Title: Lesko v. Stanislaw

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2014 ME 3 
Docket: 
Han-12-535 
Argued: 
November 19, 2013 
Decided: 
January 14, 2014 
 
Panel: 
SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, 
JJ. 
 
 
LISA LESKO 
 
v. 
 
THEODORE STANISLAW 
 
 
GORMAN, J. 
[¶1]  Theodore Stanislaw appeals from a divorce judgment entered in the 
District Court (Ellsworth, Mallonee, J.) dividing the parties’ marital property.  
He contends that the court failed to make requisite findings concerning his 
financial misconduct to support its judgment; that it erred when it considered his 
criminal conduct for purposes of dividing the property; and that its division of the 
marital property was inequitable.  Because the court was required to consider the 
economic circumstances of each spouse at the time of the property division, and 
because this analysis necessarily involves consideration of a party’s criminal 
conduct if that conduct affects the household finances, we conclude that the court 
acted within the bounds of its discretion in ordering a division of marital property 
 
2 
that reflected the financial impact of Stanislaw’s criminal conduct on the marital 
estate.  We affirm the judgment. 
I.  BACKGROUND 
[¶2]  Lisa Lesko and Theodore Stanislaw were married in New York on 
June 27, 1992, and have a son, born in 2002.  Lesko is a family physician in Blue 
Hill.  Stanislaw, who has a bachelor’s degree in music education, served as a 
homemaker for much of the marriage, earning income on a part-time basis as a dog 
trainer, piano teacher, and voice instructor.  In November 2008, Stanislaw was 
arrested and indicted for multiple counts of sexual abuse of girls who had been his 
piano students.  He was convicted and began serving his sentence in early 2010.1  
[¶3]  Lesko filed for divorce on November 1, 2010.  Because Stanislaw was 
precluded from having contact with the parties’ son as a result of his criminal 
convictions, there was no evidence presented on the issues of parental rights or 
responsibilities during the two-day hearing held on May 15 and July 19, 2012.  The 
court primarily received evidence concerning matters related to the division of the 
marital estate.  The parties testified about the assets they accumulated during the 
marriage, including real estate, personal property, retirement and bank accounts, 
and life insurance accounts.  At the time of the trial, the marital residence in Blue 
                                         
1  The criminal matter is still pending, as Stanislaw faces a third sentencing hearing. 
 
3 
Hill, which had been transferred by the parties solely to Lesko sometime after 
Stanislaw’s arrest, had been placed by her into a trust for the benefit of their son.  
Despite this technical issue concerning ownership, the parties agreed that Lesko 
would be awarded the real property, but disagreed as to how the debts associated 
with the property should be divided.  Both parties had taken out loans against their 
life insurance policies to pay down the debt on the residence, and they could not 
agree about the disposition of responsibility for these loans. 
[¶4]  During the trial, and over Stanislaw’s objections, Lesko presented 
evidence that was intended to demonstrate the effect of Stanislaw’s criminal 
behavior on the family’s finances.  She testified that some of Stanislaw’s victims 
were patients of hers and that she lost approximately fifteen children as patients.  
She also testified that she had paid the substantial legal fees Stanislaw incurred.  In 
addition, because Stanislaw was required to live separately from the family and 
because he has not worked at all since his arrest, Lesko’s wages—the only source 
of support for this family—had to cover the expenses he incurred while living 
separately from their son.  Finally, at no time since his 2008 arrest has Stanislaw 
provided either childcare for their son or any household assistance, as he had 
historically done.   
[¶5]  On August 29, 2012, the court issued a “Memorandum of Decision” 
granting the parties a divorce on the ground of irreconcilable marital differences.  
 
