MacKaben v. MacKaben , 2015 S.D. LEXIS 148 ( 2015 )


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  • #27238-a-DG
    
    2015 S.D. 86
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    ANNETTE MACKABEN,                           Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    EVERETT THOMAS MACKABEN, JR.,               Defendant and Appellant.
    ****
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
    THE FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
    MEADE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    THE HONORABLE JEROME A. ECKRICH, III
    Judge
    ****
    PATRICIA A. MEYERS
    Rapid City, South Dakota                    Attorney for plaintiff
    and appellee.
    KYLE KRAUSE
    Rapid City, South Dakota                    Attorney for defendant
    and appellee.
    ****
    CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
    ON AUGUST 31, 2015
    OPINION FILED 11/04/15
    # 27238
    GILBERTSON, Chief Justice
    [¶1.]        On August 15, 2014, the circuit court granted a divorce to Everett
    Thomas MacKaben Jr. (Tom) and Annette MacKaben because of irreconcilable
    differences. In dividing the property, the circuit court determined that a sizable tax
    lien on the marital home was Tom’s nonmarital debt. The court also awarded
    spousal support of $1,000 per month to Annette for a period of 10 years to follow the
    sale of the marital home. Tom appeals, asserting that the circuit court abused its
    discretion in assigning him sole responsibility for most of the tax lien, in not
    specifying that the spousal support terminates in the event of his own death, and in
    setting the amount and duration of the support award. We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [¶2.]        Tom and Annette met in 1999 and married on September 18 of that
    year. At the time of trial, Tom was 53 years old and Annette was 45 years old. The
    parties have one child together, who was 13 years old at the time of trial. Tom has
    a high-school-level education and was largely self-employed during the marriage.
    He owned and operated a small construction company called Bear Paw Construction
    and sometimes served as a hunting guide. Annette has a Bachelor of Science degree
    in animal science from South Dakota State University. Aside from Tom recovering
    from surgery on his bicep, the parties were otherwise in good health at the time of
    the divorce. Although Annette worked outside of the home for a short time after the
    marriage, Tom successfully encouraged Annette to discontinue her employment in
    order to assist in his construction business by tracking financial information and
    records.
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    [¶3.]         The parties struggled financially from the beginning of the marriage.
    Tom came into the marriage with existing child-support obligations and owing
    $40,000 to his previous wife. More importantly, however, Tom did not reliably keep
    accurate business records, nor was Annette able to do the bookkeeping. The parties
    did not timely file income-tax returns from 2000 to 2006. They filed their 2005,
    2006, and 2007 returns in 2007 after they sought to refinance the debts on the
    marital home. The parties eventually filed their 2003 and 2004 returns as well.
    During this time, Tom accumulated several judgments against his construction
    business, including one default judgment, and failed to pay excise taxes. Annette’s
    mother loaned the parties $20,000 to satisfy and settle one of these judgments.
    Without Annette’s knowledge, Tom also incurred a significant amount of credit card
    debt and allowed the parties’ medical insurance to lapse, resulting in a large,
    uninsured medical debt for their child.
    [¶4.]         By 2011, the parties’ economic situation had deteriorated to such an
    extent that they sought out Consumer Credit Counseling Services (CCCS). CCCS
    obtained a credit report on the parties, and Annette first learned that their personal
    tax returns had not been filed for three tax years and that the Internal Revenue
    Service (IRS) had placed a tax lien on their home totaling nearly $50,000. 1
    However, because the IRS was not actively pursuing repayment of the debt, the
    parties decided to focus their available funds on paying down their short-term
    obligations first. Over the subsequent year and a half, the parties’ short-term debt
    1.      By the time parties submitted their briefs for this appeal, the current pay-off
    amount for the tax lien was $55,504.
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    was reduced to approximately $3,000. During this time, the parties’ income
    increased significantly because Tom went to work as an equipment operator at a
    coal mine in Wyoming. Although Tom put in substantial overtime, on his days off
    he continued to take on small construction projects and guide hunting groups. 2 The
    parties’ tax returns have been timely filed since Annette assumed control of the
    parties’ finances in 2011.
    [¶5.]         Annette filed for divorce in December 2013. Thereafter, the parties
    separated, and Tom stopped living at the marital home. The parties agreed that
    they would share legal custody of their child, that Annette would have primary
    physical custody, and that Tom would get reasonable and liberal visitation. The
    parties also agreed to sell the marital home. Tom continued paying the monthly
    mortgage, insurance, and tax payments on the home; the monthly payment to
    CCCS; Tom’s business insurance; and the parties’ health insurance. The parties
    also agreed on the division of personal property and non-IRS debts. Additionally,
    Tom has been making $500 payments to the IRS every month under a debt-
    repayment plan.
    [¶6.]         After the parties separated, Annette initially worked part-time driving
    a school bus, but later found full-time employment as a paraprofessional with the
    Meade County School District. Annette has also received additional training
    2.      Tom claimed that the money he earned as a hunting guide was only enough
    to cover his own expenses. When asked whether he reported this income on
    the parties’ tax returns, Tom asserted his 5th Amendment right to remain
    silent.
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    enabling her to drive charter busses during the summer months and for school
    trips.
