Child support and "stay at home parents"
Court of Appeals rules that “stay at home” parents are not necessarily voluntarily underemployed / unemployed.

In calculating child support, the court must consider
all income and resources of each parent's household. This includes income such as salaries,
wages, interest and dividends, along with other sources of income including
maintenance actually received. The court
is required to impute income to a parent when the parent is "voluntarily
unemployed or voluntarily underemployed.”
In other words, the court will put income in their column whether they are actually making the money or not. In a recent case from the Washington State Court of Appeals (Marriage of
Kaplan, 2018), the court stated that: “where,
as here, a spouse in a long-term marriage stays home to care for the children
and manage the household while the other spouse works out-side the home, the
court erred in finding at the time of dissolution that [the mother / wife] was
voluntarily unemployed and voluntarily underemployed.” The court found that, under the facts of that case, it was error for the trial court to have put income in the wife's column (to calculate child support) when she was not working for those reasons. If you would like to discuss a child support matter, please call us at 360-675-9310. We also handle other divorce / family law matters, guardianship, probate and personal injury.









