Court Opinion

ID: 3131895
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-17 00:39:07.110724+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:23.540660
License: Public Domain

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

                                           ENTRY ORDER

                           SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2012-362

                                         APRIL TERM, 2014

 Lisa Mangini                                          }    APPEALED FROM:
                                                       }
                                                       }    Superior Court, Windsor Unit,
    v.                                                 }    Family Division
                                                       }
                                                       }
 Richard E. Hardie                                     }    DOCKET NO. 67-2-08 Wrdm

                                                            Trial Judge: William D. Cohen

                          In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

       Wife appeals a final divorce order issued by the family division of the superior court,
arguing that the court abused its discretion by inequitably dividing the marital property and by
not awarding her maintenance. We reverse and remand the matter for the court to reconsider the
property distribution and maintenance.

        The parties married in 2001, when wife was in her early forties and husband in his late
forties. No children were born of the marriage. The parties separated in 2007, when wife moved
into what had had been the parties’ vacation home in Weathersfield, Vermont, which husband
purchased in 2002. What had been the marital home is located in New Jersey.

        The Weathersfield property has been the subject of other legal proceedings. Husband
refinanced the property on three occasions, the last in 2008. In her February 2008 divorce filing,
wife claimed the property as her primary residence and asked the court to award it to her free and
clear of any encumbrances. In January 2011, the mortgagee commenced a foreclosure action on
the property, naming only husband as a defendant. Despite not being named in the action, wife
filed an answer and affirmative defense claiming that she had established a homestead interest in
the property before husband had refinanced it in 2008, thereby making the 2008 mortgage
inoperative to convey her homestead interest. The mortgagee responded that wife did not have a
homestead interest in the property because she possessed neither a legal nor an equitable title to
the property. The civil division of the superior court granted summary judgment to wife, and
husband appealed. We recently reversed that decision, concluding that wife had no legal or
equitable title to, and therefore no homestead interest in, the property. See Brattleboro Savings
& Loan Ass’n v. Hardie, 2014 VT 26, ¶¶ 17, 19.

       Meanwhile, on May 20, 2011, following a March 17, 2011 hearing, the family division of
the superior court made brief oral findings and conclusions in support of its final divorce order.
The court first concluded that, although wife was entitled to approximately $15,000 in
maintenance arrearages based on a temporary order requiring husband to pay wife $2500 per
month in maintenance, it would not award ongoing maintenance beyond June 2011. In so ruling,
the court noted the parties’ high standard of living during the marriage, husband’s reduced
income, wife’s minimal efforts to obtain work during the previous two years, and wife’s
employability. In making these general findings, the court did not specify the income or
expenses for either party so as to enable this Court to evaluate whether the court acted within its
broad discretion in declining to award maintenance.

        Regarding the property division, the family court explained what property it was
awarding to whom, but provided no reasoning for its decision and did not indicate the statutory
factors upon which it was basing its decision. Essentially, apart from personal property, the
court awarded wife the Weathersfield property and husband the rest of the marital estate,
including the marital home and other real property, as well as his entire retirement account.
Regarding the Weathersfield property, the court made wife responsible for all debts and
encumbrances associated with the property.

       The ensuing July 1, 2011 final judgment order, which was prepared by husband’s
attorney, contained no findings or conclusions, but confirmed the court’s decision from the
bench. The order awarded wife the Weathersfield property free and clear of any interest by
husband but subject to all debt associated with the property, including the 2008 mortgage. Wife
was ordered to indemnify husband against any debt from the property and to refinance the
property within six months so as to remove defendant’s name from the existing mortgage.

        On August 31, 2012, in response to post-judgment motions from both parties, the court
confirmed that it had intended to award wife the Weathersfield property subject to the 2008
mortgage and promissory note. The court noted that wife knew the property was “underwater,”
but nonetheless wanted to live there and save the house from foreclosure “because she felt
(correctly) that she had a reasonable defense to the foreclosure proceedings. In other words,
[wife] asked for the risk, because she saw the potential benefits.” The court further explained as
follows:

               As a result, the court agreed to “award” [wife] the house, along
               with the accompanying note and mortgage, thus assigning to [wife]
               the benefits and risks of her choice. It was then up to [wife] to see
               what she could do in terms of defending against the pending
               foreclosure action (she was successful) and refinancing the debt
               obligation (success to be determined). The court notes that [wife]
               is not without leverage in the refinancing negotiations: she holds
               title to a house free and clear, and the bank is holding unsecured
               debt. In the final analysis, the court is persuaded that the equitable
               reasons that justified the award of the house to [wife] in the first
               instance (along with the accompanying note and mortgage) remain
               intact.