    [¶7.]        The circuit court granted each of the parties a divorce on the grounds
    of irreconcilable differences on August 15, 2014. The court adopted the parties’ own
    personal-property division but ordered Tom to pay $10,000 to Annette in order to
    equalize the division. As for the marital home, the court ordered that it be sold.
    However, the court concluded that while the underlying tax liability was a marital
    debt, the interest and penalties were Tom’s nonmarital debt. As a result, the court
    ordered Tom to pay $22,187 to Annette after the sale of the home; that any proceeds
    remaining after paying the mortgage, costs of sale, and tax lien go toward satisfying
    this award; that Tom receive any additional proceeds totaling up to $5,000; and that
    any remaining proceeds be shared equally. The circuit court also ordered Tom to
    continue paying $2,500 per month to cover the mortgage, insurance, and property
    tax on the home. Finally, the court ordered Tom to pay Annette $1,000 per month
    in spousal support for a period of 10 years following the sale of the home.
    [¶8.]        Tom raises seven issues on appeal. Additionally, Annette requests
    appellate attorney fees.
    1.     Whether the circuit court’s findings of fact, conclusions of
    law, and decree are only entitled to limited deference.
    2.     Whether the circuit court was required to specify whether
    Tom’s spousal-support obligation terminates upon his
    death.
    3.     Whether a spousal-support obligation that extends past
    the death of the obligor is an abuse of discretion.
    4.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion by
    determining that the interest and penalties on the parties’
    IRS tax liability was Tom’s nonmarital debt.
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    5.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion by
    ordering Tom to pay all mortgage, insurance, and
    property-tax payments on the marital home until its sale.
    6.     Whether the circuit court’s decree effectively executed its
    division of the parties’ IRS debt.
    7.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion in
    determining the amount and duration of spousal support.
    8.     Whether Annette should be awarded appellate attorney
    fees.
    Standard of Review
    [¶9.]        We review a circuit court’s division of property for abuse of discretion.
    Huffaker v. Huffaker, 
    2012 S.D. 81
    , ¶ 11, 
    823 N.W.2d 787
    , 790. We also review a
    circuit court’s spousal-support determinations for abuse of discretion. Hagedorn v.
    Hagedorn, 
    2012 S.D. 72
    , ¶ 9, 
    822 N.W.2d 719
    , 722. “An abuse of discretion ‘is a
    fundamental error of judgment, a choice outside the range of permissible choices, a
    decision, which, on full consideration, is arbitrary or unreasonable.’” Gartner v.
    Temple, 
    2014 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 7, 
    855 N.W.2d 846
    , 850 (quoting Arneson v. Arneson, 
    2003 S.D. 125
    , ¶ 14, 
    670 N.W.2d 904
    , 910). “Pursuant to an abuse of discretion standard
    of review, factual determinations are subject to a clearly erroneous standard.” 
    Id. ¶ 8,
    855 N.W.2d at 850 (quoting State v. Guthrie, 
    2002 S.D. 138
    , ¶ 5, 
    654 N.W.2d 201
    , 203). However, the circuit court’s conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. 
    Id. Analysis and
    Decision
    [¶10.]       1.     Whether the circuit court’s findings of fact,
    conclusions of law, and decree are only entitled to
    limited deference.
    [¶11.]       Tom asserts that the circuit court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law,
    and divorce decree are only entitled to limited deference because they were all
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    drafted by Annette’s counsel. In support of this assertion, Tom offers a single
    dissenting opinion stating: “[W]e cited with approval a case suggesting that
    appellate courts should scrutinize more carefully and give less weight to findings
    prepared by counsel than those findings prepared by trial judges themselves.”
    Kreps v. Kreps, 
    2010 S.D. 12
    , ¶ 48, 
    778 N.W.2d 835
    , 848 (Konenkamp, J.,
    dissenting). According to Tom, the circuit court altered only a single finding of fact,
    added one conclusion of law, and omitted Annette’s proposed conclusions of law
    regarding attorney fees.
    [¶12.]         We decline Tom’s invitation to hold that findings and conclusions
    prepared by a party at the court’s request are only entitled to limited deference as a
    general rule. SDCL 15-6-52(a) specifically empowers a circuit court to “direct
    counsel for the prevailing party to prepare findings[.]” After the opposing party has
    been given an opportunity to respond to the proposed findings, “the court shall
    make or enter such findings and conclusions as may be proper.” SDCL 15-6-52(a).
    The opposing party is free to argue on appeal that a particular finding or conclusion
    is improper. As indicated above, see supra ¶ 9, we already review a circuit court’s
    conclusions of law de novo—i.e., they receive no deference on appeal. Gartner, 
    2014 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 
    8, 855 N.W.2d at 850
    . Tom offers no compelling reason for us to abandon
    our well-established standards of review regarding a circuit court’s findings of fact
    (clearly erroneous) or decisions in property division and spousal support (abuse of
    discretion).
    [¶13.]         2.    Whether the circuit court was required to specify
    whether Tom’s spousal-support obligation
    terminates upon his death.
