Linda Mavilla v. Ralph Mavilla ( 2011 )


Menu:
  • Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
    ENTRY ORDER
    SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2011-095
    AUGUST TERM, 2011
    Linda Mavilla                                         }    APPEALED FROM:
    }
    v.                                                 }    Superior Court, Bennington Unit,
    }    Family Division
    }
    Ralph Mavilla                                         }    DOCKET NO. 239-9-09 Bndm
    Trial Judge: Karen R. Carroll
    In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
    Husband appeals from the family court’s final divorce order. He challenges the court’s property
    division and maintenance award. We affirm.
    Husband and wife were married in August 1970 and they separated in August 2008. Husband
    was sixty-one years old at the time of the final divorce hearing; wife was sixty. They have an adult son.
    Following the hearing, the court distributed the parties’ assets and awarded wife permanent
    maintenance. Husband appeals from this order. We discuss the court’s findings in detail below.
    Husband first challenges the court’s assessment of his monthly expenses, asserting that the court
    failed to provide a clear statement of what it decided and why. He also argues that several of the court’s
    findings are erroneous.
    The family court has broad discretion in dividing marital property, and we will uphold its
    decision unless its discretion was abused, withheld, or exercised on clearly untenable grounds. Chilkott
    v. Chilkott, 
    158 Vt. 193
    , 198 (1992). We recognize that the distribution of property is not an exact
    science, and, therefore, all that is required is that the distribution be equitable. Lalumiere v. Lalumiere,
    
    149 Vt. 469
    , 471 (1988). Nonetheless, the court must also “provide a clear statement as to what was
    decided and why.” Cabot v. Cabot, 
    166 Vt. 485
    , 500 (1997).
    We find no basis to disturb the court’s property division here. Certainly, the record is confusing
    as to husband’s claimed expenses. Two financial affidavits were entered into evidence for husband: one
    dated October 13, 2009 and another dated September 30, 2010. On the 2009 form, husband claimed
    expenses of $8468.52; on the 2010 form, he claimed expenses of $6505.83. Husband also testified at
    trial to revisions of various expenses, such as money spent on gifts, eating out, and hair care. Wife’s
    attorney referred to both financial affidavits at trial, and wife concedes that the trial court appears to
    have used figures from both financial affidavit forms in calculating husband’s expenses.
    Not only were there inconsistent forms in evidence, but the claimed expenses on husband’s 2010
    form appear to contain mathematical errors and other omissions. When one adds husband’s claimed
    monthly loan payments, for example, they total $1362.40 rather than the $1690.42 he indicated on his
    financial affidavit. This loan figure is also inaccurate, as the trial court found, because husband included
    $311.98 for a personal loan that he was no longer paying, and he double-counted his mortgage and car
    payments.
    The trial court determined that husband’s monthly expenses were $4778.85. In reaching its
    conclusion, the court found some of husband’s claimed expenses unreasonable and deducted or reduced
    them accordingly. The court mistakenly combined some elements of the 2009 form and the 2010 form.
    It found that husband had listed $414 as an expense for contribution to retirement in two places in his
    financial affidavit. The $414 payment is listed twice on the 2009 affidavit, but it is not included in
    husband’s 2010 financial affidavit. Thus, the court should not have subtracted $414 from the total value
    of husband’s claimed expenses on the 2010 form. The court also referred to husband’s claimed monthly
    loan payments of $1527.17, which was a number used on the 2009 affidavit. (The 2010 form claimed
    $1690.42 in monthly loan payments, which, when added correctly, should have been $1362.40). The
    court found that the claimed monthly loan payment included husband’s mortgage payment, vehicle
    payment, and a 401(k) loan payment of $311, values that had already been included on other lines of the
    financial affidavit form. The court stated that the correct amount for husband’s monthly loan payments,
    not including these payments, was $876. It is difficult to discern how the court arrived at this figure, but
    it is evident that husband double-counted his car and mortgage payments and included the same $311
    payment on both the 2009 and 2010 financial affidavit.
    We find these errors harmless because, using husband’s claimed expenses as a guide, we arrive
    at a similar figure for husband’s monthly expenses. Husband claimed $6505.83 in expenses on his 2010
    financial affidavit, $328.02 of which reflects a mathematical error in calculating his monthly loan
    obligation. As the trial court found, husband claimed his mortgage payment and car payment twice and
    claimed $311.98 for a loan that he was no longer paying. This reduces the value of his claimed
    expenses to $4815.41. Husband appears to have omitted his monthly credit card obligations of $640
    from the total expense figure on his 2010 form. These expenses are offset, however, by the $650 in
    deductions made by the trial court for expenses that it found unreasonable. The resulting value—
    $4805.41—is almost identical to that found by the trial court.
