Dunn v. Dunn
Dunn v. Dunn
Opinion of the Court
Warren M. Dunn ("the husband") and Suzette T. Dunn ("the wife") were married in December 1978 and separated in April 2001. Their marriage produced three children; only one child was a minor at the time the parties' divorce was tried. After a failed mediation attempt and a trial, the trial court divorced the parties; awarded them joint legal custody of their minor child; awarded the husband sole physical custody of the minor child; deviated from the child-support guidelines by not requiring the wife to pay child support; awarded the wife one-half of the husband's retirement benefits; and divided the parties' real and personal property and debts. The husband appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by failing to order the wife to pay child support, in dividing the parties' property inequitably, and in awarding the wife one-half of his retirement benefits.
The testimony established that the wife, who was a teacher at the time the parties were married, had primarily stayed at home to rear the children, at her husband's request. She had a few part-time jobs after the children were born, but none of those jobs lasted longer than one year. The wife has not accrued any retirement benefits. She was 47 years old at the time of trial and was employed by Toxey Outdoors and Supply ("Toxey"), earning a monthly gross income of $866.66. She performs bookkeeping, management, and cashiering services for the retail store. Before working at Toxey, she had been employed at G.O.C., Ltd., where she earned approximately $300 per week performing bookkeeping and accounting services for a number of retail stores. She said she left that job because she was under a lot of pressure and it "got too much for her." At the time of trial, the wife had been recertified as a teacher, but she had not yet secured a teaching position despite applying for positions with public and private schools in the area. She testified that she had a few credit cards in her own name, which had credit balances totaling "a couple of thousand dollars." She admitted that she was currently in a romantic relationship with the owner of Toxey, but she denied that the relationship with him had started before the parties' separation.
The wife stated that she thought that the marital residence was worth approximately $110,000. She testified that she presently lived in a mobile home that had formerly been the marital residence, which is located on property that the parties had purchased from the wife's grandmother ("the grandmother's property"). The *Page 893 grandmother's property, consisting of approximately an acre, also contains a house, which the wife testified was in an unliveable condition. She testified that the grandmother's property, including the house and mobile home, was worth approximately $30,000. The remaining balance on the mortgage on that property was $23,065.63. The husband concurred with the $30,000 valuation, which was further supported by an appraisal that assigned the property and dwellings a value of $32,000.
The husband, who was 58 years old at the time of trial, is employed by Georgia Pacific Company and had been employed by that company or its predecessors for 31 years. The husband is a shift supervisor and earns an annual salary of $66,600. He testified that the marital residence was worth approximately $80,000, but he accepted as fair an appraisal value of $85,000. The marital residence is subject to two mortgages; the first mortgage has a balance of $26,685, and the second mortgage has a balance of $19,104. The husband also testified that the marital residence required some repairs, including repairs to the plumbing and the swimming-pool liner. Other than the mortgage debt, the husband testified that he and the wife had one joint credit card with an unspecified balance that required monthly payments in the amount of $247, that he had personal credit cards with unspecified balances that required monthly payments in the amounts of $184 and $78, and that he had a monthly truck payment in the amount of $402.61.
The husband testified that his company provides its employees with a pension plan, which the husband testified was worth approximately $60,000. However, a letter from Sharon K. Philpott, a senior paralegal in Georgia Pacific's law department, stated that the husband's balance under the corporation's pension plan, after its conversion from the Fort James pension plan (the pension plan offered by Georgia Pacific's predecessor), would be $42,080.79 as of October 1, 2001. The letter also stated that the amount could be paid out in a lump sum. However, the husband's "Fort James Frozen Benefit Statement as of September 30, 2001," indicated that the husband's "Final Average Compensation" amount under than plan was $60,815.86 and that he would be entitled to a monthly benefit, if he retired at age 65 or later, of $533.13. The husband also has a 401(k) account, the balance of which, according to the husband's testimony at trial, was approximately $38,000. In addition, the husband has an outstanding loan against the 401(k) account with a remaining balance of $19,000.
The parties both testified that their minor child, who was 16 years old at the time of trial, should live with the husband, as the child wished. In addition, the husband testified that he was not asking the wife to help him support the child, and he testified, without objection, that he had offered during settlement or mediation negotiations to waive child support from the wife. However, he also stated that he would be willing to assume all the costs of rearing the child only "if all things [were] equal. . . . If not, I [would] require child support." The trial court's judgment does not require the wife to pay child support; the trial court explained the deviation from the child-support guidelines by stating that the deviation is justified by the relative incomes of the parties and the debt assigned to the wife under the divorce judgment.
The husband first argues that the trial court's division of property is inequitable. He complains that the award of the grandmother's property and one-half of his retirement benefits to the wife, coupled with *Page 894
the wife's not being ordered to pay child support, her being awarded one-third of the equity in the marital residence, and his being ordered to assume all of the remaining marital debt, amounts to an inequitable division of the marital assets. His major contention is that the wife was not entitled to an award of one-half of his retirement benefits because the evidence failed to establish the amount of retirement benefits subject to division under Ala. Code 1975, §
Generally, a trial court is afforded a wide degree of discretion in dividing the marital assets of the parties upon divorce. Moody v. Moody,
Section
"(b) The judge, at his or her discretion, may include in the estate of either spouse the present value of any future or current retirement benefits, that a spouse may have a vested interest in or may be receiving on the date the action for divorce is filed, provided that the following conditions are met:
"(1) The parties have been married for a period of 10 years during which the retirement was being accumulated.
