In the Matter of Robert Pizani, Jr. and Dayana Pizani ( 2024 )


Menu:
  •                    THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    SUPREME COURT
    In Case No. 2022-0251, In the Matter of Robert Pizani, Jr.
    and Dayana Pizani, the court on February 21, 2024, issued the
    following order:
    The court has reviewed the written arguments and the record submitted
    on appeal, has considered the oral arguments of the parties, and has
    determined to resolve the case by way of this order. See Sup. Ct. R. 20(2). The
    respondent, Dayana Pizani (Wife), appeals a final divorce decree and alimony
    order entered by the Circuit Court (Lemire, J.) dividing the marital property
    and awarding her alimony in her divorce from the petitioner, Robert Pizani, Jr.
    (Husband). See RSA 458:16-a (2018 & Supp. 2023); RSA 458:19-a (2018 &
    Supp. 2023). Wife argues that the trial court erred by: (1) improperly allowing
    Husband to offset his alimony obligation against the property division award;
    (2) allowing Husband’s appraisal reports to be admitted at trial under New
    Hampshire Rule of Evidence 804(b)(6); (3) choosing a value for certain property
    in Panama that was the average of the appraisals offered by the parties when
    there was no evidence to support the value; (4) ignoring the children’s interest
    in the Panama property and assigning one hundred percent of the property’s
    value to Wife; and (5) finding that Wife intentionally dissipated or diminished
    the marital estate when she transferred her ownership in the Panama property
    to a business entity. We affirm.
    I.    Background
    The following facts were found by the trial court or are supported by the
    record. The parties were married in 1995 and have two adult children. Wife is
    from Panama. The parties purchased a home in Londonderry and lived there
    for more than seventeen years. In 2006, Wife’s mother deeded three parcels of
    land in Panama to her. In 2015, Wife’s father deeded three additional parcels
    of land in Panama to her.
    In January 2019, Husband began an affair. In July 2019, Husband
    announced he was leaving the marriage and moved out of the marital home. In
    August 2019, Wife created En Dios Confio, S.A. (EDC), a business entity in
    Panama. In January 2020, Wife owned a fifty-two percent interest in the
    company, while the parties’ children each owned a twenty-four percent
    interest. In January 2020, Wife deeded the Panama land held in her name to
    EDC.
    Husband filed for divorce on February 24, 2020, alleging irreconcilable
    differences. On February 28, Wife transferred her EDC shares equally to her
    children. On May 28, Wife filed a cross-petition for divorce alleging the fault
    ground of adultery. In September, the children transferred shares back to Wife
    such that she regained her prior fifty-two percent interest in the company.
    Following a final divorce hearing, the trial court issued a narrative order.
    The court dismissed Husband’s ground for divorce and granted Wife the
    divorce on the ground of adultery. Citing RSA 458:16-a, II(l) and RSA 458:19-
    a, IV(g), the court considered Husband’s adultery, among other things, in
    determining the division of marital assets and alimony.
    The court awarded alimony to Wife in the amount of $5,000 per month
    for a period of 148.5 months. In determining the property division, the court
    identified and valued a variety of marital assets. Relevant to this appeal, the
    court constructively awarded the full value of the Panama land, $2,428,047, to
    Wife in the parties’ overall property division. The court awarded Wife
    approximately sixty-five percent of the marital estate and Husband
    approximately thirty-five percent.
    Because the Panama land was the largest asset, and was awarded
    entirely to Wife, the court found that a cash payment was required to make the
    division equitable. The court ordered Wife to pay Husband $719,632 at a rate
    of $5,000 per month. Further, the court ordered that so long as Husband had
    an alimony obligation to Wife, instead of making the alimony payment, “he
    shall retain the $5,000 per month and it shall be credited against the property
    settlement payment she owes him.” The court stated that in the event Wife
    paid the balance of the settlement payment in full, Husband “shall thereafter
    immediately begin paying her alimony of $5,000 per month until the end of
    148.5 months, or [Wife’s] remarriage, whichever sooner occurs.” This appeal
    followed.
    II.    Analysis
    A trial court has broad discretion in fashioning a final decree of divorce,
    and in managing the proceedings before it. In the Matter of Spenard &
    Spenard, 
    167 N.H. 1
    , 3 (2014). Its discretion necessarily encompasses
    decisions concerning child support, alimony, and property distribution. 
    Id.
     We
    will not overturn a trial court’s rulings absent an unsustainable exercise of
    discretion. 
    Id.
     This standard of review requires that we review the record only
    to determine whether it contains an objective basis to sustain the trial court’s
    discretionary judgments. 
    Id.
     If the court’s findings can reasonably be made on
    the evidence presented, they will stand. 
    Id.