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    [¶14.]         Next, Tom asserts the circuit court should have specifically addressed
    whether Tom’s spousal-support obligation terminates in the event that his death
    occurs prior to the conclusion of the 10-year obligation. However, this issue is not
    ripe for review. 3 “Ripeness involves the timing of judicial review and the principle
    that judicial machinery should be conserved for problems which are real and
    present or imminent, not squandered on problems which are abstract or
    hypothetical or remote.” Meinders v. Weber, 
    2000 S.D. 2
    , ¶ 39, 
    604 N.W.2d 248
    , 263
    (quoting Boever v. S.D. Bd. of Accountancy, 
    526 N.W.2d 747
    , 750 (S.D. 1995)).
    “Courts should not render advisory opinions or decide moot theoretical questions
    when the future shows no indication of the invasion of a right.” 
    Boever, 526 N.W.2d at 750
    . However, “[a] matter is sufficiently ripe if the facts indicate imminent
    conflict.” 
    Id. Here, the
    circuit court awarded Annette spousal support to run for a
    period of 10 years following the sale of the marital home. As indicated above, Tom
    was healthy and only 53 years old at the time of the divorce proceedings. Although
    it is not known when a third party will purchase the home, there is nothing in the
    3.       Although Annette did not raise this argument, a dispute is not justiciable
    unless it is ripe. Ohio Forestry Ass’n, Inc. v. Sierra Club, 
    523 U.S. 726
    , 732,
    
    118 S. Ct. 1665
    , 1670, 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 921
    (1998); see also Brendtro v. Nelson,
    
    2006 S.D. 71
    , ¶ 12 n.1, 
    720 N.W.2d 670
    , 674 n.1. Whether a controversy is
    justiciable may be considered by a court on its own motion. See Nat’l Park
    Hosp. Ass’n v. Dep’t of the Interior, 
    538 U.S. 803
    , 808, 
    123 S. Ct. 2026
    , 2030,
    
    155 L. Ed. 2d 1017
    (2003); Baldwin Cty. v. Palmtree Penthouses, Ltd., 
    831 So. 2d
    603, 605 & n.4 (Ala. 2002); Kapuwai v. City & Cty. Of Honolulu, Dep’t of
    Parks & Recreation, 
    211 P.3d 750
    , 757 (Haw. 2009); W.B. v. Commonwealth,
    Cabinet for Health & Family Servs., 
    388 S.W.3d 108
    , 115 (Ky. 2012); Brickley
    v. Horton, 
    951 A.2d 801
    , 802 (Me. 2008); Wilson v. State Highway Comm’n,
    
    370 P.2d 486
    , 488 (Mont. 1962); Appeal of Buckeye Power, Inc., 
    330 N.E.2d 430
    , 431 (Ohio 1975) (per curiam); Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale, 
    964 S.W.2d 922
    , 928 (Tex. 1998); Williams v. Univ. of Utah, 
    626 P.2d 500
    , 503 (Utah
    1981); Daniels v. Mobley, 
    737 S.E.2d 895
    , 899 (Va. 2013).
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    record to suggest that Tom’s death is imminent, absent some unforeseen accident.
    In such an event, Tom’s estate is free to petition for a modification.
    [¶15.]       3.      Whether a spousal-support obligation that extends
    past the death of the obligor is an abuse of
    discretion.
    [¶16.]       We do not reach this issue because of our decision on Issue 2.
    [¶17.]       4.      Whether the circuit court abused its discretion by
    determining that the interest and penalties on the
    parties’ IRS tax liability was Tom’s nonmarital
    debt.
    [¶18.]       The circuit court attempted to divide the marital estate into equal
    shares with the exception of the portion of the parties’ IRS debt attributable to
    interest and penalties. While the court equally divided the underlying tax liability
    due the IRS, the court determined that the penalties and interest accumulated as
    the result of prior failures to file tax returns constituted a nonmarital debt
    attributable solely to Tom. Tom asserts the circuit court abused its discretion by
    assigning Tom sole responsibility for the penalties and interest. Specifically, Tom
    asserts the circuit court erred in three ways: (1) by failing to give sufficient weight
    to Annette’s treatment of the parties’ tax problem, (2) by basing its decision on
    erroneous findings, and (3) by attributing all payments made on the parties’ IRS
    debt to principal.
    [¶19.]       Tom first asserts that the circuit court failed to give sufficient weight
    to Annette’s treatment of the parties’ tax problem. The circuit court found that in
    2011, after attending credit counseling, Annette learned that the parties’ income-
    tax returns had not been filed for three previous tax years and that the marital
    home had been encumbered by a tax lien of nearly $50,000. Although Tom
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    acknowledges that “Annette’s testimony provides some basis in the record for that
    finding[,]” he argues that “if Annette really was unaware of any issue, it could only
    be because she willfully stuck her head in the sand[.]” According to Tom, Annette
    should have realized the parties had a tax problem because Annette testified she
    believed the parties had been granted extensions for previous tax years, including
    an eight-year extension for the 2000 return; because the parties filed six tax returns
    at once in 2008; because Annette was generally aware of the parties’ financial
    difficulties throughout the marriage; and other miscellanea. Additionally, Tom
    points out that after both parties learned of the problem, they allowed their
    outstanding tax liability to continue accruing interest and penalties for over a year
    before taking any steps to directly address the tax lien.
