Court Opinion

ID: 4686925
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-05-14 14:11:10.116119+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:37.307813
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
        This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
     internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

                                                        SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                        DOCKET NO. A-3990-18

A.J.V.,

          Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

M.M.V.,

     Defendant-Respondent.
________________________

                   Argued April 27, 2021 – Decided May 14, 2021

                   Before Judges Fisher, Gilson and Gummer.

                   On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
                   Chancery Division, Family Part, Morris County,
                   Docket No. FM-14-1402-14.

                   Karin Duchin Haber argued the cause for appellant
                   (Haber Silver & Simpson, attorneys; Karin Duchin
                   Haber and Jane B. Simpson, of counsel; Jani Wase
                   Vinick, on the brief).

                   Mark H. Sobel argued the cause for respondent
                   (Greenbaum, Rowe, Smith and Davis LLP, attorneys;
                   Mark H. Sobel, of counsel and on the brief; Lisa B.
                   DiPasqua, on the brief).
PER CURIAM

        The parties to this matrimonial action were married in October 1996 and

have one child. Both plaintiff A.J.V. (Alan 1) and defendant M.M.V. (Martha)

have college degrees and have worked in the pharmaceutical industry. After a

twenty-two-day trial, Judge Noah Franzblau rendered a 117-page written

decision, which included twenty pages of thorough and thoughtful credibility

findings, and entered a judgment of divorce.

        In this appeal, Alan seeks review of certain portions of the judgment of

divorce, arguing the trial judge erred or abused his discretion: (1) in including

a $5,000 monthly savings component in his eleven-year obligation to pay Martha

$11,500 per month in limited durational alimony; (2) by imposing a Mallamo2

adjustment – based on the alimony savings component – because that component

was absent from the pendente lite support order; (3) in the manner in which he

distributed restricted stock units Alan received as part of his compensation from

his employer; and (4) in allowing Alan less parenting time than he enjoyed

during the pendente lite stage.     Because the trial judge's extensive factual

1
  We use fictitious names to avoid any unnecessary invasion of the parties'
privacy and because of the child-related issues.
2
    Mallamo v. Mallamo, 280 N.J. Super. 8 (App. Div. 1995).
                                                                           A-3990-18
                                        2
findings are supported by substantial credible evidence and because his legal

conclusions comport with applicable law, we affirm the judgment of divorce in

all respects.

                                       I

      The following general circumstances inform the trial judge's alimony

rulings.

      Alan worked at the same pharmaceutical company throughout most of the

marriage; he has been the company's head of global pricing for its oncology unit

since 2006. Martha worked at three different pharmaceutical companies during

part of the marriage but left her job in 2006 to care full time for their newly-

born and only child, Stephen.

      After they married, the parties initially lived in a condominium unit owned

by Alan, but they later purchased a home in Flanders for $312,000. In 2004,

after Alan received a promotion, the parties sold their Flanders home and

purchased a home in Montreal. Another promotion two years later necessitated

their move back to New Jersey; they then purchased a $1.3 million-dollar, 5,000-

square-foot home in Chester.

      Alan was the primary wage earner during the marriage. His W-2 wages

for the years 2012 through 2018 were: $1,022,923 in 2012; $962,465.81 in

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                                       3
2013; $784,786.84 in 2014; $832,694.32 in 2015; $971,793.45 in 2016;

$841,562.01 in 2017; and $633,606.20 in 2018. Alan also received short-term

cash incentives in the form of annual bonuses and long-term incentives awarded

yearly in the form of restricted stock units (RSUs). According to Alan, his

employer calculated employee compensation differently depending on whether

the employee's position was part of the Corporate Executive Group (CEG). He

testified that in or around 2010, his position was considered part of the CEG,

resulting in the employer's calculation of his short-term and long-term incentives

so that he received greater compensation.

      In 2011 or 2012, Alan was working as the head of a particular operation

that was not part of the CEG, but his compensation in that role was

"grandfathered" under the CEG framework through 2012. From 2013 forward,

the employer calculated Alan's short-term and long-term incentives outside of

the CEG framework so that his compensation generally decreased. But in 2017,

Alan received a supplemental, one-time cash payment of $158,800, which he

claimed represented "three years of transition payments" for 2014, 2015, and

2016 that were supposed to have been paid to him during those years.

      Martha earned substantially less than Alan during the marriage and, as

noted, left the workforce after Stephen was born. She began working as a

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                                        4
pharmaceutical sales representative just before the parties married, earning

between $40,000-$50,000 per year plus bonuses. In 1999, Martha obtained

employment as a market researcher earning around $60,000 per year, and she

later worked for another pharmaceutical company until 2004, when the parties

moved to Canada due to Alan's promotion. She had some difficulty obtaining

employment in Canada.

      When the parties moved back to New Jersey in 2006, Martha returned to

work at a pharmaceutical company that had previously employed her; she was

then earning approximately $140,000 per year and received multiple one-time

bonuses in 2007 that increased her earnings to approximately $187,000. She

left that position in November 2007.

      In February 2014, on learning Alan had engaged in adulterous affairs,

Martha moved out of the marital home with Stephen to an extended-stay hotel

and later to an apartment in Somerset. She put most of the marital home's

furniture into storage and removed $22,000 in cash from Alan's gun safe, leaving

behind a letter from her attorney advising she wanted a divorce.

      In November 2014, about five months after Alan filed for divorce, Martha

and Stephen returned to the marital home pursuant to a pendente lite order and

Alan moved to a rental home, also in Chester.

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                                       5
      Based on these and many other facts unnecessary to recount in full here,

the trial judge ordered Alan to pay Martha limited durational alimony – for a

period of eleven years – in the amount of $11,500 per month. Alan argues the

trial judge abused his discretion by including in that amount a $5,000 monthly

component for savings. Alan, in fact, asks this court "to exercise its original

jurisdiction and determine that no savings component is needed."