       Wife appeals, arguing that the family court abused its discretion: (1) by inequitably
dividing the marital property, not awarding her maintenance, and failing to make adequate
findings to support its decision; (2) by requiring her to assume the note and mortgage obligations
on the Weathersfield property; and (3) by requiring her to indemnify husband against obligations
associated with that property. Husband responds that the court’s property division and refusal to
award maintenance was within its discretion, given the relatively short, childless marriage and

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the fact that virtually all of the martial assets were either brought into the marriage by him or
earned by him during the marriage.

        We conclude that the matter must be remanded for the family court to reconsider the
property division and maintenance not only because of its failure to explain a highly unequal
distribution of marital property but also to take account of this Court’s recent decision
concluding that wife cannot avoid the 2008 mortgage based on her claimed homestead
exemption. In distributing the marital property, the court made few findings, did not consider the
statutory factors set forth in 15 V.S.A. § 751, and provided no rational for its decision. For this
reason alone, its decision must be reversed. Dreves v. Dreves, 160 Vt. 330, 333 (1993) (stating
that family court’s discretion in distributing marital property is not unlimited, and thus court’s
findings must provide clear statement of what was decided and why). The court did not account
for the parties’ total assets, or acknowledge what percentage of those assets is going to wife, let
alone provide an explanation for its property division. Wife contends, and husband does not
dispute, that the court awarded husband at least ninety percent of the marital estate. Given this
apparent disparity in the respective awards, it was particularly critical for the court to explain its
rationale for the unequal distribution. Wade v. Wade, 2005 VT 72, ¶ 20, 178 Vt. 189 (stating
that large disparity in property division requires careful examination of evidence and findings “to
assure that the family court made adequate findings and acted within its wide discretion in
awarding one spouse the vast majority of the marital assets”); Dreves, 160 Vt. at 335 (stating that
“our need for some understanding of the trial court’s rationale is paramount” when there is
significant disparity in property award); Daitchman v. Daitchman, 145 Vt. 145, 150 (1984)
(stating that significantly unequal property award justifies closer look to ensure legislatively
mandated equitable division of property pursuant to statutory factors). Husband contends that
the distribution is fair because he brought in or earned the vast majority of those assets, but the
family court did not explicitly rely upon this rationale in making its decision.

        Rather, as indicated above, the court appears to have awarded wife the marital home
under the assumption—or at least presumed likelihood—that she ultimately would obtain the
property free and clear of the 2008 mortgage. As the court stated, it was assigning her the risks
or benefits of the property, depending on how the legal proceedings concerning the property
were resolved. In short, wife would get either the lady or the tiger, and, as it turned out, she got
the tiger, resulting in husband receiving ninety-plus percent of the marital assets. Because the
civil division of the superior court had already granted wife summary judgment on her
homestead exemption claim—a ruling that the family court deemed correct but that we reversed
on appeal—the family court may have assumed that wife would receive a much larger portion of
the marital estate than she wound up receiving. In any event, we decline to uphold a property
distribution in which a principal part of the marital estate is not valued with any precision.

        In light of our rejection of wife’s homestead exemption claim, the family court on
remand may establish the actual value of the mortgaged Weathersfield property at the time of the
parties’ divorce, reconsider the division of marital property, and make findings and conclusions
that explain its rationale based on the relevant statutory factors. Because we are reversing its
property award, the court must also reconsider maintenance in light of the new division of
marital property. See Harris v. Harris, 162 Vt. 174, 185 (1994) (declining to consider family
court’s refusal to award maintenance because court would have to reconsider maintenance in
light of reversal of property division); Dreves, 160 Vt. 330, 335 (stating that where property
division is reversed, maintenance ruling should also be reexamined because of interrelationship
between property and maintenance awards). In sum, while we do not disturb the family court’s
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decree of divorce and award of maintenance arrears to wife, we reverse its rulings on property
division and ongoing maintenance.

       Reversed and remanded.

                                             BY THE COURT:

                                             _______________________________________
                                             Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice

                                             _______________________________________
                                             Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice

                                             _______________________________________
                                             Geoffrey W. Crawford, Associate Justice

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