    We first address Wife’s argument that the trial court erred in allowing
    Husband’s appraisal reports to be admitted at trial under New Hampshire Rule
    2
    of Evidence 804(b)(6).1 In February 2021, Husband’s appraisal company
    issued appraisal reports regarding the Panama land. In May, Husband
    provided copies of the appraisals to Wife. On June 10, Wife moved to strike the
    appraisals. On June 14, the trial court denied the motion. On June 18, Wife
    granted power of attorney to her cousin, a Panamanian attorney. On August 9,
    the attorney filed a criminal complaint and civil action on Wife’s behalf against
    the appraisal company alleging that the company completed the appraisals
    without authorization or permission and established “false values . . . with the
    sole purpose of benefitting [Husband] in the . . . divorce proceedings.” The civil
    action alleged economic damages equivalent to $1,000,000.
    On December 17, Husband’s appraisal company informed him that, in
    light of the lawsuit, it would not act as an expert witness in his divorce hearing.
    On January 10, 2022, Husband moved to admit the appraisal reports without
    expert testimony, arguing that they were admissible, in part, under Rule
    804(b)(6) because Wife “wrongfully and intentionally” caused the appraisal
    company to be unavailable “by filing a frivolous lawsuit to intimidate” the
    company from testifying at the divorce hearing. See N.H. R. Ev. 804(b)(6). The
    trial court granted the motion. In its order, the court observed that “[t]he Rules
    of Evidence do not apply to divorce proceedings in the Family Division.”
    Nevertheless, the court found that the appraisal reports were admissible under
    Rule 804(b)(6).
    The trial court has broad discretion over the admission of evidence in
    divorce cases and is not bound by the rules of evidence. Gosselin v.
    Gosselin, 
    136 N.H. 350
    , 353 (1992); N.H. R. Ev. 1101(d)(3). We review a trial
    court’s decision on the management of discovery and the admissibility of
    evidence under an unsustainable exercise of discretion standard. In the Matter
    of Hampers & Hampers, 
    154 N.H. 275
    , 280 (2006). To meet this standard, Wife
    must demonstrate that the trial court’s ruling was clearly untenable or
    unreasonable to the prejudice of her case. 
    Id.
    Although the trial court conducted an analysis under Rule 804(b)(6) in
    finding the appraisal reports admissible, we need not review the court’s
    analysis under that rule because we conclude that the court’s decision to admit
    the evidence was a sustainable exercise of discretion. The court inferred from
    the timing of the Panamanian lawsuit that it “was intended to accomplish what
    [Wife] was unable to do in this Court, namely preclude the admission of
    [Husband’s] appraisals.” On this record, we determine that it was reasonable
    for the trial court to admit Husband’s appraisal reports and Wife has failed to
    1 New Hampshire Rule of Evidence 804(b)(6) provides that the following is not excluded by the rule
    against hearsay if the declarant is unavailable as a witness: “A statement offered against a party
    that wrongfully caused — or acquiesced in wrongfully causing — the declarant's unavailability as
    a witness, and did so intending that result.”
    3
    demonstrate that the court’s ruling was clearly untenable or unreasonable to
    the prejudice of her case.
    We next address Wife’s argument that the trial court erred when it chose
    a value for the Panama land that was exactly one half the value between the
    competing appraisals when there was no evidence to support that value. The
    trial court found that Husband’s appraisals valued the Panama land at a
    combined $4,027,073 and that Wife’s appraisals valued the land at a combined
    $757,020. The trial court found “that the fair market value of the five lots
    appraised for this trial likely lies between the figures provided by the two
    appraisers” and assessed a value of $2,392,047 to the lots in question. This
    value is the average of the two appraisals rounded to the nearest dollar.
    “Fair market value is the price a willing buyer and a willing seller would
    probably arrive at through fair negotiations, taking into account all
    considerations that fairly might be brought forward and reasonably be given
    substantial weight in such bargaining.” Rattee v. Rattee, 
    146 N.H. 44
    , 50
    (2001) (quotation omitted). The determination of fair market value is a
    question of fact. Ventas Realty Ltd. P’ship v. City of Dover, 
    172 N.H. 752
    , 755
    (2020). “We have never attempted to tie the fact finder’s hands with a rigid fair
    market value formula in the absence of legislative directive. Rather, judgment
    is the touchstone.” Appeal of Pennichuck Water Works, 
    160 N.H. 18
    , 38 (2010)
    (quotations, brackets, citation, and ellipsis omitted).
