T.R. VS. B.M.,JR. (FV-02-1144-19, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2020 )


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  •                                       RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5272-18T1
    T.R.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    B.M., Jr.,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ______________________________
    Submitted April 1, 2020 – Decided May 1, 2020
    Before Judges Whipple and Mawla.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen County,
    Docket No. FV-02-1144-19.
    Muller & Muller, attorneys for appellant (Lynn S.
    Muller and Steven T. Muller, on the briefs).
    Jeffrey Marc Bloom, attorney for respondent.
    PER CURIAM
    Plaintiff T.R. appeals from a June 24, 2019 order amending a Final
    Restraining Order (FRO) entered against defendant B.M., Jr., adjudicating
    issues of property division and the parties' obligation to pay college expenses .
    We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part for further proceedings.
    The parties began a relationship in 1995. Two children were born of the
    relationship, a son who is emancipated and a daughter who, at the time of the
    amended FRO, completed her sophomore year in college. In 1998, the parties
    purchased a Bergenfield residence titled and later encumbered by a mortgage
    in both names.
    The parties' relationship worsened, which led to domestic violence and
    entry of an FRO in January 2019. In pertinent part, the FRO stated: "By
    consent, defendant is permitted to remain in the residence until the house is
    sold. The house shall be listed for sale immediately." The residence was not
    listed for sale. In April 2019, plaintiff filed a complaint under the domestic
    violence docket, which the trial court treated as a motion, seeking partition of
    the residence and contribution to the daughter's college expenses. Defendant
    filed a cross-motion seeking financial relief unrelated to this appeal and
    attached a Case Information Statement (CIS) to his pleadings.
    The parties disputed who contributed to the residential expenses,
    including its purchase.    Plaintiff insisted she funded the purchase of the
    residence and its carrying expenses during the parties' relationship and even
    after she fled the residence because of domestic violence. Plaintiff also sought
    A-5272-18T1
    2
    a contribution from defendant to the daughter's college expenses, asserting she
    paid the expenses. Defendant argued the parties shared the expenses for the
    residence and the daughter, and the remaining equity in the residence should
    first be used to pay their daughter's college expenses for her junior and senior
    years, so she could graduate without debt, and thereafter shared equally by the
    parties.
    The motion judge first heard the matter in May 2019. After the first
    appearance, the judge entered an amended FRO memorializing the parties'
    agreement to sell the residence with an agreed-upon broker. The judge ordered
    the parties to return on a separate date to address the relief sought in
    defendant's cross-motion and to "determine whether or not an attorney in fact
    shall be appointed and if the sale proceeds shall be held in escrow." The judge
    also ordered "both parties shall submit documentation regarding the purchase
    of the Bergenfield property and payment of [the] mortgage and home equity
    loan utilize[d] to pay college tuition as well as proof of payment for college
    tuition that came from the home equity loan."
    The parties returned to court in June 2019 and engaged in lengthy oral
    argument.   The judge took limited testimony related only to the cost and
    payment of the daughter's off-campus housing. The judge entered an amended
    FRO and in pertinent part ordered:
    A-5272-18T1
    3
    Defendant shall pay [$2875.50] to [plaintiff] for
    reimbursement of fall 2017 tuition fees and costs
    without prejudice and subject to credits being proven
    by defendant. Effective July 1, 2019[,] both parties to
    share . . . campus costs for tuition, books, etc. [fifty-
    fifty] after scholarship, loans, grants, work study and
    any other form of [financial] aid obtained by [the
    parties' daughter] in consideration of the [Newburgh v.
    Arrigo1] factors. Effective [July] 1, 2019[,] both
    parties to give $500.00 to [the daughter] for off
    campus housing and support. Parties to exchange
    documentation       within    [twenty-one]    days     to
    [determine] appropriate credit for funds spent on
    college expenses between fall 2017 and spring 2019.
    In the amended FRO the judge also appointed an attorney in fact to
    handle the sale of the former marital home. [The
    attorney-in-fact] shall be paid reasonable attorney's
    fees out of the sale proceeds at the time of closing. . . .
