S.G. VS. A.G. (FM-02-1063-12, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5394-18T2
    S.G.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    A.G.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Submitted November 16, 2020 – Decided February 1, 2021
    Before Judges Fasciale and Rothstadt.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen County,
    Docket No. FM-02-1063-12.
    Garth A. Molander, attorney for appellant.
    Einhorn, Barbarito, Frost & Botwinick, PC, attorneys
    for respondent (Matheu D. Nunn and Jessie M. Mills,
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In this post-judgment dissolution matter, defendant A.G.1 appeals from
    the Family Part's July 5, 2019 order that granted plaintiff S.G.'s motion to
    enforce a March 2016 consent order that fixed his spousal support obligation.
    The July 5, 2019 order also awarded plaintiff counsel fees and denied
    defendant's cross-motion to (1) vacate the consent order or (2) to hold a plenary
    hearing as to his capacity to enter into the consent order or as to the issues of
    "waiver and/or the doctrine of impossibility," or (3) modify his obligation
    despite the consent order's anti-Lepis provision.2
    On appeal, defendant argues that the motion judge abused her discretion
    by not vacating the consent order under Rule 4:50-1 because he "made a prima
    facia showing that the consent order and or the anti-Lepis provision [was]
    void . . . due to [his] lack of capacity to contract." He also contends that the
    alimony established in the consent order was neither fair nor reasonable "under
    his prevailing extraordinary circumstances." Finally, he challenges the award
    of attorneys' fees to plaintiff.
    We have carefully reviewed the record and for the reason discussed in this
    opinion, we conclude that we are constrained to remand this matter for further
    1
    We use initials to protect the parties' privacy interests. See R. 1:38 -3(d)(3).
    2
    Lepis v. Lepis, 
    83 N.J. 139
    , 146 (1980).
    A-5394-18T2
    2
    consideration by the motion judge as her oral decision failed to refer to
    significant expert evidence filed in support of defendant's cross-motion.
    Defendant's initial alimony obligation was established in the parties' June
    18, 2013 dual final judgment of divorce (JOD) that incorporated the terms of
    agreements they reached through counsel.         Under the parties' agreements,
    defendant was required to pay permanent alimony to plaintiff in the amount of
    $324,000 per year. The agreements did not contain an anti-Lepis provision or
    any other provisions addressing a change in circumstances, other than defendant
    retiring or plaintiff cohabiting in a marriage-like relationship.
    At the time the JOD was entered, defendant was a 50% owner of a business
    and his "gross annual earned income from his business ha[d] been approximately
    $1,100,000 over the last five years." Plaintiff had not been gainfully employed
    since 1991, but for the purposes of determining alimony, the parties imputed
    annual income of $50,000 to her.
    For equitable distribution purposes, the parties agreed that defendant's
    interest in his business had a value of $4,750,000, and plaintiff "was entitled to
    29.25%" of that value. After their divorce, on January 15, 2015, defendant sold
    his interest in his business for $6,750,000 and received periodic payments of the
    purchase price over several years.
    A-5394-18T2
    3
    On March 17, 2015, defendant filed a motion to terminate his alimony
    obligation, alleging that plaintiff was cohabiting with her paramour.          That
    motion was resolved by the parties' entry into the March 2016 consent order that
    they negotiated through counsel, after they exchanged discovery. The order
    resolved the cohabitation issue and reduced and placed a time limit on
    defendant's obligation to pay alimony. Part of the negotiations focused on when
    defendant's obligation could be terminated due to disability or other
    "catastrophic physical disability."
    The consent order obligated defendant to pay plaintiff alimony of
    $128,000 in 2016, $425,000 in 2017 and $250,000 in 2018. Defendant was to
    pay the 2017 and 2018 alimony from the release of funds held in escrow on his
    behalf following the sale of his interest in his business in 2015. Between 2019
    and 2026, the order obligated defendant to pay plaintiff alimony of $148,000 per
    year, in monthly installments of $12,333.33 on the first day of each month.