4 
Included in that decision were findings that Stanislaw’s criminal conduct “resulted 
in expenditure of tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees, followed by lengthy 
incarceration during which he [could not] work or generate income” and  “resulted 
in diminished income” for Lesko’s practice.  Based on these findings, the court 
concluded that Stanislaw’s conduct constituted financial misconduct.  The court 
also stated that, even if Stanislaw’s actions did not constitute financial misconduct, 
his actions and the consequences of those actions were relevant factors to be 
considered in the division of marital property pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. 
§ 953(1) (2013). 
[¶6]  In its August 29 decision, the court divided the parties’ property and 
directed Lesko’s counsel to “prepare a judgment in accordance with the terms of 
this decision.”  On September 10, 2012, Stanislaw filed a motion pursuant to 
M.R. Civ. P. 52(a) and (b) for additional findings and conclusions, and to alter or 
amend the court’s findings and conclusions pertaining to financial misconduct and 
its treatment of debt incurred against the parties’ respective life insurance policies.  
Lesko filed an objection to this motion. 
[¶7]  On October 4, 2012, the court issued a divorce judgment that divided 
the parties’ property as it had in its August 29 decision, and assigned values and 
debts to the property as follows:   
 
5 
 
Assignment 
to Lesko 
Assignment 
to Stanislaw 
Real Property 
 
 
Blue Hill residence 
$623,000.00  
 
Real estate mortgage 
($239,037.64) 
 
Home equity loan  
($15,854.36) 
 
Vermont condominium 
 
$148,000.00  
 
 
 
Retirement Accounts 
 
 
Lincoln Financial Group 
$104,524.67  
 
Fidelity 
$122,533.40  
 
 
 
 
Life Insurance Accounts 
 
 
Northwestern Mutual policies2 
$40,024.32 
$52,612.32 
 
 
 
Vehicles 
 
 
Subaru 
$11,815.00  
 
 
 
 
Bank and Investment Accounts 
 
 
Bar Harbor Bank & Trust account 
$14,911.81  
 
Bar Harbor Bank & Trust "condo account" 
 
$1,027.06  
Stifel Nicolaus investment account 
 
$44,665.29  
Bangor Savings Bank account 
 
$218.88  
 
 
 
TOTAL 
$670,717.20  
$246,523.55  
% of Total Marital Estate 
73% 
27% 
 
 
 
[¶8]  Eleven days later, the court denied Stanislaw’s motion to alter or 
amend and responded to his request for additional findings by stating that, 
“[r]egardless of whether Defendant’s conduct was ‘economic misconduct,’ it could 
validly be taken into account under 19-A [M.R.S.] § 953(1).”  The court also stated 
that it could not overlook the “enormous economic impact” that Stanislaw’s 
                                         
2  These figures represent the cash surrender values of the parties’ Northwestern Mutual policies.  
Lesko’s policy was valued at $96,331.60, less a $47,507.28 loan balance; and Stanislaw’s policy was 
valued at $218,758.45, less a $166,146.13 debt. 
 
6 
conduct had on the parties.  It further stressed that, given the impossibility of a 
precise assessment of the effect Stanislaw’s actions had on the marital estate, the 
court’s division of property sought overall equity and its treatment of the life 
insurance policy debts “does not affect this overall assessment.”  Stanislaw timely 
appealed pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 104 (2013) and M.R. App. P. 2. 
II.  DISCUSSION 
[¶9]  We consider whether, in the property disposition, the trial court: 
(A) failed to make the findings necessary to support its judgment; (B) erred as a 
matter of law in considering Stanislaw’s criminal conduct as a relevant factor in 
the property division; or (C) inequitably divided the property.   
A. 
Necessary Findings to Support Judgment 
[¶10]  Stanislaw contends that the trial court failed to explain the causal 
connection between its findings of financial misconduct and its division of the 
marital estate.  A trial court “has a duty to make findings sufficient to inform the 
parties of the reasoning underlying its conclusions and to provide for effective 
appellate review.”  Peters v. Peters, 1997 ME 134, ¶ 10, 697 A.2d 1254 (citations 
omitted).  However, a court is not required to detail its rationale as to every finding 
of fact or conclusion of law.  See Miele v. Miele, 2003 ME 113, ¶ 11, 
832 A.2d 760.   
 
