Court Opinion

ID: 2809390
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-06-17 19:09:36.472533+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:27:54.030457
License: Public Domain

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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

JOSEPH J. PIOTTI, JR.,                          IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                      PENNSYLVANIA
                            Appellee

                       v.

JULIE R. PIOTTI,

                            Appellant                No. 899 WDA 2014

                      Appeal from the Decree April 30, 2014
                  In the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County
                      Civil Division at No(s): 2010 GN 3057

BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON, and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                              FILED JUNE 17, 2015

       Julie R. Piotti (“Wife”) appeals from the trial court’s second amended

divorce decree and order of equitable distribution. We affirm in part, reverse

in part, and remand for further proceedings.

       Wife and Joseph J. Piotti, Jr. (“Husband”) married on April 27, 1995

and separated on July 29, 2010. No children were born of the marriage. On

August 13, 2010, Husband filed a complaint in divorce seeking only to

dissolve the marriage. Wife’s answer and counterclaim requested that the

trial court equitably divide the marital assets.    Additionally, Wife sought

counsel fees, alimony pendente lite, spousal support, and permanent

alimony.

____________________________________________

*
    Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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       This was the second marriage for each party. Wife is fifty-seven years

old. Following the separation, Wife maintained exclusive possession of the

marital home, which was her premarital property until she transferred it into

joint names in 1999.1         She earns approximately $8,800 per year from a

part-time position at Penn State University that does not provide any

benefits. Since January 2012, she received $848 per month spousal support

plus $56 toward arrears.         Husband, who is approximately sixty years old,

resides with his girlfriend, with whom he has two children. He is employed

fulltime by Penn State University, runs a small, intermittent carpet cleaning

operation, and maintains a part-time position at a local country club.      His

spousal support obligation to Wife and the accrued arrears are deducted

monthly from his paycheck from Penn State.

       The parties owned several assets including the marital residence, two

rental properties, $10,030.66 proceeds from the then-recent sale of a third

property, two automobiles, a motorcycle, a bass fishing boat, miscellaneous

personal property, Husband’s pension benefits, and savings and annuity

accounts. The marital debts and liabilities included mortgages on two of the

homes, the balance on an open line of credit, vehicle loans for one

automobile and the motorcycle, credit card debt, and real estate taxes.

____________________________________________

1
  “Where a spouse places separate property in joint names, a gift to the
entireties is presumed absent clear and convincing evidence to the
contrary.” Lowry v. Lowry, 544 A.2d 972, 978 (Pa. Super. 1988).

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Additionally, Wife owes approximately $70,000 in student loans, interest,

and fees.

      The trial court appointed a divorce master to address the dissolution of

the marriage and Wife’s economic claims. On February 28, 2013, the parties

adduced evidence before the divorce master, and on July 30, 2013, the

master filed with the trial court its report and recommendations. As the trial

court’s subsequent alterations to the master’s recommendation and its own

ensuing equitable distribution orders are the bases for Wife’s arguments on

appeal, we outline those determinations with specificity.

      The master recommended that the court grant the divorce and

distribute the marital property so that Wife would receive marital equity

totaling approximately $48,000.    That amount included the marital home,

one of the rental properties, and the entire proceeds from the recent sale of

an investment property. Husband was assigned approximately $93,000 in

marital equity, including the remaining rental property, the motorcycle, and

his contributions to the Pennsylvania State Employees Retirement System

(“SERS”). In order to resolve the $45,000 difference between the parties’

equitable shares of the marital assets, the master devised a scheme wherein

Husband would pay Wife an additional $22,500 in monthly installments

secured by a second mortgage against the income property that he received

in equitable distribution.   Finally, the master recommended that the trial

court deny Wife’s request for alimony and counsel fees and that she be

responsible for the balance of the the master’s fees.

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      Both    parties    filed   exceptions   to   the   master’s   report   and

recommendations.        Wife leveled seven exceptions, including that: (1) the

master’s valuation of the SERS pension was flawed in that it was calculated

using Husband’s contributions to the pension account rather than the defined

benefit that he is entitled to receive upon reaching pay status; (2) the equal

division of assets and debts failed to account for Husband’s significantly

enhanced monthly income; (3) the master ignored the $70,000 student loan

debt that accrued during the marriage; and (4) the master erred in denying

her request for alimony and attorneys’ fees. Wife failed to list an exception

challenging the omission of Husband’s AXA Equitable annuity totaling

$1,862.03 from the master’s equitable distribution scheme. Wife raised this

misstep for the first time with the trial court in a supplemental brief filed

after oral argument regarding the parties’ respective exceptions of the

master’s report and recommendations.

