Weiss v. Weiss ( 2017 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    KIMBERLY WEISS,
    Petitioner/Appellant,
    v.
    LEE WEISS,
    Respondent/Appellee.
    No. 1 CA-CV 16-0504 FC
    FILED 10-19-2017
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FC2009-050837
    The Honorable Jennifer C. Ryan-Touhill, Judge
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    COUNSEL
    Berkshire Law Office, PLLC, Phoenix
    By Keith Berkshire, Erica L. Gadberry
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant
    Tiffany & Bosco, PA, Phoenix
    By Tina M. Ezzell
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellee
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Diane M. Johnsen delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop and Judge Maria Elena Cruz joined.
    J O H N S E N, Judge:
    Kimberly Weiss ("Wife") appeals the superior court's order
    modifying spousal maintenance payable by Lee Weiss ("Husband"). She
    also appeals the court's summary denial of her petition for modification of
    child support and parenting time and its award of attorney's fees. For the
    following reasons, we vacate the order and remand.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The parties' marriage was dissolved in July 2009. The consent
    decree of dissolution provided that Husband would make two types of
    spousal maintenance payments to Wife: (1) a fixed payment of $1,000 per
    month until May 2018, and (2) a "Monthly Adjustable Payment" of 13% of
    Husband's W-2 income, adjusted annually until May 2018. The adjustable
    payment was subject to modification if Wife received "income in any form,"
    other than her employment income, "that exceeds $26,000 a year." If Wife
    received additional income beyond that threshold, Husband's adjustable
    payment to Wife was to be modified by the court pursuant to Arizona
    Revised Statutes ("A.R.S.") section 25-319 (2017).1
    In May 2014, Husband petitioned to modify spousal
    maintenance, alleging Wife had received an inheritance of more than
    $26,000 from her father and therefore met the qualifying condition for the
    modification of her spousal maintenance award. Husband further asserted
    Wife "colluded with her deceased father" to change his will after the decree
    was entered "in order to hide and delay payment of her inheritance" until
    after Husband's support obligation had expired. Wife then filed a petition
    for modification of child support and parenting time and allocation of
    expenses for minor children, and asked the court to consider her petition in
    conjunction with Husband's petition to modify spousal maintenance.
    1     Absent material revision after the relevant date, we cite a statute's
    current version.
    2
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    The superior court sua sponte appointed a special master to
    hear the issues involved in the parties' respective petitions and make
    findings and recommendations. After ruling on pretrial motions and
    conducting a ten-hour trial, the master issued a report and recommended
    rulings that the Monthly Adjustable Payment be reduced to $3,154 from
    $3,947. The master further recommended that Wife be required to pay
    $20,000 toward Husband's attorney's fees because she "acted unreasonably
    at times regarding disclosure and discovery and . . . this unreasonable
    behavior has caused Father to incur additional attorney fees."
    Wife filed an objection to the special master's report and
    requested a hearing. Without considering Husband's response, the court
    denied the request for hearing and issued a ruling further reducing the
    Monthly Adjustable Payment to $1,000 per month and increasing the
    attorney's fees award to $30,000. We have jurisdiction over Wife's timely
    appeal pursuant to Article 6, Section 9, of the Arizona Constitution, and
    A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(2) (2017).
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Spousal Maintenance Modification.
    1.     Due-process issue.
    Wife first argues that the superior court violated her due-
    process rights by appointing the special master without a request from
    either party. She also asserts that the master was not qualified to decide
    family law issues and that the court failed to "specify the particular issues"
    the master was to decide. Wife, however, waived those arguments by
    failing to raise them in the superior court. See Pflum v. Pflum, 
    135 Ariz. 304
    ,
    307 (App. 1982) ("Matters not raised below will not be considered on
    appeal."). In any event, at the relevant time, Arizona Rule of Family Law
    Procedure 72(A) (2016) authorized the court to appoint a special master "on
    [its] own motion" and without a request from either party.2
    2.     Zale and the interpretation of a consent decree.
    Wife next argues the master and the superior court both erred
    by considering evidence of the parties' intent in interpreting the dissolution
    decree's terms concerning the "Threshold Amount" of income that would
    render the adjustable payment "subject to modification." The interpretation
    2     See Order Amending Rule 72, Arizona Rules of Family Law
    Procedure, R-16-0037 at 3 (Dec. 14, 2016); Rule 72(M) (2017).
