Shawn Gaines v. Leonora Gaines ( 2021 )


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  •                                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Russell, Malveaux and Athey
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued by videoconference
    SHAWN GAINES
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.       Record No. 0885-20-4                                  JUDGE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR.
    MARCH 30, 2021
    LEONORA GAINES
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY
    Grace Burke Carroll, Judge
    Daniel B. Schy (Curran Moher Weis, P.C., on brief), for appellant.
    No brief or argument for appellee.
    The trial court awarded Leonora Gaines (wife) a divorce from Shawn Gaines (husband).
    The final decree provided for equitable distribution of the parties’ estate and granted wife spousal
    support. On appeal, husband challenges the trial court’s apportionment of the marital debt and its
    calculation of spousal support. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the trial
    court.
    BACKGROUND
    For the purpose of this appeal, wife was the prevailing party in the trial court. “When
    reviewing a trial court’s decision on appeal, ‘we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prevailing party, granting it the benefit of any reasonable inferences.’” Brandau v. Brandau, 
    52 Va. App. 632
    , 635 (2008) (quoting Smith v. Smith, 
    43 Va. App. 279
    , 282 (2004)). Accordingly, we
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    “discard the evidence . . . which conflicts, either directly or inferentially, with the evidence” that
    favored wife at trial. Id. (quoting Petry v. Petry, 
    41 Va. App. 782
    , 786 (2003)).
    So viewed, the evidence establishes that the parties were married in July 1992 and separated
    in May 2018. The parties have a son, who was an adult when the divorce proceedings began.
    When the parties married, they were living in Guam. Husband was serving in the United
    States Air Force and wife was a student, working towards a degree in hotel management. Wife did
    not complete her higher education, but she worked full time at a hotel during the first few years of
    marriage. When the parties moved to northern California in 1994, the parties agreed that wife
    would stay home to care for their son, but a few years later she began working part-time. The
    parties discussed the possibility of wife completing her education, but they ultimately decided that
    she would continue to be available to care for the child and that husband would “go first.” Husband
    completed his undergraduate degree in 2004 after taking out student loans to do so.
    The family moved to Virginia in 2005. Wife engaged in a brief affair, but the parties
    reconciled. Wife worked at a call center for a short while, but ultimately found full-time
    employment as a pre-kindergarten teacher with her current employer, Rainbow Day Care Center.
    Husband was able to use the G.I. bill to obtain a master’s degree. The parties lived beyond their
    means: they travelled, went to concerts, and made other luxury purchases.
    In the summer of 2011, husband retired from the military and started working for the CIA.
    The same year, the parties’ son enrolled in college, and the parties agreed to pay for his attendance
    and took out several loans to do so. The parties continued to live beyond their means, and husband
    ultimately took out two personal loans to pay off some accrued credit card debt.
    In the fall of 2017, husband began an affair with another woman. In December 2017, he left
    the marital residence, telling wife that he was “going to a friend’s house.” When he returned several
    days later, he told wife that he did not want to be married anymore and he left again “for three
    -2-
    months.” Husband returned temporarily in March 2018. He permanently removed himself in May
    2018 and moved in with his now girlfriend. In May 2019, husband and his girlfriend entered into an
    apartment lease together.
    Post-separation, wife continued to deposit her paychecks in the parties’ joint account until
    November 2018. Husband paid the rent and utilities for the marital residence until January 2019; he
    also made payments on wife’s credit cards. Husband consolidated the personal loans and obtained
    additional funds to pay 2018 taxes.
    Wife filed a complaint for divorce in May 2019, and a pendente lite order was entered in
    July 2019. The parties were directed to pay at least the monthly minimums on debts held in their
    respective names, wife was made responsible for expenses associated with the martial residence,
    and husband was ordered to pay wife $2,200 monthly spousal support until further order of the trial
    court.
    To expedite proceedings in the trial court, the parties entered into several stipulations
    regarding their finances. They agreed to the classification, valuation, and distribution of several
    items of tangible personal property, including vehicles and a dog. They further agreed that husband
    was receiving $2,217 a month from his military pension, which pension was 93% marital property.
    Husband also was in possession of a Thrift Savings Plan valued at $191,607, with the marital share
    valued at $178,421. Wife’s employment had resulted in no retirement or pension accounts.
