother moved to Tennessee for the child to receive specialized care
desire that the child remain in private school. Southerland v. Southerland (Southerland II),
875 So. 2d 204, 205 (¶4) (Miss. 2004). The Supreme Court noted that the father wanted his
daughter to remain in private school, that he was able to meet the expense because of his
ability to earn a substantial income, and that the child had been enrolled in the private school
since the family moved back to Mississippi. Id. at 207 (¶8). Therefore, the chancery court
did not err or abuse its discretion in deviating from the guidelines. Id. at (¶10).
20
in a private school and filed a modification petition, seeking a change from joint to sole
custody of the child and a modification of the father’s child support obligation to help pay
for the child’s tuition. Id. at 487 (¶2). At the modification hearing, the mother presented
evidence of the child’s specific learning needs that could not be addressed in her current
school. Id. at 491 (¶22). The director of curriculum of the child’s current school admitted
that a mainstream educational environment would not meet the child’s needs. Id. Given the
record, the supreme court affirmed the chancery court’s determination that the child be
enrolled in private school and that the father pay half of the tuition. Id. at (¶23).
¶33. In the case at hand, when JDM was younger, Lewis had agreed and allowed JDM to
attend private school. But he later disagreed, contending that she was not getting any better
of an education, and for several years, JDM then attended public school. At the time of the
hearing, Myles had unilaterally decided to enroll the child back in private school over
Lewis’s objection. Myles argues that as the child’s mother, who has raised JDM for fourteen
years, her decision to send the child to private school should be respected and Lewis should
be ordered to pay for half of its cost. However, Myles cites no authority for her position. In
addition, Myles presented no testimony that JDM had special educational needs, as the child
in Smith had, that required JDM to attend private school. In fact, Myles said JDM was an
A/B student. Rather Myles stressed the need for JDM to receive better sports coaching.
Under these facts, we find no error in the chancery court’s decision that Lewis did not have
to pay for JDM’s private school tuition or any associated fees.
B. Half of Insurance Premiums
21
¶34. Mississippi Code Annotated section 43-19-101(7) contains a provision specifically
dealing with medical insurance coverage of a minor child:
All orders involving support of minor children, as a matter of law, shall
include reasonable medical support. Notice to the obligated parent’s employer
that medical support has been ordered shall be on a form as prescribed by the
Department of Human Services. In any case in which the support of any child
is involved, the court shall make the following findings either on the record or
in the judgment:
(a) The availability to all parties of health insurance coverage for the
child(ren);
(b) The cost of health insurance coverage to all parties.
The court shall then make appropriate provisions in the judgment for the
provision of health insurance coverage for the child(ren) in the manner that is
in the best interests of the child(ren). If the court requires the custodial parent
to obtain the coverage then its cost shall be taken into account in establishing
the child-support award. If the court determines that health insurance coverage
is not available to any party or that it is not available to either party at a cost
that is reasonable as compared to the income of the parties, then the court shall
make specific findings as to such either on the record or in the judgment. In
that event, the court shall make appropriate provisions in the judgment for the
payment of medical expenses of the child(ren) in the absence of health
insurance coverage.
(Emphasis added).
¶35. In Holdeman, 34 So. 3d at 652 (¶8), we reversed and remanded a chancery court’s
order of support because it failed to address the issue of the health insurance. The parties had
testified about how the child’s health insurance premium was paid prior to their divorce, but
the order failed to state anything at all about how that premium payment would be handled
in the future. Id. Likewise, in this case, the chancery court’s final judgment failed to address
the issue of payment of JDM’s monthly $114 health insurance premium. Myles testified that
22
she had been paying it, and she asked the court to order Lewis to pay half. Lewis said he had
no problem with paying part of the insurance premium. However, the final judgment only
deals with the payment of medical costs not covered by insurance; it mentions nothing about
the payment of the health insurance premium. Because Holdeman specifically held that the
chancery court was required by the statute to deal with health insurance coverage, on remand,
the chancery court should address the issue of the payment of the premium for JDM’s
medical insurance and fashion whatever arrangement the court feels proper under the
circumstances.
C. Half of JDM’s Extracurricular Fees
¶36. In Thomas v. Crews, 203 So. 3d 701, 706 n.2 (Miss. Ct. App. 2016), this Court
clarified the meaning of “extracurricular activities,” stating,
Extracurricular is defined as “outside the normal curriculum.”
Extracurricular, The Oxford English Dictionary (2d ed. 1989).