      Husband’s exceptions challenged the master’s respective valuations of

the marital residence that Wife received and the income property that he

was assigned.    Husband posited that since Wife received from the marital

estate $4,500 in additional assets due to those errors, he should be relieved

from paying her the additional $22,500.

      On January 31, 2014, the court entered a divorce decree and equitable

distribution order that outlined changes to the master’s recommendations

and explained its rationale in resolving the parties’ respective exceptions.

The trial court sustained Husband’s exception concerning the equity in the

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marital residence and sustained Wife’s exceptions regarding the valuation of

Husband’s pension and alimony. The trial court determined that, since Wife

failed to level her assertion regarding the AXA Equitable annuity in a timely

exception, that issue was waived.         The trial court also noted that the master

declined to specifically identify several de minimis assets, such as the

annuity    in   the   proposed      distribution   schedule,   because   they   were

uncontested or already in the parties’ possession.             All of the remaining

exceptions were denied.

       The ensuing equitable distribution order reduced Husband’s payment

to Wife from $22,500 to $11,033.34, directed that the marital portion of

Husband’s defined benefit pension be disbursed according to a qualified

domestic relations order2 (“QDRO”), and awarded Wife $500 per month

alimony for one year. Significantly, the trial court declined to assess against

Husband the marital portion of Wife’s student loan debt.            Essentially, the

court concluded that the certified record sustained the master’s purported

credibility determination that Husband “was unaware that [Wife] had taken

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2
   In Smith v. Smith, 938 A.2d 246, 248 n.3 (Pa. 2007) (citation and
internal quotations omitted), our Supreme Court explained, “A QDRO is an
order which creates or recognizes the rights of an alternate payee to receive
all or a portion of the benefits payable to a participant under the plan. To be
qualified, the order must contain certain required information and may not
alter the amount or form of plan benefits.”

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excess student loans to spend at her discretion.”          Trial Court Opinion and

Order, 1/31/14, at 15.

       Husband filed a timely motion for reconsideration seeking what he

claimed was the true value of the marital assets that he was awarded. On

February 18, 2014, the trial court granted the motion for reconsideration,

thus tolling the appeal period pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2.3 Thereafter, on

March 27, 2014, the trial court entered an amended opinion and order

wherein it sustained Husband’s exceptions concerning: (1) the value of the

income property he received; and (2) Wife receiving $4,500 in surplus

assets from the marital estate.           Accordingly, the trial court reduced the

value of Husband’s rental property, increased Husband’s share of the

proceeds from the sale of the investment property, and relieved Husband

from making any additional payments to Wife.

       On April 7, 2014, Wife filed a motion for reconsideration.        The trial

court granted the motion on April 25, 2014, tolling the thirty-day appeal

period for the second time.         Thereafter, on April 30, 2014, the trial court

entered a second amended divorce decree and equitable distribution order.

In total, the court’s directives extended Wife’s entitlement to alimony from

one year to eighteen months and continued to sustain her original challenge
____________________________________________

3
  Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2 (d) provides “[t]he time for filing a notice of appeal will
begin to run anew from the date of entry of the reconsidered decision, or, if
the court does not enter a reconsidered decision within 120 days, from the
121st day.”

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to the valuation of Husband’s pension. The court did not alter its denials of

any of Wife’s remaining exceptions. This timely appeal followed.

     The trial court did not order Wife to file a concise statement of errors

complained of on appeal. Wife presents the following issues for our review,

which we reordered for convenience of disposition:

     [I.] Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in
     failing to include in its determination of equitable distribution an
     annuity, obtained during the marriage, which was omitted by the
     Master in his recommended distribution schedule.

     II. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in
     failing to give appropriate consideration to the Defendant's
     substantial student loan debt incurred during the marriage in
     determining the equitable distribution of the parties’ marital
     property and the amount and duration of the alimony award.

     [III]. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion
     in ordering a 50/50 division of marital assets given the
     significant disparity in the parties respective economic
     circumstances and the Defendant's substantial student loan
     debt.

     [IV]. Whether the trial court's adjustments to the Master's
     recommendations, and its subsequent adjustments to its own
     orders and decrees on reconsideration, resulted in an overall
     resolution of the parties economic claims that fails to effectuate
     economic justice between the parties as required by the Divorce
     Code and, therefore, constituted an abuse of discretion.

     [V]. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in
     determining the amount and duration of the alimony award
     under all of the facts and circumstances of this case.

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       [VI]. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in
       denying the Defendant's request for costs and counsel fees
       under all of the circumstances of this case.

Wife’s brief at 5-6.4

       The following principles guide our review.