    3
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    of a dissolution decree is a legal issue that we review de novo. Cohen v. Frey,
    
    215 Ariz. 62
    , 66, ¶ 10 (App. 2007).
    Although courts may use parol evidence to determine the
    intent of the parties when interpreting a contract, a dissolution decree is not
    a contract, but a judgment. As such, a consent decree is "an independent
    resolution by the court of the issues before it and rightfully is regarded in
    that context and not according to the negotiated intent of the parties." In re
    Marriage of Zale, 
    193 Ariz. 246
    , 249, ¶ 11 (1999); see also Ariz. R. Civ. P. 54(a).
    Therefore, a court interpreting a consent decree applies general rules of
    construction but does not rely on extrinsic or parol evidence of the parties'
    intent. See Zale at 250, ¶¶ 16–17. Husband cites no case authority to the
    contrary.
    At issue on Husband's petition to modify maintenance was
    the following language from the decree:
    Modification of Monthly Adjustable Payment. The Monthly
    Adjustable Payment is subject to modification for the
    following reasons:
    *      *       *
    d. [Wife's] Additional Income. Upon [Wife's] receipt of
    income other than her employment income in any form
    (including without limitation income from other employment,
    gifts, inheritances, or direct payments by another person to
    [Wife] or to third parties on [Wife's] behalf towards the minor
    children's and [Wife's] living expenses), that exceeds $26,000
    a year (the "$26,000 Threshold Amount").
    (Emphasis added.) The master and the superior court both concluded that
    Wife's inheritance from her father constituted additional income that
    exceeded the $26,000 Threshold Amount.
    Wife acknowledges that the decree specifically includes
    "inheritances" as a form of income that may trigger a modification of
    spousal maintenance. She argues, however, that the decree's reference to
    "income from . . . inheritances" does not include a lump-sum inheritance, but
    instead means a recurring payment from an inheritance, or an amount
    generated from the investment of an inheritance. As support, Wife cites a
    dictionary definition of "income" as "money or other form of payment that
    one receives, [usually] periodically." Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed.
    2014). But the decree likewise refers to "income from other employment,
    4
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    gifts, . . . or direct payments by another person," a construction that
    undercuts Wife's contention that the decree does not treat an inheritance as
    income subject to the $26,000 Threshold Amount.
    Wife also cites cases that address whether investments or one-
    time capital gains or insurance settlements should be treated as income for
    purposes of child support. The cases Wife cites do not control here, when
    the decree specifically defines "income" to include "inheritances," which by
    their nature often are a one-time event. Moreover, although the parties
    dispute whether Wife as a practical matter could access money in one of the
    accounts that was to be held in trust for her until 2018, we need not
    determine that issue because Wife admitted during the hearing before the
    special master that when her father passed away in January 2014, she
    became the sole owner of a joint account containing a little more than
    $76,000, which she then transferred to various accounts. As a matter of law,
    under the decree, Wife's receipt of that amount was more than sufficient to
    trigger Husband's ability to request a modification of the monthly
    adjustable payment.3
    3.       Redetermination of spousal maintenance.
    Having concluded that Husband had demonstrated that Wife
    had "qualifying income" that exceeded the $26,000 Threshold Amount, the
    master proceeded under the decree to determine whether spousal
    maintenance should be modified pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-319 (2017). The
    master noted evidence that Wife's annual employment income had risen to
    $84,000 since the decree was entered, and Husband's income had fallen to
    $361,000. He then made the following additional findings:
    •   [Wife] is still in need of financial assistance to meet her
    reasonable needs. That said, the [inheritance] . . . and
    [Wife's] increased employment income make [Wife]
    3      In addition to the $76,000 in the joint account to which Wife
    succeeded after her father's passing, the special master also found that Wife
    received income of no less $24,667 in one trust account and an interest in
    another $185,000 held in trust for her until December 1, 2018. The master
    concluded that even though the $185,000 could not be released to Wife until
    beyond the date specified in the decree, her interest in that trust "became
    vested and was neither contingent nor speculative," meaning that she
    "could sell or encumber" her interest in the trust. According to the master,
    however, his findings with regard to the two trusts did not affect his
    recommendation that spousal maintenance be reduced to $3,154.