      "[A]limony is neither a punishment for the payor nor a reward for the

payee," Mani v. Mani, 183 N.J. 70, 80 (2005), but instead constitutes an

economic right arising from the marital partnership, providing the dependent

spouse with "a level of support and standard of living generally commensurate

with the quality of economic life that existed during the marriage," Koelble v.

Koelble, 261 N.J. Super. 190, 192-93 (App. Div. 1992).

      The fixing of a spousal support award is "broadly discretionary."

Steneken v. Steneken, 367 N.J. Super. 427, 434 (App. Div. 2004), aff'd, 183 N.J.

290 (2005). A court may order alimony "as the circumstances of the parties and

the nature of the case shall render fit, reasonable and just." N.J.S.A. 2A:34 -23.

"Whether alimony should be awarded is governed by [the fourteen] distinct,

objective standards" – not one of which is "elevated in importance over any

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                                        6
other" – listed by the Legislature in N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b). Gnall v. Gnall, 222

N.J. 414, 429 (2015).

      A matrimonial judge must "make specific findings on the evidence about

all of the statutory factors." N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(c); see also Crews v. Crews, 164

N.J. 11, 26 (2000). Overall, "[t]he goal of alimony is to assist the supported

spouse in achieving a lifestyle 'reasonably comparable' to the one enjoyed during

the marriage." Lombardi v. Lombardi, 447 N.J. Super. 26, 37 (App. Div. 2016)

(quoting Steneken, 183 N.J. at 299).         Establishing the standard of living

experienced during the marriage "serves as the touchstone" in the analysis.

Crews, 164 N.J. at 16. Marital lifestyle is ascertained by considering "the

marital residence, vacation home, cars owned or leased, typical travel and

vacations for each year, schools, special lessons, and camps for [the] children,

entertainment . . ., household help, and other personal services." Weishaus v.

Weishaus, 360 N.J. Super. 281, 290-91 (App. Div. 2003), rev'd in part on other

grounds, 180 N.J. 131 (2004). A marital lifestyle finding must be based not just

on the amounts expended but ultimately what is equitable. Glass v. Glass, 366

N.J. Super. 357, 372 (App. Div. 2004).

      At trial, the judge learned that the parties had their own credit cards and

maintained separate checking, savings, and money market accounts during the

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marriage. Martha testified that Alan "didn't want . . . anything joint," although

the testimony revealed there were exceptions to this general approach. For

example, even before they married, the parties deposited their incomes into

Alan's checking and money market accounts, which Martha could not access.

Alan used his money market account to, among other things, assist with

purchasing their homes and other large marital expenses, and he used his

checking account to pay household bills. They also garnered significant annual

income from several investment accounts, and plaintiff paid the credit card bills

in full each month.

      Because Martha did not have access to Alan's bank accounts, she mostly

used her American Express card for day-to-day expenses, acknowledging as

well that Alan would give her cash "[a]t times" if she needed it. Although Alan

paid Martha's credit card bill each month, he required her to itemize the

statement.

      They owned a million-dollar home in Chester and a $285,000 vacation

home on a farm in Pennsylvania where they spent their weekends between April

and September, and they had already paid off both mortgages by the time of the

separation because they were "debt adverse." The parties also vacationed

elsewhere – between 2010 and 2014, they traveled with Stephen to Disney

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                                       8
World during the off-season, the Bahamas, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Cape Cod,

and once to Hawaii on "an award trip" – but the employer bore most of the

expenses for those trips.

      They did not own any luxury cars. Up until around 2017, Alan used his

company car as his primary vehicle; later, when the company no longer provided

him with a car, he purchased a 2017 Ford Explorer. At the time of the trial,

which started in September 2018 and ended in March 2019, Martha drove a 2014

Ford Explorer and, prior to that, either a 2002 or 2003 Mercury Mountaineer or

her company car when employed. They drove Fords, according to Martha,

because they were able to utilize Alan's father's executive discount to purchase

them. Their only debts were the automobile loans for the Ford Explorers. They

also owned several recreational vehicles, including a 2012 Spyder motorcycle,

a 2004 Suzuki ATV, a Polaris RZR ATV, and a Kubota tractor.

      The parties accumulated more than $7 million in marital assets due to their

focus on saving and investing as much money as possible. Martha testified

"[s]avings was always a big part" of the marital lifestyle; they "always saved

regularly, on a month to month basis, year to year," in "a continuous pattern . .

. based on saving for [their] future." Alan agreed that savings was "by far the

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                                       9
largest component" of the marital lifestyle, acknowledging they saved $12,800

per month in 2012 and $21,250 per month in 2013.

      As part of their frugal lifestyle, Martha sewed the drapes for their living

room and dining room, purchased clothing for herself at the Salvation Army at

Alan's suggestion, and made use of hand-me-down clothing for Stephen from

friends until he was in second grade, although Martha also acknowledged she

sometimes shopped at other clothing stores for herself and Stephen. The parties

did not hire outside help to clean the home or to assist with childcare.

      In an assessment of a marital lifestyle, courts must give due consideration

to evidence of regular savings during the marriage, even if there is no concern

about protecting an alimony award from future modification or cessation on the

death of the supporting spouse. "The most 'appropriate case' in which to include

a savings component is where the parties' lifestyle included regular savings . . .

[b]ecause it is the manner in which the parties use their income that is

determinative when establishing a martial lifestyle." Lombardi, 447 N.J. Super.

at 39. The fact that "the payment of the support ultimately is protected by life

insurance or other financial tools, does not make the consideration of the savings

component any less appropriate."      Ibid. Indeed, "[t]he Supreme Court has

recognized the need to consider regular savings in determining a marital lifestyle

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                                       10
by including a line item for monthly savings in Schedule C of the case

information statement parties must file in family matters." Id. at 40-41.

      Based on the evidence found credible, the judge included in the limited

durational alimony award a $5,000 per month savings component. We focus on

this aspect because it is hotly contested and because the balance of the alimony

determinations are sound and reasonable beyond question.

