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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Robert Wills v. Aniela Humphries, f/k/a Aniela Whah-Wills (2/21/2025) sp-7751

Robert Wills v. Aniela Humphries, f/k/a Aniela Whah-Wills (2/21/2025) sp-7751

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  



  ROBERT WILLS,                                             )     

                                                            )   Supreme Court No.  S-18935  

                             Appellant,                     )     

                                                            )   Superior Court No.  3AN-11-10373 CI  

           v.                                               )     

                                                            )   O P I N I O N  

  ANIELA HUMPHRIES, f/k/a Aniela                            )     

  Whah-Wills,                                               )   No. 7751 - February 21, 2025  

                                                            )  

                             Appellee.                      )  

                                                            )  

                     

                   Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                   Judicial District, Anchorage, Andrew Guidi, Judge.  

  

                   Appearances:    Robert  Wills,  pro  se,  Lexington,  South  

                   Carolina, for Appellant.  Notice of nonparticipation filed by  

                   Aniela Humphries, pro se, Chugiak, Appellee.  

  

                   Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                   Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                     

                   CARNEY, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                   The father of three children challenges the superior court's order allowing  



the mother to offset the amount he owed her in attorney's fees against the child support  



she owed him.  We conclude that the superior court has discretion to order an offset  



against child support if it finds that good cause exists and the offset is in the children's  



best  interests.    The  court  did  not  abuse  its  discretion  by  concluding  that  manifest  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

injustice would result if the mother was not granted the offset and that the offset was in  



the children's best interests.  We affirm the superior court's order.    



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.     Facts  



               Robert Wills and Aniela Humphries have three children, all of whom were  



minors  when  Wills  and  Humphries  divorced  in  January  20 12.    The  superior  court  



adopted and incorporated their agreed-upon custody schedule into the divorce decree.   



Wills and Humphries shared joint legal custody; they initially shared physical custody  



of  the  children  on  an  approximately  2/3-1/3  basis  and  switched  to  a  50-50  custody  



arrangement from January 2013 onward.   



        B.     Proceedings  



                       Humphries's motion to enforce custody order  



               In early November 2020, Wills emailed Humphries stating that he would  



not  return  their  middle  child  to  her  care,  even  though  she  was  to  have  custody  the  



following week pursuant to  their custody  agreement.   Humphries  filed  an expedited  



motion to enforce the custody agreement, which Wills opposed.   



               The court ordered a custody investigator to interview  the  middle  child.   



The custody investigator submitted a report to the court in December.  The report noted  



the child's concerns about not being able to participate in extracurricular activities while  



he was  in Humphries's  care.   The investigator also identified concerns that  the child  



may have been included in discussions about "adult issues" including child support and  



assignment of his Permanent Fund Dividend.  The report also observed that the child's  



current "extreme level of hostility" towards Humphries "likely clouds his judgment."   



               The court held an evidentiary hearing in April 2021.  It heard testimony  



from Wills and Humphries, their eldest child, Humphries's husband, and  the  middle  



child's counselor.   



               The court made findings on the record following the evidentiary hearing  



and  issued a written order in early May  2021.   It  found that Wills had disobeyed the  



                                                -2-                                           7751  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

custody order without cause and  had done "too much  to undermine" the relationship  



between Humphries and the middle  child.   The court found that it was in the  child's  



best interest to reunify him with Humphries and ordered a gradual transition back to 50- 



50 custody over four consecutive weeks.   



                        Humphries's motion for attorney's fees and award  



                In  July  Humphries  moved  for  attorney 's  fees  in  connection  with  her  



successful motion to enforce custody.   She argued that because Wills had violated the  



custody order, was in a "vastly superior economic position," and had not acted in good  



faith, she should be awarded her full attorney's  fees of $32,648.   Wills opposed the  



motion.   



                In October the court awarded Humphries $21,000 in attorney's fees.  The  



court found that Wills's actions were "mistaken and ill-conceived, but not in bad faith."  



The court based its award on Humphries's and Wills's relative financial circumstances  



                                                                1 

and the importance of the issues, citing AS 25.20.115.   The court ordered Wills to pay  



the attorney's fees within 45 days.    



