Court Opinion

ID: 9323253
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-06 19:07:30.119902+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:46.440391
License: Public Domain

J-S28017-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

    ERIC MARVEL                                :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                               :        PENNSYLVANIA
                                               :
                v.                             :
                                               :
                                               :
    BOBBI MARVEL                               :
                                               :
                       Appellant               :   No. 474 MDA 2022

               Appeal from the Decree Entered March 2, 2022
      In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Civil Division at
                            No(s): CI-18-10869

BEFORE: OLSON, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and KING, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.:                  FILED: DECEMBER 6, 2022

       Bobbi Marvel (“Wife”) appeals pro se from the decree divorcing the

parties and equitably distributing their marital property.1 Wife argues the court

erred in adopting the divorce master’s determinations regarding certain assets

and debts for equitable distribution, in failing to consider Husband’s dissipation

of marital assets and to properly consider the parties’ earning capacities, and

in denying her request for alimony. We affirm.

       Wife and Eric Marvel (“Husband”) were married in 1993 and separated

in 2011. Wife filed for spousal support in 2012. Husband filed a complaint for

divorce in 2018. According to the trial court,

____________________________________________

1  Although Wife’s notice of appeal references both the order adopting the
Divorce Master’s Report and the ensuing divorce decree, the appeal properly
lies from the final decree of divorce and equitable distribution, and we have
amended the caption accordingly. Schultz v. Schultz, 70 A.3d 826, 829
(Pa.Super. 2013); Syno v. Syno, 567 A.2d 717, 718 (Pa.Super. 1989).
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      The parties have no children. The parties have some history of
      domestic violence, and the separation and process leading up to
      the entrance of the divorce decree has been anything but
      amicable. The parties did not have substantial assets to divide in
      the divorce. Prior to the filing of the divorce, the marital home was
      foreclosed upon. The parties’ residential rental property was sold
      at a short sale prior to the finalization of the divorce, leaving an
      amount of $4200 in rental income remaining to be divided
      between the parties. Neither party had substantial income or
      liquid assets, and there were minimal liabilities to consider.

Trial Court Opinion, April 19, 2022, at 1.

      A hearing was held before a divorce master in the spring of 2021. The

master issued a report recommending that 55% of the marital property be

allocated to Wife. After assessing the value of the marital assets and debts,

and dividing the total according to the equitable proportions, the master

calculated that Wife owed husband $9,770. However, the master found that

Husband owed Wife $38,136 in rent for seven years that he resided in the

marital residence without paying the mortgage. The master offset this amount

by the amount Wife owed Husband and concluded that Husband owed Wife

the remaining $28,365.88.

      The master found no alimony was warranted because Wife has

cohabitated with Mark Stone since 2012. The master further concluded

alimony was not appropriate because

      Wife has minimal expenses and is earning sufficient wages to meet
      those expenses. The parties lived a moderate lifestyle, have
      similar education and training, similar needs, and are similar in
      age. Wife has been receiving support for nine (9) years of the
      eighteen (18) years the marriage was intact.

Master’s Report, 9/2/21, at 12.

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      Both parties filed exceptions, and the court heard argument. On

February 28, 2022, the court denied the exceptions, adopted the Master’s

Report, and ordered Husband to pay Wife the equitable distribution amount

by monthly installments of $337.69 for seven years. On March 2, 2022, the

court entered a divorce decree that included a final order of equitable

distribution in accordance with both the court’s preceding order and the

Master’s Report. Wife appealed.

      Wife’s brief fails to substantially conform to the Rules of Appellate

Procedure. She does not include a statement of the questions involved, a

summary of her argument, or an argument divided according to her questions.

See Pa.R.A.P. 2111(a), 2116(a), 2118, 2119(a). Wife additionally fails to

include any citations to relevant authorities, make specific reference to the

certified record, or explain where in the record she preserved her issues. See

Pa.R.A.P. 2119(b), (c), (e).