      As noted above, a matrimonial court must give consideration to all

fourteen statutory factors. Under the first – the "actual need and ability of the

parties to pay," N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(1) – the judge found "the net assets subject

to equitable distribution are in excess of $8 million" and that "following the sale

of the parties' real estate," it was anticipated "both parties will each receive in

excess of $3 million, which includes pension and retirement assets ." The judge

further found that "[w]hile it is expected that the equitable distribution will

enable the parties to acquire separate residences, the potential interest earned on

the parties' remaining equitable distribution (especially following [the] payment

of legal fees) will not be sufficient to enable the parties to live a lifestyle

reasonably comparable to the marital lifestyle."

      As for the parties' earnings, the court found that Martha's potential future

earnings, based upon an imputed gross income of $76,415 that Alan does not

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                                       11
challenge on appeal, "will be insufficient to enable her to meet the marital

lifestyle." That said, Alan's "significant annual earnings . . . will enable him [to]

maintain a lifestyle similar to that which existed during the marriage and to pay

alimony in order to supplement [Martha's] lifestyle to provide her with a lifestyle

similar to that which existed during the marriage."

      In considering the second and third factors – the "duration of the

marriage," N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(2), and the "age, physical and emotional health

of the parties," N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(3) – the judge found the parties were

married for seventeen-and-a-half years and were in good health.

      As for the fourth factor – the standard of living established during the

marital partnership, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(4), which we have already discussed

– the judge concluded that while the parties "did not live an extravagant lifestyle

during the marriage," they "accumulated material assets and maintained a high

standard of living." He observed that they owned a $1.3 million-dollar home in

Chester, a $285,000 Pennsylvania vacation home, "furniture, including antiques,

[and Alan] purchased a multitude of guns, and the parties acquired a motorcycle

and recreational vehicles."      They "periodically vacationed, although they

preferred to vacation when it coincided with [Alan's] business travel so that the

cost would be subsidized" by his employer.

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                                        12
      The judge also found that Alan "earned significant annual income during

the entirety of the parties' marriage, which was supplemented by [Martha's]

more modest income during the early years of the marriage." The judge found

the parties' "focus on savings, as opposed to consumption, allowed them to

accelerate the pay-down of their mortgages," so that by the time this action was

commenced they "owned the[ir] homes without any mortgage debt"; they had,

in essence, "accumulated approximately $7.02 million of assets during the

course of their marriage, and their only debt was approximately $40,000 relating

to an automobile loan"; they "voluntarily elected to focus on saving for their

future."

      Considering the next five statutory factors, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(5) to

(9), the judge found Alan had "acquired sufficient education, training, skills and

work experience to have held numerous high-level positions, including

executive level jobs" and during the prior ten years, his total compensation

"ranged from a high of approximately $1,691,871 in 2007 to a low of

approximately $639,947.45 in 2009." He fixed Alan's average annual gross

compensation from 2007 through 2018 at $750,147.89, which "would certainly

enable him to maintain a marital lifestyle reasonably comparable to that which

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                                       13
he enjoyed during the marriage," and that "he will continue in his [present] job

. . ., which will continue to pay him significant annual income."

      In contrast, the judge found Martha's average annual gross earnings were

$76,401 between 1994 and 2008 and that "even assuming [she] could earn this

amount annually upon returning to the workforce, she would not be able to

sustain a lifestyle remotely comparable to the marital lifestyle on her salary."

Even though Martha was college-educated, the judge found she had been absent

from the workforce for more than eleven years, and it was "unknown what, if

any, additional training would be required to enable [her] to re-enter the

workforce"; indeed, the judge found it was "unclear whether [Martha] can return

to the pharmaceutical industry in a similar capacity or at a similar salary ." In

essence, the judge found Martha "sacrificed her career advancement in order to

promote [Alan's] career advancement" during the marriage, as most notably

evidenced by the impact on her employment due to their relocation to Canada.

The judge also recognized Martha's continuous "service as a homemaker during

the entirety of the parties' marriage (cooking, cleaning and maintaining the

home), even when she was working full-time, and her subsequent dedication as

a full-time stay-at-home mother and home-maker following [Stephen's] birth,"

which permitted Alan "to dedicate long hours to his career advancement." While

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                                      14
the judge recognized both parties will have responsibility for Stephen going

forward, Martha will have greater responsibility under the parenting time

schedule, which grants her nine overnights during every fourteen-day period.

      As for the tenth factor – requiring the consideration of "[t]he equitable

distribution of property ordered and any payouts on equitable distribution,

directly or indirectly, out of current income, to the extent this consideration is

reasonable, just and fair," N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(10) – the judge determined the

parties would "receive significant assets" as part of equitable distribution. He

"anticipated that equitable distribution will be paid from the sale of the parties'

two residences and other liquid assets" and that because "[p]laintiff's income

will not be materially required as a source to pay equitable distribution . . . his

net income will be available to pay alimony."

      The judge analyzed and weighed the eleventh factor – "[t]he income

available to either party through investment of any assets held by that party,"

N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(11) – and anticipated that while "the equitable distribution

will enable the parties to acquire separate residences and pay counsel fees, the

potential interest earned on the parties' remaining equitable distribution will not

be sufficient to enable the parties to live a lifestyle reasonably comparable to

the marital lifestyle."

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                                       15
      The judge lastly weighed the twelfth factor, which requires consideration

of the "tax treatment and consequences" for both parties of the alimony award,

N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(12), and the thirteenth, which requires consideration of

the "nature, amount, and length of pendente lite support paid, if any," N.J.S.A.

2A:34-23(b)(13). The judge determined that the alimony award was not tax-

deductible for Alan, would not be taxable to Alan, and that Alan had paid

pendente lite support for over four years at the rate of $4,500 monthly plus

defendant's Schedule A and B expenses (except automobile maintenance, fuel,

and oil).