    The order also contained an anti-Lepis, non-modification provision that
    barred any change in alimony during 2019–2026 "for any reason whatsoever
    except for a catastrophic physical disability" that had to be established by certain
    proofs.   No other reason could be relied upon, including "unemployment,
    decreases or increases in income, appreciation or depreciation of assets, mental
    A-5394-18T2
    4
    disability, injury, illness, . . . loss of professional license, . . . or changes with
    respect to . . . [d]efendant's entitlement to receive the funds held in escrow from
    the sale of his interest in [his business]." Moreover, the provision contained an
    acknowledgment that the parties had conferred with counsel "regarding his/her
    respective rights pursuant to Lepis . . . and Crews v. Crews, [
    164 N.J. 11
    (2000)], and . . . knowingly waive[d] any and all rights . . . to seek a
    modification of alimony" for those years, "regardless of any changes in
    circumstances which may occur in the future."
    Defendant failed to make the direct alimony payments that became due in
    January 2019. According to defendant's original explanation, he could no longer
    pay alimony as he was experiencing financial difficulties and had depleted his
    assets. After initial attempts to settle the dispute failed, plaintiff then filed her
    motion to enforce the consent order. Defendant responded to the motion and
    filed his cross-motion to vacate the consent order or, in the alternative, to rescind
    its anti-Lepis provision, and modify the alimony obligation based on changed
    circumstances or impossibility, and to schedule a plenary hearing on the issue
    of his capacity to contract in 2016.
    In plaintiff's motion, she requested that the motion judge find defendant
    in violation of her rights, require him to resume paying alimony and satisfy his
    A-5394-18T2
    5
    arrears, issue a daily sanction for non-payment, and pay her counsel fees. She
    also asked for an order to compel defendant to comply with certain discovery
    demands, including filing an updated case information statement and providing
    certain documents related to his employment situation.
    In his motion's supporting certification, defendant explained in detail
    certain financial setbacks he experienced in recent years due to his lack of
    employment, although he made numerous good faith efforts to secure
    employment, and due to bad investments, supporting his children and himself,
    and paying alimony. After accounting for these financial circumstances, he was
    left with only approximately $94,600 from the sale of his business in 2015.
    Turning to the events surrounding the March 2016 consent order,
    defendant explained at that time the parties were engaged in family counseling
    with a social worker, whom they first began seeing in 2012. The social worker
    referred defendant to a psychiatrist to assess symptoms of possible bipol ar
    disorder.
    Defendant certified that he met with a psychiatrist in 2014, who diagnosed
    him with bipolar II disorder and prescribed medication. However, he alleged
    that at that point he was in denial of the diagnosis and its effects and refused to
    take any medication. He certified that he later saw two different psychiatrists,
    A-5394-18T2
    6
    both of whom diagnosed him with bipolar II disorder and prescribed medication
    for him.
    Defendant claimed that he did not engage in structured therapy at the time
    of the consent order, and that he did not take medication until November 2016 .
    Defendant certified that his attorney advised him not to consent to an anti-Lepis
    provision in the consent order, but he ignored the advice. He claimed that he
    was not fully aware of the consequences of his psychological disorder on his
    inability to consent and did not inform his attorney that he was suffering from
    any disorder.
    Defendant attached to his certification a March 2019 psychiatric
    evaluation report by Morton Fridman, M.D. Fridman reviewed documents,
    including records from defendant's prior treating psychiatrist, interviewed
    defendant (in both February 2019 and March 2019) and spoke with both his
    former treating social worker and his business partner. Fridman noted that the
    social worker observed that defendant engaged in "excessive spending,"
    "grandiose pursuits" and "took a lot of risks."
    Defendant's former psychiatrist's November 2016 notes stated that
    defendant's "pattern of mood changes and behaviors ha[d] been impairing" over
    the prior year or two. Similarly, Fridman reviewed a letter from defendant's
    A-5394-18T2
    7
    current psychiatrist that stated defendant experienced "periods of being reckless,
    irresponsible, grandiose, irritable, exhibiting risky, . . . promiscuous, and
    hypersexual behavior, and [was] financially irresponsible."            Since the
    psychiatrist began seeing defendant in February 2019, his symptoms continued
    to reduce due to his treatment regimen that included continued medication.
    Fridman concluded that defendant's history was consistent with a
    diagnosis of bipolar II disorder but found that he may meet the DSM-5 criteria
    for bipolar I disorder as well because his "episodes appear to have caused
    marked impairment in his social and occupational functioning." In Fridman's
    opinion, defendant's bipolar disorder compromised his judgment in the period
    leading up to the parties' finalizing the consent order and his "state of mind was
    inconsistent with making an informed, knowledgeable and voluntary consent to
    the [consent order], nor was he capable of appreciating [its] consequences ."
