John M. v. Stephanie M. ( 2016 )


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  •                             STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    John M.,                                                                           FILED
    Petitioner Below, Petitioner
    June 3, 2016
    RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK
    vs) No. 15-0656 (Kanawha County 00-D-1154)
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    Stephanie M.,
    Respondent Below, Respondent
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    In this post-divorce action, Petitioner John M.1 (“husband”), by counsel Stephen L.
    Gaylock, appeals the order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, entered June 4, 2015, that
    affirmed, in part, and reversed, in part, the final order of the Family Court of Kanawha County,
    entered May 20, 2015. Respondent Stephanie M. (“wife”), by counsel Richard L. Vital, filed a
    response in support of the circuit court’s order. Husband filed a reply.
    This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal
    arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided
    by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the Court finds no substantial
    question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming
    the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    The parties were married on April 25, 1981; three children were born of the marriage.
    The parties separated on May 22, 2000. Thereafter, a divorce action was filed. On February 5,
    2001, the family court entered a temporary order that awarded wife custody of the parties’
    children, child support, and temporary alimony. Husband responded with a motion to reconsider
    on the ground that his financial condition made it impossible for him to meet the obligations set
    out in the temporary order. Wife also filed various motions.
    On February 16, 2001, the family court held a hearing on all outstanding motions. By
    order entered February 22, 2001, the family court found that wife had withdrawn $58,000 from a
    line of credit that was in both parties’ names and secured by the marital home; that she had
    expended $23,000 of the $58,000; that she was to use $15,000 for “interim fees and costs” and
    $6,000 for “family and household” support for March through June of 2001; and that the
    remaining $14,000 was to be returned to the bank. The court also ordered that, on a temporary
    basis, each party was to pay half of the monthly payment on the line of credit debt. The family
    1
    Consistent with our long-standing practice in cases with sensitive facts, we use initials
    where necessary to protect the identities of those involved in this case. See In re K.H., 235
    W.Va. 254, 
    773 S.E.2d 20
    (2015); In re Jeffrey R.L., 190 W.Va. 24, 
    435 S.E.2d 162
    (1993); State
    v. Edward Charles L., 183 W.Va. 641, 
    398 S.E.2d 123
    (1990).
    1
    court based the order upon a review of the parties’ finances and the fact that wife did not work
    outside the home. This temporary order is the family court’s only pronouncement regarding the
    line of credit debt during the lengthy pendency of this case.
    In 2002, while the divorce was pending, wife and the parties’ youngest child moved to
    the State of New York, with the approval of husband and the family court. Wife bought a home
    in New York and obtained employment.
    The parties were divorced by final order entered November 24, 2003, upon a finding of
    irreconcilable differences. In accordance with the parties’ settlement agreement, the order
    provided (1) that husband agreed to pay wife permanent alimony in the amount determined by
    the family court, (2) that, in consideration of wife’s “age, income and expenses and the cost of
    living in New York, and [husband’s] age, income, and debt load,” wife’s monthly permanent
    alimony award would be $2,500 per month; (3) that wife agreed to waive any interest in the
    marital home and husband’s business; and (4) that husband assumed all outstanding marital
    indebtedness which did not include “any debts incurred by the parties subsequent to the date of
    their separation.” The order also provided that “[a]ny and all debts incurred individually . . . after
    the date of separation shall be the responsibility of the person making such debt.” The final
    divorce order did not mention the line of credit debt. Neither party appealed the 2003 final
    divorce order to this Court.
    In 2005, the parties’ youngest child returned to West Virginia to live with her father. The
    family court entered an order reflecting that change on November 23, 2005. However, in 2007,
    the youngest child returned to New York to again reside with her mother. Wife thereafter filed a
    family court action in New York that apparently sought to enforce the provisions of the parties’
    final divorce order. A hearing was held in New York in May of 2007. Husband claims that (1)
    the New York action was wrongfully filed given that West Virginia retained jurisdiction over the
    child; and (2) he was required to hire counsel to appear on his behalf at that New York hearing.
    Wife later agreed to dismiss the New York action.