           Our standard of review in assessing the propriety of a
           marital property distribution is whether the trial court
           abused its discretion by a misapplication of the law or
           failure to follow proper legal procedure. An abuse of
           discretion is not found lightly, but only upon a showing of
           clear and convincing evidence.

       McCoy v. McCoy, 888 A.2d 906, 908 (Pa.Super. 2005) (internal
       quotations omitted). When reviewing an award of equitable
       distribution, “we measure the circumstances of the case against
       the objective of effectuating economic justice between the
       parties and achieving a just determination of their property
       rights.” Hayward v. Hayward, 868 A.2d 554, 559 (Pa.Super.
       2005).

Smith v. Smith, 904 A.2d 15, 18 (Pa.Super. 2006).                In determining the

propriety of an equitable distribution award, courts must consider the

distribution scheme as a whole.                Wang v. Feng, 888 A.2d 882, 887

(Pa.Super. 2005).

       Initially, we must determine whether the trial court erred in omitting a

marital asset from its calculation of the marital estate. This issue concerns

Husband’s AXA Equitable annuity in the amount $1,862.03, which the

master    did    not    specifically   allocate   in   the   recommended   equitable

distribution schedule. While Wife does not object to Husband’s retention of
____________________________________________

4
  Husband did not file a brief or participate in oral argument before this
Court.

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the annuity, she believes that she would have received an additional $931 in

equitable distribution had the master listed the annuity specifically.         As

noted, supra, Wife failed to identify this complaint among her exceptions to

the master’s report and recommendations.              Therefore, the trial court

deemed the issue waived.       Additionally, the trial court explained that the

annuity was one of several assets that the master declined to identify

specifically in the proposed equitable distribution schedule due to their de

minimis nature.     Upon review of the Wife’s argument and the certified

record, we find no relief is due.

      At the outset, it is beyond argument that Wife’s claim is waived. It is

a well-ensconced principle of law that parties in domestic relations cases are

required   to   level   specific    exceptions   to   a   master’s   report   and

recommendation in order to preserve issues for appellate review. Nagle v.

Nagle, 799 A.2d 812, 821 (Pa.Super. 2002) (issue waived because it was

not included in exceptions to the master's report). As Wife did not level this

assertions in her exceptions, the matter is waived.

      Furthermore, to the extent that the trial court addressed Wife’s claim

in its opinion and order entered on January 31, 2014, the record reveals that

the master did, in fact, include Husband’s annuity in the marital estate and

simply declined to enumerate the $1,862.03 endowment in disseminating its

value to Husband pursuant to the proposed schedule. See Master’s Report

and Recommendation, 7/30/13, at ¶ 29 (“Plaintiff has a Tax Sheltered

Annuity invested through AXA Equitable that had a balance as of March 8,

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2013 of $1,863.03.”). The record also supports the trial court’s observation

that the omission was not an oversight, but rather, a product of the master’s

deliberate decision to omit de minimis assets, such as insurance proceeds

and rental income retained by Wife, that were both uncontested and too

insignificant to disturb the equal division of the marital estate. In essence,

the master treated the de minimis assets as if they were personal property

that the parties agreed would be retained by the party in possession.

Significantly, Wife received the value of her share of the annuity by retaining

other assets that were properly designated as marital property but not

expressly identified in the master’s equitable distribution schedule.

      Ideally, a recommended equitable distribution schedule would account

specifically for the entire marital estate, even uncontested personal property

and assets already in the parties’ possession.           However, under the

circumstances of this case, where the master focused on the equitable

distribution of substantial marital assets such as Husband’s pension benefits,

three properties, proceeds from the sale of another property, and three

motor vehicles, the decision to omit the de minimis uncontested assets from

the recommended schedule is justifiable. No relief is due.

      Next, we address Wife’s contention that the trial court erred in

burdening her with the entire amount of student loan debt. The trial court

indicated that Wife received $40,125 in student loans between August 2007

and August 2009.     She incurred additional student loan debt immediately

after the parties’ separation.   The repayment terms for all of the student

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loans commenced post-separation. The master’s report stated that the total

student loan debt, including interest, fees, and penalties, exceeded $70,000.

As of February 15, 2013, Wife risked having her wages garnished to satisfy

the debt.

      Wife argues that she incurred the debt with Husband’s express

support, approval, and reassurance that the couple would repay the loans

after Wife obtained a college degree and enhanced her opportunities for full-

time employment.      Additionally, referencing our discussion in Hicks v.