    Regarding their respective incomes from employment, the parties stipulated that, at the
    pertinent time, “[w]ife’s monthly gross income from employment with Rainbow Daycare Center is:
    $2,437.00” and “[h]usband’s monthly gross income from employment with the CIA is: $9,311.00.”
    Thus, by stipulation, the parties established that husband earned slightly less than eighty percent of
    the combined employment income and wife earned slightly more than twenty percent of the
    combined employment income.
    -3-
    The parties also stipulated to the amounts and sources of their debts. They agreed that they
    had amassed just over $34,000 in marital credit card debt as of the date of separation. Both parties
    had acquired additional credit card debt after separation. The stipulation noted the personal loans
    acquired during the marriage that were consolidated after separation; the parties agreed that there
    was a balance of $17,654 when the consolidation occurred. As of the date of the separation, a
    balance of roughly $7,515 was outstanding on husband’s student loans while just under $6,080
    remained by the date of hearing. When they separated, the parties owed approximately $96,300 on
    their son’s student loans, but that amount had been reduced to $87,210 by the hearing date. Wife
    also was liable for $9,100 in promissory notes.
    The parties additionally agreed that husband and his now girlfriend “live together . . . [and]
    share the cost of living expenses . . . .” The stipulation, however, did not address how those living
    expenses were allocated or the amount of the living expenses actually paid by husband.
    Several weeks prior to the filing of these stipulations, wife filed a motion for an alternate
    valuation date. She more specifically moved as follows:
    In light of the pay-down of debt with marital funds during the
    pendency of the suits, [h]usband’s admission of waste and the
    accumulation of additional debt, [w]ife requests that the debt
    accounts and accounts from which funds were paid be valued at a
    date that best represents the marital value of the debt(s) and
    accounts/funds from which debt(s) were paid for purposes of
    [e]quitable [d]istribution . . . [and t]hat the [c]ourt determine the
    appropriate valuation date for each debt or other marital property,
    asset or interest so designated by this [c]ourt[.]
    An ore tenus evidentiary hearing was held on October 8 and 9, 2019. At the outset of the
    trial, wife raised the issue of valuation of the debts. She stated, “[W]ith respect to the school loans,
    [I] ask[] that those loans be valued at the date of the hearing[,]” using “[t]he current value.” Wife
    explained that “husband has received, during the course of the separation, his military pension . . .
    that is already in pay status” and that for “the first five or six months of the parties’ separation, [she]
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    was depositing her paycheck into the joint account” and therefore, because husband “had marital
    funds at his disposal during the separation . . . these marital funds should be credited with the pay
    down of debt.” She further asked that the personal loans be valued as of June 2019, when husband
    consolidated them and “increased the amount due.”
    In response, husband argued that the law required that debt be valued as of the date of
    separation, but that it also authorized the trial court to consider any pay down of debt, and therefore
    “it does not follow that the [c]ourt needs to use an alternate []valuation date in order to attain the
    ends of justice.” Husband further argued that wife should not get credit for the pay down of marital
    debt in light of all the support she was receiving post-separation, which support was “based largely
    on the gross income of the parties, which included the pension income.” The trial court took the
    issue under advisement pending presentation of the evidence; during closing argument, the trial
    court queried, “[H]ow does the [c]ourt, if I don’t use an alternative valuation date, tease out the fact
    that the husband and the wife’s separate property after separation -- i.e., their income, and including
    the DFAS, including husband’s income, including wife’s income, was used to pay these expenses?”
    Husband responded that “the simplest, easiest way is, just take the date of separation, and use that
    for the valuation of these debts, and credit [him] then for paying down all of these obligations.”
    The parties testified to various aspects of their marriage, including decisions related to their
    own and their son’s higher educations, husband’s active involvement in the son’s activities, and the
    impact of their respective affairs. Wife noted that they always had struggled with management of
    their finances, even after husband started to use a spreadsheet to track their spending. She
    acknowledged the financial contributions husband made to her post-separation. Both parties offered
    evidence of their living expenses. Husband asserted that he paid $600 in rent and that the amount
    was low “out of the kindness of friends.” When questioned regarding his expenses, particularly his
    high dining and entertainment expenditures, husband explained that, when he first left the marital
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    residence, “I was living rent free, and I wasn’t paying for any of the utilities, I wasn’t paying for
    entertainment or for cable. Someone helped me out in a high-rent area. I wasn’t able to afford two
    addresses at the same time, so I was grateful.” He recounted that he paid for things as an “offset”
    for the generosity he was receiving: “Because I’m not contributing to cable, or any of the -- as far
    as -- like, food or whatever, so . . . she[, the girlfriend,] was able to give me a lower price because I
    was willing to cover other bills in other ways, I guess.”