Extracurricular activities “are those sponsored by and usually held at school
but that are not part of the standard academic curriculum.”
In Thomas, a modification of child support case, the parties had originally entered into a
child-custody and support agreement in which they agreed to split the costs of the child’s
“extracurricular activities,” an undefined term. Thomas, 203 So. 3d at 703 (¶3). The child
played high school volleyball, but after the divorce she also joined a competitive volleyball
team. Id. at (¶4). In the subsequent modification proceeding, the chancellor increased the
father’s child support obligation due to the father’s increase in income. Id. at 704 (¶10). But
concerning the costs of the child’s participation in competitive volleyball, even though the
parties had agreed to split the costs, the chancellor clarified that “extracurricular expenses
23
are those incurred through school. [S]chool volleyball is different than competitive
volleyball[.] [I]f the Father wants to pay, that will be up to the Father.” Id. at 706 (¶22). On
appeal, we affirmed the chancellor’s decision, citing the Oxford Dictionary definition above.
¶37. In this original paternity case, it is undisputed that JDM played basketball and softball
at the private school she attended. According to her Rule 8.05 financial statement, Myles
said she had to pay a $55 fee for basketball and $1,000 in fees for softball ($500 in the fall
and $500 in the spring). She paid $600 per year for softball uniforms, $100 for cleats, and
$100 for basketball shoes. JDM also played softball in an independent “traveling” team.
Myles said that she spent $400 per month for “travel ball.”
¶38. Because we have determined that Lewis did not have to pay for private school tuition,
it follows that he should not have to pay any fees that the school imposed for JDM to play
those sports, or Myles’s expenses for transporting the child to and from school ball games.
¶39. Concerning the fees and expenses for JDM to participate in the independent softball
team, we find nothing in the record indicating that Lewis had agreed to JDM’s participation
in this non-school-sponsored league, or that he had agreed to pay its costs. Myles specifically
testified that she paid these expenses with her credit cards and had not asked Lewis to pay
any of them. Nor in light of the limited income of both parties, did Myles present sufficient
evidence to warrant a deviation from the child support guidelines under section 43-19-103(e)
(“the age of the child, taking into account the greater needs of older children”). Like in
Thomas, under the facts of this case, JDM’s traveling team was not a school-affiliated
extracurricular activity, and Lewis was not obligated to pay for it. Accordingly, we affirm
24
the chancery court’s order that does not require Lewis to pay for JDM’s expenses to
participate in the traveling team.
¶40. However, we note that the chancery court stated it was not ordering Lewis to pay for
the child’s extracurricular activities “at this time.” Our holding today is limited to the facts
presented at the time of the hearing, among them that Myles had unilaterally chosen to enroll
the child in private school over Lewis’s objection, without any proof of the child needing
such schooling for educational, mental, or physical purposes. Nor were there sufficient facts
presented concerning the traveling team to justify a deviation from the child support
guidelines. Should Myles present such proof on remand or, in the future, should the
circumstances of the parents or the child change, Myles may seek a modification of the
chancery court’s order and raise this issue again at that time.
V. Whether the chancery court erred in failing to award Myles
attorney’s fees.
¶41. At trial, Myles requested reimbursement from Lewis of the $1,200 attorney’s fee that
she had incurred in filing this action. The chancery court made no factual finding on the
issue and simply ruled that each party would pay his or her own attorney’s fees. On appeal,
Myles argues that the chancery court erred in not requiring Lewis to pay her attorney’s fees.
¶42. In paternity actions, prevailing parties are entitled to a reasonable attorney’s fee by
statute. Mississippi Code Annotated section 93-9-45 (Rev. 2021) provides:
If the court makes an order of filiation, declaring paternity and for the support
and maintenance, and education of the child, court costs, including the cost of
the legal services of the attorney representing the petitioner, expert witness
fees, the court clerk, sheriff and other costs shall be taxed against the
defendant.
25
After citing the statute in Dobbins v. Coleman, 930 So. 2d 1246, 1251 (¶25) (Miss. 2006),
the Mississippi Supreme Court held that “while the awarding of attorney’s fees and costs
appears automatic pursuant to the statute, we have held that those fees must be reasonable.”
