Colorado Code § 14-10-114

Spousal maintenance - advisory guidelines - legislative declaration - definitions
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(1) Legislative declaration. (a) The general assembly hereby finds that:
(I) The economic lives of spouses are frequently closely intertwined in marriage and that
it is often impossible to later segregate the respective decisions and contributions of the spouses;
and
(II) Consequently, awarding spousal maintenance may be appropriate if a spouse needs
support and the other spouse has the ability to pay support.
(b) The general assembly further finds that:
(I) Because the statutes provide little guidance to the court concerning maintenance
awards, there has been inconsistency in the amount and term of maintenance awarded in
different judicial districts across the state in cases that involve similar factual circumstances; and
(II) Courts and litigants would benefit from the establishment of a more detailed
statutory framework that includes advisory guidelines to be considered as a starting point for the
determination of fair and equitable maintenance awards.
(c) Therefore, the general assembly declares that it is appropriate to create a statutory
framework for the determination of maintenance awards, including advisory guidelines for the
amount and term of maintenance in certain cases, that will assist the court and the parties in
crafting maintenance awards that are fair, equitable, and more consistent across judicial districts
and in their application to both parties.
(2) At the time of permanent orders in dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or
declaration of invalidity proceedings, and upon the request of either party, the court may order
the payment of maintenance from one spouse to the other pursuant to the provisions of this
section. An award of maintenance shall be in an amount and for a term that is fair and equitable
to both parties and shall be made without regard to marital misconduct.
(3) (a) (I) Determination of maintenance. When a party has requested maintenance in a
dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or declaration of invalidity proceeding, prior to
granting or denying an award of maintenance, the court shall make initial written or oral findings
concerning:
(A) The amount of each party's gross income;
(B) The marital property apportioned to each party;
(C) The financial resources of each party, including but not limited to the actual or
potential income from separate or marital property;
(D) Reasonable financial need as established during the marriage; and
(E) Whether maintenance awarded pursuant to this section would be deductible for
federal income tax purposes by the payor and taxable income to the recipient.
(II) After making the initial findings described in subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (a),
the court shall determine the amount and term of the maintenance award, if any, that is fair and
equitable to both parties after considering:
(A) The guideline amount and term of maintenance set forth in paragraph (b) of this
subsection (3), if applicable, based upon the duration of the marriage and the combined gross
incomes of the parties;
(B) The factors relating to the amount and term of maintenance set forth in paragraph (c)
of this subsection (3); and
(C) Whether the party seeking maintenance has met the requirement for a maintenance
award pursuant to paragraph (d) of this subsection (3).
(b) Advisory guideline amount and term of maintenance. If the duration of the
parties' marriage is at least three years and the parties' combined annual adjusted gross income
does not exceed two hundred forty thousand dollars, the court shall make additional oral or
written findings concerning the duration of the marriage in whole months and the advisory
guideline amount and term of maintenance, calculated as follows:
(I) (A) If the maintenance award is deductible for federal income tax purposes by the
payor and taxable income to the recipient, the amount of maintenance under the advisory
guidelines is equal to forty percent of the parties' combined monthly adjusted gross income
minus the lower income party's monthly adjusted gross income. If the calculation results in a
negative number, the amount of maintenance is zero.
(B) If the maintenance award is not deductible for federal income tax purposes by the
payor and not taxable income to the recipient, the amount of maintenance under the advisory
guidelines for parties with a combined monthly adjusted gross income of ten thousand dollars or
less is equal to eighty percent of the amount calculated pursuant to subsection (3)(b)(I)(A) of this
section.
(C) If the maintenance award is not deductible for federal income tax purposes by the
payor spouse and not taxable income to the recipient spouse, the amount of maintenance under
the advisory guidelines for parties with a combined monthly adjusted gross income of more than
ten thousand dollars but not more than twenty thousand dollars is equal to seventy-five percent
of the amount calculated pursuant to subsection (3)(b)(I)(A) of this section.
(II) (A) The advisory term of maintenance under the guidelines, calculated in whole
months, for marriages of at least three years but not more than twenty years, is set forth in the
table contained in subsection (3)(b)(II)(B) of this section. When the duration of the parties'
marriage exceeds twenty years, the court may award maintenance for a specified term of years or
for an indefinite term, but the court shall not specify a maintenance term that is less than the
maintenance term under the guidelines for a twenty-year marriage without making specific
findings that support a reduced term of maintenance.