      Based on his findings regarding these thirteen factors 3 that we have only

briefly summarized, the judge concluded that the parties' monthly marital

lifestyle was approximately $10,588, and they had an additional monthly

savings component of $19,087. In fixing the alimony award, the judge reviewed

Alan's earnings history, utilized $700,000 as Alan's "reasonable annual income"

from employment (taxed at 38 percent), and estimated his available net income

will be approximately $36,166 per month. The judge also imputed $76,415 in

annual gross employment income to Martha based in part on her prior average

3
  N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(14) isn't a factor per se; it simply allows a court to
consider "[a]ny other factors" that may be found "relevant." The judge found
none here.
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                                      16
income and the average salary of a secondary school teacher, since she testified

about looking for work as a substitute teacher. Based on the marital lifestyle of

$10,588 monthly plus a $19,087 savings component, the judge reasoned that "it

will not be possible for both parties to maintain the marital lifestyle base d upon

their combined annual gross income of $776,415."

      The judge explained that he reached the $11,500 per month alimony award

by considering "the parties' respective incomes, income derived from interest on

equitable distribution, and the need for each party to downsize their lifestyles,

and further considering [Alan's] alimony obligation will not be tax deductible."

He concluded that $6,500 per month in alimony as supplemented by Martha's

imputed net income of approximately $4,000 per month "equates to and

reasonably supports the prior $10,588 per month" marital lifestyle.

      The judge also found that the $5,000 monthly savings component was

"reasonable and appropriate based upon the history of the parties' marriage"

during which they saved approximately $19,087 per month. He recognized that

"[w]hile 50 percent of the monthly marital savings component would be

$9543.50 for each party . . . the savings component must decrease dramatically

as a result of [Alan's] alimony obligation and his having to maintain two

households."

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                                       17
      In so ruling, the judge relied on Lombardi, 447 N.J. Super. at 39-40, for

the proposition that "the most 'appropriate case' in which to include a savings

component is where the parties' lifestyle included regular savings," as well as

our rejection in Lombardi of the argument that a party receives the "savings

component through equitable distribution of the parties' accounts."         That

contention, the judge held, "runs afoul of the rule that 'equitable distribution

determinations are intended to be in addition to, and not as substitutes for,

alimony awards,' which are awarded to provide for the maintenance of the

marital lifestyle post-dissolution."

      Alan does not dispute those findings pertaining to the marital lifestyle

(including the finding that the parties saved approximately $19,087 per month

during the marriage), his employment income, or the employment income

imputed to Martha. Rather, he asserts "the court never quantified or counted the

passive income [Martha] could be expected to earn from investment of the non-

retirement assets she received in equitable distribution, as required by N.J.S.A.

2A:34-23(b)(11)" prior to setting the alimony award.4 He presents a number of

4
  Although Alan argues that the retirement assets Martha received in equitable
distribution should factor into this analysis, consideration of those assets in
fixing alimony is contrary to law. See N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b) (stating that
"[w]hen a share of a retirement benefit is treated as an asset for purposes of

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                                       18
hypothetical scenarios to suggest Martha "has her own ability to save from

$6000 to $10,000 per month herself" if one assumes she could obtain annual

investment earnings on those assets at a rate of five percent.

      Neither the alimony statute nor case law requires application of a five-

percent annual return on investment income when calculating alimony, as Alan

urges. The plain language of N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b)(11) requires a consideration

of "[t]he income available to either party through investment of any assets held

by that party." See Tannen v. Tannen, 416 N.J. Super. 248, 261 (App. Div.

2010), aff'd, 208 N.J. 409 (2011).

      In any event, the trial judge's decision establishes that he "consider[ed]"

and "assess[ed] evidence" pertaining to available investment income when

calculating the alimony award, as was required. N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b). In

ordering Alan to pay $5,000 per month as a savings component (substantially

less than what was part of the marital lifestyle), the judge explained that he

considered, among other factors, Martha's imputed employment income and her

ability to derive income "from interest on equitable distribution." Indeed, the

judge stated at various points throughout his written decision that Martha's

equitable distribution, the court shall not consider income generated thereafter
by that share for purposes of determining alimony").
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                                       19
ability to derive investment income from the interest on equitable distribution

would be affected by her need to use part of the non-retirement, liquid assets to

secure housing and to pay more than $700,000 in outstanding counsel fees.

These findings are supported by the record.

       In short, we agree with the trial judge and conclude that the $5,000

monthly savings component is reasonable under the circumstances – particularly

given the couple's joint emphasis on regular savings as part of the marit al

lifestyle.   Moreover, the judge's fixing of that amount certainly does not

constitute an abuse of discretion because he explained the ruling in great detail

and his explanation constitutes a more than reasonable or rational interpretation

and analysis of all the alimony factors. The end result achieved is, in our view,

"fair under the circumstances and congruent with the standards set forth in

N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23." Steneken, 183 N.J. at 302.

                                        II

       Alan argues that the trial judge abused his discretion in granting Martha a

Mallamo credit of $5,000 per month to make up for the absence of a savings

component in the support Alan paid during the pendente lite stage. He claims

the judge "arbitrarily applied the same savings rate ordered post-divorce to the

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                                       20
pendente lite period, without any real consideration of the parties' financial

circumstances and ability to save during that time."

      Pendente lite support orders are subject to modification at any time prior

to entry of final judgment and credits may be awarded to adjust the support paid

prior to final judgment. As we explained in Mallamo, 280 N.J. Super. at 16,

pendente lite support is most often the end product of a motion without an

evidentiary hearing, when the judge "is presented reams of conflicting and, at

times, incomplete information concerning the income, assets and lifestyles of

the litigants" and must impose an interim award that does not always reflect "a

reasonably complete picture of the financial status of the parties until a full trial

is conducted." Thus, later, when all the evidence is presented and weighed at

trial, the judge is in a better position to fix a proper amount of support and may

craft an award that is either higher or lower than the prior interim order. When,

as here, it is the latter, a judge may consider awarding the supported spouse a

credit to equalize the fact that the supported spouse was short-changed during

the pendente lite stage; these rulings are reviewed under an abuse of discretion

standard. Slutsky v. Slutsky, 451 N.J. Super. 332, 368 (App. Div. 2017).