      Failure to satisfy the briefing rules may result in waiver or quashal of an

appeal. See Pa.R.A.P. 2101; Karn v. Quick & Reilly Inc., 912 A.2d 329, 336

(Pa.Super. 2006) (“Appellate arguments which fail to adhere to these rules

[of appellate procedure] may be considered waived, and arguments which are

not appropriately developed are waived. Arguments not appropriately

developed include those where the party has failed to cite any authority in

support of a contention”). Nonetheless, we will review Wife’s issues to the

extent we can discern them. To the extent that we misconstrue or

misunderstand her issues or arguments, they are waived.

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       We review the trial court’s equitable distribution of marital property

under 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3502(a) for an abuse of discretion. Conner v. Conner,

217 A.3d 301, 309 (Pa.Super. 2019) (citations and quotation marks omitted).

“We do not lightly find an abuse of discretion, which requires a showing of

clear and convincing evidence.” Id. (citation omitted). An abuse of discretion

only occurs when “the law has been overridden or misapplied or the judgment

exercised was manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice,

bias, or ill will, as shown by the evidence in the certified record.” Id. (citation

omitted).

       Wife first challenges the master’s valuation2 of the 2010 Jeep ($6,000)

and 1991 Nissan ($900), which the master allocated as assets held by Wife.

Regarding the Jeep, Wife argues that when the couple separated in 2011, the

vehicle was approximately one year old, with a remaining loan balance of

$25,000 and a $450/month payment. Wife argues the master should have

assessed the vehicle as of the date of separation, and as debt, rather than as

an asset using the trade-in value of $6,000, particularly as Wife did not trade

the vehicle in until 2018, well after the date of separation.

       The Divorce Code does not require a court to value marital assets as of

the date of separation. Smith v. Smith, 653 A.2d 1259, 1270 (Pa.Super.

1995). Rather, trial courts have “discretion to choose a date of valuation which

____________________________________________

2 Although Wife challenges the court’s denial of her exceptions and adoption
of the findings in the Master’s Report, in this memorandum we will on occasion
refer to the master’s findings directly.

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best provides for ‘economic justice’ between the parties.” Id. (citation

omitted). Therefore, there is no merit to Wife’s argument that the master

should have valued the Jeep as of the date of separation and not the actual

value received by Wife when she traded in the vehicle.

      Regarding the Nissan, Wife claims the couple sold the vehicle together

and split the proceeds. However, Wife does not assert that she presented any

evidence of this to the master. The only evidence regarding the Nissan came

from Husband, who testified that Wife kept the proceeds of the sale. N.T.,

3/30/21 and 4/23/21, at 28-29. There was no abuse of discretion in assigning

the full value to Wife as an asset.

      Wife argues the court failed to properly assess the values of “a riding

mower with plow, a professional slate top pool table, an antique Juke Box, a

3-wheeler, and a 4-wheeler.” Wife’s Br. at 22-23. She claims Husband had no

proof that these items were broken or sold during the marriage.

      Wife did not include this argument in her exceptions and does not even

now state the value she believes the master should have assigned these items.

Nor does she assert that she offered any testimony to substantiate a different

valuation. She has therefore waived these issues.

      Wife argues the master erred in assigning her a $6,390 marital asset

consisting of rental income, because she asserts Husband told her to keep his

portion of the rental income during certain months in lieu of spousal support.

She claims she did not file for spousal support until she stopped receiving the

rental income.

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      Husband testified that Wife received the rental income between the time

of the parties’ separation and the short sale of the rental property, and that

the amount was not included as a source of income in the support action. N.T.

at 26-27; see also id. at 67-69. Husband testified on cross-examination that

while he recalled having a conversation with Wife about “keeping the rental

checks   as   support,”   “that   agreement   went   away”    after   intervening

circumstances, including the commencement of the support action, because

Wife was “getting the rent checks plus support.” Id. at 65-66. However,

Husband did not actually testify that he had told Wife to keep the earlier rental

income in lieu of support, and Wife did not testify on this point. The master

therefore did not abuse her discretion in determining the rental income Wife

collected prior to the support action was marital property.