                        Modification of physical custody and child support  



                Despite the superior court's order requiring a return to  shared physical  



custody, Wills moved to South Carolina with the middle child.  In July 2022 he moved  



to modify physical custody of their two minor children after he and Humphries could  



                           2 

not  agree  on  custody.     He  argued  that  the  children's  best  interests  were  served by  



"remaining  together"  in  South  Carolina  and  spending  time  over  school  breaks  with  



Humphries in Alaska.  Humphries did not oppose the motion.   



        1       See  AS 25.20.115 (authorizing court to award attorney 's  fees and costs  

upon  party's  request  in  action  to  modify,  vacate,  or  enforce  that  part  of  order  and  

requiring court to "consider the relative financial resources of the parties and whether  

the parties have acted in good faith").    

        2       The eldest child was no longer a minor at this point.  



                                                  -3-                                              7751  


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                 The court held hearings on  Wills's  motion to modify custody over  two  



days in December 2022 and granted his motion.  The court found that his move was a  



                                             3 

substantial change in circumstances,  that his reasons for the move were legitimate, and  



that modification was in the children's best interests.  The court awarded Wills primary  



                                                                       4 

physical custody and joint legal custody with Humphries.   It modified child support in  



August,  requiring  Humphries  to  pay  $1,070.89  in  monthly  child  support  for  both  



children effective January  1, 2023.   



                         Offset proceedings  



                 In September  2023  Humphries  filed a request  to  offset  the amount she  



owed in child support by the amount Wills  owed her in attorney's fees.    Humphries  



asserted Wills had only paid $6,300 of the $21,000 he owed her.  Wills opposed, arguing  



that  Humphries's  request  did  not  constitute  good  cause  under  Alaska  Civil  Rule  



90.3(c)(1)  and that her calculations were incorrect and failed to account for interest  



owed on her past due child support.  He asserted that he had paid Humphries $6,500,  



not the $6,300 that she calculated, and that Humphries's own records  of his payments  



showed  $6,399  paid.   Wills filed an affidavit listing payments he made but did not  



provide any other supporting documents.  In response, Humphries argued that the offset  



was proper under Rule 90.3(c) because "manifest injustice would result if [she] were  



required to remit funds to [Wills] when he owed her a substantial sum of money."   



                 The  court  granted  Humphries's  request  in November, ordering that her  



child support was offset by the amount Wills  still owed in attorney's fees.  The court  



                                                                                                              

        3        See,  e.g.,  Bagby  v.  Bagby,  250  P.3d  1127,  1129  (Alaska  2011)  ("[A]  

custodial  parent's  decision  to  move  out-of-state  with  the  children  amounts  to  a  

substantial change in circumstances as a matter of law and the moving party is entitled  

to a hearing on a motion to modify custody as a matter of law ."  (brackets omitted)  

(quoting Barrett v. Alguire, 35 P.3d 1, 6 (Alaska 2001))).    

        4        The court observed that Wills and Humphries had agreed to an open-ended  

visitation schedule between Wills and the middle child and a set schedule for in-person  

visitation between Wills and the younger child.   



                                                    -4-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

held  that  "[f]or  the  reasons  articulated  in  [Humphries's]  motion,  manifest  injustice  



would result if  [she] were required to remit funds while  [Wills] owes her a substantial  



sum for attorney's fees."   



                 The court found that Wills still owed Humphries $15,641.09 in attorney's  



fees.  It adopted Humphries's accounting in an exhibit filed with her reply as "accurately  



showing  the  remaining  balance  assuming  [Humphries's]  child  support  obligation  is  



offset against [Wills's] attorney fee debt."  It found that if Humphries deferred paying  



child  support  until  March  1,  2024  and  then  made  a  one-time  payment  of  $491.02,  



Wills's attorney's fee debt would be reduced to $0.  It therefore ordered Humphries to  



begin  paying  child  support  in  March  2024  with  a  payment  of  $491.02  and  the  full  



amount of child support of $1,070.89 from April onward.   



                                               5 

                 Wills appeals the offset.     



         STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 We review a superior court's decision to modify child support for an abuse  



                 6 

of discretion.    "We will find an abuse of discretion when the decision on review is  



                                 7 

manifestly unreasonable."     



                 But whether the superior court "applied the correct legal standard to its  



                                                                                             8 

child support determination is a question of law that we review de novo."   "Similarly,  



'the interpretation of Alaska Civil Rules governing child support orders is reviewed de  



novo; we will adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason,  



                                                                                                               

        5        At oral argument before us, Wills seemed to have modified his position;  

he no longer questioned the court's authority to order an offset under certain conditions,  

but argued that it was not calculated correctly.   