      The judge found that, while Alan's payment of Martha's Schedule A and

Schedule B expenses plus $4,500 per month (approximately $9,202 in total

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                                        21
monthly pendente lite support) "reasonably enabled" Martha to maintain the

marital lifestyle during the pendente lite stage, that award did not provide her

"with any monthly savings component." In contrast, as the judge also found,

Alan was able "during this same time . . . to continue saving whatever was left

over" once he paid the pendente lite support each month.

        To achieve an equitable result, the judge concluded that Alan owed

Martha "$5000 per month from November 2014 through March 2019 (52

months), which amounts to $260,000." He also reasonably declined to apply the

Mallamo credit prior to November 2014 because Martha admittedly benefited

from removing cash from the parties' safe when she moved out of the marital

home.

        Alan's contention that the judge "arbitrarily applied the same savings rate

ordered post-divorce to the pendente lite period" is simply not true. The judge

gave a thorough reasoned explanation for his ruling.

        It suffices to observe that Alan did not contest the judge's finding that the

couple saved approximately $19,087 per month during the marriage, and there

is no doubt the pendente lite award did not include a savings component. It was

entirely consistent with the marital lifestyle and not unreasonable for the judge

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                                         22
to order a Mallamo credit in the amount of $5,000 per month, less the $22,000

Martha removed from the parties' safe when they separated.

      Alan's assertion that he would not have had the ability to pay the extra

$5,000 per month "without any access to his RSUs for the entire period of time

in question," is also unavailing given his substantial employment income and

lack of debt. Further, he testified that he continued to save each month by

contributing toward his 401(k) during the pendente lite period, and he agreed

that Martha was "equally entitled to the marital lifestyle," as our jurisprudence

recognizes.

      Finally, Alan claims the judge made a factual error in finding Alan was

"sustaining two households" during the pendente lite period, and not three, by

failing to recognize he was also required to pay expenses for the Pennsylvania

home during the pendente lite period. His case information statement, however,

reveals those expenses were relatively minimal, totaling, along with real estate

taxes, homeowner's insurance, and utilities, $615 per month. Even assuming the

judge overlooked these expenses rather than implicitly deeming them

inconsequential, any error in that regard is harmless and should be disregarded;

in short, Alan has not demonstrated such an alleged error was "clearly capable

of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2.

                                                                           A-3990-18
                                      23
                                       III

      Regarding equitable distribution, the parties were able to stipulate the

disposition of the majority of their marital assets, including their homes. But

they left to the trial judge their disputed issues concerning the RSUs provided

to Alan by his employer in 2012, 2013 and 2014. Alan argues the judge abused

his discretion in the manner in which he distributed those RSUs. We disagree.

      Prior to 2018, the employer awarded RSUs annually in January based on

the prior year's performance but with a three-year vesting period at the end of

which the employer deposited a net amount of shares into an investment account

in Alan's name after withholding certain minimum amounts for federal and state

income taxes.

      The record reveals that Alan sold the 2,465 net shares that vested in 2015

and deposited the cash obtained in the money-market portion of the Fidelity

RSU account. He did not sell the net shares that vested in 2016 and 2017; they

remained in the Fidelity RSU account as stock shares at the time of trial.

      On February 21, 2019, the last day of trial testimony, Alan's attorney told

the trial judge that

             in terms of the RSUs . . . we have an agreement except
             for one small issue just related to taxes. Otherwise, we
             are completely in agreement about the RSUs.

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                                       24
Martha's attorney later said they "tentatively . . . reached agreement as to the

methodology of the calculation of what we call the coverture fraction" that

would ultimately determine what portion of the tranches at issue were marital

assets subject to equitable distribution and what portions were not. 5

      Their agreement to use a coverture fraction would suggest the parties

presumed Martha was entitled only to a portion of the RSUs that vested post-

complaint. Although not explained in the trial record, Alan's brief defines the

numerator of the coverture fraction as the "number of months worked from the

grant date to the date of [the divorce] [c]omplaint" and the denominator as thirty-

six, representing "the total number of working months necessary from grant date

to vesting date."6

5
  Generally, the use of a coverture fraction ensures that "the equitable
distribution pot includes only that portion of the working spouse's labor which
constitutes a 'shared enterprise'" and "also assures the employee spouse the
benefits of his or her pre and post coverture labors." Eisenhardt v. Eisenhardt,
325 N.J. Super. 576, 581 (App. Div. 1999).
6
  See Sandra R. Klevan, Beyond Salary and Bonus: The Where, What and How
of Complex Executive Compensation from a Divorce Perspective, 41 Fam.
Advoc. 12, 12-16 (2018) (explaining that, in the context of RSUs that vest after
the filing of the divorce complaint, "[t]he coverture fraction allocates the award
as marital and nonmarital based on the vesting schedule, with the numerat or
being the time period from the date the award was granted to the cutoff date and
the denominator being the period from the date of grant to the vesting date").
                                                                             A-3990-18
                                       25
      Martha's counsel represented to the trial judge that based on this coverture

fraction, the parties agreed Martha should receive thirty-nine percent of the net

shares in the tranche that vested in 2015, twenty-two percent of the net shares

in the tranche that vested in 2016, and six percent of the net shares in the tranche

that vested in 2017. He also confirmed that the parties disagreed about the tax

rate to be utilized in determining the net value of each year's tranche. He

presented the tax rates that Martha favored; Alan's attorney replied that she

needed time to review those numbers to see whether they "may be in agreement"

on that issue. The trial judge instructed the parties to thereafter "advise" him if

they resolved that part of the case.

      Immediately prior to the parties' summations in March 2019, the parties

still had not agreed on a tax rate to be utilized in determining the net value of

each year's tranche. On the record, Alan's attorney said that Martha's attorney

had not responded to a letter sent about the RSUs and asked if there was an

agreement. The reply was: "The issue is . . . the tax [rate], everything else we

agree upon."