    We will uphold the trial court’s findings of fact unless they lack
    evidentiary support or are legally erroneous. Ventas Realty Ltd. P’ship, 172
    N.H. at 755. We do not decide whether we would have ruled differently than
    the trial court, but rather, whether a reasonable person could have reached the
    same decision as the trial court based upon the same evidence. Id. Thus, we
    defer to the trial court’s judgment on such issues as resolving conflicts in the
    testimony, measuring the credibility of witnesses, and determining the weight
    to be given evidence. Id. The trier of fact “is not compelled to accept the
    opinion evidence of any one witness or group of witnesses, including expert
    witnesses.” Appeal of Pennichuck Water Works, 
    160 N.H. at 41
    . The trier of
    fact can “accept or reject such portions of the evidence as it [finds] proper,
    including that of expert witnesses,” and is “not required to believe even
    uncontroverted evidence.” 
    Id.
    In determining the value of the Panama land, the trial court reviewed and
    considered the parties’ appraisals of the property. Husband’s appraiser
    employed a comparative market approach in valuing the property. The
    appraiser identified various comparable properties that had recent offers and
    determined a dollar per square meter value for each. The appraiser made
    adjustments to the values based on a variety of factors including size,
    accessibility, location, zoning, view, and topography in comparison to the
    subject property. Based on the adjusted values, the appraiser determined a
    4
    dollar per square meter value for the subject property and multiplied it by the
    surface area resulting in a final dollar value of the property. The court
    observed that Husband’s appraiser “did not appear to have discounted
    substantially enough for the location of the comparable properties that were in
    ‘better’ locations” but otherwise found the appraisal method, and the
    appraisals themselves, “to be more professional, detailed, accurate, and
    reliable” than Wife’s appraisals.
    The trial court noted several issues with Wife’s appraisals. First, Wife’s
    appraiser’s license number was not noted on his reports. The appraiser
    testified that although he is a member of a Panamanian appraisal organization,
    he had not yet met the prerequisites to obtain a registration number that
    would be displayed on his appraisals. Further, Wife’s appraisals did not: (1)
    bear the appraisal organization’s stamp; (2) identify a method of appraisal,
    although the appraiser testified that he utilized the “investigation in the direct
    place” approach; or (3) explain the basis of the values depicted. The appraiser
    simply assigned a price per square meter value and multiplied it by the surface
    area.
    In addition, the trial court considered the testimony of the parties, and of
    Husband’s mother, regarding the value of the Panama land. Husband testified
    that Wife frequently told him that the land was worth “millions” ranging
    anywhere from $4.5 million to $12 million. Husband’s mother recalled a
    conversation in 2009 during which she heard the land was appraised at $4.5
    million. Wife confirmed in her testimony that she told Husband the land was
    worth millions. The court also considered “the great lengths to which [Wife]
    went to attempt to remove the land — at whatever its value — from the marital
    estate and keep it for herself and her family.”
    We conclude that the trial court’s valuation of the Panama land does not
    lack evidentiary support. As discussed above, the record supports the trial
    court’s valuation largely crediting Husband’s appraisals based on their overall
    quality compared to Wife’s appraisals, but significantly discounting the final
    total value in consideration of the distant location of the comparable properties
    relied on by the appraiser. A reasonable person could have reached the same
    decision as the trial court based on the same evidence. See Ventas Realty Ltd.
    P’ship, 172 N.H. at 755.
    Wife further argues that the trial court erred when it found that she had
    dissipated or diminished the marital estate by transferring her ownership of the
    Panama land and when it attributed one hundred percent of the value of the
    Panama land to her in the property division. We disagree.
    The trial court found that Wife “transferred her ownership interest in the
    land to [EDC] in an effort to remove it from the marital estate and to frustrate
    [Husband’s] efforts to either receive any interest therein in the property division
    5
    and/or to have the Court assess its full value to her if awarded to her in the
    divorce.” The court observed that “while it is true that only [Wife’s] 52%
    interest in EDC is a marital asset subject to division in this divorce, the Court
    may and does consider the full value of the property transferred by [Wife] to
    EDC in determining the equitable division of the marital estate because it finds
    that her transfers were intended to avoid division of the Panamanian land as
    part of the marital estate.” The trial court found that because “[Wife]
    transferred the Panamanian land to EDC, and gave 48% of the interest in EDC
    to the parties’ adult [children] who are not subject to the jurisdiction of [the]
    Court in order to avoid its inclusion in the marital estate, the Court can and
    does treat the Panamanian land as though it is still part of the marital estate
    and constructively awards it to [Wife] as part of her share of the estate.”
    When property is intentionally dissipated to avoid its inclusion in the
    property to be equitably distributed, such intentional dissipation is a fraud on
    marital rights. In the Matter of Brownell & Brownell, 
    163 N.H. 593
    , 600
    (2012). In such a case, courts treat the dissipated assets as if they were
    existing marital property, and then either constructively award them to the
    dissipating spouse as part of that spouse’s share of the marital estate, or, if
    insufficient assets remain to compensate the innocent spouse, order the
    dissipating spouse to pay a monetary award. 
