During the marriage, for almost twenty years, she only ever worked part-time, based out of New Jersey. We appealed on our client’s behalf, arguing that the trial court erred in doubling her historic income, ruling that she should relocate, finding without proof that her mother could care for her children, and imputing income without making the required findings. In finding that the maternal grandmother “is capable of caring for the children in the Former Wife’s absence,” the magistrate expressly reasoned that the Former Wife had provided “no reason why she cannot leave her children with her mother” and gave “no indication that her mother is not able to care for the children while the Former Wife worked. But the mere
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