7 
[¶11]  In this case, the court made express findings about the family’s 
expenditure of substantial legal fees on Stanislaw’s behalf and about his 
victimization of Lesko’s patients, noting that the latter directly resulted in 
diminished income from Lesko’s practice.  It also found that Lesko suffered not 
only financial losses arising from the loss of patients who left her family practice 
after Stanislaw’s criminal conduct came to light, but that she suffered the loss of a 
financially contributing co-parent.  The court explained that, although the only 
quantifiable elements of financial loss were the legal fees incurred in Stanislaw’s 
criminal defense, the court had taken into account Stanislaw’s dismal earning 
potential during and following his incarceration in dividing the marital property.  
Contrary to Stanislaw’s assertion, the court provided findings sufficient to allow 
for effective appellate review.   
B. 
Criminal Conduct as a Relevant Factor in Marital Property Division 
[¶12]  Stanislaw’s main contention on appeal is that the court erred when it 
expressly considered his criminal conduct as a relevant factor in dividing the 
marital property.  He advances four grounds for his argument.  First, Stanislaw 
contends that the court exceeded its statutory authority by considering the 
consequences of his criminal conduct as a relevant factor in the property division.  
“We review a court’s division of property and debts for an abuse of discretion.”  
Leary v. Leary, 2007 ME 63, ¶ 9, 926 A.2d 186.  A court exceeds the bounds of its 
 
8 
discretion when it considers a factor prohibited by law.  See Pettinelli v. Yost, 
2007 ME 121, ¶ 11, 930 A.2d 1074.  Although Maine’s property disposition 
statute, 19-A M.R.S. § 953(1), enumerates three “relevant factors” that a court 
must consider in dividing marital property, the plain language of the statute makes 
clear that these factors are not exclusive.3  Thus, courts may “give consideration to 
other matters peculiar to the case being heard in order that a ‘just’ result be 
obtained.”4  Fournier v. Fournier, 376 A.2d 100, 103 (Me. 1977).  
More specifically, although courts may not consider a party’s criminal behavior to 
establish fault or marital misconduct, courts must consider the financial 
consequences of criminal conduct as relevant factors in the division of marital 
property.  See Hebert v. Hebert, 475 A.2d 422, 424-25 (Me. 1984) (stating that a 
                                         
3  Title 19-A § 953(1) (2013) states: 
1.  Disposition.  In a proceeding for a divorce, for legal separation or for disposition of 
property following dissolution of the marriage by a court that lacked personal jurisdiction over the 
absent spouse or lacked jurisdiction to dispose of the property, the court shall set apart to each 
spouse the spouse's property and shall divide the marital property in proportions the court 
considers just after considering all relevant factors, including: 
A.  The contribution of each spouse to the acquisition of the marital property, including the 
contribution of a spouse as homemaker;  
B.  The value of the property set apart to each spouse; and  
C.  The economic circumstances of each spouse at the time the division of property is to become 
effective, including the desirability of awarding the family home or the right to live in the home 
for reasonable periods to the spouse having custody of the children.  
4  In Robinson v. Robinson, 554 A.2d 1173, 1175 (Me. 1989), we identified several factors as not 
being legitimate considerations in the distribution of marital property; those factors, however, are not 
relevant here. 
 
9 
defendant’s incarceration and attendant lack of living expenses formed his “present 
economic circumstances”—a consideration mandated by statute). 
[¶13]  Here, the court methodically evaluated how Stanislaw’s criminal 
conduct, convictions, and incarceration had and would continue to financially 
affect the household.  Specifically, the court found that (1) Stanislaw’s criminal 
conduct resulted in the expenditure, from the marital estate, of “tens of thousands 
of dollars in legal fees”; (2) his conduct, particularly his victimization of some of 
Lesko’s patients, caused Lesko to lose income through the loss of patients in her 
practice; (3) his lengthy incarceration, which will likely extend into their son’s 
adulthood, would cause Lesko to suffer the loss of a financially contributing 
co-parent; (4) his incarceration would adversely affect his current and future 
earning potential; and (5) the specific nature of his criminal conduct would 
preclude him from doing many of the jobs for which he was qualified.  
Importantly, the court did not consider evidence of Stanislaw’s criminal conduct 
for purposes of discerning moral fault and expressly excluded the introduction of 
sentencing transcripts, witness statements, and other materials bearing on the 
specific offenses for which Stanislaw was convicted, stating that this evidence 
“would be at best cumulative and at worst inflammatory.”   
[¶14]  Second, Stanislaw contends that the court erred as a matter of law 
when it characterized his use of marital funds for his criminal defense as a form of 
 
