Turner v. Turner
Turner v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
Jeffrey Turner appeals from a modification judgment entered by a judge of the Probate and Family Court on his complaint to terminate alimony and on his former wife's counterclaim for modification. Relying in part on George v. George,
Background. This was a traditional marriage, lasting approximately eighteen years (or 217 months). Joan Turner, the former wife, stopped work upon the birth of the parties' first of two children (both children are now emancipated). Jeffrey
The parties' original separation agreement, incorporated in the divorce judgment of April, 2002, obligated Jeffrey to pay $500 per week in child support and $450 per week in alimony (and up to one-third of any salary or commissions in excess of $150,000 annually) until Jeffrey reached age sixty-five (or the death of either party, or Joan's remarriage).
On April 7, 2014, Jeffrey filed the present modification complaint, asserting a change of circumstances due to his decreased income, seeking termination of his alimony in accordance with durational limits under the Alimony Reform Act (Act), and requesting an order for Joan to repay him the $6,000 child support overpayment deferred by the 2012 modification judgment. Joan responded with a counterclaim, requesting a deviation from the alimony durational limits because of her inability to provide for her own support, and asking that the judge attribute income to Jeffrey.
After trial, the judge found that Joan is not self-supporting, even though, at the time of trial, she was working as a bank teller and had made some advancement in her position with the bank. The judge concluded that Jeffrey had failed to pursue employment at a lower level (declining various offers of employment), and imputed to him an annual income of $66,500.
In addition, because the judge found that Joan was unable to provide sufficiently for her own support, the judge deviated from the durational limits in accordance with G. L. c. 208, § 53(e )(8), obligating Jeffrey to continue paying alimony until age sixty-five, rather than the presumptive termination date (September 1, 2015) based on their eighteen-year marriage. The judge rationalized that, because Joan "credibly testified that, had she known that alimony would possibly not continue until [Jeffrey] turned 65, as they had agreed[,] she never would have agreed to have assets set aside for her daughter's college or agreed to share equally the cost of their daughter attending Columbia [University], despite no court order for her to do so."
Discussion. First, alimony awards predating the enactment of the Act are considered general term alimony; this category of alimony may be modified in amount and duration upon a material change in circumstances but "for not longer than 80 per cent of the number of months of the marriage" if the duration of the marriage is, as here, between fifteen and twenty years. G. L. c. 208, § 49(b )(4). See Rodman v. Rodman,
At the time the present modification judgment entered in August, 2015, the judge did not have the benefit of the George case. In George, as in this case, the judge concluded that, had the former wife known at the time of the divorce that the former husband's alimony obligation would terminate before the date specified in the merged separation agreement, "she would likely have 'bargained for' a different division of property."
Next, "[a]lthough a 'judge has broad discretion when awarding alimony under the [Act],' the judge must consider all relevant, statutorily specified factors, such as those set forth in G. L. c. 208, §§ 49(d ) and 53(a )." Duff-Kareores v. Kareores,
Finally, the judge was permitted to attribute income to Jeffrey in determining whether to modify the existing alimony order, as "[a] judge is not limited to a party's actual earnings but may ... consider potential earning capacity" when attributing income. Heins v. Ledis,
Here, the judge provided detailed findings as to Jeffrey's income history, the retention of significant assets, the fact that he had no debt, and that there had been virtually no change in his lifestyle, despite his claim to have little or no income in the two years prior to trial. She expressly attributed that to the fact that Jeffrey's present wife, as he testified, is paying all of their household expenses during his unemployment.
In addition, in her findings, while the judge credited Jeffrey's efforts to obtain employment similar to his prior jobs, she noted that "he has been recruited to pursue applications in other fields and has rejected those opportunities .... The Court [found] it unreasonable for [Jeffrey], who has the responsibility to support [Joan,] to remain unemployed, in hopes of securing a position as a Vice President of Sales when other positions, for which he is qualified[,] have been and are available to him."
In light of these facts, we conclude that the $66,500 in income attributed to Jeffrey with respect to modifying the existing alimony order was reasonable and is supported by the findings and the trial record.
Based on the foregoing, we vacate the modification judgment dated August 3, 2015, and remand the matter to the Probate and Family Court to determine whether, in light of George v. George,
So ordered.
Vacated and remanded.
Because they share a last name, we refer to the parties by their first names.
The divorce judgment was first modified in late 2004, reducing, by stipulation, Jeffrey's child support and alimony obligations due to his unemployment (his monthly alimony payment was reduced by $330 to $1,620). It was again modified by stipulation in 2012, further reducing Jeffrey's child support obligation, based largely on the newly updated child support guidelines. As a result of the second modification judgment, Jeffrey was obligated to pay $600 per month in child support until the emancipation of the younger child, and he was responsible for that child's State college costs. The issue of a $6,000 retroactive child support overpayment was deferred. Jeffrey's alimony obligation did not change.
In arriving at this income amount, it appears that the judge considered Jeffrey's reported income of $45,000, and the fact that he received no income in 2015, but continued to pay his $224 weekly alimony obligation while increasing the value of his significant assets, incurring no debt, and retaining a balance of more than $6,000 (his half) in the checking account held jointly with his present wife.
The court found the analysis "flawed in two respects. First, there was nothing in the [parties'] agreed statement of facts to support this finding. Second, this logic might well prevent nearly all payor spouses with alimony obligations predating the act from ever gaining the benefit of the act's durational limits, because recipient spouses could argue that, had they known that their alimony payments would be affected by the act, they would have negotiated their separation agreement differently."
The factors are: "(1) advanced age; chronic illness; or unusual health circumstances of either party; (2) tax considerations applicable to the parties; (3) whether the payor spouse is providing health insurance and the cost of health insurance for the recipient spouse; (4) whether the payor spouse has been ordered to secure life insurance for the benefit of the recipient spouse and the cost of such insurance; (5) sources and amounts of unearned income, including capital gains, interest and dividends, annuity and investment income from assets that were not allocated in the parties divorce; (6) significant premarital cohabitation that included economic partnership or marital separation of significant duration, each of which the court may consider in determining the length of the marriage; (7) a party's inability to provide for that party's own support by reason of physical or mental abuse by the payor; (8) a party's inability to provide for that party's own support by reason of that party's deficiency of property, maintenance or employment opportunity; and (9) upon written findings, any other factor that the court deems relevant and material." G. L. c. 208, § 53(e )(1)-(9).
The judge found that Jeffrey's claimed weekly expenses appeared inaccurate; for example, he included "$259 per week for motor vehicle expenses, yet he owns no vehicle," and "reported numerous expenses for rent, insurance, repairs, etc., for a home owned by his present wife."
Jeffrey's argument that the judge failed to include Joan's cohabitation as a basis for future termination of alimony is waived, as he failed to raise this issue in his complaint in support of his asserted changed circumstances warranting modification of the existing alimony order. See Chin v. Merriot,
Joan's motion for appellate attorney's fees is denied.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.