Kubit, 758 A.2d 202 (Pa.Super. 2000), which we discuss infra, Wife posits

that the couple used portions of the money for household expenses.         The

crux of Wife’s argument is that the trial court did not consider all of the

circumstances surrounding the acquisition and use of the student loan debt

or the parties’ respective financial wherewithal to repay the loan in light of

the equitable distribution scheme. Wife’s position is meritorious.

      In rejecting Wife’s argument, the trial court concluded that Wife

accepted $40,125 in student loans during the marriage, that the loans were

in her name, and that she controlled the use of the loan proceeds. The court

further determined, “The record indicates that [Husband] was unaware that

[Wife] had taken excess loans to spend at her discretion.”        See Second

Amended Opinion and Order, 4/30/14, at 17.         Thereafter, the trial court

purported to defer to the divorce master’s credibility determination.

Significantly, however, the master did not make any express credibility

determinations relevant to this issue or address any of the factors outlined in

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Hicks.   The master simply noted that Wife owed student loans exceeding

$70,000, and then failed to account for that debt in the recommended

distribution scheme. While it is obvious that the master elected to burden

Wife with the entire debt, the master did not disclose any reason for its

decision, much less render any findings on this point.           Accordingly, we

cannot countenance the trial court’s reliance upon the master’s non-existent

credibility determination as a basis to sustain that decision.

      Hicks, supra, is the seminal case involving the assignment of student

loan debt in equitable distribution.    To be clear, the salient principles in

Hicks are that student loan debt incurred during a marriage is a marital

debt regardless of the purposes for which the money is actually expended;

however, in assigning responsibility to repay the debt following divorce, the

fact finder must look to which party benefited from the education the loan

facilitated. In Hicks, the wife incurred $30,776 in student loan debt during

the marriage.    She deposited $13,000 of the loan proceeds into a bank

account that she shared with her husband and the couple used that portion

of the money to cover joint living expenses.         The balance of the loan

proceeds went to educational expenses.          The trial court in that case

concluded that the $13,000 that was used for joint purposes was marital

debt, but the portion of the loan that was used to pay for the wife’s

education was non-marital.       Consistent with the equitable distribution

scheme that divided the marital assets 60/40 in favor of the wife and

allocated the marital debts in the inverse proportion, the trial court assigned

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the wife responsibility for 40 percent of the $13,000 and 100 percent of the

balance used for educational purposes.        On appeal, the wife asserted that

the trial court should have considered the entire student loan, and not just

the $13,000 deposited into the joint account, as marital debt subject to the

equitable distribution scheme.

      In affirming the trial court’s equitable distribution order, we clarified

that student loans borrowed during the course of the parties’ marriage

constitute a marital debt for purposes of determining an equitable

distribution award. Id. at 204-205. Thus, we found that it was error for the

trial court to characterize any portion of the loan debt as “non-marital”

based upon how the loan proceeds were expended. Id. at 204. However,

notwithstanding the designation of the entire loan as marital property, we

explained that the label is not determinative of the ultimate question

regarding which party is responsible for satisfying the student loan debt. Id.

at 205.    We stated, “[W]hether the . . . debt is marital or not is of

significance, but not ultimately determinative of who shall be responsible for

its repayment.” Id. Rather, that determination should be based upon “the

ultimate distribution of either assets or liabilities . . . is to be based on the

circumstances surrounding the acquisition of the debt or asset, along with all

other factors relevant to fashioning a just distribution.” Id. In essence, we

reasoned that the spouse who received the exclusive benefit of the

education is ultimately responsible for the portion of the student loan applied

to education expenses. “Thus, despite any error in the terminology used by

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the court to describe the balance of the loan applied to [the wife’s]

educational expenses, the court properly noted that its discretion extended

to assigning the debt to [the wife] on the equitable principle that she

received the sole and exclusive benefit of the education financed by such

means.”   Id.   Hence, the Hicks Court held that, since the wife was the

exclusive beneficiary of the education she received, she was responsible for

the portion of the loan that went to that purpose. Accordingly, we did not

disturb the trial court’s equitable distribution scheme allocating the $13,000

debt between the parties on the 60/40 basis but making the wife 100

percent responsible for the balance of the loan proceeds.