        6        Mitchell v. Mitchell, 370 P.3d 1070, 1076 (Alaska 2016).    



        7        Id. (quoting Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc. , 355  

P.3d 503, 508 (Alaska 2015)).  

        8        Id. (quoting Limeres v. Limeres , 320 P.3d 291, 295 (Alaska 2014)).    



                                                     -5-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                 9 

and policy.' "   We "  'reverse child support awards only if the superior court abused its  



discretion or applied an incorrect legal standard,' or if 'its factual findings are clearly  

erroneous.' "10  "Clear error exists 'when a review of the record leaves us with a definite  



and firm conviction that the superior court has made a mistake.' "11    



        DISCUSSION  



                 Wills asks us to conclude that the superior court abused its discretion by  



offsetting  the amount  Wills  owed Humphries  in attorney's fees against  Humphries's  



child support obligations.    We have not previously  decided whether a child support  



offset should be granted to a parent who is owed attorney 's  fees by the other parent.   



We therefore look first at how we have addressed offsets against child support in other  



contexts.    



                 Alaska  Civil  Rule  90.3(c)  authorizes  the  court  to  order  offsets  against  



child support if good cause exists and it is in the best interests of the child.  And we  



have considered such offsets for parents who owed the State for public assistance paid  

for  their children.12    Those cases make clear the superior court's  broad discretion  to  



authorize an offset against child support so long as good cause exists and the offset is  



in the child's best interests.   We  have also  addressed  cases  in which  obligor parents  



sought credit for children's insurance benefits (CIB) that the children received because  



                                                                                                              

        9        Id. (brackets omitted) (quoting J.L.P. v. V.L.A. , 30 P.3d 590, 594 (Alaska  

2001)).    

        10       Id. (first quoting Koller v. Reft, 71 P.3d 800, 804 (Alaska 2003); and then  

quoting Limeres , 320 P.3d at 296).    

        11       Thompson  v.  Thompson,  454  P.3d  981,  988  (Alaska  2019)  (brackets  

omitted) (quoting Geldermann v. Geldermann, 428 P.3d 477, 481 (Alaska 2018)).    

        12       See State, Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. v. Pealatere, 996  

P.2d 84 (Alaska 2000); State, Dep 't of Revenue, Child Support Enf 't Div. v. Green, 983  

P.2d 1249, 1253 (Alaska 1999).  



                                                    -6-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

the obligor parents were eligible for federal social security benefits.13  The CIB cases  



also reinforce the superior court's discretion to authorize an offset against child support.    



                 Reviewing the superior court 's order here, we conclude that it properly  



ordered an offset because it found that good cause existed and that the offset was in the  



children's best interests.  We therefore affirm the superior court's order.    



        A.       Alaska Civil  Rule 90.3(c) Authorizes The Superior Court To  Order  

                 An Offset Against Child Support  If  Good Cause Exists And It Is In  

                 The Best Interests Of The Child.    



                 Civil  Rule  90.3  provides  a  framework  and  formula  to  determine  child  

support obligations.14    We recognized in Ruppe v. Ruppe  that because the "  'right to  



support is that of the child,' . . . the amount of child support calculated under Civil  

Rule 90.3 cannot be waived or modified other than for good cause."15  We noted that  



"the commentary to the Rule states that two of the major purposes of the formula are to  



'ensure that child support orders are adequate to meet the needs of children, subject to  



the  ability  of  parents  to  pay'  and  to  make  child  support  awards  '[p]redictable  and  

consistent.' "16    



                 But we also noted in Ruppe that "Rule 90.3(c)(1) permits the court to 'vary  



the child support award as calculated under the other provisions of this rule for good  



cause upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice would result  



                                                                                                             

        13       See Rosenbaum v. Shaw, 459 P.3d 467 (Alaska 2020); Pacana v. State,  

Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. , 941 P.2d 1263, 1264 (Alaska 1997); State,  

Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. v. Fry , 926 P.2d 1170 (Alaska 1996); Miller  

v. Miller, 890 P.2d 574 (Alaska 1995).  

        14       Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3.    



        15       Ruppe v. Ruppe, 358 P.3d 1284, 1290 (Alaska 2015) (quoting State, Dep't  

of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. ex rel. Valdez v. Valdez, 941 P.2d 144, 154 n.14  

(Alaska 1997)).    