"(2) The court shall not include in the estate the value of any retirement benefits acquired prior to the marriage including any interest or appreciation of the benefits.
"(3) The total amount of the retirement benefits payable to the non-covered spouse shall not exceed 50 percent of the retirement benefits that may be considered by the court."
(Emphasis added.)
This court recently discussed the requirements of that statute.See Smith v. Smith,
Smith,"A reading of §
30-2-51 (b) indicates that a trial judge has the discretion to divide a spouse's retirement benefits if either of two conditions exists at the time the complaint for divorce is filed: a spouse must have a vested interest in or be receiving retirement benefits. Section30-2-51 (b) then states that the trial judge's discretion to divide retirement benefits is further limited by three additional conditions: the 10-year marriage rule of subsection (1); the post-nuptial acquisition-of-benefits rule of subsection (2); and the 50 percent division rule of subsection (3). The apparent meaning of these provisions, when read as a whole, is that the trial judge may divide the value of any retirement benefits in which one spouse has a vested interest or is receiving on the date the action for divorce is filed, provided that the parties have been married for 10 years as of that date, that the judge divides only those retirement benefits acquired during the marriage, and that the judge awards the noncovered spouse no more *Page 895 than 50 percent of the benefits that may be considered by the court."
The husband and the wife had been married 22 years and 8 months when the wife filed for a divorce in August 2001. The husband had, according to his testimony, worked for Georgia Pacific or its predecessors in the same location for 31 years. The record does not clearly indicate the specific date that the husband began accruing his retirement benefits; however, his pension-plan statement indicates that his "vesting service credit" was 29.750 years as of September 30, 2001. The wife presented evidence concerning the amount of money accumulated in the husband's retirement accounts. She presented no evidence concerning the amount of benefits that accrued during the parties' marriage. Thus, the husband argues that the wife's failure of proof precludes an award of his retirement benefits to her.
At least two cases have clearly addressed the issue presented by the husband. See Piatt v. Piatt,
The husband also argues that the trial court's judgment on the child-support issue should be reversed because the record does not contain a CS-42 "Child Support Guidelines" form as required by Rule 32(E), Ala. R. Jud. Admin.; because the trial court erred by failing to impute income to the wife; and because the trial court's deviation from the child-support guidelines is not supported by the evidence. The testimony concerning the wife's income revealed that her monthly net income is only $752.72. She testified that she had been paying the child's orthodontist $90 per month, that she was paying her middle child's truck payment in the amount of $242.66 per month, and that she was also paying on her own personal credit-card debt, although the amount of those payments were not specified. The judgment required her to pay the mortgage on the grandmother's property and awarded her no alimony with which to offset that *Page 896 payment. She was, however, awarded a lump sum of $16,239.63, which she planned to use to help her pay that outstanding mortgage.
The husband's argument that the lack of a completed CS-42 form is reversible error is based in large part on this court's insistence that parties and trial courts comply with Rule 32(E).See Martin v. Martin,
The husband further argues that the trial court erred in failing to impute additional income to the wife based on the testimony at trial establishing that the wife had the ability to earn more income than she was earning at the time of trial. Rule 32(B)(5), Ala. R. Jud. Admin., does require a trial court to impute income to a parent it finds to be voluntarily underemployed or unemployed. Whether to find a parent voluntarily underemployed or unemployed, however, is within the trial court's discretion. Griggs v. Griggs,
Finally, the husband argues that the record does not support a deviation from the child-support guidelines in the present case. As noted above, the wife makes a meager salary. Although we are not sure of her monthly expenses, we know that the truck payment, the orthodontic bill, and the remaining payments on the property she was awarded will expend a large amount of that meager salary. In addition, the husband testified at trial that *Page 897
he did not want the wife's financial assistance. He said that he had always been willing to waive child support. See Ex parteTabor,
In conclusion, the trial court's judgment is reversed insofar as it awards the wife one-half of the husband's retirement accounts. The cause is remanded to the trial court with instructions that it not award the wife any portion of the husband's retirement accounts because the evidence does not demonstrate what portion of those benefits were accrued during the marriage so as to be divisible pursuant to § 30-3-51(b); on remand, the trial court should reconsider the division of the parties' marital assets. The trial court's judgment is affirmed insofar as it deviates from the child-support guidelines and does not require the wife to pay child support.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
THOMPSON and PITTMAN, JJ., concur.
MURDOCK, J., concurs in the result, with writing.
YATES, P.J., concurs in part and dissents in part, with writing.
Concurring Opinion
I concur in the result. In so doing, I note my difference of opinion with the majority of this court as to the necessity, in every divorce case in which one spouse is seeking an award of a portion of the other spouse's retirement benefits, of proving, and couching the award in terms of, the "present value" of those benefits. See Wilkinson v. Wilkinson, [Ms. 2011255, April 16, 2004] ___ So.2d ___, ___ (Ala.Civ.App. 2004) (Murdock, J., concurring specially).
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with the majority that the trial court's judgment regarding child support should be affirmed. However, I must respectfully dissent from the majority's reversal of the trial court's judgment insofar as it awarded the wife a portion of her husband's retirement benefits pursuant to §
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Warren M. Dunn v. Suzette T. Dunn.
- Cited By
- 39 cases
- Status
- Published