    [The] net proceeds [shall] be held in escrow pending a
    full accounting of home equity loan [disbursements].
    Both parties to provide a full accounting within
    [thirty] days of this order of the funds spent from the
    home equity line which shall be considered at the time
    the net proceeds are to be distributed. Net proceeds to
    be shared equally.
    "The general rule is that findings by the trial court are binding on appeal
    when supported by adequate, substantial, credible evidence."               Cesare v.
    Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 411-12 (1998); see also T.M.S. v. W.C.P., 450 N.J.
    Super. 499, 502 (App. Div. 2017).
    1
    
    88 N.J. 529
    (1982).
    A-5272-18T1
    4
    "On the other hand, where our review addresses
    questions of law, 'a trial judge's findings are not
    entitled to the same degree of deference if they are
    based upon a misunderstanding of the applicable legal
    principles.'" N.T.B. v. D.D.B., 
    442 N.J. Super. 205
    ,
    215 (App. Div. 2015) (quoting N.J. Div. of Youth &
    Family Servs. v. Z.P.R., 
    351 N.J. Super. 427
    , 434
    (App. Div. 2002)). The appropriate standard of
    review for conclusions of law is de novo. S.D. v.
    M.J.R., 
    415 N.J. Super. 417
    , 430 (App. Div. 2010)
    (citing Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of
    Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995)).
    
    [T.M.S., 450 N.J. Super. at 502
    .]
    On appeal, plaintiff argues the motion judge misinterpreted the case as
    one involving equitable distribution and erred as a matter of the law when she
    found the parties were joint owners. Plaintiff points out the order described
    the property as "the former marital home" yet the parties were unmarried. She
    argues the judge erred by permitting hearsay evidence related to the daughter's
    housing expenses, not requiring defendant to submit a CIS, and adjudicating
    college expenses using only defendant's paystubs. Plaintiff asserts the judge
    should have ordered discovery. She contends the judge gave no reasons for
    appointing the attorney-in-fact. She argues the judge erred by not holding a
    plenary hearing to address college expenses and division of the real estate.
    We disagree with plaintiff's assertion the judge misunderstood this case
    to involve equitable distribution.     Although the deed to the Bergenfield
    property incorrectly stated the parties held title as a married couple, the record
    A-5272-18T1
    5
    readily demonstrates the judge was not under the misimpression the parties
    were married. The judge clearly understood the parties possessed the property
    jointly.
    In Mitchell v. Oksienik, we addressed a property division dispute
    between an unmarried couple incident to a domestic violence proceeding. 
    380 N.J. Super. 119
    , 123 (App. Div. 2005). There, following a post-FRO plenary
    hearing, defendant appealed from the trial judge's decision to equally divide
    the net sales proceeds of a residence titled in defendant's name, which the
    parties occupied during their lengthy relationship.
    Id. at 123-126.
    Specifically, defendant argued
    the trial court erred in utilizing the statutory equitable
    distribution rationale in distributing property of a non-
    married couple[, . . .] and exceeded its jurisdiction in
    ordering the sale of the property and awarding
    [plaintiff] a one-half interest therein under the
    [Prevention of Domestic Violence Act,] which is the
    basis for the jurisdiction [that] exists in this action.
    [Id. at 126-27 (third alteration in original) (internal
    quotations omitted).]
    We affirmed and held "[a]s joint venturers, the parties are entitled to
    seek a partition [including sale] of their property when their joint enterprise
    comes to an end . . . ."
    Id. at 127.
    We stated: "To deny co-habiting but
    unmarried persons the legal and equitable remedies generally available would
    be unfair and unwise."
    Id. at 128.
    A-5272-18T1
    6
    Importantly and relevant to the issues raised on this appeal we stated:
    Our review of the trial court's oral opinion
    discloses that the court did not apply equitable
    distribution principles to the case at bar. Rather, the
    court made factual findings and, within its general
    equity powers, determined, based upon the facts
    establishing a joint enterprise, that the parties had
    equal interests in the real property.