        16       Id. at 1290-91 (quoting Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. I.B).    



                                                    -7-                                                7751  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

if the support award were not varied.' "17  The rule requires a court to "specify in writing  



the reason for the variation, the amount of support which would have been required but  



for the variation, and the estimated value of any property conveyed instead of  support  

calculated under the other provisions of this rule."18    



                 The good cause inquiry must "first and foremost  [focus on] the needs of  

the children."19   "Good cause may include a finding that unusual circumstances exist  



which require variation of the award in order to award an amount of support which is  



just and proper for the parties to contribute toward the nurture and education of their  

children."20  "To justify a good cause variation, a finding of unusual circumstances must  



be followed by a finding  that 'these unusual circumstances make application of the  

usual formula unjust.' "21    



                 In Brandal v. Shangin, we held that the superior court has the discretion  

to authorize an offset against child support for marital property.22  Henry Brandal and  



Lorraine Shangin disputed child support and marital property, including a settlement  



recovery resulting from depressed commercial fishing in the wake of the Exxon Valdez  

oil spill.23    The court ordered Shangin to pay child support to Brandal, but delayed  



payment until she received her share of the settlement money.24   Brandal argued on  



appeal that the court lacked authority to allow Shangin to delay payment of past due  



                                                                                                               

        17       Id. at 1291 (quoting Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1)).    



        18       Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1).    



        19       Ruppe, 358 P.3d at 1291 (quoting Koller v. Reft, 71 P.3d 800, 807 (Alaska  

2003)).    

        20       Christopher D. v. Krislyn D., 426 P.3d 1118, 1121 (Alaska 2018) (quoting  

Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c)(1)).    

        21       Id. (quoting Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3 cmt. VI.B).    



        22       36 P.3d 1188 (Alaska 2001).    



        23       Id. at 1191.  



        24       Id. at 1192.    



                                                     -8-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

child support until she received her share of the settlement because "child support is a  

special debt on behalf of children that is separate from property division."25    



                 We held  that  "[a] trial court has discretion to approve an offset against  

marital property for child support when it is in the child 's best interests."26  We upheld  



the  superior  court's  decision  to  offset  Shangin's  child  support  against  the  marital  



property distribution "[i]f on remand the trial court finds that it is in the children's best  

interests to do so."27  But because the court had not found that it was in the children's  



best interests to allow Shangin to delay payment, we remanded the issue for the court's  

consideration.28    Brandal  confirms  the  superior  court's  broad  discretion  under  Rule  



90.3(c) to authorize an offset against child support so long as it finds that such an offset  



is in a child's best interests and therefore that good cause to vary child support exists.   



         B.      Our Case Law Authorizing Offsets Against Child Support In Similar  

                 Contexts Also  Confirms The Superior Court's Broad Discretion To  

                 Authorize An Offset.    



                 We have previously  considered  offsets against child support for parents  



who owed the State for public assistance paid for their children.  We concluded that the  



superior court has broad discretion to authorize an offset against child support so long  



                                                                                                                

         25      Id. at 1195.    



         26      Id.    In Brandal  we used  the phrase "offset against marital property for  

child support" instead of offset against child support, but this phrase should be read in  

context.   Id.    Because  the  amount  Brandal  owed  Shangin  to  equalize  the  property  

division "was likely to exceed  [Shangin's]  child support arrearages,"  the amount of  

child support owed had to be offset against marital property.  Id.    

         27      Id.    



         28      Id.  We also considered in Elder v. Elder the question of whether an offset  

against child support based on a father's veteran's disability benefits was available and  

remanded it to the superior court.  S-9187, 2002 WL 32903104 at *3 (Alaska Jan. 9,  

2002).  We noted in Elder v. Elder that our case law permitted offsets of certain benefits  

against  a  child  support  obligation  and  remanded  the  issue  to  the  superior  court  for  

further factual development.  Id .    



                                                     -9-                                                  7751  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

as  good  cause  exists  and  the  offset  is  in  the  child's  best  interests.    We  also  have  



considered  whether  obligor  parents  ought  to  be  given  credit  for  CIB  paid  to  their  



children derived from the obligor parents' federal social security benefits.  Those cases,  



too, reinforce the superior court's discretion to authorize an offset against child support.    



                          The public assistance cases support the superior court's broad  

                          discretion to authorize an offset against child support.   