    Also in 2007, husband filed a petition to modify custody, a petition for declaratory relief,
    and a contempt petition against wife. In his contempt petition, husband—for the first time since
    the entry of the parties’ 2003 final divorce order—sought to have wife pay the line of credit
    debt.2 Following a May 14, 2007, hearing, the family court, by order entered June 1, 2007, ruled
    that West Virginia had exclusive jurisdiction over the case and granted wife custody of the
    youngest child. The remaining matters were disposed via an agreement between the parties
    which was memorialized in a September 24, 2007, order. That order dismissed husband’s
    contempt petition “without prejudice.” Neither the June 1, 2007, nor the September 24, 2007,
    order mentions the line of credit debt. Neither party appealed these orders.
    The next seven years passed without any activity in this case. Then, in 2014, eleven years
    after the entry of the final divorce order, husband claims he first learned that, while the divorce
    2
    Although husband’s contempt petition is not included in the record on appeal, wife
    admits husband’s claim that he sought relief regarding the line of credit debt in his contempt
    petition.
    2
    was pending (from 2000 to 2003), wife approached persons she perceived to be husband’s
    enemies and told them that husband had abused two of the parties’ children when they were
    young. Husband claims that wife also told two of the parties’ children and members of his
    church about the alleged abuse.
    In response, on May 1, 2014, husband filed a motion pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6) of the
    West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure that sought to terminate wife’s permanent alimony award
    and/or to modify it back to the date of the 2003 final divorce order. Husband also sought relief
    with regard to the line of credit debt, which he claimed was owed by wife as a post-separation
    debt and was still unpaid. Husband averred that he had paid $35,000 in interest on that debt
    between 2001 and 2014 and that wife had wrongfully converted about $20,000 which was to be
    used to pay college tuition for the two younger children. Husband asserted that, as a result, he
    had to pay the children’s college costs. Lastly, husband claimed that wife’s New York action was
    fraudulently filed; that he was forced to hire an attorney to defend against that action at a cost of
    $8,500; and that wife had not reimbursed him for those attorney’s fees.
    At the family court hearings on husband’s petition, husband’s accountant testified that
    husband’s average income from 1999 through 2001 (upon which wife’s alimony award was
    based) was 30% greater than his 2013 income and 67% greater than his expected 2014 income.
    By order entered October 24, 2014, the family court found that husband’s income had
    diminished and his business’s income was “in a decline that may not be recoverable,” while
    wife’s income had increased. Based on that finding, the family court reduced wife’s monthly
    permanent alimony award from $2,500 to $1,000 per month. However, the family court declined
    husband’s motion to terminate wife’s permanent alimony award or to modify that award back to
    the date of the 2003 final divorce order. With regard to the line of credit debt, the family court
    noted that the issue had been pending for fourteen years, that the issue was not set out in the final
    divorce order, and that husband had assumed the debt in the parties’ equitable distribution
    agreement which was set out in the final divorce order. As for the $20,000 for the younger two
    children’s college expenses, the family court denied relief and found that the “college fund” was
    established and funded by wife’s family inheritance and in her name only and that college
    expenses are not a legal obligation under West Virginia law. With regard to the New York case,
    the family court granted husband a $4,500 attorney’s fee award on the ground that husband
    incurred $8,500 in attorney’s fees and that wife admitted her filing of the New York action was
    “improper.”
    Husband appealed the family court’s order to the circuit court, which held a hearing on
    the matter on April 23, 2015. By order entered April 29, 2015, the circuit court remanded the
    case to the family court for clarification of its October 24, 2014, order.
    The family court responded with a May 20, 2015, order that included various exhibits and
    the following additional findings of fact: With regard to the line of credit debt, the family court
    found that, at the time that debt was incurred, wife was in a “significantly inferior position” to
    husband and took on the debt “out of desperation.” The family court also noted that husband was
    advised of the debt at the time; that he had paid on the indebtedness for ten or more years; that if
    he believed the line of credit debt was not part of his assumption of the marital debt, he should
    3
    have “swiftly” brought the issue before the court; and that wife gave up all interest in the marital
    home and husband’s business as consideration for husband’s assumption of all debts that
    included the line of credit debt.
    With regard to the children’s college fund, the family court found that wife used the
    funds to help purchase a home in New York for herself and her youngest child, and if husband
    was relying upon the fund, he should have so noted this fact in the 2003 final divorce order that
    memorialized the parties’ settlement agreement. The family court further found that, under West
    Virginia law, the payment of a child’s college costs is voluntary, and that no contractual
    obligation regarding college expenses was set forth in the 2003 final divorce order.