    Id. at 600-01
    .
    We conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that Wife
    intentionally dissipated the Panama land by transferring it to EDC ahead of the
    imminent divorce proceedings. We further conclude that, given its dissipation
    finding, the trial court did not err when it considered the full value of the
    property in determining the equitable division of the marital estate and when it
    constructively awarded the property to Wife as part of her share of the estate.
    In these circumstances, because the court constructively awarded Wife the
    property for the purposes of determining the equitable division of the marital
    estate, its order did not have the effect of invalidating the rights of the parties’
    children who have a forty-eight percent interest in EDC, as argued by Wife. Cf.
    In the Matter of Routhier & Routhier, 
    175 N.H. 6
    , 13 (2022) (determining that
    “including the value of [the husband’s] undivided interest in the Dunbarton
    property as part of the marital estate does not sever his joint interest from the
    whole and would not invalidate his parents’ ownership interest”).
    In addition, Wife asserts that the trial court erred by admitting a text
    message between the parties’ daughter and Husband that is the “factual
    underpinning to the finding that the wife intentionally dissipated the
    Panamanian property.” Wife appears to argue that the text message was
    inadmissible hearsay. As discussed above, in divorce cases the trial court is
    not bound by the rules of evidence, see Gosselin, 
    136 N.H. at 350
    , and we
    review the trial court’s decision to admit evidence under an unsustainable
    exercise of discretion standard. See Hampers, 
    154 N.H. at 280
    . We conclude
    that Wife has failed to demonstrate that the trial court’s decision to admit the
    6
    text message was clearly unreasonable or untenable. See 
    id.
     We disagree with
    Wife’s premise that the text message was the factual underpinning of the trial
    court’s dissipation finding. Instead, the court relied on Wife’s actions in
    transferring the property to EDC ahead of the imminent divorce. The court’s
    dissipation finding is supported by the record even without considering the text
    message. In these circumstances, the text message amounted to cumulative
    evidence and its admission did not prejudice Wife’s case. On this record, we
    conclude that Wife has failed to demonstrate that the court unsustainably
    exercised its discretion to the prejudice of her case by admitting the text
    message. See In the Matter of Kamil & Kamil, 
    173 N.H. 424
    , 437 (2020).
    Given our conclusion that the record supports the trial court’s ruling
    that Wife intentionally dissipated the Panama property, we need not consider
    the court’s alternative ruling that the transfer of the property warrants an
    unequal distribution of the estate under RSA 458:16-a, II(f) and In the Matter
    of Martel & Martel, 
    157 N.H. 53
     (2008). See Loeffler v. Bernier, 
    173 N.H. 180
    ,
    189 (2020).
    Finally, Wife argues that the trial court improperly allowed Husband to
    offset his alimony obligation against the property division award. Wife asserts
    that the trial court “merged” its property division and alimony orders “so that
    [Wife] lost nearly all of her alimony award in order to compensate [Husband] for
    his share of the marital property.” We disagree.
    The court’s orders generate two independent obligations. First, Husband
    is obligated to pay $5,000 per month for 148.5 months to Wife in alimony.
    Second, Wife owes Husband a property settlement payment of $719,632. The
    court, acknowledging that it was unlikely Wife would be able to make a lump
    sum payment to Husband thereby satisfying the property settlement obligation,
    ordered the lump sum payment to be paid at a rate of $5,000 per month until
    it is paid in full. The court went on to order Husband to retain his alimony
    payments, crediting those payments against the property settlement, so long as
    the alimony obligation exists, until the property settlement is paid.
    Absent these specific orders, Wife would immediately owe Husband the
    property settlement amount in full. See In the Matter of Harvey & Harvey, 
    153 N.H. 425
    , 436 (2006) (explaining that “a trial court should award a property
    settlement to be effected immediately where practicable”), overruled on other
    grounds by In the Matter of Chamberlin & Chamberlin, 
    155 N.H. 13
    , 15-16
    (2007). If Wife wishes to receive alimony payments from Husband, she may do
    so by paying her property settlement obligation to Husband. Accordingly, we
    7
    conclude that the court sustainably exercised its “broad discretion” in so
    fashioning the final decree of divorce. See Spenard, 
    167 N.H. at 3
    .
    Affirmed.
    MACDONALD, C.J., and BASSETT, HANTZ MARCONI, and DONOVAN,
    JJ., concurred; HICKS, J., sat for oral argument but did not participate in the
    final vote, see N.H. CONST. pt. II, art. 78.
    Timothy A. Gudas,
    Clerk
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022-0251

Filed Date: 2/21/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024