    Husband testified that, in addition to the stipulated retirement accounts, he was entitled to a
    FERS pension through the CIA. Husband conceded that he had access to funds from wife’s
    paychecks from May to November 2018 and that payments on husband’s student loans were made
    from the parties’ joint account until at least August 2018. Husband described the consolidation of
    the personal loans and acknowledged his 2018 IRS debt.
    Husband’s counsel asked both parties whether either anticipated making any changes on
    their 2019 tax returns from their 2018 returns, particularly with respect to deductions. Neither party
    anticipated any differences. Husband asked the trial court “to take judicial notice . . . of the IRS
    publication for tax brackets for 2019, and the Commonwealth of Virginia’s tax brackets for 2019.”
    The trial court rejected a copy of the proposed 2019 federal tax rate schedules but accepted the
    adopted federal tax rate schedules for 2018 and the adopted Virginia 2019 schedules. No testimony,
    expert or otherwise, was offered regarding the immediate effect of the tax rates or how they would
    impact the parties in the future when they began drawing from the retirement accounts, such as the
    TSP, that were not presently in payment.
    During his argument regarding equitable distribution, husband contended,
    The TSP has $191,000 . . . . If it was divided 50-50 we would be
    looking at approximately $95,000 each. As a pre-tax asset, in order
    to get the cash equivalent, we would need to do the time value of
    money, the cost of an early withdrawal, the cost of taxes. We’re not
    asking for all of that. All we want is for the [c]ourt to gross up the
    number so that we get the pre-tax value of $56,300 in cash.
    -6-
    Husband further asserted that he “has an effective tax rate of approximately 23-percent. In order for
    the [c]ourt to gross up that number then, it would be multiplying -- or dividing $56,300 by
    .7777-percent, and the result would be [his] receiving $73,116 from his TSP above the 50-percent
    that he would already receive under our 50-50 award.”
    The trial court asked husband to expound upon his request. Husband stated, “[I]f the [c]ourt
    is going to consider the tax consequences, they have to consider what each item is actually worth to
    the parties. . . . [T]he party who ends up with the pre-tax asset, if we’re just keeping them equal,
    will always lose; always.” He continued, “[W]hen I’m considering the present value, I haven’t put
    into my equation the time value of money, or any early withdrawal penalties. I’m strictly looking at
    the fact . . . that this is a pre-tax asset, and the factor that the [c]ourt has to consider is the tax
    implications, in dividing assets under [§] 20-107.3.” When the trial court interjected, “Tax
    implications as to which evidence was presented[,]” husband rejoined, “[W]hat we have presented
    as evidence is that the TSP is a pre-tax asset . . . and that the parties are paying taxes currently at a
    certain rate” and referenced the tax schedules he had introduced.
    Given that no present payments were being made from the TSP, the trial court noted that
    neither party would be “paying taxes on this until the money is distributed sometime, and at some
    kind of formula that the government comes up with at some point, of service, age, and what tax
    bracket anybody might be in at that point in time.” Husband agreed, but added that “they will also
    not get the benefit of the money until they incur [that] tax liability.” During his argument, husband
    also noted that, even after accounting for an equal division of the martial share of husband’s military
    pension, that husband would be subject to higher taxes, reducing his disposable income.
    Wife acknowledged tax consequences as one of the statutory factors, but commented that
    “the tax consequence to the parties is . . . a nebulous sort of thing,” noting that the testimony about
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    the parties’ future tax filing decisions and what the rates would be in the future “was speculative.”
    She further argued,
    The tax consequence is attributable to both. . . . [I]f this [c]ourt
    awards [wife] half of the marital share of the military pension, she
    will have an additional tax consequence, he will have less
    income. . . . [I]n terms of fairness, we can’t say today what the parties
    will do, with respect to those things that affect the taxes, such as the
    itemization, the standard deductions, the medical expenses; it’s just
    too nebulous. . . . [W]hile I think we can consider it, I don’t think it
    bears a big impact on the award that you give today; it’s not the
    determining factor.