                 Under AS 25.27.120,  "[a]n obligor parent who  'owes a duty of support'  

'is liable to the state' for public assistance paid to the child."29  We have considered two  



cases  in  which  parents  sought  offsets  against  their  resulting  obligation  to  pay  child  



support to the State.    



                 In State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division v.  



Green, we addressed whether the superior court erred by crediting a father's payment  



of a lump sum to the mother without judicial approval against his future child support  



obligation   and  therefore  against  the   State's  claim  for  reimbursement  of  public  

assistance.30  We concluded that the State was entitled to recoup public assistance under  



AS 25.27.120  and the  father "could not defeat or diminish his direct liability to  [the  

State]  by  paying  [the  mother]  directly."31    Yet  we  noted  that  the  State's  rights  to  



recoupment may yield to equitable considerations in some circumstances - such as a  



parent  making  payments  directly  to  the  other  "under  an  arrangement  adequately  

protecting the child's interests."32  But we also observed that parents must receive court  



approval  to  enter  child  support  agreements  that  deviate  from  Rule  90.3  to  avoid  



                                                                                                                

         29      State, Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. v. Green, 983 P.2d 1249,  

1253 (Alaska 1999) (quoting AS 25.27.120(a)).   

         30      Id. at 1251.    



         31      Id. at 1253-54.    



         32      Id. at 1254.  



                                                     -10-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

prejudicing the child.33   And in  Green, there was no judicial determination that the  



offset was in the child's best interests.34  The decision suggests, however, that a court- 



approved child support offset agreement is a permissible exception to Rule 90.3 when  



the offset is in the child's best interests.   



                 A  few  years  later,  in  State,  Department  of  Revenue,  Child  Support  



Enforcement Division v. Pealatere, we confronted "the exception that we contemplated  

when we announced the rule in Green."35  At issue in Pealatere was whether a mother  



was entitled to an offset against child support after the parents entered into a judicially  



approved divorce agreement that provided that  she would relinquish all claims to the  



father's tools  (valued at approximately $5,000) in consideration of the father waiving  

$50 in monthly child support payments from her.36  We held that she was, explaining  



that "[i]f a child support offset preserves the custodial parent's means of support, the  

trial court may conclude that the offset is in the best interests of the child."37  We noted  



that the superior court concluded that the equities in Pealatere favored an offset against  



the mother's interest in the tools because it would not be " 'fair and equitable' to extract  



$50 monthly payments from [the mother's] limited income" while forcing the father to  

sell tools that he needed for work."38  The superior court therefore permitted the father  



to keep his tools so that he could "maintain his ability to support [the child]."39   We  



concluded  that  the  offset  comported  "with  the  policies  underlying  Alaska's  child  



support award rules" because there was  clear and convincing evidence of good cause  



                                                                                                                   

         33      Id. at 1254 n.17.  



         34      Id. at 1254.  



         35       996 P.2d 84, 87 (Alaska 2000).    



         36      Id. at 85.    



         37      Id.    



         38      Id.   



         39      Id. at 87.  



                                                      -11-                                                   7751  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

for variance and that it was in the child's best interests.40  We therefore held that the  



superior court did not abuse its discretion by authorizing the offset.41    



                 Green and Pealatere together support the superior court's broad discretion  



to authorize an offset against child support  so long as good cause exists and the offset  



is in the child's best interests.  And they suggest that the court may authorize an offset  



against child support whenever there is clear and convincing evidence that it is for good  



cause and in the child's best interests.    



                          The  CIB  decisions  also  reinforce  the  superior  court's  broad  

                          discretion to authorize an offset against child support.    



                 Our CIB offset decisions  address two scenarios:   (1) parents  seeking  an  



offset against past due child support for CIB payments to their children; and (2) parents  



seeking an offset against future child support for past overpayments arising from CIB  

payments to their children.42  Though most of these decisions do not squarely address  



Rule 90.3(c)(1), they nevertheless suggest that an offset for CIB payments against past  



due child support constitutes good cause to vary a child support award, but an offset for  

CIB payments against future child support does not.43  They thus support the superior  



court's discretion to authorize an offset against child support.    

                 We first confronted this issue in Miller v. Miller .44  There we concluded  



that the payment of CIB to the children in connection with the father's social security  



                                                                                                                

         40      Id.    



         41      Id.    



         42      See,  e.g.,  Rosenbaum  v.  Shaw,  459  P.3d  467,  472  (Alaska  2020)  

(distinguishing between "overpayments offsetting past arrearages" and "overpayments  

serving as a basis for future credit or reimbursement").    