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(c) Factors affecting the amount and term of maintenance. In any proceeding for
maintenance, the court shall consider all relevant factors, including but not limited to:
(I) The financial resources of the recipient spouse, including the actual or potential
income from separate or marital property or any other source and the ability of the recipient
spouse to meet his or her needs independently;
(II) The financial resources of the payor spouse, including the actual or potential income
from separate or marital property or any other source and the ability of the payor spouse to meet
his or her reasonable needs while paying maintenance;
(III) The lifestyle during the marriage;
(IV) The distribution of marital property, including whether additional marital property
may be awarded to reduce or alleviate the need for maintenance;
(V) Both parties' income, employment, and employability, obtainable through reasonable
diligence and additional training or education, if necessary, and any necessary reduction in
employment due to the needs of an unemancipated child of the marriage or the circumstances of
the parties;
(VI) Whether one party has historically earned higher or lower income than the income
reflected at the time of permanent orders and the duration and consistency of income from
overtime or secondary employment;
(VII) The duration of the marriage;
(VIII) The amount of temporary maintenance and the number of months that temporary
maintenance was paid to the recipient spouse;
(IX) The age and health of the parties, including consideration of significant health-care
needs or uninsured or unreimbursed health-care expenses;
(X) Significant economic or noneconomic contribution to the marriage or to the
economic, educational, or occupational advancement of a party, including but not limited to
completing an education or job training, payment by one spouse of the other spouse's separate
debts, or enhancement of the other spouse's personal or real property;
(XI) Whether the circumstances of the parties at the time of permanent orders warrant
the award of a nominal amount of maintenance in order to preserve a claim of maintenance in
the future;
(XII) Whether the maintenance is deductible for federal income tax purposes by the
payor and taxable income to the recipient, and any adjustments to the amount of maintenance to
equitably allocate the tax burden between the parties; and
(XIII) Any other factor that the court deems relevant.
(d) After considering the provisions of this section and making the required findings of
fact, the court shall award maintenance only if it finds that the spouse seeking maintenance lacks
sufficient property, including marital property apportioned to him or her, to provide for his or her
reasonable needs and is unable to support himself or herself through appropriate employment or
is the custodian of a child whose condition or circumstances make it inappropriate for the spouse
to be required to seek employment outside the home.
(e) The maintenance guidelines set forth in paragraph (b) of this subsection (3) do not
create a presumptive amount or term of maintenance. The court has discretion to determine the
award of maintenance that is fair and equitable to both parties based upon the totality of the
circumstances. The court shall make specific written or oral findings in support of the amount
and term of maintenance awarded pursuant to this section or an order denying maintenance.
(f) The court may award additional marital property to the recipient spouse or otherwise
adjust the distribution of marital property or debt to alleviate the need for maintenance or to
reduce the amount or term of maintenance awarded.
(g) The court may reserve jurisdiction to establish, review, or modify an award of
maintenance at a later date pursuant to the provisions of this section by setting forth:
(I) The reasons for reserving jurisdiction;
(II) The ascertainable future event that forms the basis for reserving jurisdiction; and
(III) A reasonably specific time within which maintenance may be considered pursuant
to this section.
(h) The court may award maintenance in short-term marriages, including marriages of
less than three years in duration, when, given the circumstances of the parties, the distribution of
marital property is insufficient to achieve an equitable result. In determining the award of
maintenance, the court may consider the maintenance guidelines and the relevant factors
affecting the amount and term of maintenance set forth in this subsection (3). The court shall
make written or oral findings pursuant to paragraph (e) of this subsection (3).
(i) Nothing in this section prohibits an award of maintenance in gross.
(3.5) Combined annual adjusted gross income in excess of advisory guideline
amount. If the parties' combined annual adjusted gross income exceeds two hundred forty
thousand dollars, the calculation methodology described in subsection (3)(b)(I) of this section for
determining the advisory guideline amount of maintenance does not apply, and the court shall
instead consider the factors set forth in subsection (3)(c) of this section in determining the
amount of maintenance. The court may consider the advisory guideline term of maintenance set
forth in subsection (3)(b)(II) of this section.
(4) Temporary maintenance. (a) (I) In every proceeding for dissolution of marriage,
legal separation, or declaration of invalidity where temporary maintenance is requested by a
party, the court may award a monthly amount of temporary maintenance pursuant to the
provisions of subsection (3) of this section that are relevant to a determination of temporary
maintenance.
(II) The guideline term of maintenance set forth in subparagraph (II) of paragraph (b) of
subsection (3) of this section does not apply to temporary maintenance orders. The court shall
determine the term for payment of temporary maintenance.
(III) In addition to the relevant factors set forth in paragraph (c) of subsection (3) of this
section, the court shall consider any additional factors specific to the determination of temporary
maintenance, including the payment of family expenses and debts.