Moreover, the party seeking fees must present proof of the reasonableness of the amount
sought. For example, in Dobbins, the mother of the child who sued to establish the father’s
paternity submitted an “Attorney’s Report,” itemizing the charges and expenses for the case,
as well as affidavits from two attorneys practicing in the county as to the usual and customary
fees charged in the area. Id. The supreme court found this to be substantial evidence to
support the reasonableness of the chancellor’s award of attorney’s fees and affirmed. Id. at
1252 (¶27).15

¶43. In Smith v. Williams, 199 So. 3d 705, 709-10 (¶15) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016), we
affirmed a chancellor’s award of attorney’s fees to the mother (albeit not as much as she
claimed she incurred). Id. at 710 (¶16). In that case, Smith filed an action to adjudicate
Williams as the father of her child born out of wedlock. Id. at 706 (¶3). In addition to
support and other special expenses, Smith asked for payment of her attorney’s fees. Id. at
707 (¶4). When the chancellor awarded only $1,000 for fees, Smith appealed and pointed
out that Williams had contributed to “protracted litigation” lasting five years, by requesting
DNA testing, refusing to cooperate in the scheduling of the test, filing motions, and failing
to respond to discovery. Id. at 709 (¶14). However, the affidavit concerning her fees that
15 In Daniels v. Bains, 967 So. 2d 77, 82 (¶16) (Miss. Ct. App. 2007), we pointed out
that the Dobbins opinion clarified that in paternity actions where attorney’s fees are awarded
pursuant to section 93-9-45, the court should not rely on the factors for awarding attorney’s
fees set out in McKee v. McKee, 418 So. 2d 764 (Miss. 1982), a divorce case.
26
Smith’s attorney gave to the chancellor in chambers did not make it into the record. Id. at
(¶13). We noted the problem of not having this information in the record, but we also noted
that the chancellor had encouraged one of the mother’s attorneys not to press the issue. Id.
at 710 (¶16). Because the chancellor had entered an order of filiation and support, we cited
the statute and held that Smith was nonetheless entitled to a reasonable attorney’s fee and
affirmed the chancellor’s award. Id. at 710 (¶16).
¶44. In the case at hand, although Myles may have been entitled to attorney’s fees under
the statute, she failed to present any evidence that the amount she sought, $1,200, was
reasonable. There is no affidavit or testimony from her attorney for how this amount was
calculated (the hours worked or the hourly fee charged) and no affidavits from other
attorneys concerning the fees customarily charged by attorneys in the area. The burden was
on Myles to present the evidence needed to establish not only her claim to a fee, but the
reasonableness of the amount sought. Accordingly, because of the lack of evidence in the
record, we find no error by the chancery court in not awarding Myles attorney’s fees.
VI. Whether Lewis is entitled to attorney’s fees on appeal.
¶45. In addition to briefing the issues raised by Myles, Lewis has filed a separate motion
for an award of his costs and attorney’s fees in defending the appeal. Lewis cites no
authority in his motion. Rule 38 of the Mississippi Rules of Appellate Procedure provides,
“[I]n a civil case if the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals shall determine that an appeal is
frivolous, it shall award just damages and single or double costs to the appellee.” M.R.A.P.
38. “An appeal is frivolous when the appellant has no hope of success.” In re Est. of Cole,
27
256 So. 3d 1156, 1160 (¶13) (Miss. 2018); see also McDowell v. Zion Baptist Church, 203
So. 3d 676, 688 (¶49) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016). Further, the “inquiry into whether a party had
any hope of success is an objective one to be exercised from the vantage point of a
reasonable party in the litigant’s position as it filed and pursued its claim.” Dean v. Slade,
164 So. 3d 468, 474 (¶18) (Miss. Ct. App. 2014).
¶46. We reverse and remand in part for a recalculation of Lewis’s net monthly income.
Clearly and objectively, Myles’s appeal was not frivolous. Accordingly, we deny Lewis’s
motion for attorney’s fees.

Outcome:

In summary, Myles was not procedurally barred from pursuing her appeal. Because we find that the chancery court abused its discretion by ignoring critical evidence in the record concerning Lewis’s income and expenses, we reverse its determination of Lewis’s child support obligation. We remand for the chancery court to recalculate Lewis’s gross and
net monthly personal income and calculate the amount of past and future child support he should pay. On remand, the chancery court should also specifically address the premium for the child’s medical insurance and determine the obligation of each party for its payment. We affirm the chancery court’s determination that Lewis is not required to pay for JDM’s private
school tuition or fees, for her extracurricular fees, or for her participation in the traveling team at this time. Further, we hold that the chancery court did not err in refusing to order Lewis to pay Myles’s attorney’s fees. Finally, we deny Lewis’s motion for attorney’s fees on appeal.

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