         43      See Pacana v. State, Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. , 941 P.2d  

1263, 1267 (Alaska 1997) (authorizing offset for overpayments against past due child  

support); Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d at 475 (concluding parent could not seek offset against  

future child support based on overpayments already made).    

         44      890 P.2d 574 (Alaska 1995).    



                                                     -12-                                                 7751  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

retirement  benefits  entitled him  to receive  an  offset  against past due  child support.45   



We observed that an "overwhelming majority of states that have considered this issue"  



allowed such an offset because "unlike welfare and other forms of public assistance,  



social security benefits represent contributions that a worker has made throughout the  



course  of  employment"  and  so  represent  earnings  "in  much  the  same  way  as  do  

annuities paid by an insurance policy."46  We  agreed  and allowed the children's  CIB  



payments to count toward child support obligations.47  Although we did not specifically  



rely  on  Rule  90.3(c)'s  good  cause  exception  in  authorizing  the  offset  against  child  



support, Miller makes clear that the superior court  enjoys  discretion to  order  such an  

offset.48    



                 In  Miller ,  we  also  explained  that  "no  theoretical  basis"  existed  to  

distinguish   between   disability          and   retirement   benefits.49           Therefore   in   State,  



Department  of  Revenue,  Child  Support  Enforcement  Division  v.  Fry,  we  applied  



Miller 's retirement-benefit holding to disability benefits and held that an offset against  



child support could be authorized for CIB payments made in connection to disability  

benefits.50    



                                                                                                                  

         45      Id. at 576-77.   



         46      Id.  at 576  (quoting Pontbriand v. Pontbriand , 622 A.2d 482, 484 (R.I.  

1993)).  

         47      Id. at 577.    



         48      The father seeking the offset argued in the alternative that if he did not get  

a "dollar-for-dollar credit," he should at the very least be entitled to vary child support  

for "good cause" under Civil Rule 90.3.  Id. at 576.  But because we decided that the  

father was entitled to a "dollar-for-dollar" offset against child support, we did not decide  

whether the social security benefits the child received was "good cause."  Id. at 577.  

         49      Id. at 577.  



         50       926 P.2d 1170, 1172, 1174 (Alaska 1996).    



                                                      -13-                                                  7751  


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                 In Pacana v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement  



Division , we  extended Miller  and Fry  and  decided  a  parent  could  receive  an  offset  



against child support for "CIB payments made before the parent moves to modify child  

support."51  We concluded that because CIB payments are "regular monthly payments"  



that  the  custodial  parent  is  aware  of,  they  can  be  credited  against  a  child  support  



obligation.  Further, Rule 90.3(h)(2), which restricts the retroactive modification of a  

child support order, does not preclude a court from ordering an offset.52  Miller , Fry,  



and Pacana  together  reinforce  the  superior  court's  broad  discretion  to  authorize  an  



offset against child support.    



                 Rosenbaum v. Shaw is our most recent case dealing with an offset against  

child support for CIB payments.53  Rosenbaum concerned a father who regularly paid  



child support and began receiving social security payments.54  As a result, his daughter  



received  CIB payments paid to  her  mother.55   But the father was unaware that CIB  



payments could be credited against his child support obligations.56   Once the  father  



discovered that CIB payments could be credited, he stopped paying child support and  



sued to recover overpaid child support  as  either  a reimbursement or  a  credit against  

future payments.57  We distinguished between using CIB payments to  offset past  due  



child support  (as in Pacana) from using them to credit future or reimburse past child  

support.58  After considering a number of out-of-state cases, we concluded that those  



                                                                                                                 

        51       941 P.2d 1263, 1264 (Alaska 1997).    



        52       Id. at 1266.  



        53       459 P.3d 467 (Alaska 2020).    