    [¶20.]       An appeal is not an opportunity to simply relitigate credibility
    determinations. “We give deference to the [circuit] court on judging the credibility
    of the witnesses and weighing their testimony.” Hill v. Hill, 
    2009 S.D. 18
    , ¶ 26, 
    763 N.W.2d 818
    , 826. Any “[d]oubts about whether the evidence supports the [circuit]
    court’s finding of fact are to be resolved in favor of the successful party’s version of
    the evidence and of all inferences fairly deducible therefrom which are favorable to
    the court’s action.” Gartner, 
    2014 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 
    8, 855 N.W.2d at 850
    (quoting Estate of
    Olson, 
    2008 S.D. 97
    , ¶ 9, 
    757 N.W.2d 219
    , 222). During the divorce proceedings,
    under cross-examination by Tom’s counsel, Annette testified as follows:
    [Tom’s Counsel]: Now, at some point did you become aware of
    a rather large debt to the IRS?
    [Annette]: Yes.
    [Tom’s Counsel]: How did you become aware of that debt?
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    [Annette]: When we took Tom’s credit cards to consumer credit
    that first meeting with them, of course she had to run a credit
    score on both of us. And she walked back in and handed the
    credit scores to us and pointed to it, and that was the first time
    that I knew of any of it. I just remember looking at Tom and
    him just stating “Yes. I knew about it.”
    ....
    [Tom’s Counsel]: And so that would have been the first time
    you learned about a tax lien that was filed in December of 2009?
    [Annette]: Yes.
    ....
    [The Court]: I have a quick question . . . . My question is:
    When you went to the credit counselor, that’s when you first
    learned [of the tax lien]?
    [Annette]: Yes.
    [The Court]: When was that?
    [Annette]: That would have been February of 2011.
    The circuit court was not required to disbelieve Annette’s testimony simply because
    Tom concludes she should have known better. While the content of Tom’s
    assertions provides circumstantial evidence that might help prove Annette’s
    awareness of a tax problem at the trial level, Tom has not proved by “a clear
    preponderance of the evidence” that Annette was aware of the parties’ tax problem.
    See 
    id. (quoting Olson,
    2008 S.D. 97
    , ¶ 
    9, 757 N.W.2d at 222
    ). Because Tom has
    fallen short of leaving us “with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has
    been committed[,]” 
    id. (quoting Olson,
    2008 S.D. 97
    , ¶ 
    9, 757 N.W.2d at 222
    ), we are
    not persuaded that the circuit court “failed to give sufficient weight” to Annette’s
    treatment of the parties’ tax problem.
    [¶21.]       Next, Tom asserts that the circuit court’s finding that Annette’s efforts
    after learning of the tax lien “set[] the stage for a return to solvency” is clearly
    erroneous. According to Tom, “[t]he primary thing that set the stage for the family’s
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    financial solvency was not Annette preparing tax returns, but rather the fact that
    Tom started working the coal mine in 2011 and earned a higher and more
    consistent income than at any other time during the marriage.” We fail to
    understand how this finding, even if erroneous, undermines the circuit court’s
    conclusion that the interest and penalties on the unpaid tax liability was Tom’s
    nonmarital debt. The circuit court determined the interest and penalties on the
    unpaid debt was nonmarital because Tom was responsible for the imposition of
    those amounts, not because of Annette’s role in remedying the situation.
    [¶22.]       Finally, Tom asserts the circuit court erred by attributing all payments
    made on the parties’ IRS debt to principal. The parties initially owed the IRS an
    unpaid tax liability of $33,455. This tax liability generated an additional $44,376 in
    interest and penalties. However, the parties were credited with $23,661 in
    payments to the IRS. The circuit court applied the entirety of this credit toward the
    $33,455 underlying tax liability, leaving the interest and penalties unaffected.
    According to Tom, “Annette should be responsible for half of the interest
    accumulated on the unpaid taxes, even if penalties and interest on the penalties are
    made Tom’s responsibility.” Thus, the essence of Tom’s argument is that the circuit
    court abused its discretion by categorizing the interest and penalties on the IRS tax
    liability as Tom’s nonmarital debt. We disagree that the circuit court abused its
    discretion in this regard.
    [¶23.]       The Nebraska Supreme Court decided a substantially similar case in
    Meints v. Meints, 
    608 N.W.2d 564
    (Neb. 2000). In Meints, over the course of seven
    years, a “husband incurred a federal income tax liability of $19,162.31, plus an
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    additional $11,235.36 in statutory penalties for late filing, for a total Internal
    Revenue Service (IRS) liability amounting to $30,397.67.” 
    Id. at 567.
    During those
    same years, “the husband and the wife filed separate income tax returns.” 
    Id. However, the
    husband testified—and the wife did not dispute—that he “spent the
    funds that he failed to withhold from his income for IRS tax purposes on family
    expenses[.]” 
    Id. Consequently, the
    “district court did not treat the tax liability
    incurred by the husband as a marital debt and proceeded to divide the remaining
    marital estate accordingly.” 
    Id. at 566.
    On appeal, the Nebraska Supreme Court
    noted that “[i]ncome tax liability incurred during the marriage is one of the
    accepted costs of producing marital income, and thus . . . should generally be
    treated as a marital debt.” 
    Id. at 569.
    When “taxes are overdue, the principle
    behind the rule is the same, and the underlying tax liability [is] ordinarily . . . a
    marital debt.” 
