Taylor v. Taylor , 2015 Fla. App. LEXIS 15030 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •               NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    KIMBERLY TAYLOR,                            )
    )
    Appellant,                     )
    )
    v.                                          )       Case No. 2D14-3930
    )
    THOMAS S. TAYLOR,                           )
    )
    Appellee.                      )
    )
    Opinion filed October 9, 2015.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Polk
    County; Jalal A. Harb, Judge.
    Jean Marie Henne of Jean M. Henne,
    P.A., Winter Haven, for Appellant.
    Karie L. Sanoba of Karie L. Sanoba, P.A.,
    Lake, for Appellee.
    ALTENBERND, Judge.
    Kimberly Taylor appeals the final judgment of dissolution of her marriage
    to Thomas S. Taylor. She argues primarily that the trial court erred by awarding
    durational alimony rather than permanent alimony in this long-term marriage. We
    conclude that the judgment does not contain the findings necessary under section
    61.08, Florida Statutes (2012), to support an award of durational alimony. Our review of
    the record convinces us that the insufficient findings impede appellate review. See
    Wright v. Wright, 
    135 So. 3d 1142
    (Fla. 5th DCA 2014) (reversing a denial of permanent
    alimony in a long-term marriage where the absence of findings impeded review).
    Without better findings, this court cannot conclude that the trial court engaged in a
    legally correct decision-making analysis in choosing durational alimony rather than
    permanent alimony. Accordingly, we reverse the award of alimony in the final judgment
    and remand with special instructions.
    I. THE FACTS
    The parties in this case were married in 1990. The marriage lasted
    twenty-two years. At the time of the dissolution in 2014, the parties were in their mid-
    forties and were in good health. They have two children, one of whom was an adult by
    the time the final judgment was entered. The other became an adult during the
    pendency of this appeal.
    At the time of the dissolution, the Husband had a good job with a large
    corporation earning approximately $86,000 per year in addition to health and retirement
    benefits. The Wife had been a teacher in a private school in the early years of the
    marriage. Eventually the Husband wanted to return to school, so the Wife took a higher
    paying job with an insurance company. After the Husband completed his education, the
    Wife quit her job to stay at home with the children. About ten years before the
    dissolution, she reentered the workforce as a part-time transcriptionist for a doctor. At
    the time of the dissolution, she worked approximately twenty-five hours a week making
    fourteen dollars an hour or about $1500 a month. She did not receive benefits. In the
    final judgment, the trial court imputed $24,000 per year as income for the Wife based on
    full-time employment, and that amount is not disputed. The trial court also reasonably
    -2-
    concluded that the Wife's income was likely to increase in the future, but there is no
    evidence or finding concerning any increase in income in the foreseeable future. See
    Purin v. Purin, 
    158 So. 3d 752
    , 753 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015) ("Generally, 'trial courts may not
    consider future or anticipated events in setting current alimony . . . due to the lack of an
    evidentiary basis or the uncertainty surrounding such future events.' " (quoting Nelson v.
    Nelson, 
    651 So. 2d 1252
    , 1254 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995))).
    The equitable distribution in this case is somewhat difficult to calculate.
    There is no spreadsheet or other mathematical division of the property to fulfill the trial
    court's stated intention to divide the assets equally. The retirement funds are divided
    equally based on their value on the date of filing in June 2012, but that value is not
    determined in the judgment. The court ordered the parties to sell the marital residence
    with the expectation that it would generate about $137,000 in net equity.1 Although not
    expressly stated in the final judgment, it appears that the trial court divided equally
    about $400,000 in marital equity. The value of the home and the retirement accounts
    comprised most of this equity.
    Concerning alimony, the trial court correctly determined that the Wife had
    need for support and that the Husband had the ability to pay support. The Wife's true
    level of need is somewhat difficult to review on appeal because she and the minor child
    were living in the marital residence, which the trial court ordered to be sold. The final
    judgment does include cursory findings under section 61.08, but those findings contain
    little more than the facts already recited in this opinion. In conjunction with the findings,
    the final judgment states: "The Court finds, considering the dictates of Chapter 61.08,
    1
    At oral argument, the parties agreed that the home had been successfully
    sold during the pendency of this appeal.