    5
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    less in need of such financial assistance than she was
    when the Decree was entered in 2009.
    •   [Husband] retains the ability to meet his needs and to
    assist [Wife] in meeting her needs. That said, in light
    of his decrease in income, [Husband's] ability to do so
    has lessened somewhat since entry of the Decree.
    •   . . . [A]t the hearing, [Husband] contended that the
    Monthly Adjustable Payment should be decreased
    dollar for dollar for all qualifying income above the
    Threshold Amount. Had the money received and to be
    received by [Wife] been part of a stream of annuity
    payments or guaranteed annual gifts, [Husband's]
    argument would be more persuasive.
    •   It is true that the qualifying income relied on by
    [Husband] is in the nature of a series of one time
    events. That said, the Master finds that this income has
    changed [Wife's] financial circumstances in a
    substantial and continuing way.
    •   After having considered all of the factors in Section 25-
    319 and based on all of the facts and circumstances
    presented, the Master finds that the Monthly
    Adjustable Payment should be modified and reduced
    to $3,154.
    •   Assuming for the sake of discussion that [Wife's]
    portion of the trust funds does not constitute
    qualifying income, the Master's decision would not
    change. Whether or not the funds from the trust are
    deemed to be qualifying income, the above discussed
    funds that have flowed and will flow to [Wife] will
    have the same impact on [Wife's] financial
    circumstances.
    4.       The superior court's order.
    Wife objected to the master's report. Although Husband filed
    a response to Wife's objection, the superior court ruled the response
    untimely and did not consider it. When a party objects to a special master's
    report, Rule 72(G) allows the superior court to "set oral argument on the
    objection(s), adopt the report, modify it, reject it in whole or in part or . . .
    6
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    receive further evidence." In a case such as this, when the parties have not
    stipulated to accept the master's findings, the court reviews the master's
    findings of fact only for clear error, based on the record before the master.
    See Rule 72(H) ("[T]he court shall not reverse the special master's findings
    of fact unless clearly erroneous and shall review conclusions of law de
    novo.").
    In ruling on Wife's objection to the master's report, the
    superior court agreed with the master's conclusion that Husband had
    established that the $26,000 Threshold Amount was established, rendering
    spousal maintenance subject to modification. The court also agreed with
    the master that Wife's monthly employment income was about $7,000.
    Together with child support of $660 and the non-modifiable spousal
    support payment of $1,000, the court noted that Wife's monthly income
    accordingly totaled about $8,660 before any modifiable component of
    spousal maintenance.
    The court parted with the master, however, on the issue of
    Wife's reasonable expenses. Wife testified before the special master that her
    reasonable monthly expenses were $12,000, and Husband did not cross-
    examine her about that issue. Although the master made no express finding
    concerning Wife's reasonable expenses, his award of $3,154 in spousal
    maintenance suggests that he accepted Wife's testimony and found her
    reasonable monthly expenses to be on the order of $12,000 (i.e., $8,660 +
    $3,154 = $11,814). Wife objected to the master's finding, arguing that he
    should have made an express finding that she had reasonable monthly
    expenses of $12,000.
    Without addressing Wife's contention that the master should
    have made such an express finding, the superior court's order extensively
    critiqued Wife's most recent affidavit of financial information ("AFI"), dated
    December 5, 2015, which listed monthly expenses, net of legal fees, of
    roughly $15,000. The court found the expenses listed in the AFI
    "overinflated" and concluded that Wife's "necessary monthly expenses total
    $10,000.00." On that basis, and without acknowledging the "clearly
    erroneous" standard of review specified in Rule 72(H), the superior court
    then rejected the master's findings modifying monthly child support to
    $3,154, and instead ordered monthly spousal support reduced to $1,000.
    The court's factual finding that Wife "only requires a limited
    amount of assistance from [Husband] to pay reasonable expenses in full"
    seems to have been based primarily on the court's critique of the recent AFI.
    But there is no indication from the record that the master relied on that AFI
    7
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    in making his recommendation. Although the AFI was in evidence before
    the master, it was not the subject of any substantive examination or
    argument during the master's hearing. Beyond that, the master did not
    embrace or even reference the AFI in his findings; indeed, by finding that
    spousal maintenance should be reduced commensurate with reasonable
    expenses of only about $12,000 a month, the master, like the court,
    impliedly rejected the AFI.