      During his summation, Martha's attorney told the trial judge: "I believe

we have resolved the issue of the tranches and the amount of the RSUs, and the

division utilizing a coverture fraction," and the parties have "agreed . . . as to

                                                                              A-3990-18
                                        26
the percentages that [Martha] is entitled to, percentages of RSUs" but they still

had not agreed on the tax rate. Martha's attorney asserted the tax rates proposed

by Alan would result in Martha unfairly "bear[ing] the burden of the highest

progressive rate"; she preferred utilizing an average tax rate for each tranche.

      Similarly, during summation, Alan's attorney stated that while the parties

agreed Martha was to receive thirty-nine percent, twenty-two percent, and six

percent of the net shares of the tranches that vested in 2015, 2016, and 2017,

respectively, they had not agreed on the tax rate needed to determine the net

value of each year's tranche.

      In his decision, the judge came to the conclusion that the parties' inability

to agree on the tax rates meant they had no agreement at all. The judge then

went on to make detailed findings as to the sixteen statutory factors in N.J.S.A.

2A:34-23.1 and concluded that Martha was "entitled to 50% of all net RSU[s]

granted to [Alan] prior to May 8, 2014" – the date Alan filed his divorce

complaint – and "50% of the net remaining shares after tax withholding related

to the 1/19/2012 grant (2133 shares), the 1/17/2013 grant (3049 shares), and the

1/22/2014 grant (1782 shares), which are the subject of the current dispute"; he

also made Alan "solely responsible for all remaining and unpaid taxes on the

RSUs to be transferred to" Martha. In considering the tax obligation, the judge

                                                                             A-3990-18
                                       27
considered the fact that he had awarded Alan "all outstanding [tax] refunds"

from 2014 to 2017.

      Alan initially argues that the judge erroneously disregarded the parties'

agreement about the percentage of the three tranches of RSUs expressed on the

record and, as a result, his award of fifty percent of those tranches to Martha

was an abuse of discretion. Alan alternatively argues that the judge's division

of the RSUs was premised on an error as to how and when they vested, and the

division was inconsistent with applicable legal principles. We disagree in both

respects.

                                          A

      The judge reasonably determined from what had been presented during

the trial – and in light of the parties' last-minute description of their negotiations

but incomplete agreement about these RSUs during their closing arguments –

that in failing to resolve all aspects of that particular equitable distribution item,

he was entitled to divide those RSUs and allocate the tax consequences in the

manner he found most equitable. We agree.

      As Judge Jayne said for this court in Kupper v. Barger, 33 N.J. Super. 491,

494 (App. Div. 1955) (emphasis added), while the enforcement of a stipulation

is always subject to the trial court's "sound discretion and control," a stipulation

                                                                                A-3990-18
                                         28
of settlement should not be enforced "where there appears to have been an

absence of mutuality of accord between the parties or their attorneys in some

substantial particulars, or the stipulated agreement is incomplete in some of its

material and essential terms." See also DeVries v. Evening J. Ass'n, 9 N.J. 117,

120 (1952) (holding that "[s]o long as negotiations are pending over matters

relating to the contract, and which the parties regard as material to it, and until

they are settled and their minds meet upon them, it is not a contract, although as

to some matters they may be agreed"); Bistricer v. Bistricer, 231 N.J. Super.

143, 147 (Ch. Div. 1987). Considering that the parties did not present to the

judge a full resolution of their dispute about the RSUs, the judge was free to

conclude there was no binding agreement on any aspects of the dispute. We find

no abuse of discretion in this determination.

                                        B

      We also find no abuse of discretion in how the judge divided the RSUs in

question. "The goal of equitable distribution . . . is to effect a fair and just

division of marital assets." Steneken, 367 N.J. Super. at 434. "Every case turns

on its own facts and requires a case[-]by[-]case analysis." Barr v. Barr, 418 N.J.

Super. 18, 44 (App. Div. 2011). A matrimonial judge must engage in a three-

step process, which includes determinations of each spouse's eligibility for

                                                                             A-3990-18
                                       29
distribution, the property's value, and the most equitable allocation of the

property. See Rothman v. Rothman, 65 N.J. 219, 232 (1974); see also Thieme

v. Aucoin-Thieme, 227 N.J. 269, 284 n.4 (2016); Pascale v. Pascale, 140 N.J.

583, 609 (1995).

      A judge must also recognize the presence of "a rebuttable presumption

that each party made a substantial financial or nonfinancial contribution to the

acquisition of income and property while the party was married," N.J.S.A.

2A:34-23.1, and apply the sixteen factors set forth in that statute. In engaging

this process, the judge "has broad discretionary authority to equitably distribute

marital property." Sauro v. Sauro, 425 N.J. Super. 555, 572 (App. Div. 2012).

As a result, our review of an "order pertaining to the division of marital assets

is narrow," id. at 573, entailing a determination of whether the judge "mistakenly

exercised [the] broad authority to divide the parties' property or whether the

result reached was bottomed on a misconception of law or findings of fact that

are contrary to the evidence." Genovese v. Genovese, 392 N.J. Super. 215, 223

(App. Div. 2007). Reversal is warranted only when the judge "clearly abused"

this discretion. Clark v. Clark, 429 N.J. Super. 61, 72 (App. Div. 2012).

      After determining the parties had not reached a binding agreement on this

issue, the judge made detailed factual findings about each of the sixteen statutory

                                                                             A-3990-18
                                       30
factors, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23.1, some of which are repetitive of the findings made

regarding alimony already discussed.

      To briefly repeat, the judge found that, during the parties' seventeen-year

marriage, they maintained a high standard of living and accumulated

approximately $7.02 million in assets with just $40,000 in debt due to their

"focus on savings." He recognized Alan's employment generated a "significant

annual income" during the entire marriage, as compared to Martha's "more

modest income during the early years of the marriage." The judge properly

assumed that after the divorce Alan would continue in his current job and earn

at least $700,000 annually, while Martha would be expected to earn only

$76,401 on average on returning to the workforce. The judge also recognized

the parties would both receive "significant assets" in equitable distribution that

would provide each "a lifestyle reasonably comparable to . . . the marital

lifestyle."