        54       Id. at 469.    



        55       Id.    



        56       Id.    



        57       Id. at 469-70.   



        58       Id. at 472.    



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that  would  deny  the  father  reimbursement  or  credit  were  more  persuasive.59    We  



concluded that it was "more fair to allocate the risk of loss to [the father]" because "[h]e  



was the parent making the overpayments," and had the opportunity to notify the  State  

but did not do so.60  We also observed that we "should be hesitant to create a . . . rule  



that  strips  the  money  from  the  child 's  household  after  the  money  has  already  been  



provided for the child"; and that "reimbursement could wreak havoc for the custodial  



household where it is allowed for payments made months or years in the past, when the  

CIB monies would likely have been long since budgeted and expended."61    



                 In  Rosenbaum,  we  observed  that  other  Alaska  cases  supported  "the  



general proposition that voluntary overpayments should not be reimbursed or credited  

against future payments."62  We first cited Epperson v. Epperson , where we held that  



an obligor's "past voluntary contributions in excess of his support obligation [did] not  

constitute good cause for reducing his future child support obligation."63  In Epperson  



a  father  argued  in  response  to  the  mother's  motion  to  modify  his  child  support  



obligation  that  his  voluntary  payments  to  the mother  since  their  divorce  constituted  

"good cause" to reduce his child support obligation to $0.64  We held that while we had  



previously allowed past excess voluntary contributions to be credited against past due  



child support, it would be contrary to Rule 90.3 to offset such contributions against  

future child support payments except in exceptional circumstances."65   We therefore  



                                                                                                                 

        59       Id. at 472-74.    



        60       Id. at 475.    



        61       Id. (alteration in original).   



        62       Id. at 474-75.  



        63       Epperson  v.  Epperson ,  835  P.2d  451,  453  (Alaska  1992),  quoted  in  

Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d at 475.    

        64       Id. at 452-53.    



        65       Id. at 453.    



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concluded that the father's past voluntary contributions in excess of his child support  



obligation  did  not  constitute  good  cause  for  reducing  his  future  child  support  

obligation.66    



                 We then turned to Ruppe v. Rupp e, which involved overpayments of child  



support by a father to the mother; the superior court awarded an offset for the overpaid  

amount against the father's future child support obligations.67  We held that "[e]ven if  



[the father] had paid [the mother] too much during the interim period, it was error to  

credit any voluntary overpayment against his future obligations."68   We reversed the  



superior court's award of the offset against future child support obligations.69  We noted  



that we  suggested  in Epperson  that an offset against future child support obligations  



should only be recognized in "exceptional circumstances," such as "if the parties agreed  



at the time the contributions were made that they would constitute prepayment of future  

child support."70  We concluded that "exceptional circumstances" did not exist in Ruppe  



because  the  father 's  claimed  overpayment  was  made  pursuant  to  a  plan  that  he  

proposed.71   He did not directly pay the mother the amount prescribed by Rule 90.3,  



instead partly relying on an in-kind contribution of housing to fulfill his obligation .72   



We noted that "while [the father's] provision of housing easily  satisfied the difference  



between what he did pay and that prescribed amount [of child support], any excess  



                                                                                                                  

         66      Id.    



         67      Ruppe  v.  Ruppe,  358  P.3d  1284,  1287-88  (Alaska  2015),  discussed  by  

Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d at 475.    

         68      Id. at  1292, quoted in Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d at 475.  



         69      Id.  



         70      Id. (citing Epperson, 835 P.2d at 453), discussed by Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d  

at 475.   

         71      Id.  



         72      Id.   



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value of that housing should not have been credited against his future child support  

obligations."73    



                 We concluded in Rosenbaum that good cause to vary child support does  



not exist under Rule 90.3(c) when an obligor parent seeks to offset past overpayments  

against  future  child  support  obligations.74    In  contrast,  Miller ,  Fry,  and  Pacana  



recognized  good cause to grant an offset against past due child support.75   Our cases  



that consider  CIB payments  reinforce the superior court's discretion to authorize an  



offset against child support when good cause exists.    



        C.       The  Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By Ordering An  

                 Offset.    



                 Having concluded that Rule 90.3(c) permits the superior court to order an  



offset against child support for good cause and when it is in the best interests of the  



child, we  now  turn  to  the  superior  court's exercise of  that discretion.    Rule 90.3(c)  



requires "clear and convincing evidence that manifest injustice" would result without a  



deviation from the standard formula calculation.  The rule also states that "[g]ood cause  



may include a finding that unusual circumstances exist" which require varying child  



support to an amount "which is just and proper for the parties to contribute toward the  

nurture and education of their children."76    



                 The court did not abuse its discretion when it granted Humphries an offset.   