    Id. However, the
    court also noted that even underlying tax liability
    need not be classified as marital debt “if credible evidence establishes that the
    delinquent tax-paying spouse spent significant funds on nonmarital pursuits.” 
    Id. As an
    extension of these principles, the court held “that an innocent spouse who has
    filed separate tax returns, and paid his or her taxes in a timely fashion, should not
    be forced to share in any statutory penalties for the late filings of a dilatory spouse.”
    
    Id. Consequently, the
    court concluded that while the underlying tax liability was
    properly considered a marital debt, the accrued interest and penalties were
    nonmarital debt “solely attributable to the husband’s late filings.” 
    Id. [¶24.] Although
    the facts of the present case are not identical to those
    presented in Meints, we think they are sufficiently analogous to apply the same
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    principles. Like the Nebraska Supreme Court, the circuit court here concluded the
    underlying tax liability was a marital debt while the accrued interest and penalties
    were Tom’s nonmarital debt. 4 The circuit court so found for the following reasons:
    (1) If Defendant had . . . timely paid the taxes, then interest and
    penalties would not have accrued. The IRS wouldn’t have a lien
    on the marital property and Plaintiff would realize more hard
    cash from the sale of the home.
    (2) Defendant was the person responsible for . . . paying the
    taxes.
    (3) The Defendant concealed his dereliction from his wife. She
    had no knowledge that Defendant failed to pay income taxes.
    (4) Upon discovery of the Defendant’s deep dereliction,
    Plaintiff—with the help of Defendant’s accountant—worked
    through a garbage bag full of records to recreate the delinquent
    tax years. As a result, returns were filed, thus setting the stage
    for a return to solvency.
    (5) The IRS lien was a function of Defendant’s character—a
    tendency to profligacy and financial neglect.
    Additionally, the circuit court also found that “Tom’s failure to file income taxes was
    willful as well as negligent and as a result the parties incurred a significant amount
    of penalties and interest that they should not have incurred had Tom managed
    their financial affairs properly.” Tom has not convinced us that the circuit court
    clearly erred in its relevant factual findings. Therefore, like the Nebraska Supreme
    Court in Meints, we must likewise conclude that Annette is “innocent” and should
    not suffer the consequences of Tom’s concealed mismanagement of the family’s
    finances—i.e., the interest and penalties portion of the tax lien.
    4.    Although Annette initially attempted to convince the circuit court to
    categorize the entire tax lien as Tom’s nonmarital debt, she has not made the
    same argument on appeal. Therefore, it is undisputed that the circuit court
    properly categorized that portion of the tax lien representing the parties’
    underlying tax liability, which does not include interest and penalties, as
    marital debt.
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    [¶25.]         In light of the foregoing, the circuit court’s application of the parties’
    $23,661 credit was proper. Tom has not asserted that any portion of this credit was
    paid out of his nonmarital funds. Therefore, it was proper for the circuit court to
    apply half of the credit toward each of the parties’ shares of the underlying tax
    liability and then equally divide the remaining tax liability between the parties. 5
    [¶26.]         5.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion by
    ordering Tom to pay all mortgage, insurance, and
    property-tax payments on the marital home until its
    sale.
    [¶27.]         Tom asserts that the mortgage, insurance, and property-tax payments
    on the marital home should have been proportional to the allocation of the asset
    between the parties. Although the circuit court ordered Tom to make the foregoing
    payments on the home, the court ordered the first $5,000 of any net proceeds
    obtained from the sale of the home to be paid to Tom and any remaining proceeds to
    be equally divided between the parties. Annette argues that she remained equally
    obligated on the debt even though the circuit court “simply ordered Tom to pay the
    entire mortgage” instead of having “Tom pay half of the mortgage debt and Annette
    pay half of the mortgage debt with alimony that Tom paid to her[.]”
    5.       Annette was actually required to pay a small portion of the interest. The
    court calculated Annette’s remaining share of the underlying tax liability at
    $5,564. This amount reflects half of the difference between the tax-lien-
    payoff-statement amount ($55,504) and the sum of the penalties ($15,516)
    and interest ($28,860). However, Tom’s exhibit JJ indicated the payoff
    amount of $55,504 was higher than the calculated total of $54,170 ($33,455 in
    unpaid taxes plus $15,515 in penalties plus $28,860 in interest minus
    $23,661 in payments) because of additional interest that had accrued.
    Therefore, Annette should have only been responsible for $4,897—i.e., half of
    the difference between the unpaid taxes ($33,455) and the credit ($23,661).
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    [¶28.]       As Tom points out, we reviewed an analogous property division in
    Foley v. Foley, 
    429 N.W.2d 42
    (S.D. 1988). In Foley, a husband and wife divorced,
    and the circuit court ordered the husband to make monthly payments of $518 for
    “the house payment, consisting of principal, interest and insurance” and $176 “for
    utilities, food, and necessaries[.]” 
    Id. at 43.
    The court did not identify whether it
    considered these payments a portion of the property settlement or an award of
    spousal or child support, but the awards were set to terminate upon the later
    occurrence of the parties’ youngest child reaching age 18 or finishing high school.
    
    Id. at 43-44.
    While the court determined that the parties would retain joint title to
    the marital home, the court decided the wife would receive 70% of the net proceeds
    from the sale of the home and the husband would receive the remaining 30%. 
    Id. at 44.