    . . . At the plenary hearing, in the light of his factual
    findings that a joint enterprise existed, [the trial court]
    concluded that plaintiff was "entitled equitably to an
    equal share of the value of this house[.]" It is beyond
    question that the trial court determined the real
    property to be an asset of the joint enterprise it had
    found to exist.
    Based upon the evidence proffered, and
    explicitly in the context of showings that had not been
    made, the court also found that both parties had made
    equal contributions to the purchase and maintenance
    of the real property. . . .
    [Id. at 129.]
    Here, there is no credible dispute regarding title or the existence of a
    partnership. The residence was held in joint names, the parties were involved
    in a long-term relationship, raised two children to adulthood, and funded their
    educations, utilizing in part the equity in their residence. In this regard, in
    recognition of the parties' partnership, the judge's decision was not erroneous.
    However, what is lacking is a record on which we can discern whether an
    equal division of residence was appropriate.         For these reasons, we are
    A-5272-18T1
    7
    constrained to reverse and remand the finding regarding the equal division of
    the residence for a plenary hearing and further findings by the motion judge.
    Regarding the college expenses, the judge's findings addressed the
    Newburgh factors.     However, the findings related to the third Newburgh
    factor, pertaining to the amount of the contribution sought, offer no
    explanation for her conclusion why the evidence did not support plaintiff's
    claim that she paid for all the daughter's college expenses to date, requiring
    defendant to reimburse plaintiff only for the fall 2017 tuition. Plaintiff filed a
    certification addressing the Newburgh factors, and her certification noted there
    were records attached, yet the judge concluded plaintiff offered no proof of the
    expenses and did not explain what was lacking. Regardless, we glean from the
    record and the resultant order that the judge intended the parties share in the
    entirety of the daughter's college expenses equally.
    We agree with the motion judge the preponderance of the Newburgh
    factors favor an equal contribution to the expenses after application of the
    daughter's work-study income, grants, scholarships, and financial aid. The
    judge's order regarding the payment for the off-campus housing also does not
    constitute an abuse of discretion. Because the judge's order contemplate d the
    parties exchange documentation related to their respective credits for the
    payment of college, we suggest such an accounting occur after sale of the
    A-5272-18T1
    8
    residence. If the parties are unable to resolve the issue of credits for all four
    years of the daughter's college, this issue should be joined for trial with the
    dispute regarding the division of the residence.
    Because we remand the matter for reconsideration, we do not reach
    plaintiff's argument the judge erred by deciding the matter without permitting
    discovery.   Defendant notes plaintiff was afforded ample opportunity to
    formally seek discovery and controlled the evidence related to the credits she
    sought in order to achieve an unequal division of the equity in the residence.
    Notwithstanding, because of the remand, the judge will have the discretion to
    determine the extent and nature of the discovery necessary.        See Major v.
    Maguire, 
    224 N.J. 1
    , 24 (2016) (holding "[w]hether the case is designated as
    complex or handled as a summary action, Family Part judges have broad
    discretion to permit, deny, or limit discovery in accordance with the
    circumstances of the individual case.").
    The record amply supports the judge's decision to appoint an attorney in
    fact to sell the residence and handle the net proceeds. For reasons unknown,
    the parties failed to comply with their own agreement to sell the residence after
    the court ordered it in the initial FRO. Moreover, even with able counsel, we
    can readily understand how the existence of an FRO, and defendant's
    occupancy of the residence, complicated a transaction that can require much
    A-5272-18T1
    9
    interaction between the parties. The judge had the inherent ability to enforce
    her own orders. Joseph Harris & Sons, Inc. v. Van Loan, 
    23 N.J. 466
    , 469
    (1957). She did not abuse her discretion by enforcing her order and appointing
    an attorney in fact to facilitate the sale of the residence.
    Finally, to the extent we have not addressed plaintiff's other arguments it
    is because they lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion.
    R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed in part, and reversed and remanded in part. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
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    10