      Initially, we observe that neither the master nor the trial court in the

instant case specifically identified any portion of the student loan as marital

debt or differentiated between the student loan proceeds that went directly

to Wife’s education expenses and the surplus proceeds that were used for

non-educational expenses. Pursuant to Hicks, as the ultimate beneficiary of

her college education following her divorce from husband, Wife is responsible

for the student loan debt that is attributed to her educational expenses even

though it would be properly designated as a marital debt.       However, the

Hicks Court did not mandate that all student loan debts are invariably

assigned to the student spouse. Indeed, the Hicks Court affirmed the trial

court’s finding that $13,000 of the student loan proceeds were marital debts

subject to the 60/40 equitable distribution scheme in that case because

those proceeds were deposited into a joint account and used for personal

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expenses. See id. at 205. Instantly, the trial court highlighted in its second

amended opinion and order that a significant surplus existed after Wife paid

her educational expenses. However, neither the trial court nor the divorce

master calculated the amount of the surplus. Indeed, the master assigned

the entire balance of the student loan to Wife uncritically and without

determining what portion of the current $70,000 balance should be

designated a marital debt under Hicks, supra or whether any portion of the

marital amount was used for a joint purpose unrelated to education

expenses.

      As noted supra, Wife contends that the parties made a joint decision

for her to pursue a college degree, that prior to the separation Husband

reassured her that they would repay her mounting student loan debts, and

that a portion of the loan proceeds was used for living expenses. During the

master’s hearing, she testified that she used the excess student loan

proceeds to purchase food, pay for household expenses, and contribute to

the couple’s lifestyle. N.T., 2/28/13, at 84, 87, 94, 96. She stated that she

did not buy anything frivolous with the proceeds or purchase “[anything]

that wasn’t used by both of [them].” Id. at 84. Although Wife cashed the

student loan checks rather than deposit the proceeds into a joint account,

she stressed that Husband benefited equally from the balances of the loan

proceeds because she only used the money for household items and joint

expenses.   Id. at 87, 94, 96.     Additionally, she testified that Husband

observed the checks and knew the amounts distributed and what she

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contributed to their household. Id. at 95, 98. Accordingly, Wife requested

that the master allocate the student loan debt consistent with the equitable

distribution scheme. Id. at 110.

      Husband counters that he was unaware that Wife took out student

loans in excess of what was required to pay college expenses and that Wife

consumed the surplus funds at her sole discretion.       During the hearing,

Husband testified that he had no involvement in the student loan process.

Id. at 115.   He was aware that Wife received student loan proceeds but

could not differentiate between Wife’s earnings from part-time employment

and the money she received from the loans. Id. at 115, 117.

      The master, as the ultimate finder of fact, did not render any

determination regarding the amount of the surplus loan proceeds or how

those funds were consumed.         While the trial court identified several

indications in the record concerning the extent of Husband’s knowledge

about the loans, Wife’s control over the amount of the loan request, and how

the surplus proceeds were expended, those “findings” do not warrant the

deference this Court reserves for factual determinations because the trial

court in this case did not preside over any evidentiary proceedings.       In

actuality, the trial court reviewed a cold record and, without acknowledging

Wife’s countervailing evidence, it gleaned select references from the notes of

testimony of the February 2013 hearing in front of the divorce master. In

this regard, the trial court’s review of the master’s hearing is no different

from our own.    Cf. Commonwealth, Dept. of Trans. v. O'Connell, 555

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A.2d 873, 875 (Pa. 1989) (deference due to factfinder stems from “sole

position to observe the demeanor of the witnesses and assess their

credibility. Th[i]s rule of law is well established in our jurisprudence and is

rooted in concepts of fairness, common sense and judicial economy”);

Commonwealth v. Wright, 78 A.3d 1070, 1080 n.12 (Pa. 2013)

(observing that abuse-of-discretion rubric “may be something of a misnomer

because the deference derives more from the role and respective vantage of

the factfinder than from any accordance of ‘discretion’”).    As a fact-finder

never resolved the parties’ contradictory evidence regarding the use and

nature of the surplus loan proceeds, we remand the matter for an

evidentiary hearing to determine whether any portion of the loan proceeds

were expended for joint purposes and to apportion that share of the student

loan principal, interest, and fees, between the parties accordingly.

      Next, we address Wife’s third, fourth, and fifth issues collectively.

Wife asserts that, given the disparity between the parties’ respective

economic conditions, the trial court erred in fashioning an equal division of

marital assets. Instead of receiving fifty percent of the value of the marital

estate, Wife advocates a 60/40 division of the assets in her favor. She also

stresses that the marital property she received under the trial court’s

amended equitable distribution scheme lacks liquidity, and that the

temporary alimony the court awarded is insufficient to permit her to survive.

For the reasons explained below, we find no basis to disturb the trial court’s

decision to divide the marital estate equally.    However, we find that the

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record supports Wife’s remaining contentions regarding the reality of her

current economic circumstances.