    We reject husband’s assertion that the court did not make it sufficiently clear whether it was
    deducting all or part of his expenses for alcohol and tobacco, charitable contributions, and meals eaten
    out. The court specifically stated that it deducted the items that were discussed in its findings which
    husband was not paying or which were stated incorrectly. This includes a reduction in the amount spent
    on gifts for family and friends and on hair care. The court explained that if it also deducted charitable
    gifts, which was not a required expense, and reduced husband’s expenses for eating out to a reasonable
    level, his monthly expenses would be $4553.85. The court was not obligated to determine husband’s
    expenses with mathematical precision, and any slight variation as to the exact amount is harmless.
    We also reject husband’s argument that the property distribution is contrary to the evidence.
    Husband relies on his own evidence as support for this assertion. He argues, for example, that the court
    should have adopted his claimed expense of $250 in monthly maintenance for the upkeep of the marital
    home. The court concluded otherwise, and it acted within its discretion in doing so. See Kanaan v.
    Kanaan, 
    163 Vt. 402
    , 405 (1995) (trial court’s findings entitled to wide deference on review because it is
    in unique position to assess the credibility of witnesses and weigh the evidence presented). As the court
    explained, the parties refinanced their home in 2001 and received $90,000. Part of this money was used
    to repair the roof of the marital home and $50,000 was used for a kitchen renovation. Husband
    refinanced the home again in 2008, after wife moved out, and received $87,400. He used a large portion
    of this money on himself and his expenses. Shortly before the 2008 refinance, husband also took out a
    2
    loan from his 401(k) account, spending $13,800 on home improvements. Given all of these
    expenditures, the court reasonably concluded that husband was not currently paying $250 per month in
    maintenance.
    We similarly reject husband’s assertion that the court erred in finding that the “respective merits
    of the parties” favored wife. Husband asserts that he did not physically abuse wife as the trial court
    found, although he acknowledges wife’s testimony to the contrary. He complains that the court found
    that he let an insurance policy “lapse,” rather than stating that husband chose not to continue paying for
    it. He also maintains that by controlling the parties’ finances and providing wife with $25 a month in
    spending money, he was trying to help wife rather than control her. All of these arguments go to the
    court’s assessment of the weight of the evidence, a matter reserved exclusively for the trial court. 
    Id.
    Finally, the record amply supports the court’s finding that husband acted as if the marital assets were his
    own, as discussed in greater detail below. None of husband’s arguments demonstrate that the court
    abused its discretion in dividing the marital estate or that its award is inequitable.
    We turn next to the court’s maintenance award. According to husband, the court failed to
    explain how it determined that his monthly income was $5364. He also asserts that the court’s decision
    rests on unrealistic assumptions, such as wife obtaining a driver’s license in the future and purchasing a
    home. Finally, husband argues that wife’s standard of living with the maintenance award is higher than
    the parties enjoyed during the marriage.
    The trial court may award maintenance, either rehabilitative or permanent, to a spouse when it
    finds that the spouse lacks sufficient income and/or property to “provide for his or her reasonable needs”
    and the spouse is unable to support herself “through appropriate employment at the standard of living
    established during the . . . marriage.” 15 V.S.A. § 752(a); Chaker v. Chaker, 
    155 Vt. 20
    , 24-25 (1990).
    The maintenance must be in the amount and for the duration the court deems just, based on the
    consideration of seven nonexclusive factors. See 15 V.S.A. § 752(b). Once the family court finds
    grounds for awarding maintenance, it has broad discretion in determining the duration and amount.
    Chaker, 155 Vt. at 25. A maintenance award will be set aside only if there is no reasonable basis to
    support it. Id.
    The court found as follows. Husband had been employed by Verizon since 1969. He earned
    $65,612 in 2008 and $88,454 in 2009. At the beginning of 2010, husband was earning $6274 per
    month. He retired in June 2010 after being offered a beneficial early-retirement package. Upon his
    retirement, husband began receiving $1424 per month for four years, which will be reduced to $550 per
    month for one year thereafter. Husband also received $3400 per month from an annuity and $540 in
    veteran’s benefits. The sum of this monthly income is $5364, the figure used by the trial court.
    The court also found that husband received a lump sum payment of $41,770.67 in July 2010 as
    part of his early retirement package. He used approximately $18,000 of this money for himself until the
    court ordered that he place the remaining funds into an escrow account. Husband received a lump sum
    of $2349 from his military pension that he similarly did not share with wife. Husband also took a
    distribution of $19,000 from his 401(k) plan after the court’s interim order had issued and without wife’s
    permission. The court found that husband took over the parties’ finances about five years before the
    parties separated. Wife’s income during the marriage went into a joint account. During the marriage,
    husband would give wife $25 per paycheck for spending money. Husband had given wife no money
    since the separation.
    3
    Turning to wife’s circumstances, the court found that she was sixty years old and had completed
    school through the fifth grade. Wife stayed home with the parties’ son until he was seven years old.
    Wife was the primary caregiver for the parties’ son and she cooked and cleaned for the family. She later
    obtained a licensed nursing assistant (LNA) certificate and began working full-time, with the exception
    of one year of part-time work. Wife earned $31,270 in 2005; $30,072 in 2006; $29,114 in 2008; and
    $40,636 in 2009. The increased salary in 2009 was due to overtime shifts, which are no longer available
    to wife. Wife’s current monthly income was $3333. Wife claimed monthly expenses of $4282.69,
    which the court reduced by approximately $900.