    The court ordered the home be sold if the wife remarried or upon the later
    occurrence of the parties’ youngest child reaching age 18 or finishing high school.
    
    Id. After the
    home was eventually placed on the market for sale, the wife petitioned
    for modification, which the circuit court granted.
    [¶29.]       On appeal of the modification, we commented on the circuit court’s
    distribution of the mortgage and insurance payments. We said:
    It is . . . clear that unless the mortgage payments were made,
    the property could have been foreclosed upon preventing either
    party from receiving any possible gain on the sale of the home.
    Although the trial court was justified in requiring [h]usband and
    [w]ife to share these payments, the percentages should have
    reflected the percentage interest of each party in the asset (or
    liability). To require [h]usband to pay an additional twenty
    percent would be permissible only if such payments were part of
    [h]usband’s continuing support obligation to [w]ife.
    
    Id. at 47.
    Consequently, we remanded to give the circuit court an opportunity
    either to reimburse the husband for the additional 20% of the mortgage and
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    insurance payments he had paid or to clarify that the additional sum was an award
    of spousal support rather than a property division.
    [¶30.]       We think Foley is inconsistent with the discretion given to circuit
    courts to equitably divide marital property in divorce proceedings. Foley itself was
    a split decision, and it appears that we have never relied on Foley for the notion
    that a party’s responsibility for preventing foreclosure on the marital home must be
    proportional to that party’s interest in the asset. Such a rule ignores the equity
    court’s larger function of dividing the total of marital property. A court is not
    required to equally divide each individual asset; rather, the overall division of the
    entirety of the marital assets must be equitable. To the extent that Foley suggests
    otherwise, it is overruled. In light of the larger property division, requiring Tom to
    pay an extra $1,250 per month to preserve the one asset that would be used first to
    satisfy his tax debt to the IRS was not an abuse of discretion.
    [¶31.]       6.     Whether the circuit court’s decree effectively
    executed its division of the parties’ IRS debt.
    [¶32.]       In addition to disputing the circuit court’s categorization of the interest
    and penalties as his nonmarital debt, Tom asserts “the manner in which the
    [c]ircuit [c]ourt attempted to accomplish this goal fails in its purpose because it does
    not account for the likelihood that the parties would make payments on the debt
    before the sale of their home.” According to Tom, “[a]ny findings regarding the
    amount of proceeds from the home sale that will go towards the IRS lien are clearly
    erroneous” because the circuit court could not have known whether and by how
    much the tax lien would change by the time of sale. Tom asserts that he has been
    making $500-per-month payments on the tax lien under a settlement agreement
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    with the IRS. Thus, Tom concludes that “[t]o properly accomplish the objective of
    making [him] responsible for $44,375 of the IRS debt, it is necessary to use a
    formula that accounts for payments on the debt made by each party before the home
    sells.” We disagree.
    [¶33.]         Tom ignores the larger picture of the entire property division. Tom’s
    burden on appeal is not to prove merely that one aspect of the actual property
    division deviated from the circuit court’s intended property division. Rather, Tom
    must convince us that the property division, as executed, was an abuse of discretion.
    Although a circuit court must “have regard for equity and the circumstances of the
    parties” when dividing the marital estate, SDCL 25-4-44, “[i]n the division of
    property rights, there is no rigid formula that must be followed, nor any fixed
    percentage to which either party is entitled.” Clement v. Clement, 
    292 N.W.2d 799
    ,
    801 (S.D. 1980) (citation omitted). When a circuit court divides property, “the law
    does not require perfection that would approach a mathematical certainty.”
    Pellegrin v. Pellegrin, 
    1998 S.D. 19
    , ¶ 24, 
    574 N.W.2d 644
    , 649. In this case, the
    circuit court did not abuse its discretion by declining to adopt a formula that would
    account for potential, minor variations in the amount of Tom’s tax-lien obligations.
    Considering the property division as a whole, Tom’s monthly obligation to make the
    tax payment would only affect the overall property division marginally if at all. 6
    6.       It does not appear that Tom’s monthly payments are likely to ever benefit
    Annette. The thrust of Tom’s argument is that every $500 payment he
    makes reduces the total amount of the tax lien and consequently increases
    Annette’s equity by $250. However, under the decree, Tom is required to pay
    Annette $22,187 regardless of whether the sale proceeds are sufficient to
    cover that amount. Thus, if the net proceeds from the home sale are less
    (continued . . .)
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    Such a decision is not “a choice outside the range of permissible choices[.]” Gartner,
    ________________________
    (. . . continued)
    than $22,187, Annette will not receive any additional value from Tom’s $500
    payments. Because Tom is then entitled to any remaining proceeds up to
    $5,000, Tom’s payments will not affect the amount Annette receives unless
    the net proceeds exceed $27,187. However, if the home sells for $27,187,
    Annette—as a joint owner of the property—is already entitled to 50% of the
    $22,187 in proceeds allocated to her by the court (i.e., the court functionally
    ordered Tom to pay Annette only $11,094). Likewise, Tom would also already
    be entitled to 50% of the $5,000 the court ordered he receive. Thus, at the
    point at which each of Tom’s $500 tax payments would be adding $250 to
    Annette’s equity on a monthly basis, Tom would already have been permitted
    to retain $8,594 (50% of $22,187 minus 50% of $5,000) in proceeds that would
    have been distributed to Annette under a true 50/50 division of the property.