    The family court made no new findings with regard to the portion of its original order
    that required wife to pay husband $4,500 in attorney’s fees.
    By order entered June 8, 2015, the circuit court found that many of the “factual
    representations” in this case were “not factual,” but, instead, had been repeated so many times
    during the lengthy pendency of this case that new counsel and the various judges who had heard
    it assumed that those representations were “fact” without ever substantiating them with the
    record. Following extensive efforts to reconstruct a complete and accurate record from all of the
    filings found in the circuit clerk’s office, the circuit court reversed the family court order with
    regard to the decrease in wife’s alimony award and husband’s attorney’s fees award, but
    affirmed the family court order with regard to the “college fund” and the line of credit debt.
    Husband now appeals the circuit court’s order.
    We review such appeals under the following standard:
    “In reviewing a final order entered by a circuit court judge upon a review
    of, or upon a refusal to review, a final order of a family court judge, we review the
    findings of fact made by the family court judge under the clearly erroneous
    standard, and the application of law to the facts under an abuse of discretion
    standard. We review questions of law de novo.” Syl., Carr v. Hancock, 216
    W.Va. 474, 
    607 S.E.2d 803
    (2004).
    Mayle v. Mayle, 229 W.Va. 179, 181, 
    727 S.E.2d 855
    , 857 (2012).
    Husband raises four assignments of error on appeal. Husband first argues that both the
    family court and the circuit court erred in finding that he “assumed” the line of credit debt.
    Husband highlights that the 2003 final divorce order specifically states that husband would
    assume only “outstanding marital indebtedness.” (Emphasis added.) Thus, husband argues that
    because wife borrowed from the parties’ line of credit after they had separated, wife was solely
    responsible for the line of credit debt. Alternatively, husband argues that because the line of
    credit debt is mentioned only in the 2001 temporary order (that required each party to
    temporarily make half of the monthly payment on the line of credit debt), that order is still in
    effect and, therefore, wife is liable for half of that debt.
    4
    Wife counters that husband clearly assumed the line of credit debt as part of the parties’
    separation agreement, which was memorialized in the 2003 final divorce order. Wife also points
    to an April 24, 2003, letter sent to the family court by a mediator who attempted settlement
    negotiations below. In that letter, the mediator found (1) that the parties’ marital residence was
    “now solely in [husband’s] name”; (2) that husband had “assumed” the first and second
    mortgages on the marital residence creating “a zero net asset”; and (3) that husband had “rolled
    other debt into the current mortgage.” Finally, wife argues that husband assumed the line of
    credit debt given that it was part of the mortgages he voluntarily accepted in exchange for wife’s
    agreement to give up any interest in the marital home and husband’s business.
    In the order on appeal, the circuit court cites to the following findings made by the family
    court with regard to the line of credit debt. First, wife borrowed the money from the parties’ line
    of credit “out of desperation” when she was in a “significantly inferior income position.” Second,
    the line of credit debt has not been addressed in any order since the 2001 temporary family court
    order. Third, although husband raised the line of credit debt in his 2007 contempt petition, in
    2008, he consented to the entry of an agreed order which did not address that debt. Fourth, since
    the entry of the parties’ 2003 final divorce order, husband alone has made payments on the line
    of credit debt. Fifth, the line of credit debt was a “marital debt” which husband assumed when he
    received the marital home as part of the parties’ settlement agreement. Based on these findings,
    the circuit court concluded that “it was hard-pressed to find that the [f]amily [c]ourt committed
    error when it found that [husband] ‘assumed the debt.’”
    We agree with both the family court’s and the circuit court’s findings. Since 2003,
    husband has failed to raise, in any significant manner, the issue of the line of credit debt. For
    example, husband did not appeal either the 2003 final divorce order or the 2007 order that
    resolved his contempt petition against wife, nor did he request any further relief with regard to
    the line of credit until 2014, when he filed the instant action. Further, husband’s payments on the
    line of credit debt since 2003 strongly supports the family court and circuit court’s findings that
    husband assumed the line of credit debt as part of the parties’ marital debt. On this record, we
    cannot say that the circuit court clearly erred in concurring with the family court’s findings that
    husband assumed the line of credit debt.