    During most of the marriage, wife had no driver’s license and relied on friends for transportation.
    After the parties separated, wife obtained her learner’s permit and purchased a car. She was later
    involved in an accident. She had not repaired the vehicle at the time of the final hearing, nor had she
    obtained her driver’s license. Wife was required to take a driver’s education class, and she anticipated
    that she would need many more classes before taking the driving test. Since the parties separated, wife
    had been living in a run-down one-bedroom apartment. The marital property, in contrast, had three
    bedrooms, one and a half baths, and an above-ground pool. Wife’s current rent was $675 per month,
    and she sought to move into a bigger apartment, which would cost approximately $1000 per month. She
    also desired to purchase a home at some point, but she had no money for a down payment. Wife also
    needed to purchase health and dental insurance.
    Based on these and numerous other findings, the court awarded permanent maintenance to wife.
    The court recognized that this was a long-term marriage, and wife had acted as a homemaker and stay-
    at-home mother for seven years. She cared for husband and for the home, continuing to cook and clean
    after returning to full-time work. It noted that husband had also worked hard and earned a good income
    during the marriage. As the court explained, an important factor in its decision was husband’s use of the
    parties’ assets as his own, both before and after the parties’ separation. Husband spent exorbitant sums
    that he did not have. The parties refinanced the marital home twice and filed for bankruptcy once.
    Nonetheless, husband continued to use credit cards and to incur further debts. Husband also put wife in
    a position of hardship following the separation when he denied wife access to their joint bank accounts
    and continued to use this money for himself. In addition to depleting the marital assets, the court found
    evidence that husband was physically abusive to wife. Although wife admitted that she also drank to
    excess on occasion, the court found that husband was controlling and he limited wife’s access to money.
    His attitude appeared to be that since wife moved out of the marital home, she no longer had any claim
    to the parties’ assets. The court found that husband failed to understand that wife was an equal when it
    came to the use and division of marital property.
    As reflected above, wife’s monthly income was $3333 and her expenses were $3157.67,
    resulting in a difference of $175.33. The court found that while wife’s income was currently adequate to
    make ends meet, it was far from adequate given wife’s need to purchase a vehicle. It also failed to
    account for the fact that wife was living in a small, one-bedroom apartment with limited furnishings.
    The court found that wife reasonably desired to find a larger place to live, buy a car, and be able to save
    for a down payment on a house. While wife would be receiving a property settlement, she had no
    savings or retirement benefits, unlike husband, and she might reasonably choose to use the property
    settlement toward that end. During the marriage, the parties owned a home and ate out often. They
    managed their finances very poorly, which resulted in numerous refinances, loans, and a bankruptcy to
    address their debt. Nonetheless, the court found that the parties’ standard of living during the marriage
    was superior to that which wife was now experiencing.
    4
    Husband’s monthly income was $5364, which would be reduced to $4490 after four years.
    Husband would begin receiving social security benefits in 2011, however, of $1589 per month.
    Currently, husband’s income exceeded his expenses by $810.15 per month, and would exceed his
    expenses by $2399 per month when his social security payments began in July 2011. After four years,
    husband’s income would be $6079 for one year, following which his income would be reduced by $550
    per month. Additionally, husband had had the benefit of all of the parties’ financial assets since the
    separation. He used funds without wife’s knowledge or consent and in violation of the court’s interim
    order. Husband continued to live in the marital home, travel, eat out, and spend money with his credit
    cards. His standard of living was far superior to that enjoyed by wife, and it was closer to the standard
    of living established during the marriage. Finally, the court found nothing to prevent husband from
    working again and securing additional income.
    Given these factors, the court concluded that without spousal maintenance, wife would be unable
    to meet her prospective and reasonable needs and that wife’s standard of living was far below that
    established during the marriage and that which husband currently enjoyed. It thus ordered husband to
    pay $1000 per month to wife beginning on March 1, 2011; $1200 per month between August 1, 2011
    and May 31, 2014; and $1000 per month thereafter.
    This award is amply supported by the court’s findings. We reject husband’s assertion that the
    court relied on “unrealistic” assumptions about wife obtaining a car and saving for a down payment on a
    house. The court found these goals reasonable, and it is for the trial court to assess the credibility of
    witnesses and weigh the evidence. As to the standard of living, the court recognized that the parties
    managed their finances poorly during the marriage. Nonetheless, it found that husband continued to
    enjoy a much better standard of living than wife, one that was closer to what the parties enjoyed during
    the marriage. The court reasonably concluded that its award would allow wife to enjoy a similar
    standard of living. We find no grounds to disturb the court’s maintenance award here.
    Affirmed.
    BY THE COURT:
    _______________________________________
    John A. Dooley, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Denise R. Johnson, Associate Justice
    _______________________________________
    Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2011-095

Filed Date: 8/31/2011

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021