      In addition, the judge found Martha's "service as a homemaker during the

entirety of the parties' marriage . . . even when she was working full-time, and

her subsequent dedication as a full-time stay-at-home mother and home-maker

following [Stephen's] birth" allowed Alan "to dedicate long hours to his career

advancement." By comparison, the judge found "no evidence" to suggest Alan

                                                                            A-3990-18
                                       31
had "contributed in any material way" to Martha's career advancement. In

essence, he found Martha "sacrificed her career advancement" to promote and

allow for Alan's career advancement, citing the fact that she repeatedly left jobs

in favor of Alan's "better" jobs and his need to relocate.

       In his specific findings about the RSUs in dispute, the judge found they

"vested in equal tranches on the anniversary date of the initial grant" and "over

the proximate three years from each grant date." The judge relied on and quoted

from M.G. v. S.M., 457 N.J. Super. 286, 302 (App. Div. 2018), in holding that:

(1) "[w]here an award is made [by an employer] during the marriage for work

performed during the marriage, but becomes vested after the date of complaint,

it too is subject to equitable distribution"; (2) "there is a rebuttable presumption

the award is subject to equitable distribution unless there is a material dispute

of fact regarding whether the stock, either in whole or in part, is for future

performance"; and (3) "[t]he party seeking to exclude such assets . . . bears the

burden to prove the stock award was made for services performed outside the

marriage."

      Applying these principles, the judge found the RSUs at issue were subject

to equitable distribution because they were awarded for Alan's "pre-complaint

work performance" as "compensation" during times when he was working and

                                                                              A-3990-18
                                        32
traveling extensively and Martha was supporting those efforts by caring for their

home and child. The judge also found that, "[u]nlike the plaintiff in M.G.," Alan

"provided no material, objective or credible testimony or evidence, including

stock plan information or testimony from corporate representatives, that the

RSUs were compensation for or contingent upon future work performance." The

judge, therefore, found Alan "failed to meet his burden of proof to exclude the

RSUs from equitable distribution." The judge added that he "generally did not

find [Alan] to be credible," and so rejected his "unsupported position that the

RSUs are contingent or related to future performance."

      In appealing, Alan argues the judge's disposition of these assets was based

on a factual misconception that each RSU award vested gradually over three

years, in three equal amounts per year – an interpretation of the evidence that

was contrary to his own testimony, asserting that the RSUs vested after the end

of three years, not gradually over three years. But the judge never specifically

stated there was a gradual vesting of the RSUs. He instead held that the RSUs

"vested in equal tranches over the proximate three years from each grant date,"

giving the example that the RSUs granted to Alan "in March 2011 were for 2010

performance, and they vested in equal tranches on the anniversary date of the

initial grant in each 2012, 2013 and 2014." This holding was later repeated in

                                                                           A-3990-18
                                      33
the judge's opinion, while he never said, as Alan argues, that "each RSU award

vested gradually over three years, in three equal amount per year." Regardless

of how they vested, the judge was entitled to reach the conclusion that Martha

was "entitled to 50% of all net RSU[s] granted to [Alan] prior to May 8, 2014"

including half of "the net remaining shares after tax withholding related to"

earlier RSU grants.     The judge also held Alan "solely responsible for all

remaining and unpaid taxes on the RSUs to be transferred to" Martha. In

calculating the number of net shares in each tranche, the judge utilized the

"actual effective federal income tax rates" Alan proposed as shown on a chart

marked in evidence. In holding Alan responsible for all the unpaid taxes, the

judge considered that he had awarded Alan "all outstanding tax refunds" from

2014 to 2017 that had been held by Martha's counsel or otherwise.

      The conclusions reached by the judge based on his factual findings are

soundly rooted in the legal principles followed by our courts at least since

Rothman and should not be second-guessed by an appellate court. The trial

judge sat through a lengthy trial and had a far better "feel of the case" as to what

was a fair, just, and equitable distribution of the parties' property.

                                                                              A-3990-18
                                        34
                                       IV

      Alan also argues that the judge abused his discretion by reducing his

parenting time from the extent permitted during the pendente lite stage with, in

Alan's words, "no explanation and no support in the record." In particular, Alan

argues the judge should not have eliminated his alternate Monday non-overnight

parenting time with Stephen because the court-appointed custody expert

recommended the alternate Monday parenting time be expanded to an overnight

and because Martha had not objected to the July 2015 pendente lite parenting

time schedule, which included the alternate Monday non-overnight parenting

time. While Alan is not now seeking the expanded overnight parenting time that

the expert recommended, he asks that we exercise original jurisdiction to

reinstate his alternate Monday non-overnight parenting time.

      Decisions concerning custody are left to a matrimonial judge's "sound

discretion." Pascale, 140 N.J. at 611; Nufrio v. Nufrio, 341 N.J. Super. 548, 555

(App. Div. 2001). This discretion "connotes conscientious judgment," Higgins

v. Polk, 14 N.J. 490, 493 (1954), requiring consideration of "the public policy

of this State to assure minor children of frequent and continuing contact with

both parents after the parents separated or dissolved their marriage," N.J.S.A.

9:2-4. The "primary consideration is the best interests" of the child, Hand v.

                                                                           A-3990-18
                                      35
Hand, 391 N.J. Super. 102, 105 (App. Div. 2007), which includes consideration

of

            the parents’ ability to agree, communicate and
            cooperate in matters relating to the child; the parents’
            willingness to accept custody and any history of
            unwillingness to allow parenting time not based on
            substantiated abuse; the interaction and relationship of
            the child with its parents and siblings; the history of
            domestic violence, if any; the safety of the child and the
            safety of either parent from physical abuse by the other
            parent; the preference of the child when of sufficient
            age and capacity to reason so as to form an intelligent
            decision; the needs of the child; the stability of the
            home environment offered; the quality and continuity
            of the child’s education; the fitness of the parents; the
            geographical proximity of the parents’ homes; the
            extent and quality of the time spent with the child prior
            to or subsequent to the separation; the parents’
            employment responsibilities; and the age and number
            of the children.