      Wife next argues the master erred in considering two American Express

credit balances and a Capital One credit balance as marital debt held by

Husband, because they are dated after the separation. Husband testified that

these bills were the result of the parties’ finances during the marriage. Id. at

48-52, 61. Wife did not present this argument to the master and did not testify

regarding these accounts. The master therefore did not abuse her discretion

in considering these balances to be martial debt held by Husband.

      Wife argues the master erred in failing to include her American Express

and Hess bills as marital debt because she attached evidence of these to her

pre-trial memorandum. However, Wife does not assert that she presented

these documents as evidence at the hearing, and our review discloses that

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Wife failed to do so. Therefore, the master did not abuse her discretion in

failing to include them as marital debt.

      Wife next argues the master failed to “[hold] Husband accountable for

forcing a short sale on the rental property and a foreclosure on the marital

home.” Wife’s Br. at 24 (unpaginated).

      Contrary to Wife’s assertion, “the [m]aster [gave] significant weight to

the dissipation of the marital residence by Husband . . . .” Master’s Report at

25. However, the master balanced this fact against others. These included

“the non-payment on the mortgage of the rental property by Wife while

receiving the rental income, [that] Husband had paid support to Wife during

the nine (9) years the parties were separated, and that Wife is owner of

[Stone’s residence] but does not pay the mortgage, rent, utilities, or

maintenance.” Id. As the trial court noted, “[n]either party has clean hands

with respect to the loss of the parties’ real estate. . . . Wife may argue the

dissipation, but it was adequately addressed.” Trial Ct. Op. at 7. We discern

no abuse of discretion on this point.

      Wife argues the master erred when assessing her earning capacity. She

argues the master should have considered that she would have received a

portion of Husband’s Social Security payments after retirement, but that

“Husband depleted those funds by evading his taxes and not filing taxes (per

his testimony).” Wife’s Br. at 29. She argues she will not collect Social Security

because she was a dependent spouse and only worked part-time.

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      Wife further argues the master undervalued Husband’s earning capacity.

She claims Husband’s true income is reflected in his paystubs from 2008 that

Wife entered into evidence. She claims Husband testified that “he does not

file taxes and he works for case and ‘1099’ forms,” and alleges he did not

show his actual earnings to the master. Wife’s Br. at 28.

      In her exceptions, Wife only generally challenged the master’s findings

regarding earning capacity and alleged the master had failed to assess her

physical and mental health conditions and inability to work full time. She has

therefore waived the instant arguments.

      In any event, these issues are meritless. In determining the equitable

proportion by which to divide marital property, the court must consider the

vocational skills and employability of the parties in conjunction with a list of

other factors, including the parties’ age, health, sources of income, economic

circumstances, and needs at the time the division of property is to be effective.

See Pa.C.S.A. § 3502(a).

      Regarding Wife’s earning capacity, the court reviewed the Master’s

Report and found,

      The [m]aster also considered Wife’s medical and mental health
      conditions, which Wife also highlights as reasons to justify
      receiving more in the overall resolution of the divorce because
      Wife states that she cannot work full-time. Although contingent,
      Wife has applied for SSD due to her ability to work limited hours.
      The [m]aster envisioned this benefit as helping to balance some
      income disparity of the parties. The Court agrees with the
      [m]aster in this regard. However, the Court gives greater weight
      to the fact that Wife is deriving a large portion of her monthly

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      support currently from not having to pay any housing expenses
      for herself, a fact which Wife does not highlight.

Trial Ct. Op. at 6. Regarding Husband’s earning capacity, the court observed,

      Wife did not present a compelling argument to contradict the
      [m]aster’s findings of earning capacities of the parties. The
      [m]aster’s Report is consistent with testimony and exhibits
      entered on the record in the [m]aster’s Hearing. The [m]aster’s
      findings are also consistent with the earnings for Husband as
      calculated and used for the purposes of Wife’s spousal support
      order through Domestic Relations. (Master’s Report at 23). Wife
      claimed that Husband earned cash on the side outside of his work
      as a mechanic. However, Wife introduced no evidence to support
      her testimony. If the [m]aster had found Wife to be credible in her
      claim about Husband’s cash income on the side, then the [m]aster
      would have said so and adjusted Husband’s earning capacity
      accordingly.