    -3-
    the Husband shall be directed to pay temporary alimony in the sum of One Thousand
    and 00/100 Dollars ($1000.00), per month, for a period of four (4) years, beginning
    June 1, 2014." In a later paragraph, the trial court repeats this finding but correctly
    describes the alimony as "durational," rather than as "temporary." The Wife on appeal
    challenges this award of durational alimony.2
    II. THE STATUTORY FRAMEWORK FOR AWARDING ALIMONY
    Section 61.08 was amended in 2010 to authorize an award of "durational"
    alimony and also to recognize statutorily "bridge-the-gap" alimony. Ch. 2010-199, § 1,
    at 2405-08, Laws of Fla. The terms and conditions for durational alimony were further
    refined in an amendment in 2011. See ch. 2011-92, § 79, at 1703-04, Laws of Fla.
    Thus, the option of durational alimony is still relatively new.
    With these amendments, the statutory framework now divides the
    decision-making process for alimony into essentially four steps. As explained in more
    detail below, the court determines: (1) a party's need for support; (2) the other party's
    ability to pay; (3) the type of alimony or the types of alimony appropriate in the case;
    and (4) the amount of alimony to award.3
    Under subsection 61.08(2), "[i]n determining whether to award alimony or
    maintenance, the court shall first make a specific factual determination as to whether
    either party has an actual need for alimony or maintenance and whether either party
    has the ability to pay alimony or maintenance." Although described as the "first" step,
    2
    The Wife also challenges an adjustment to equitable distribution based
    on the parties' payment of certain credit card statements. We cannot conclude from this
    record that the trial court erred in this decision.
    3
    Because the trial court erred in this case during the third step, we have
    no reason to discuss the fourth step.
    -4-
    this is actually two steps. In the first step the court decides whether a party has actual
    need for support. If so, it goes to the second step of determining whether the other
    party has the ability to pay some amount of support. These two steps involve questions
    of fact that need to be supported by competent, substantial evidence.
    Once need and ability have been determined, the third step is to
    determine which type or types of alimony to select as the appropriate remedy. See 
    id. Section 61.08
    provides the trial court with four approaches to alimony that are not
    always mutually exclusive. See §§ 61.08(5)-(8). The court can award (1) bridge-the-
    gap alimony under subsection 61.08(5); (2) rehabilitative alimony under subsection
    61.08(6); (3) durational alimony under subsection 61.08(7); and (4) permanent alimony
    under subsection 61.08(8). The court is expressly authorized to award "any
    combination of those forms of alimony." § 61.08(1).
    The mandated list of findings under subsection 61.08(2) is used to
    determine "the proper type and amount of alimony or maintenance under subsections
    (5)-(8)." Although it is unquestionable that a trial court must use its reasoned discretion
    in selecting the type of alimony or the types of alimony best suited for a particular case,
    section 61.08 places considerable limitations on this discretionary decision and requires
    the court to adjust the decision-making process depending on the length of the
    marriage. See §§ 61.08(2), (4), (8). In this step, the trial court is applying the relatively
    new and complex statute to the facts of the case. Given the level of complexity in this
    decision, it is important for the trial court to demonstrate on the record or in its order that
    it has applied the correct law when selecting its choice of alimony. See, e.g., Valente v.
    Barion, 
    146 So. 3d 1247
    (Fla. 2d DCA 2014) (reversing award of permanent alimony in
    -5-
    a moderate-term marriage where trial court appeared to apply the wrong law in its
    decision making).
    Subsection 61.08(4) establishes a "rebuttable presumption" that a
    marriage having a duration of seventeen years or greater is a long-term marriage. In
    this case, there is no dispute that the Taylors' twenty-two-year marriage was a long-term
    marriage. In the case of such a long-term marriage, "[p]ermanent alimony may be
    awarded . . . if such an award is appropriate upon consideration of the factors set forth
    in subsection (2) . . . ." § 61.08(8). There is no special burden of proof applicable to the
    award of permanent alimony in a long-term marriage. Nevertheless, when it is awarded
    the court must "include a finding that no other form of alimony is fair and reasonable
    under the circumstances of the parties." 