    At that rate, the home would need to be on the market for nearly three years
    before Tom’s tax payments caught up with Annette’s deficit.
    Further, even if we agreed with Tom’s conclusion that the circuit court’s
    decree did not effectively carry out the court’s intended property division,
    Tom ignores the bigger picture of the entire property division. It is clear from
    the circuit court’s decree, findings of fact, and conclusions of law that—aside
    from the interest and penalties on the tax liability—the court intended to
    divide the marital estate equally. However, the parties themselves came to
    an agreement regarding the distribution of personal property and debts other
    than the tax lien. Under that agreement, Annette received $37,477 in
    personal property but assumed $21,000 in debt. In contrast, Tom received
    $54,011 in personal property but assumed only $9,916 in debt. As a result of
    this $27,618 disparity in value between property received by the parties, the
    circuit court ordered Tom to pay Annette $10,000 to help balance the
    personal-property division. This amount, however, still leaves Tom with
    approximately $7,618 more than Annette. Considering the $8,594 deficit
    discussed in the preceding paragraph, it appears that Tom’s payments would
    not even begin to tip the financial advantage in Annette’s favor—i.e., result
    in her receiving more cash value than Tom as a result of this property
    division—until the home had been on the market for over five years.
    In order to be entitled to relief on appeal, Tom has the burden of establishing
    that the circuit court’s decision was “outside the range of permissible
    choices,” Gartner, 
    2014 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 
    7, 855 N.W.2d at 850
    , not merely that the
    court failed in execution to impose an intended debt liability to the penny. As
    things stand, Tom’s tax payments are unlikely to ever benefit Annette under
    the circuit court’s decree. If the total of the sale price and Tom’s tax
    payments ever reach the point where Annette benefits from them, it would
    take years of such tax payments for the property division to equalize, let
    alone tip in Annette’s favor to such an extent that it becomes inequitable.
    -18-
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    2014 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 
    7, 855 N.W.2d at 850
    (quoting Arneson, 
    2003 S.D. 125
    , ¶ 
    14, 670 N.W.2d at 910
    ).
    [¶34.]       7.     Whether the circuit court abused its discretion in
    determining the amount and duration of spousal support.
    [¶35.]       Tom asserts the circuit court abused its discretion in ordering Tom to
    pay Annette $1,000 per month in spousal support for a period of 10 years beginning
    on the first day of the month following the sale of the home. Tom argues the court
    abused its discretion in two respects. First, Tom argues that the circuit court
    clearly erred by concluding Annette’s income potential would never approach Tom’s.
    Second, because the 10-year period does not begin until the home sells, Tom argues
    that the effect of the circuit court’s order “was to essentially extend Tom’s alimony
    obligation by a month for every month the home remains unsold.” According to
    Tom, “having the period run from an undetermined point in the future (whenever
    the home sells) cannot be reasonably justified.” We are not persuaded by either
    argument.
    [¶36.]       The circuit court’s evaluation of the parties’ earning capacities was not
    clearly erroneous. Tom asserts that “[t]he alimony award is . . . based on the
    erroneous factual finding that Annette’s ‘income potential despite her degree will
    never approach Tom’s.’” The reason for this, Tom suggests, is that “[t]here was no
    evidence suggesting [Annette] could not become qualified to drive equipment at a
    coal mine, or similarly drive trucks that service the oil fields in North Dakota.”
    However, Tom offers no authority for the proposition that a spouse seeking support
    must move to another state and seek out a particular occupation or necessarily risk
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    having its income potential be imputed to that spouse. 7 The circuit court found that
    Annette earns $10 per hour, seven hours per day, while school is in session.
    Additionally, at the time of divorce, Annette hoped to continue driving a school bus
    at least one shift per day at $14.50 per hour. Finally, the court found that Annette
    has received additional training enabling her to drive charter busses during the
    summer and for school trips. In comparison, the court also found that Tom has
    demonstrated an ability to earn in excess of $100,000 per year. Although Tom
    asserts that he has only earned this amount annually once in his lifetime, that one
    year occurred immediately prior to the year of divorce and at the same job he
    currently holds. Consequently, the circuit court found that Tom will likely earn
    between $96,000 and $120,000 per year, whereas Annette will earn between
    $20,000 and $24,000 per year. Therefore, we are not “left with a definite and firm
    conviction” that the circuit court made a mistake in concluding Annette’s earning
    capacity will never approach that of Tom’s. See id. ¶ 
    8, 855 N.W.2d at 850
    (quoting
    Olson, 
    2008 S.D. 97
    , ¶ 
    9, 757 N.W.2d at 222
    ).
    [¶37.]         Even if we agreed that the circuit court clearly erred in its findings on
    the parties’ respective earning capacities, Tom would not necessarily prevail. A
    circuit court that grants a divorce “may compel one party to make such suitable
    allowance to the other party for support during the life of that other party or for a
    7.       If we so held, it is not difficult to imagine myriad future divorce appellants
    arguing that their support-seeking, former spouses are not entitled to support
    because they could simply learn to drive a truck, move to Wyoming, and work
    the coal mines. In a similar vein, such a holding would also invite any
    support-seeking spouse to claim his or her former spouse is voluntarily
    underemployed if that spouse earns less than he or she could in the coal
    mines of Wyoming.