      The primary focus of Wife’s argument is that the equitable distribution

order failed to effectuate economic justice in light of the parties’ respective

economic circumstances. She highlights that, when compared to Husband,

she is underemployed and her only source of supplemental income is a

rental property that is encumbered by a mortgage that consumes all but

$180 of the monthly income it generates.       After accounting for insurance

and property taxes, the income from the rental property is minimal. Wife

earns approximately $8,800 per year salary without health or retirement

benefits, and her total allocation of cash from the equitable distribution is

approximately $1,000.

      She further highlights that the equitable distribution order fails to

alleviate her economic burden due to the fact that the marital home that she

received accounts for approximately sixty-percent of the total value of her

share of equitable distribution. Wife does not challenge the finding that the

residence was marital property subject to equitable distribution; however,

she contends that the trial court should have factored in the specific

circumstances of the case when assessing the property’s value against her

portion of the marital estate.

      In contrast to Wife’s sparse monthly budget, Husband enjoys fulltime

employment with Penn State University and maintains part-time positions at

his carpet cleaning business and a local country club.      Additionally, Wife

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asserts   that,   unlike   her   income-producing    property,    Husband      nets

approximately $900 per month from his income property after deducting

taxes, mortgages, and insurance premiums.         Wife continues that Husband

was not burdened with any of the marital debt other than the loans on the

property he received in the equitable distribution, and pursuant to the

equitable distribution order, he will receive approximately eighty percent of

the escrowed proceeds from the prior sale of a property that was included in

the marital estate.

      In fashioning an equitable distribution scheme, the trial court is

required to consider the factors enumerated in 23 Pa.C.S. § 3502(a), which

provides as follows:

      (a) General Rule.—Upon the request of either party in an
      action for divorce or annulment, the court shall equitably divide,
      distribute or assign, in kind or otherwise, the marital property
      between the parties without regard to marital misconduct in such
      percentages and in such manner as the court deems just after
      considering all relevant factors. . . . Factors which are relevant
      to the equitable division of marital property include the
      following:

          (1) The length of the marriage.

          (2) Any prior marriage of either party.

          (3) The age, health, station, amount and sources of income,
          vocational skills, employability, estate, liabilities and needs of
          each of the parties.

          (4) The contribution by one party to the education, training
          or increased earning power of the other party.

          (5) The opportunity of each party for future acquisitions of
          capital assets and income.

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          (6) The sources of income of both parties, including, but not
          limited to, medical, retirement, insurance or other benefits.

          (7) The contribution or dissipation of each party in the
          acquisition, preservation, depreciation or appreciation of the
          marital property, including the contribution of a party as
          homemaker.

          (8) The value of the property set apart to each party.

          (9) The standard of living of the parties established during
          the marriage.

          (10) The economic circumstances of each party at the time
          the division of property is to become effective.

          (10.1) The Federal, State and local tax ramifications
          associated with each asset to be divided, distributed or
          assigned, which ramifications need not be immediate and
          certain.

          (10.2) The expense of sale, transfer or liquidation associated
          with a particular asset, which expense need not be
          immediate and certain.

          (11) Whether the party will be serving as the custodian of
          any dependent minor children.

As we stated in Gates v. Gates, 933 A.2d 102, 105 (Pa.Super. 2007)

(citations omitted), the enumerated factors “require the trial court to

consider the relative economic positions of the parties and the nature of the

parties' relationship.”

      Instantly, we find no basis in the certified record to disturb the trial

court’s 50/50 division of the marital debts and assets. Primarily, we observe

that the record confirms that the divorce master considered the relevant

factors in formulating the proposed equitable distribution scheme and that

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the   trial     court   accepted     most      of   those    findings   in    adopting    the

recommendations and in subsequently amending the equitable distribution

order.        Specifically, the master considered the length of the parties’

marriage, prior marriages, age, health, employment opportunities, child

dependents, respective sources of income, value of property received, and

Husband’s pension.        See Master’s Report and Recommendations, 7/23/13,

at 2-9;5 Second Amended Opinion and Order, 4/30/14, at 3-5, 12, 15-16.

       The aspects of § 3502(a) implicated by Wife’s arguments relate to the

court’s considerations regarding: (1) the parties’ respective sources of

income; (2) their opportunities to acquire additional capital assets and

income in the future; (3) their vocational skills, employability, and liabilities;

and (4) the general consideration of each parties’ economic circumstances at

the time the division of property is to become effective.                    The first three

components of this argument basically request that this Court re-weigh the

evidence and modify the equitable distribution order in her favor. However,

in light of our deferential standard of review, we must reject this entreaty.

See Gates, supra at 106 (“[I]t is apparent appellant is urging us to simply

reweigh the section 3502 factors in the hope the scales will tip in his favor

the second time around.         We cannot do so in the absence of an abuse of

discretion,     which    appellant    has      failed   to   demonstrate.”);     see     also
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5
 The Master’s Report is not paginated. We assigned page numbers for ease
of reference.