(b) After determining the amount of temporary maintenance pursuant to this subsection
(4) and the amount of temporary child support pursuant to section 14-10-115, the court shall
consider the respective financial resources of each party and determine the temporary payment
of marital debt and the temporary allocation of marital property.
(c) A determination of temporary maintenance does not prejudice the rights of either
party at permanent orders.
(5) Modification or termination of maintenance. (a) Except upon written agreement
of the parties, an award of maintenance entered pursuant to this section may be modified or
terminated pursuant to the provisions of section 14-10-122. The court may consider the guideline
amount and term of maintenance and the statutory factors set forth in subsection (3) of this
section only in a modification or termination proceeding concerning a maintenance award
entered on or after January 1, 2014.
(b) The enactment of this section does not constitute a substantial and continuing change
of circumstance for purposes of modifying maintenance orders entered before January 1, 2014.
(c) The enactment of the December 2017 "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act", Pub.L. 115-97,
federal tax legislation, does not constitute a substantial and continuing change of circumstance
for purposes of modifying maintenance orders entered prior to the effective date of that law.
(6) Security for the payment of maintenance. (a) The court may require the payor
spouse to provide reasonable security for the payment of maintenance in the event of the payor
spouse's death prior to the end of the maintenance term.
(b) Reasonable security may include, but need not be limited to, maintenance of life
insurance for the benefit of the recipient spouse. In entering an order to maintain life insurance,
the court shall consider:
(I) The age and insurability of the payor spouse;
(II) The cost of the life insurance;
(III) The amount and term of the maintenance;
(IV) Whether the parties carried life insurance during the marriage;
(V) Prevailing interest rates at the time of the order; and
(VI) Other obligations of the payor spouse.
(c) Orders to maintain security may be modified or terminated pursuant to section 14-10-
122.
(7) Maintenance agreements - waiver - unrepresented parties. (a) Either or both of
the parties may agree in writing or orally in court to waive maintenance consistent with the
provisions of section 14-10-112. The parties may also agree to waive maintenance in a
premarital agreement or marital agreement consistent with the provisions of the "Uniform
Premarital and Marital Agreements Act", created in part 3 of article 2 of this title. The
enforceability of maintenance provisions in a premarital agreement or marital agreement is
determined pursuant to the provisions of section 14-2-309.
(b) In any proceeding that falls within the maintenance guidelines set forth in subsection
(3) of this section, at the time of either temporary orders or permanent orders, if either party is
not represented by an attorney or a licensed legal paraprofessional, the court shall not approve an
agreement waiving maintenance or agreeing to an amount or term of maintenance that does not
follow the maintenance guidelines unless the unrepresented party has indicated that the party is
aware of the maintenance guidelines pursuant to this section.
(8) Definitions. As used in this section, unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) (I) "Adjusted gross income" means gross income as defined in subsection (8)(c) of
this section, less preexisting court-ordered child support obligations actually paid by a party,
preexisting court-ordered alimony or maintenance obligations actually paid by a party, as
adjusted, if applicable, pursuant to subsection (8)(a)(III) of this section, and the adjustment to a
party's income as determined pursuant to section 14-10-115 (6)(b) for any children who are not
children of the marriage for whom the party has a legal responsibility to support.
(II) For purposes of this subsection (8)(a), "income" means the actual gross income of a
party, if employed to full capacity, or potential income, if unemployed or underemployed.
(III) (A) For purposes of this subsection (8)(a), if the preexisting court-ordered alimony
or maintenance obligations actually paid by a party are deductible for federal income tax
purposes by that party, then the full amount of alimony or maintenance actually paid must be
deducted from that party's gross income.
(B) If the preexisting court-ordered alimony or maintenance obligations actually paid by
a party are not deductible for federal income tax purposes by that party, then the amount of
preexisting court-ordered alimony or maintenance that is deducted from that party's gross
income is the amount actually paid by that party multiplied by 1.25.
(b) "Duration of marriage" means the number of whole months, beginning from the first
day of the month following the date of the parties' marriage until the date of decree or the date of
the hearing on disposition of property if such hearing precedes the date of the decree.