    Husband next argues that both the family court and the circuit court erred in refusing to
    terminate wife’s permanent alimony award pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6) of the West Virginia Rules
    of Civil Procedure given that wife attempted to destroy his character and undermine his business.
    Husband claims that he never would have agreed to pay wife alimony in 2003 had he known
    about wife’s allegations of abuse. In response, wife denies that she accused husband of abuse,
    but argues that even if she had made such accusations, they would be irrelevant to the issue of
    whether an alimony award was proper in this case. Both parties admit that they agreed in 2003
    that wife should receive permanent alimony. Thereafter, the family court found that alimony was
    proper and set the amount at $2,500 per month based on the parties’ incomes and their property
    settlement agreement.
    With regard to this assignment of error, the circuit court found that husband’s claims
    regarding wife’s alleged statements have no basis or relevancy to the determination of whether
    alimony should have been awarded in this case.
    5
    We review husband’s claim under the following standard:
    “A motion to vacate a judgment made pursuant to Rule 60(b), W.Va.
    R.C.P., is addressed to the sound discretion of the court and the court’s ruling on
    such motion will not be disturbed on appeal unless there is a showing of an abuse
    of such discretion.” Syl. pt. 5, Toler v. Shelton, 157 W.Va. 778, 
    204 S.E.2d 85
           (1974).
    Syl. Pt. 1, Fernandez v. Fernandez, 218 W.Va. 340, 
    624 S.E.2d 777
    (2005).
    As the circuit court correctly found, even if wife did make the statements husband
    alleges, they are not relevant to the factors a family court must consider in awarding
    alimony/spousal support. Those factors, found in West Virginia Code § 48-6-301, regard issues
    related to the length of the marriage, the education and abilities of the parties, their income and
    other financial factors, the distribution of the marital estate, and the care and maintenance of the
    parties’ minor children. Given that allegations of abuse are not included among these factors, we
    cannot say that the circuit court abused its discretion in affirming the family court’s denial of
    husband’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion.
    Husband’s third assignment of error is that the circuit court erred in reversing the family
    court’s $1,500 per month reduction of husband’s alimony payment and reinstating the original
    award of $2,500 per month. Husband highlights that his accountant testified at the hearing about
    his finances and presented bar graphs that tracked husband’s decreasing income. Wife counters
    that husband no longer pays child support, which saves him more than $900 a month; that he is
    financially more secure than wife; that the cost of living in New York is much higher than that in
    West Virginia; and that she has reached her potential earning cap.
    In the order on appeal, the circuit court found as follows: First, husband’s bar graphs
    reveal that husband’s gross estimated business revenue for 2014 ($401,879) was significantly
    higher than husband’s average gross business revenue at the time wife’s alimony award was
    calculated in 2003 ($271,206). Second, husband’s business’s net earnings changed by less than
    $9,000 between 2003 and 2013. Third, husband’s alimony payment had not increased since
    2003, yet his average net shareholder earnings had “soared to over $372,000.” Finally, the circuit
    court found that although wife’s income had increased by about fifty-three percent since 2003
    (from about $48,000 to about $76,000 per annum), that increase in wife’s income alone could not
    support a sixty-percent reduction in wife’s alimony given the data presented by husband.
    Therefore, the circuit court concluded (1) that it was error for the family court to modify wife’s
    alimony award absent the parties’ actual tax returns; and (2) the family court’s reduction of
    alimony was based on mere “assumptions and assertions and not the actual facts regarding
    income in 2014.”
    We review such assignments of error under the following standard:
    “Questions relating to alimony . . . are within the sound discretion of the
    court and its action with respect to such matters will not be disturbed on appeal
    6
    unless it clearly appears that such discretion has been abused.” Syllabus, Nichols
    v. Nichols, 160 W.Va. 514, 
    236 S.E.2d 36
    (1977).
    Syl. Pt. 2, Lambert v. Miller, 178 W.Va. 224, 225, 
    358 S.E.2d 785
    , 786 (1987). Furthermore,
    We have stated that “the primary standard to determine whether or not a
    trial court should modify an order awarding alimony is a substantial change of
    circumstances.” Zirkle v. Zirkle, 172 W.Va. 211, 217, 
    304 S.E.2d 664
    , 671
    (1983). We have placed the burden of showing a substantial change of
    circumstances on the party petitioning for modification of the alimony award.