    Id. By contrast,
    durational alimony is awardable "when permanent periodic
    alimony is inappropriate." § 61.08(7). The purpose of durational alimony "following a
    marriage of long duration" is to award a limited period of support "if there is no ongoing
    need for support on a permanent basis." Id.4
    4
    The findings required for permanent alimony and durational alimony, on
    first examination, feel as if they are in conflict. Although we would not expect a trial
    court to articulate this concept, the two provisions seem to require the trial court to find
    "that no other form of alimony [than permanent alimony] is fair and reasonable under the
    circumstances of the parties" because the court is unable to determine that permanent
    alimony is "inappropriate," given that it cannot conclude that "there is no ongoing need
    for support on a permanent basis."
    -6-
    III. THE JUDGMENT DOES NOT CONTAIN THE NECESSARY FINDINGS
    TO SUPPORT THE AWARD OF ALIMONY
    The difficulty that this court faces on review of the trial court's judgment is
    that the trial court did not expressly decide that permanent periodic alimony was
    "inappropriate." See § 61.08(7). Likewise, it did not find that there was "no ongoing
    need for support on a permanent basis." See 
    id. Although these
    determinations may
    sometimes be implicit within the findings made under subsection 61.08(2), in this case
    the findings give us no guidance as to why permanent alimony was inappropriate.
    Given that the Wife does not have a history of full-time employment with benefits and
    that the court actually imputed income to her, we cannot assume that the trial court
    made a proper, implicit finding that she had "no ongoing need for support on a
    permanent basis."5 See Julia v. Julia, 
    146 So. 3d 516
    , 522 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014)
    (reversing award of durational alimony where findings were insufficient to support the
    award). Cf. Fichtel v. Fichtel, 
    141 So. 3d 593
    , 595 (Fla. 4th DCA 2014) (affirming an
    award of durational alimony for a long-term marriage where the trial court found that
    "durational alimony [wa]s warranted and . . . no other form of alimony [wa]s
    appropriate," and the final judgment indicated that the trial court considered each of the
    factors in subsection 61.08(2)).
    As we did in Purin, we observe that there may be occasion for an award of
    nominal permanent alimony in combination with an award of durational alimony.
    5
    We do not decide today whether the finding that there is "no ongoing
    need for support on a permanent basis" must be based on the facts existing at the time
    of the dissolution proceeding, as compared to a fact-based prediction about future
    income. But an interpretation of the statute to permit a future prediction would be in
    conflict with the judiciary's current approach to such awards. See 
    Purin, 158 So. 3d at 753
    .
    
    -7- 158 So. 3d at 754
    . The length of an award of durational alimony can be extended only
    "under exceptional circumstances." § 61.08(7). Especially in a case like the Taylors'
    where the trial court awards durational alimony for less than a quarter of the statutorily
    permitted length—i.e., the length of the marriage—an erroneous prediction of the future
    by the trial court at the time of the final judgment could have serious consequences for
    the party in need of support. Until the law has developed so that there is certainty as to
    whether the circumstances to extend durational alimony are or are not comparable to
    those permitting a modification of permanent alimony, a nominal award of permanent
    alimony in conjunction with an award of durational alimony may be a reasonable
    safeguard.
    Accordingly, we reverse the final judgment only to the extent that we
    reverse the award of alimony. On remand, especially in light of the fact that the house
    has sold and the Wife's employment may have changed, the trial court is authorized to
    consider additional evidence relevant to this four-step determination in resolving the
    issue of alimony.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    KHOUZAM and SLEET, JJ., Concur.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2D14-3930

Citation Numbers: 177 So. 3d 1000, 2015 Fla. App. LEXIS 15030, 2015 WL 5915260

Judges: Altenbernd, Khouzam, Sleet

Filed Date: 10/9/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024