Trial Ct. Op at 3-4. We conclude the court did not abuse its discretion in

adopting the portions of the Master’s Report related to the earning capacities

of the parties.

      Wife argues the master erred in denying her request for alimony on the

basis that she has been cohabitating with Stone. She argues they are not in a

sexual relationship, do not have joint finances, and do not share food

expenses.

      A party is not entitled to alimony if she “has entered into cohabitation

with a person of the opposite sex who is not a member of the family of the

petitioner within the degrees of consanguinity.” 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3706.

“Cohabitation,” in this context,

      requires that two persons of the opposite sex reside together in
      the manner of husband and wife, mutually assuming those rights
      and duties usually attendant upon the marriage relationship.

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     Cohabitation may be shown by evidence of financial, social, and
     sexual interdependence, by a sharing of the same residence, and
     by other means

Miller v. Miller, 508 A.2d 550, 554 (Pa.Super. 1986).

     The Master’s Report summarizes the relevant evidence as follows:

     Wife testified that she lived with a friend when the parties
     separated. (N.T. 56). She also had that friend, Teresa Rissmiller,
     testify to that effect. (N.T. 104). Ms. Rissmiller also testified that
     Wife and Mark Stone own a home together, (N.T. 106), Wife and
     Mark Stone vacation together with Ms. Rissmiller (N.T. 107), but
     the relationship between Wife and Mark Stone is platonic. (N.T.
     105). Finally, Miss Rissmiller testified Wife paid for improvements
     on the home she shares with Mark Stone (N.T. 108) and all the
     furnishings in the home belong to Wife. (N.T. 108).

     Wife’s father, Sam Nelson, testified Wife and Mark Stone are
     financially co-dependent although just roommates. (N.T. 110). He
     also testified Wife and Mark Stone eat out together and vacation
     together. (N. T. 113).

     Wife testified that it was necessary for Wife to be on the Deed to
     the 120 North Aly property to insure her furniture and furnishings
     in that property, since she was not a renter. (N. T. 126). The Deed
     has Wife and Mark Stone as joint tenants with the right of
     survivorship. (N.T. 143). The mortgage is in Mark Stone’s name,
     individually (N.T. 142) and Wife does not pay rent to Mark Stone
     (N.T. 146). Wife and Mark Stone do their own grocery shopping
     and laundry (N.T. 130). Mark Stone does most of the cleaning
     (N.T. 130), maintenance, yard work, and gardening. (N.T. 131).

     Husband presented an exhibit of photos of Wife and Mark Stone
     on outings together. (Ex. P. 11). Husband also elicited testimony
     from Wife that she was with Mark Stone at the Watering Trough
     around the date of separation. (N.T. 134), and that Wife and Mark
     Stone reconnected at Beanie’s shortly before separation. (N.T.
     136). Wife testified on cross Mark Stone lived continuously with
     her in the apartment she rented from November 2012 until 2016,
     when she and Mark Stone purchased 120 North Aly. (N.T. 138).
     Finally, Wife testified on cross that Wife consolidated marital debt
     of about $12,000 in Mark Stone’s name (N.T. 141).

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Master’s Report at 5-6.

      In reviewing this claim, the trial court additionally noted that Wife

testified that Stone was “[b]asically putting a roof over [her] head.” Trial Ct.

Op. at 6 (citing R. at 139) (alteration in Trial Ct. Op.). The court noted that

neither it nor the master found Wife to be credible regarding her relationship

with Stone. We defer to these credibility findings and conclude there is

sufficient evidence in the record to support the master’s finding that Wife and

Stone have been cohabitating within the meaning of the Divorce Code, thereby

barring Wife from receiving alimony.

      Finally, Wife claims the court discriminated against her for not having

an attorney, that there was testimony left out of the transcripts, and that the

“[m]aster gave Wife the impression that her mind was made up prior to

testimony and that there was no interest in hearing the facts of the case.”

Wife’s Br. at 30. These are bald, undeveloped allegations, and as such, we

find them waived.

      Decree affirmed.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/6/2022

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