    After considering the parties' submissions and oral arguments on July 5,
    2019, the motion judge entered the order under appeal and placed her reasons
    for doing so on the record that day. Addressing the circumstances surrounding
    the entry of the 2016 consent order, the judge found that the parties were each
    represented by counsel and were in equal bargaining positions, and because the
    attorneys exchanged several drafts before the final order, each party had
    A-5394-18T2
    8
    sufficient time to consider its terms. Since defendant chose not to inform his
    attorney of his bipolar condition or receive treatment, his argument that he did
    not have the capacity to contract was "inherently contradictory and self-
    generated."
    The judge also found defendant's assertions were "inconsistent" and
    "contradictory" because he was able to sell his business, purchase a home,
    engage in short-term employment and otherwise function in everyday life.
    Defendant simply had "buyer's remorse," which was insufficient to negate the
    express terms of the consent order, in light of the State's public policy of
    enforcing negotiated marital agreements. The judge made no mention of Dr.
    Fridman's report or his opinion as to defendant's lack of capacity in 2016.
    The judge also concluded that defendant supplied insufficient support for
    his efforts at finding new employment since January 2019, and found that his
    temporary employment during that time "render[ed his] certification inherently
    unbelievable" because he worked during a period he stated he was unemployed.
    Defendant also provided very little documentation supporting job-search efforts,
    particularly outside his field. She also found deficiencies with defendant's
    description of how he dissipated the proceeds from the sale of his business, and
    that he did not provide any proof about his other losses. The judge noted that
    A-5394-18T2
    9
    as a formerly self-employed obligor, defendant was in a better position to hide
    income compared with a W-2 employee. As such, defendant failed to establish
    a prima facie case of changed circumstances.
    The judge denied defendant's request to modify his alimony obligation or
    to schedule a plenary hearing. The judge granted plaintiff's requests to enforce
    the alimony obligation but denied her requests for discovery because the judge
    ordered defendant to satisfy the alimony obligation in full. Finally, pursuant to
    the terms of the consent order, the judge ordered defendant to pay 100% of
    plaintiff's counsel fees, which were $16,800, as set forth in her attorney's
    certification of services. This appeal followed.
    We begin our review by acknowledging that "New Jersey has long
    espoused a policy favoring the use of consensual agreements to resolve marital
    controversies." Konzelman v. Konzelman, 
    158 N.J. 185
    , 193 (1999). For that
    reason, judges should not "unnecessarily or lightly disturb[]" consent
    agreements that are fair and equitable. Smith v. Smith, 
    72 N.J. 350
    , 358 (1977).
    Courts have the authority to enforce alimony agreements to the extent that they
    are fair and equitable, and the terms of the agreement should receive continued
    enforcement, provided that they remain fair and equitable. Lepis, 
    83 N.J. at
    148-
    49.
    A-5394-18T2
    10
    On the other hand, alimony orders are subject to modification by trial
    courts under appropriate circumstances. N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23. Agreements are
    subject to modification by the trial court where parties are able to demonstrate
    "changed circumstances." Lepis, 
    83 N.J. at 146
    . They are also subject to
    enforcement of valid anti-Lepis provisions where "the parties . . . with full
    knowledge of all present and reasonably foreseeable future circumstances
    bargain for a fixed payment or establish the criteria for payment to the dependent
    spouse, irrespective of circumstances that in the usual case would give rise to
    Lepis modifications of their agreement." Morris v. Morris, 
    263 N.J. Super. 237
    ,
    241 (App. Div. 1993).
    "Each and every motion to modify an alimony obligation 'rests upon its
    own particular footing and the appellate court must give due recognition to the
    wide discretion which our law rightly affords to the trial judges who deal with
    these matters.'" Larbig v. Larbig, 
    384 N.J. Super. 17
    , 21 (App. Div. 2006)
    (quoting Martindell v. Martindell, 
    21 N.J. 341
    , 355 (1956)).