(c) (I) "Gross income" means income from any source and includes, but is not limited to:
(A) Income from salaries;
(B) Wages, including tips declared by the individual for purposes of reporting to the
federal internal revenue service or tips imputed to bring the employee's gross earnings to the
minimum wage for the number of hours worked, whichever is greater;
(C) Commissions;
(D) Payments received as an independent contractor for labor or services, which
payments must be considered income from self-employment;
(E) Bonuses;
(F) Dividends;
(G) Severance pay;
(H) Pension payments and retirement benefits actually received that have not previously
been divided as property in this action, including but not limited to those paid pursuant to articles
51, 54, 54.5, and 54.6 of title 24, C.R.S., and article 30 of title 31, C.R.S.;
(I) Royalties;
(J) Rents;
(K) Interest;
(L) Trust income and distributions;
(M) Annuity payments;
(N) Capital gains;
(O) Any moneys drawn by a self-employed individual for personal use that are deducted
as a business expense, which moneys must be considered income from self-employment;
(P) Social security benefits, including social security benefits actually received by a
party as a result of the disability of that party;
(Q) Workers' compensation benefits;
(R) Unemployment insurance benefits;
(S) Disability insurance benefits;
(T) Funds held in or payable from any health, accident, disability, or casualty insurance
to the extent that such insurance replaces wages or provides income in lieu of wages;
(U) Monetary gifts;
(V) Monetary prizes, excluding lottery winnings not required by the rules of the
Colorado lottery commission to be paid only at the lottery office;
(W) Income from general partnerships, limited partnerships, closely held corporations,
or limited liability companies; except that, if a party is a passive investor, has a minority interest
in the company, and does not have any managerial duties or input, then the income to be
recognized may be limited to actual cash distributions received;
(X) Expense reimbursements or in-kind payments received by a party in the course of
employment, self-employment, or operation of a business if they are significant and reduce
personal living expenses;
(Y) Alimony or maintenance received pursuant to a preexisting court order with a payor
who is not a party to the action, as adjusted, if applicable, pursuant to subsection (8)(c)(VI) of
this section; and
(Z) Overtime pay, only if the overtime is required by the employer as a condition of
employment.
(II) "Gross income" does not include:
(A) Child support payments received;
(B) Benefits received from means-tested public assistance programs, including but not
limited to assistance provided under the Colorado works program, as described in part 7 of
article 2 of title 26, C.R.S., supplemental security income, food stamps, and general assistance;
(C) Income from additional jobs that result in the employment of the obligor more than
forty hours per week or more than what would otherwise be considered to be full-time
employment;
(D) Social security benefits received by a parent on behalf of a minor child as a result of
the death or disability of a parent or stepparent; and
(E) Earnings or gains on retirement accounts, including individual retirement accounts;
except that such earnings or gains shall not be included as income unless a party takes a
distribution from the account. If a party may take a distribution from the account without being
subject to a federal tax penalty for early distribution and the party chooses not to take a
distribution, the court may consider the distribution that could have been taken in determining
the party's gross income.
(III) (A) For income from self-employment, rent, royalties, proprietorship of a business,
or joint ownership of a partnership or closely held corporation, "gross income" equals gross
receipts minus ordinary and necessary expenses, as defined in sub-subparagraph (B) of this
subparagraph (III), required to produce such income.
(B) "Ordinary and necessary expenses", as used in sub-subparagraph (A) of this
subparagraph (III), does not include amounts allowable by the internal revenue service for the
accelerated component of depreciation expenses or investment tax credits or any other business
expenses determined by the court to be inappropriate for determining gross income for purposes
of calculating maintenance.
(IV) If a party is voluntarily unemployed or underemployed, maintenance shall be
calculated based on a determination of potential income; except that a determination of potential
income shall not be made for a party who is physically or mentally incapacitated or is caring for
a child under the age of thirty months for whom the parties owe a joint legal responsibility or for
an incarcerated parent sentenced to one year or more.
(V) For the purposes of this section, a party shall not be deemed "underemployed" if:
(A) The employment is temporary and is reasonably intended to result in higher income
within the foreseeable future; or
(B) The employment is a good faith career choice; or
(C) The party is enrolled in an educational program that is reasonably intended to result
in a degree or certification within a reasonable period of time and that will result in a higher
income, so long as the educational program is a good faith career choice.
(VI) For purposes of subsection (8)(c)(I)(Y) of this section, if alimony or maintenance
received by a party pursuant to a preexisting court order is taxable income to that party for
federal income tax purposes, then the actual amount of alimony or maintenance received is
included in that party's gross income. If the alimony or maintenance received by a party pursuant
to a preexisting court order is not taxable income to that party for federal income tax purposes,
then the amount of alimony or maintenance that is included in that party's gross income is the
amount of alimony or maintenance received multiplied by 1.25.
(9) Application. The provisions of this section apply only to actions in which a petition
for dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or declaration of invalidity, or an action for the
initial establishment of maintenance is filed on or after January 1, 2014. Actions filed before
January 1, 2014, are determined pursuant to the provisions of this section as it existed at the time
of the filing of the action.

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