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Mercatell, supra at 612 (trial court has discretion to assign weight to

various factors).      Stated simply, Wife failed to demonstrate that the trial

court abused its discretion in accepting the master’s application of the §

3502(a) factors in fashioning the 50/50 division of marital assets. Thus, we

will not disturb it.

      Notwithstanding our unwillingness to reweigh the § 3502(a) factors

and substitute our judgment for that of the divorce master and trial court in

order to alter the equal division of assets, we are compelled to note that the

equitable    distribution   order   does   not   account   for   Wife’s   economic

circumstances when the division of property was to become effective.

Specifically, the order fails to address the scarcity of liquid assets available

to Wife.    Although Wife concededly received an equal share of the marital

estate, her share is composed of equity in real property that cannot be easily

converted to cash. In addition to her personal property, Wife was awarded

the marital residence and an income-producing property that generates a

trifling net monthly income after expenses. The record bears out that both

of the properties are encumbered by a mortgage, and that the monthly

income generated from the rental property is minimal. N.T., 2/28/13, at 36-

37.

      While the master’s report and recommendation proposed to award

Wife monthly payments totaling $22,500, the trial court reduced that award

to $11,033.34, and it subsequently eliminated the cash outlay entirely.

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Additionally, Wife’s portion of the proceeds from the sale of a marital

property, about $1,000, is negligible, and her spousal support terminated as

a matter of law with the entry of the divorce decree. See Horn v. Horn,

564 A.2d 995, 996 (Pa.Super. 1989).6               Finally, Wife complains the trial

court’s award of temporary alimony is an insufficient supplement to her

monthly income.

       Wife’s latter complaint implicates her related argument in favor of an

increased alimony award.          The crux of that contention is that, even with

employment, she is unable to support herself without the benefit of

additional cash assets or a substantial alimony award that extends beyond

the eighteen months awarded by the trial court. As the trial court’s decision

regarding the distribution of marital property is interrelated with the award

of alimony insofar as a revision of the distribution scheme necessarily

requires reconsideration of the alimony award, we address her arguments

together as they relate to her current cash flow issues and conclude that the

court’s uneven allocation of liquid assets not only ignored Wife’s current

economic condition, but it also diverged from the overarching objective of
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6
  Spousal support is specifically designed to ensure that the dependent
spouse can maintain reasonable living expenses, and a spousal support
order terminates upon the entry of the divorce decree. See Horn v.Horn,
564 A.2d 995, 996 (Pa.Super. 1989) (citations omitted) (“The duty to
provide spousal support is derived from marital obligations, and that duty
terminates when the marriage does.”). Wife remains entitled to any unpaid
arrears that accrued prior to the entry of the divorce decree.

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effectuating economic justice between the parties. See 23 Pa.C.S. § 3502;

Mercatell supra at 612 (“equitable distribution does not presume an equal

division of marital property and the goal of economic justice will often dictate

otherwise”).

        In determining whether alimony is necessary, the trial court was

required to consider the enumerated factors set forth in 23 Pa.C.S. § 3701.7

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7
    The section of the Domestic Relations Code addressing alimony provides:

        ....

        (b) Factors relevant.—In determining whether alimony is
        necessary and in determining the nature, amount, duration and
        manner of payment of alimony, the court shall consider all
        relevant factors, including:

        (1) The relative earnings and earning capacities of the parties.

        (2) The ages and the physical, mental and emotional conditions
        of the parties.

        (3) The sources of income of both parties, including, but not
        limited to, medical, retirement, insurance or other benefits.

        (4) The expectancies and inheritances of the parties.

        (5) The duration of the marriage.

        (6) The contribution by one party to the education, training or
        increased earning power of the other party.

        (7) The extent to which the earning power, expenses or financial
        obligations of a party will be affected by reason of serving as the
        custodian of a minor child.

(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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Instantly, Wife does not challenge the trial court’s consideration of any of
                       _______________________
(Footnote Continued)

      (8) The standard of living of the parties established during the
      marriage.

      (9) The relative education of the parties and the time necessary
      to acquire sufficient education or training to enable the party
      seeking alimony to find appropriate employment.

      (10) The relative assets and liabilities of the parties.

      (11) The property brought to the marriage by either party.

      (12) The contribution of a spouse as homemaker.

      (13) The relative needs of the parties.