    Syllabus Point 3, Goff v. Goff, 177 W.Va. 742, 
    356 S.E.2d 496
    (1987). To
    determine if there has been a substantial change of circumstances, the circuit court
    must “consider the financial needs of the parties, their incomes and income
    earning abilities and their estates and the income produced by their estates in
    determining the amount of alimony to be awarded in a modification proceeding.”
    Syllabus Point 2, in part, Yanero v. Yanero, 171 W.Va. 88, 
    297 S.E.2d 863
           (1982).
    Adkins v. Adkins, 208 W.Va. 364, 367, 
    540 S.E.2d 581
    , 584 (2000).
    Here, husband failed to produce the necessary tax returns in support of his motion to
    reduce wife’s alimony award. Further, husband’s own exhibits indicated that his income had
    either minimally decreased, or, under some measures, had actually increased. Thus, we concur
    with the circuit court’s findings that husband failed to carry the burden of proof on his motion to
    reduce wife’s alimony award. Hence, we find that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
    reversing the family court’s sixty-percent deduction of wife’s alimony award.
    Husband’s fourth and final assignment is that the circuit court erred in reversing the
    family court’s award of $4,500 for his New York attorney’s fees. Husband argues that the award
    was not erroneous given that wife admitted below that her filing of the New York action was
    filed in bad faith. Husband also claims that he proved he retained New York counsel when he
    twice testified under oath at a May 14, 2007, family court hearing that he had paid his New York
    counsel $8,500.
    With regard to the family court’s award of attorney’s fees, the circuit court found that
    wife’s 2007 New York action was not intended to harass husband and was not brought in bad
    faith given that (1) husband was not making his child support and alimony payments to wife; (2)
    wife agreed to withdraw the action as soon as she received payment from husband; and (3)
    wife’s action was brought “out of desperation” due to her “significantly inferior income
    position.” The circuit court also found (1) that husband asserted in 2014 that he had incurred
    $8,500 in attorney’s fees in defending against wife’s New York action, yet, in 2007, husband
    testified that he had only incurred $6,000 in such fees; and (2) that there was not a “scintilla” of
    documentary evidence in the record that husband had incurred any attorney’s fees even though
    the family court had requested such documentary evidence in 2007. Finally, the circuit court
    noted that the family court failed to make the requisite findings with regard to an award of
    attorney’s pursuant to Syllabus Point 3, in part, of Mayle, which provides:
    7
    “In determining whether to award attorney’s fees, the family law master
    should consider a wide array of factors including the party’s ability to pay his or
    her own fee, the beneficial results obtained by the attorney, the parties’ respective
    financial conditions, the effect of the attorney’s fees on each party’s standard of
    living, the degree of fault of either party making the divorce action necessary, and
    the reasonableness of the attorney's fee request.” Syl. pt. 4, Banker v. Banker, 196
    W.Va. 535, 
    474 S.E.2d 465
    (1996).
    229 W.Va. at 
    181, 727 S.E.2d at 857
    .
    As the circuit court noted, there is no documentary evidence in the record on appeal
    showing that husband incurred $8,500 in attorney’s fees in defending against wife’s New York
    filing. Further, the record on appeal contains sufficient evidence to support the circuit court’s
    finding that wife did not bring the New York action in bad faith or for oppressive reasons. See
    Syl. Pt. 3, Sally-Mike Properties v. Yokum, 179 W.Va. 48, 49, 
    365 S.E.2d 246
    , 247 (1986)
    (stating that “[t]here is authority in equity to award the prevailing litigant his or her reasonable
    attorney’s fees as ‘costs,’ without express statutory authorization, when the losing party has
    acted in bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly or for oppressive reasons.”). Hence, we cannot say that
    the circuit court clearly erred in finding that wife did not bring the New York action in bad faith,
    or in reversing the family court’s $4,500 attorney’s fees award to husband.
    Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    ISSUED: June 3, 2016
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Menis E. Ketchum
    Justice Brent D. Benjamin
    Justice Allen H. Loughry II
    DISQUALIFIED:
    Justice Robin Jean Davis
    Justice Margaret L. Workman
    8