The court  specified  the  reason for the variance  in writing,  explaining that  "manifest  



injustice would result" if  Humphries were required to  pay child support  while  Wills  



owed her "substantial sums for attorney's fees."  The court found clear and convincing  



                                                                                                              

        73       Id.    



        74       Rosenbaum, 459 P.3d at 475.  



        75       See  id.  at  472  (distinguishing  between  "overpayments  offsetting  past  

arrearages" and "overpayments serving as a basis for future credit and reimbursement").    

        76       Alaska R. Civ. P. 90.3(c).  



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evidence of these "unusual circumstances."  It issued the order after a series of lengthy  



proceedings,  including  two  evidentiary  hearings  -  first  over  enforcing  the  original  



custody order and next over modifying physical custody - and after an order granting  



Humphries attorney's fees.  The court was familiar with the parties and the case and  



was fully apprised of their incomes, including Wills's "far superior" financial position.   



It was therefore able to determine that granting the offset would not leave the children  

lacking  sufficient  support.77    And  the  court  credited  Humphries's  assertion  that  she  



could  have  used  the  money  Wills  owed  her  to  travel  to  see  the  children  in  South  



Carolina, which would have been in the children's best interests.   



                 We affirmed the court's order in Pealatere because we concluded that it  



had found that the arrangement was in the child's best interests and clear and convincing  

evidence existed to support adopting the parents' agreement.78  The court found that the  



mother relinquished any claims to the father's tools "in consideration of this waiver of  



monthly child support payments" and that "[t]he agreement of the parties regarding  a  



waiver  of  that  monthly  payment  obligation  is  supported  by  clear  and  convincing  

evidence and is therefore approved." 79    



                 The order here was more specific than the one in Pealatere :  it found that  



manifest injustice would result if the offset were  not granted and if  Humphries were  



instead required to pay child support to Wills while he owed her $15,641.09.  The court  



                                                                                                                

         77      Cf.  Ruppe  v.  Ruppe,  358  P.3d  1284,  1291  (Alaska  2015)  ("Crediting  

payments  that  provide  a  home  for  a  spouse  and  children  against  child  support  

obligations risks leaving children with insufficient support.").  

         78      State, Dep't of Revenue, Child Support Enf't Div. v. Pealatere, 996 P.2d  

84, 87 (Alaska 2000).    

         79      Id. at 85.    



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----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

 found  good  cause  to  order  the  offset  and  that  the  offset  was  in  the  children's  best  

 interests.  It did not abuse its discretion.80    



         CONCLUSION  



                 We AFFIRM the grant of an offset against child support.   



                                                                                                              

         80      Wills also asserts that Humphries's exhibit calculating the proposed offset  

 "had plain errors."  But he did not provide any legal support for his argument.  While  

 "  '[w]e apply a more lenient standard to pro se litigants' and 'consider pro se pleadings  

 liberally in an effort to determine what legal claims have been raised, ' . . .  'a pro se  

 litigant's briefing must allow his or her opponent and this court to discern the pro se's  

 legal argument' " to avoid waiver of his argument.   Wright v. Anding, 390 P.3d 1162,  

 1169 (Alaska 2017)  (footnotes omitted) (first quoting  Casciola v. F.S. Air Serv., Inc.,  

 120 P.3d 1059, 1062-63 (Alaska 2005); then quoting  Toliver v. Alaska State Comm 'n  

for Hum . Rts., 279 P.3d 619, 622 (Alaska 2012); and then quoting Casciola, 120 P.3d  

 at 1063).   



                 Even if the argument was not waived, Wills appears to be confused about  

 two similar-sounding legal terms,  "clear error"  and  "plain error."   We review a trial  

 court's findings of fact for clear error and will conclude that clear error exists "when  

 'our review of the record leaves us with the definite and firm conviction that the superior  

 court has made a mistake.' "  Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc. ,  

 355  P.3d  503,  508  (Alaska  2015)  (quoting  Gilbert  M.  v.  State,  139  P.3d  581,  586  

 (Alaska 2006)).  By contrast, "[p]lain error exists where an obvious mistake has been  

 made  which  creates  a  high  likelihood  that  injustice  has  resulted."    Tenala,  Ltd.  v.  

Fowler, 921 P.2d 1114, 1124 (Alaska 1996).    



                 Wills's  argument seems to be that Humphries's  initial calculations were  

 incorrect, which they were.   But the error was corrected in the exhibit filed with her  

 reply and that is the calculation on which the court based its order.  The court did not  

 err in calculating the award based on Humphries's corrected filings.    



                                                    -19-                                                7751  

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