      (14) The marital misconduct of either of the parties during the
      marriage. The marital misconduct of either of the parties from
      the date of final separation shall not be considered by the court
      in its determinations relative to alimony except that the court
      shall consider the abuse of one party by the other party. As used
      in this paragraph, “abuse” shall have the meaning given to it
      under section 6102 (relating to definitions).

      (15) The Federal, State and local tax ramifications of the alimony
      award.

      (16) Whether the party seeking alimony lacks sufficient
      property, including, but not limited to, property distributed under
      Chapter 35 (relating to property rights), to provide for the
      party's reasonable needs.

      (17) Whether the party seeking alimony is incapable of self-
      support through appropriate employment.

      (c) Duration.—The court in ordering alimony shall determine
      the duration of the order, which may be for a definite or an
      indefinite period of time which is reasonable under the
      circumstances.

23 Pa.C.S. § 3701(b)(c).

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the statutory factors. Instead, she argues that the alimony award fails to

satisfy her reasonable needs in light of her current economic situation.

      As previously noted, in declining Wife’s request for alimony, the

divorce master considered the relevant factors outlined in § 3701(b), but

concluded that the then-envisioned lump sum payment of $22,500 would be

sufficient to fund Wife’s transition to economic independence. Upon review

of the parties’ exceptions to the master’s report, the trial court reduced

Wife’s expected lump sum payment from $22,500 to $11,033.34, and

awarded Wife $500 per month temporary alimony for one year as a short-

term supplement. After the trial court ultimately eliminated the lump-sum

payment entirely, it extended the duration of temporary alimony award from

twelve months to eighteen months.

      Mindful of Wife’s noticeably different economic condition between the

master’s originally proposed distribution scheme and the culmination of the

trial court’s piecemeal adjustments to the original scheme, we find that the

one-and-one-half-year period of alimony is insufficient to adequately

compensate for Wife’s reduced cash flow after the court eliminated the

proposed $22,500 payout over thirty years. Indeed, the temporary alimony

is approximately $350 dollars less per month than the spousal support she

received prior to the divorce decree.

      Additionally, the record will not sustain the finding that the trial court

considered Wife’s current employment status or the meager income that will

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derive from the rental unit she received during equitable distribution. To the

contrary, the trial court speculated that Wife was underemployed and

suggested that she relocate to a better job market or sell off assets received

in equitable distribution in order to satisfy her debts. See Second Amended

Opinion and Order, 4/30/14, at 18-19. That gratuitous advice by the trial

court exceeded what was required under either § 3502 regarding equitable

distribution or § 3701 concerning alimony. Thus, in light of the trial court’s

responsibility to weigh the parties’ current economic circumstances in

fashioning the equitable distribution order, we direct the trial court to revisit

its distribution of liquid assets and to devise an alimony award and/or

distribution scheme that more clearly realizes economic justice between the

parties in relation to their current settings without disturbing the equal

division of the marital estate.8

       Wife’s final claim seeks assistance with her portion of the master’s

costs and her counsel fees. We review a trial court's decision to award costs

and fees in a divorce matter under an abuse of discretion standard. Habjan

v. Habjan, 73 A.3d 630, 642 (Pa.Super. 2013). Instantly, we find that the

trial court did not abuse its discretion in making each party responsible for

____________________________________________

8
  For example, the trial court could either increase the amount and duration
of the alimony award or follow the divorce master’s lead and fashion an
arrangement wherein Husband mortgages his rental property to pay Wife a
cash offset against a portion of her share of Husband’s pension benefits
under the QDRO that the trial court directed the parties to prepare.

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one-half of the cost of the masters’ proceeding and his or her attorneys’

fees. The court’s allotment of costs is both reasonable and consistent with

50/50 equitable distribution scheme. Additionally, we observe that, to the

extent that the expenditures would be burdensome to Wife under her

current economic circumstances, the trial court’s alterations will, at a

minimum, alleviate her cash flow issues, and may result in a reduction of her

responsibility for the marital portion of the student loan debt.

      Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s determinations in relation to the

omission of the AXA Equitable annuity from the proposed equitable

distribution scedule and the trial court’s 50/50 apportionment of the marital

estate. However, we remand for the trial court to calculate the marital share

of Wife’s student loan debt, determine whether any portion of the marital

amount was used for a joint purpose unrelated to education expenses, and

consistent with Hicks, supra, divide responsibility for that amount according

to the 50/50 equitable distribution scheme.       In addition, the trial court is

directed to devise an equitable distribution order and alimony award that is

reflective of the parties’ economic realities as they currently exist.

      Decree affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further

proceedings consistent with this memorandum. Jurisdiction relinquished.

      Judge Olson joins this memorandum.

      Judge Strassburger files a concurring statement.

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Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 6/17/2015

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