10 
financial misconduct.  Invoking the criteria set forth in Levy, Maine Family Law 
§ 7.7[3][d][ii] at 7-60 (8th ed., 2013), Stanislaw asserts that his use of marital 
funds to defend himself in court falls short of the type of conduct that constitutes 
financial misconduct.5  Those criteria, however, are not meant to define financial 
misconduct; rather, they are suggested as a means to prevent evidence of marital 
misconduct from being used to subvert the legislative objective of fault-free 
divorce and to “minimize the use of the courtroom and, in particular, the process of 
dividing marital property, as a forum for the parties to vent their hostilities.”6  Id. 
We have never declared, and we decline to do so here, that courts are prohibited 
from considering the fiscal impact of a party’s use of marital funds to pay legal 
expenses in determining a just division of marital property pursuant to 
section 953(1).  Whether those fiscal impacts are characterized by a court as a form 
of “financial misconduct” is not material to the analysis. 
[¶15]  Third, Stanislaw contends that his expenditure of marital funds to 
fund his defense should not have been a factor in the division of property because 
                                         
5  Those criteria are whether the evidence of purported financial misconduct relates to conduct that 
(1) had a “direct adverse financial impact upon the marital estate;” (2) was an “unreasonable” rather than 
a “reasonable, yet unsuccessful” financial decision; and (3) was “truly probative of having had an adverse 
economic impact upon the marital estate.”  Levy, Maine Family Law § 7.7[3][d][ii] at 7-60 
(8th ed., 2013). 
6  Those objectives have been satisfied here.  The court took great pains to avoid turning the two-day 
hearing into a re-hashing of Stanislaw’s criminal actions, emphasized in its October 15th order that it did 
not adopt Lesko’s “adjectival descriptions” of Stanislaw’s conduct, and expressly excluded evidence that 
delved into the details of Stanislaw’s criminal conviction.   
 
11 
the court’s consideration of that expenditure violated his constitutionally 
guaranteed right to representation by counsel.7  However, “[t]he primary purpose 
of the effective assistance of counsel requirement is to ensure a fair trial.”  Pineo v. 
State, 2006 ME 119, ¶ 10, 908 A.2d 632.  Nothing that the court did here infringed 
on Stanislaw’s right to a fair trial, nor did the court punish Stanislaw for exercising 
his constitutional right to effective counsel.  
[¶16]  Fourth, Stanislaw asserts that the court erred in considering his 
criminal conduct because the actual and potential loss of Lesko’s professional 
earnings arising from Stanislaw’s conduct was not quantifiable.  In so arguing, 
Stanislaw confuses two points: although a court must, as it did here, assign a value 
to each item of property subject to equitable distribution, see Miliano v. Miliano, 
2012 ME 100, ¶¶ 25-26, 50 A.3d 534; Shirley v. Shirley, 482 A.2d 845, 849 
(Me. 1984), the court is not required to assign a dollar amount to each factor it 
considers pursuant to section 953(1).  Here, the court did not regard Lesko’s 
business interests as marital property subject to distribution so as to necessitate its 
valuation.  Rather, the court regarded the loss of Lesko’s patients due to 
                                         
7  Contrary to Stanislaw’s contention, we have not cautioned against considering constitutionally 
protected interests of a party in marital property division judgments; rather, we have said that courts 
“should endeavor to resolve the controversies before them without deciding constitutional issues, 
reaching such an issue only [if] it is entirely necessary to a decision on the cause in which it is raised.” 
Osier v. Osier, 410 A.2d 1027, 1029 (Me. 1980) (quotation marks omitted).  Accordingly, a court may 
take into account the constitutional rights of a party if the factual situation necessitates it, but then must 
do so by engaging in a “deliberate and articulated balancing of the conflicting interests involved” to 
ensure that the court’s order “makes the least possible infringement” on that party’s rights.  Id. at 1030.   
 
