Thank you for your response!
Mistake in law... is it a "mistake" if the judges ruling deviated from the guidelines, ruling a child support obligation on an income that is TWICE what I make per year.... and is nearly 17k per year MORE than I have ever made in my entire life? He based his ruling on sympathy for the mother, who cried if her CS payments were reduced she would be forced to go back on welfare. The judge stated he did not "wish to do that to her."
It might be, it might not be, it would depend on a wide variety of factors.
For example:
* How old is the child?
* Was this a modification or an initial order? If this was a modification, how long has it been since the last modification, and how much was it then?
* How much do the guidelines say, and how much is the deviation?
* When and why did your income drop, and what training do you have? (If you've been voluntarily unemployed/underemployed, the state may impute an income to you in excess of your actual income.)
* How much does the mother make, and what job training does she have? (The state does have an interest in keeping the welfare rolls as small as possible, so yes, the fact that she might have needed to go on welfare would be a relevant factor, if supported by her financial statements.) Does the mother have other children, and do the TN guidelines consider it?
Not enough information to say one way or the other.
Can you elaborate on this part?
Pretty much you cannot bring up an issue for the first time during the appeal, it has to have been raised during the initial hearing, and raised properly.