    However, a settlement agreement must be set aside when one party was
    not competent to voluntarily consent to it. Jennings v. Reed, 
    381 N.J. Super. 217
    , 227 (App. Div. 2005). "[T]he longstanding rule is that 'where there is not
    the mental capacity to comprehend and understand, there is not the capacity to
    A-5394-18T2
    11
    make a valid contract.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Wolkoff v. Villane, 
    288 N.J. Super. 282
    ,
    287 (App. Div. 1996)); see also Peskin v. Peskin, 
    271 N.J. Super. 261
    , 276,
    (App. Div. 1994). A party to a contract possesses the requisite capacity when
    the party has "the ability to understand the nature and effect of the act in which
    he is engaged, and the business he is transacting . . . [the party's mind must not]
    be so clouded or perverted by age, disease, or affliction, that he cannot
    comprehend the business in which he is engaging . . . ." Jennings, 
    381 N.J. Super. at 227
    . The party seeking to set aside a settlement agreement generally
    has the burden of proving his incapacity or incompetence to contract. 
    Ibid.
    We have had prior occasions to review a trial judge's decision on a motion
    to vacate an agreement or order based upon incapacity. Those cases turned on
    the evidence of incapacity at the time of the agreement rather than when the
    motion was made. See e.g., Barrie v. Barrie, 
    154 N.J. Super. 301
    , 305-06 (App.
    Div. 1977) (affirming the denial of the plaintiff-wife's motion to either vacate
    her property settlement agreement under Rule 4:50-1(f) or grant a plenary
    hearing as to whether the court should rescind the agreement where she included
    a certification from her psychiatrist that did not address her capacity at the time
    she entered into an agreement); Fineberg v. Fineberg, 
    309 N.J. Super. 205
    , 215-
    17 (App. Div. 1998) (affirming trial judge's denial of defendant-husband's
    A-5394-18T2
    12
    motion to set aside a divorce judgment on the grounds that he was hospitalized
    and did not receive notice of the trial date, because he had previously opposed
    the wife's motion to appoint a guardian ad litem for him by arguing that he was
    competent).
    Here, the motion judge rejected defendant's factual assertions that he
    claimed supported a finding that he lacked capacity. In fact, the judge found
    that those actions—purchasing and then selling a house, investing in a restaurant
    and "carry[ing] on everyday life"—actually supported her finding that he did not
    suffer from a debilitating mental illness that impaired his ability to contract.
    However, she reached that conclusion without any reference to the unrefuted
    psychiatric opinion provided by Dr. Fridman as to defendant's mental state at
    the time he entered into the March 2016 consent order.
    The judge's only reference to defendant's alleged condition was that "he
    started treating with two medical providers in or around somewhere between
    2012 and right before 2016 and then right before this motion was filed, he
    seemingly switched to two other treating providers.      There's nothing really
    indicating what happened in 2016, 2017." Yet, Dr. Fridman's comprehensive
    twenty-six-page report concluded that defendant's "state of mind was
    inconsistent with making an informed, knowledgeable and voluntary consent to
    A-5394-18T2
    13
    the March 2016 Order," and defendant was not "capable of appreciating the
    Orders consequences." The judge provided no reason why she did not accept
    the doctor's opinion, which would be her right, see Brown v. Brown, 
    348 N.J. Super. 466
    , 470 (App. Div. 2002) (explaining a trial judge is free to accept or
    reject expert testimony), and she did not even mention the doctor's opinion or
    explain why it did not support a finding of conflicting facts that warranted a
    plenary hearing. Harrington v. Harrington, 
    281 N.J. Super. 39
     (App. Div. 1995)
    (emphasizing motion judges cannot resolve material factual disputes upon
    conflicting affidavits and certifications).
    As we are left without any indication if the judge accepted or rejected any
    portion of the doctor's expert opinion that defendant's actions—including his
    entry into the consent order—might have been the result of a mental health
    problem that deprived him of the ability to understand what he was doing at the
    time,3 we are constrained to remand this matter for further findings by the
    motion judge that address Dr. Fridman's report.
    3
    We reject plaintiff's invitation to us on appeal to assume that the judge
    concluded Dr. Fridman's report was a net opinion as there is no evidence to
    support that conclusion. See State v. Townsend, 
    186 N.J. 473
    , 494 (2006). A
    net opinion is one in which the expert does not "give the why and wherefore of
    his or her opinion," and only provides "a mere conclusion." 
    Ibid.
    A-5394-18T2
    14
    However, by our remand, we do not suggest any specific outcome of the
    judge's reconsideration. We only require the judge to specifically address the
    doctor's opinion as an item of evidence that was submitted for her consideration.
    Vacated and remanded for further proceedings consistent with our
    opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-5394-18T2
    15