12 
Stanislaw’s criminal conduct as a relevant factor in arriving at a just division of the 
marital estate. 
C. 
Equitable Division of the Marital Property 
[¶17]  Finally, Stanislaw contends that the court’s distribution order is 
inequitable because it awarded seventy-three percent of the marital property to 
Lesko and only twenty-seven percent to Stanislaw, and because it failed to honor 
the parties’ intentions concerning the debt associated with Stanislaw’s life 
insurance policies.  Section 953(1) instructs that the division of marital property be 
in such proportions as the trial court deems just.  19-A M.R.S. § 953(1). 
“Just proportions” does not necessarily dictate an equal allocation of property.  
See, e.g., Robinson v. Robinson, 554 A.2d 1173, 1176 (Me. 1989) (an equal 
allocation “carries no presumptive weight either in its favor or against it”).  
We have repeatedly held that a division “need not be equal, but it must be fair and 
just considering all of the parties’ circumstances.”  Leary, 2007 ME 63, ¶ 9, 
926 A.2d 186 (citations omitted).  We will not disturb a court’s property 
distribution “if there is competent evidence in the record to support it.”  Doucette 
v. Washburn, 2001 ME 38, ¶ 7, 766 A.2d 578.   
[¶18]  In this case, the court followed best practice in its judgment by 
providing “a justification for the total award to each party” in light of the factors it 
considered pursuant to section 953(1).  Brown v. Habrle, 2008 ME 17, ¶ 15, 
 
13 
940 A.2d 1091.  The court identified all of its considerations in reaching a just 
division of the property, including (1) the effect of Stanislaw’s criminal conduct on 
the marital finances and his dismal earning potential while the parties’ child is still 
a minor in need of support, as already explained; (2) nonmarital components of the 
parties’ life insurance policies and the Blue Hill house; (3) ongoing private school 
and tutoring fees for the parties’ son that Lesko will continue to incur; 
(4) Stanislaw’s substantial services to the household as homemaker and parent; and 
(5) the diminution of Lesko’s income due to other factors.   
[¶19]  The court was not required to give “piecemeal explanations of the 
division of equity in individual pieces of property.”  Id.  Recognizing that its 
division of property “sought overall equity,” the court stated that it could not 
“overlook the enormous economic impact [Stanislaw’s] conduct had on the 
parties.”  It concluded that the stronger argument compelled the court to assign 
most of the marital assets to Lesko.  As to the insurance policies, contrary to 
Stanislaw’s contention, the record is clear that the parties disagreed about how the 
life insurance debts should be divided.  The court understood that the parties 
differed on this point, and awarded each of the parties his or her respective life 
insurance policy together with the associated debts.   
 
14 
[¶20]  We conclude that the evidence in the record supports the court’s 
distribution of the marital property, including its treatment of the debts on the 
parties’ life insurance policies. 
The entry is: 
Judgment affirmed. 
 
________________________________________ 
 
On the briefs: 
 
Glen L. Porter, Esq., and Megan E. Randlett, Esq., Eaton Peabody, Bangor, 
for appellant Theodore Stanislaw 
 
Sandra Hylander Collier, Esq., Collier Law Offices, Ellsworth, for appellee 
Lisa Lesko 
 
At oral argument: 
 
 
Glen L. Porter, Esq., for appellant Theodore Stanislaw 
 
 
Sandra Hylander Collier, Esq., for appellee Lisa Lesko 
 
 
 
Ellsworth District Court docket no. FM-2010-353 
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