            [N.J.S.A. 9:2-4(c).]

      When departing from the parents' agreement, a judge "must identify on

the record the specific factors that justify [a different] arrangement." Bisbing v.

Bisbing, 230 N.J. 309, 322 (2017). In his thorough written opinion, the judge

explained that while the parties consented to joint legal custody, they dis agreed

on physical or residential custody. Alan sought a shared residential custody

arrangement with each party having seven overnights during every fourteen -day

period; Martha sought designation as the parent of primary residence with Alan

                                                                             A-3990-18
                                       36
continuing to exercise his pendente lite parenting time schedule, which had been

in place since July 2015, of five overnights during every fourteen-day period.

      In relying on the court-appointed expert's unrebutted opinion, the judge

concluded it was in Stephen's best interests for Martha to "be awarded primary

physical (residential) custody."     He cited as "important" Alan's "lack of

credibility, his refusal to consent to a parenting coordinator during the course of

the litigation, his general lack of involvement in [Stephen's] life prior to the

parties' physical separation," and "the consistency of [Martha's] presence in [the

child's] life from birth through the present time," as well as the child's "greater

affinity and preference to spend more time" with Martha.

      In reaching this decision, the judge considered all the factors delineated

in N.J.S.A. 9:2-4 and found certain factors to be especially relevant, including:

the parties "do not possess a material ability to agree, communicate or

cooperate" in matters relating to the child; the child has a good relationship with,

and is bonded with, both parents; the child's relationship with Alan "deepened

following the parties' separation," but Stephen "continues to have a greater

affinity for his mother" and an "increased comfort level" with her; Stephen, who

appeared to the judge "intelligent, honest, and capable of expressing a rational

opinion of desire regarding the custody issue," "expressed a consistent

                                                                              A-3990-18
                                        37
preference to spend more time" with Martha7; Stephen has no special

educational or medical needs; and, prior to the separation, Martha "was the

[child's] primary caretaker . . . in all respects," although Alan became more

involved after the separation and was managing his work schedule "to

accommodate his parenting time."

      The key difference between the schedule during the pendente lite stage

and the schedule contained in the judgment of divorce is that the latter omitted

the "alternate Mondays following [Martha's] weekend with [Stephen] from after

school until 7:30 p.m." The judge did, however, add a Monday daytime visit for

Alan until 6:00 p.m. on school holidays following a weekend when he had

parenting time (which had not been previously ordered during the pendente lite

period), provided Martha does not have parenting time for that holiday. And

instead of ordering generally that the parties alternate holidays and school

vacations, as the court-appointed expert recommended, the judge created a more

detailed holiday schedule. He also adopted the expert's recommendation that

each party have at least three weeks of summer vacation with Stephen

(consisting of two consecutive weeks and one additional non-consecutive week).

7
  See Wilke v. Culp, 196 N.J. Super. 487, 498 (App. Div. 1984) (explaining that
"the desires of older children may be entitled to stronger consideration than that
afforded to younger children" on the issue of parenting time).
                                                                            A-3990-18
                                       38
      The judge characterized this new parenting plan as "essentially the same

as the current schedule with the addition of defined holiday and vacation time ."

He explained that he declined to expand Alan's parenting time to include six

overnights in each fourteen-day period as recommended by the court-appointed

expert, citing, among many other things, the importance of a need for

"consistency of the parenting schedule," Martha's "credible" testimony that

Stephen "has adjusted well to the existing parenting schedule," and Stephen's

expressed desire "to spend more time with his mother."

      The judge's extensive factual findings are adequately supported by

sufficient credible evidence, and his thorough written opinion reveals that the

judge fully discharged his duty to "identify . . . the specific factors" that justified

his disposition. Bisbing, 230 N.J. at 322. Alan, in arguing that the judge erred

in denying him the overnight Mondays that were previously allowed during the

pendente lite stage, particularly relies on the court-appointed expert's opinion

that favored his position and Martha's amenability to the preexisting schedule.

But even though family courts often "rely heavily" on the opinions of experts,

Kinsella v. Kinsella, 150 N.J. 276, 318 (1997), the judge is always "free to

accept or reject . . . and need not adopt the opinion of" an expert, Brown v.

Brown, 348 N.J. Super. 466, 478 (App. Div. 2002); see also D.A. v. R.C., 438

                                                                                A-3990-18
                                         39
N.J. Super. 431, 454 (App. Div. 2014).        Similarly, the parties cannot by

agreement or acquiescence "relieve the court of its obligation to safeguard the

best interests of the child." P.T. v. M.S., 325 N.J. Super. 193, 215 (App. Div.

1999). "The burden of making and explaining that decision remains at all times

the exclusive obligation of the trial judge and can never be delegated to any

other party." D.A., 438 N.J. Super. at 454.

      The judge reached a decision based on his assessment of the testimony

and his interview of the child, thereby gaining a better "feel of the case" and a

more informed view of what was fair and just in this situation than an appellate

court can obtain by reviewing a transcript. We, therefore, defer to the judge's

findings of fact and, after careful review, find no reason to second guess his

exercise of discretion in adopting the parenting schedule.

                                     ***

      In addition to those arguments discussed at length above, Alan argues that

the trial judge abused his discretion in allocating their responsibility for

Stephen's unreimbursed medical expenses and in his rulings about future college

education contributions; he also argues that the judge erred in denying his

motion to seal the record. We find these arguments have insufficient merit to

warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).

                                                                           A-3990-18
                                      40
      Alan lastly argues that if our decision necessitates any further trial court

proceedings we should direct the assignment of a different trial judge or take

that step notwithstanding because there may be post-judgment motions in the

future. This argument is frivolous. The judge may not have viewed the facts

and circumstances as does Alan but that does not mean he exceeded his authority

or acted with bias toward any party. To the contrary, the judge could not have

more thoroughly, carefully, and fairly considered all the issues put before him.

We find no reason to question the able judge's impartiality in this hotly-

contested case.

      Affirmed.

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                                      41