    More generally, in rejecting the master's recommended
    award, the superior court did not identify any finding of fact by the master
    that it determined to be clearly erroneous. To the contrary, the court ruled
    that the master's report sufficiently "addresses the factors under A.R.S. § 25-
    319." On this record, we cannot discern whether the superior court's
    rejection of the master's recommended modification of spousal
    maintenance was based on a finding by the court, supported by the
    evidence, that the master made a clear error. For that reason, we vacate the
    court's order rejecting the master's recommended spousal maintenance
    award and remand for reconsideration of Wife's objections to the master's
    report.4
    B.     Child Support and Parenting Time.
    The special master recommended granting Wife's request for
    a change in parenting time and concluded that the superior court should
    decide whether a change in child support should be made. The superior
    court did not specifically address Wife's petition to modify child support
    and parenting time, but generally denied "any affirmative relief sought
    before the date of this Order that is not expressly granted above." Neither
    party objected to the master's recommended change in parenting time, and
    Husband agrees with Wife on appeal that the superior court now should
    address whether child support should be modified. We agree with both
    4     Wife also argues the court erred by referring in its order to a 2014 AFI
    that was not before the special master. The superior court only referred to
    the 2014 AFI in a footnote, suggesting the court did not materially rely on
    the outdated AFI in overruling the master's recommendation. Wife further
    argues that the superior court's order impermissibly required her to use a
    portion of her "nest egg" to supplement her income sufficiently to meet her
    reasonable expenses. Without accepting the factual or legal premises of
    Wife's argument, we need not address that contention in view of our
    decision to grant her request to remand the matter to the superior court.
    8
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    parties that, on remand, the superior court should consider whether child
    support should be modified.
    C.     Attorney's Fees.
    The master recommended that Wife pay $20,000 of Husband's
    attorney's fees because of what the master characterized as her
    "unreasonable behavior." The superior court found that the master's report
    adequately "addresses the basis for attorney's fees" award. Nevertheless,
    and even though Husband did not object to the fees recommended by the
    master as insufficient, the superior court increased the award to $30,000,
    citing specific instances in which the court found Wife had lied or otherwise
    acted unreasonably, thereby expanding the litigation and increasing the
    associated costs. The court also stated it was "extremely cognizant of the
    disparity in income, which is the primary reason [it] has not ordered more
    than $30,000.00 to [Husband]." Wife argues the superior court erred in
    overruling the master's fee award.
    When the superior court referred the spousal maintenance
    issue to the special master, it granted the master the power to "make
    findings of fact, recommendations and conclusions of law on any and all
    disputes between the parties concerning (discovery) (evaluation of the
    business known as) (specify other financial issues)." Included within that
    broad grant of authority was the power to resolve the parties' respective
    attorney's fees claims arising out of Husband's petition to modify spousal
    maintenance. Therefore, under Rule 72(H), after the master recommended
    an award of fees, the superior court could overrule the award only if it
    found the master's award clearly erroneous.
    The superior court made no such finding. Moreover, our
    record does not disclose whether the events that the superior court cited in
    overruling the master's award were before the master when he ruled.
    Therefore, we vacate and remand the fees award for reconsideration by the
    superior court.5
    5      In increasing the attorney's fees award, the superior court found
    Wife lied several times to Husband about the inheritance and also found
    Wife "instructed or intimated" her father's probate lawyer to structure her
    father's estate-planning in a way that would allow her to avoid receiving
    income before the 2018 date specified in the decree. Although Wife's lies
    subject her to a fees sanction under A.R.S. § 25-324, the superior court erred
    to the extent that it sanctioned Wife merely for working with her father's
    9
    WEISS v. WEISS
    Decision of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the superior court's
    order overturning the special master's report and recommendations and
    remand for further proceedings. Both parties have requested attorney's fees
    on appeal pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-324 (2017). In our discretion, we deny
    both requests, but grant Wife her costs of appeal, contingent on compliance
    with Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    probate attorney to structure her father's estate in a manner that would
    avoid the $26,000 Threshold Amount.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1 CA-CV 16-0504-FC

Filed Date: 10/19/2017

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021