    -20-
    #27238
    shorter period, as the court may deem just, having regard to the circumstances of
    the parties represented[.]” SDCL 25-4-41. Relevant circumstances include “the
    parties’ (1) length of marriage; (2) earning capacity; (3) financial condition after the
    property division; (4) age, health, and physical condition; (5) station in life or social
    standing; [and] (6) relative fault in the termination of the marriage.” Scherer v.
    Scherer, 
    2015 S.D. 32
    , ¶ 10, 
    864 N.W.2d 490
    , 494. While spousal support “will not
    be awarded in such an amount as would allow a [spouse] capable of work to sit in
    idleness, [neither] will it be denied merely because [the spouse] may be able to
    obtain employment and support [him- or] herself.” Guindon v. Guindon, 
    256 N.W.2d 894
    , 898 (S.D. 1977). Thus, earning capacity is but one factor a court
    should consider in determining an award of spousal support.
    [¶38.]       In this case, the circuit court’s findings on the relevant factors support
    its order for spousal support. The parties were married for approximately 14 years.
    Annette’s anticipated annual income is about one-fourth to one-sixth of Tom’s.
    Neither party will derive much financial potential from the property division. Both
    parties are relatively healthy and in good physical condition, although Tom is
    approximately eight years older than Annette. The court found that without the
    ordered support, Annette would be relegated to little more than “a lower
    rudimentary middle class existence.” While the circuit court clearly assigned blame
    for the parties’ dire economic situation to Tom, the divorce itself was granted on the
    basis of irreconcilable differences. Based on these factors, we cannot conclude the
    circuit court abused its discretion by ordering Tom to pay spousal support for 10
    years following the sale of the home.
    -21-
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    [¶39.]       Although Tom argues that “having the [support] period run from an
    undetermined point in the future (whenever the home sells) cannot be reasonably
    justified[,]” he offers no authority for the conclusion that such an arrangement is
    inherently unreasonable. In this case, such an arrangement only benefited him.
    Neither the total amount Tom is required to pay, nor the total amount Annette
    receives in support, is changed by this arrangement; the only difference is when
    Tom is required to pay certain amounts. By delaying the start of the 10-year
    period, the circuit court merely gave Tom the benefit of only having to pay $2,500
    per month while the home was on the market rather than $3,500 per month. In
    contrast, Annette receives no additional benefit from this arrangement. Although
    she is permitted to live in the home prior to sale, she is deprived of the flexibility
    that accompanies a cash payment of spousal support during that time. Tom can
    hardly complain about such an arrangement. The circuit court has discretion to
    “compel one party to make such suitable allowance to the other party for support
    during the life of that other party or for a shorter period[.]” SDCL 25-4-41
    (emphasis added). The circuit court did not abuse its discretion by ordering Tom to
    pay spousal support for a period of 10 years following the sale of the parties’ home.
    [¶40.]       8.     Whether Annette should be awarded appellate
    attorney fees.
    [¶41.]       Annette requested reimbursement of appellate attorney fees. SDCL
    15-26A-87.3 permits us to grant appellate attorney fees “where such fees are
    permissible at the trial level.” Grynberg Expl. Corp. v. Puckett, 
    2004 S.D. 77
    , ¶ 33,
    
    682 N.W.2d 317
    , 324 (quoting Hentz v. City of Spearfish, Dep’t of Pub. Works, Office
    of Planning & Zoning, 
    2002 S.D. 74
    , ¶ 13, 
    648 N.W.2d 338
    , 342). Therefore, “if
    -22-
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    appropriate, in the interests of justice, [this Court] may award payment of
    [appellate] attorneys’ fees in all cases of divorce, annulment of marriage,
    determination of paternity, custody, visitation, separate maintenance, support, or
    alimony.” SDCL 15-17-38. Here, not only does Tom receive more in the division of
    marital property and debts, his income is substantially greater than Annette’s. As
    noted above, the circuit court found that Tom’s expected income is between $96,000
    and $120,000 per year, whereas Annette’s is only between $20,000 and $24,000 per
    year. Therefore, we conclude that Tom should pay Annette’s appellate attorney fees
    in the amount of $7,587.49.
    Conclusion
    [¶42.]       We decline Tom’s invitation to alter the standards of review applicable
    to this case. Whether the circuit court erred by not specifically stating that Tom’s
    support obligation to Annette terminates in the event of Tom’s death is not ripe for
    review. The circuit court was not required to assign 50% of the mortgage,
    insurance, and property-tax payments to Annette, and we overrule Foley on this
    issue. The court did not abuse its discretion in deciding that the interest-and-
    penalties portion of the IRS tax lien is Tom’s nonmarital debt. Because Tom’s tax
    payments are unlikely to ever benefit Annette, the circuit court did not abuse its
    discretion by declining to give Tom a credit for half of each tax payment. The circuit
    court did not abuse its discretion in ordering Tom to pay $1,000 in spousal support
    to Annette each month for 10 years following the sale of the home. Finally, Tom
    must pay Annette’s appellate attorney fees. We affirm.
    [¶43.]       ZINTER, SEVERSON, WILBUR, and KERN, Justices, concur.
    -23-