    Ultimately, wife “ask[ed] the [c]ourt for 50-percent of the marital share of the [] military
    pension, of the TSP, [and] of the FERS retirement.” With respect to the parties’ debt, wife
    “propose[d] that we deduct the marital waste straight off the top of what we view to be the total
    marital debt” and “valu[e] the credit-card debt on the date of separation, the [personal] loan debt on
    June, 2019, and the school loans” on the date of the hearing. She then “propose[d] to apportion the
    debt in terms of an income ratio . . . based on today’s figures, because there’s not an award of the
    military pension, or any other asset, and . . . that the income ratios would be 21-percent to wife, and
    79-percent to husband.” She suggested a spousal support award of $2,500 a month.
    Husband “ask[ed] for an equal division; 50/50 on the assets, 50/50 on the debts” with the
    martial debt worth $164,000. Presuming wife’s inability to pay her share of the debt, however,
    husband suggested that her contribution be offset by the TSP, with the amount adjusted based on it
    being a pre-tax asset. Husband indicated monthly support of $900 would be appropriate.
    The trial court issued its ruling from the bench on October 30, 2019. In issuing its ruling,
    the trial court relayed that it “had the opportunity to review the pleadings and the exhibits
    introduced as evidence at trial” and that it had “considered the testimony of witnesses, arguments of
    counsel, observed witnesses in their demeanors, ma[d]e determinations of credibility . . . .”
    -8-
    In addressing equitable distribution, the trial court noted, “I’ve considered all the factors
    under Code Section 20-107.3(E) as to when evidence was presented. I’ll discuss some of those
    factors now. If I don’t mention a factor, it’s not because I haven’t considered it.” The trial court
    first summarized the parties’ work history and their contributions generally to the marriage. The
    trial court relayed that “[w]ife made significantly less money than [husband,]” but that “wife made
    the majority of the non-monetary contributions.” The trial court noted wife’s 2005 affair, but it
    determined that “husband’s desire to end the marriage due to his [current] relationship” led to the
    dissolution of the marriage. The trial court stressed what it characterized as husband’s “deception as
    to where he was, [that] he needed to be alone . . . [then initially] agreed to come back to the
    marriage; and then when confronted, left in the spring of 2018.” The trial court further highlighted
    husband’s waste, concluding that he spent almost $13,000 of marital assets for his affair and
    emphasizing the significance of that amount in relation to the parties’ “modest marital estate.”
    In its explication of the factors, the trial court cited the parties’ stipulations to their agreed-to
    distribution of their tangible personal property and to the classification and valuation of husband’s
    retirement accounts. The trial court further noted that, at trial, “[t]here was some talk of tax
    consequences to each party, but not significant with regard to the actual accounts that they have.
    They spoke of filings and things like that.” The trial court further recalled that husband was
    responsible for a separate tax lien, paying $1,000 a month.
    The trial court addressed the “debts and liabilities of each spouse” in some detail. Using the
    balances as of the date of separation and in accordance with the parties’ stipulations, the trial court
    determined the parties had accumulated $34,002 of marital credit card debt and allotted $19,577 to
    wife and $14,425 to husband. The trial court discussed the outstanding personal loan owed, which
    had been incurred as two separate loans during the marriage but then consolidated by husband into a
    new loan after separation. The trial court concluded that “[t]he pre-consolidation two loans of
    -9-
    $17,654 is marital debt . . . .” Finding that husband “incurred additional debt on that” after
    consolidation, the trial court determined that the additional amount owed was husband’s separate
    debt.
    Turning to the student loans, the trial court found that “[t]he student loan for $6,067 is
    marital debt[ and t]he student loan for $87,210 is marital debt.” The trial court more specifically
    found that “the total debt of $93,273.36 of the student loans is marital debt.” Based on its findings,
    the trial court determined that “the total martial debt is $144,933.36” but then reduced the amount
    subject to apportionment to $132,477.36 to account for the waste attributed to husband.
    In considering the parties’ debt, the trial court found “that all these debts were consciously
    incurred by these parties” during their “lengthy marriage.” The trial court found that the parties had
    no property that could serve as security for their debts and that they had no liquid assets.
    The trial court found that “the only property that they really have is the husband’s
    retirement[,]” and after reviewing the evidence related to the factors, the trial court ordered that the
    marital shares of the retirement accounts be apportioned “55/45 in favor of the wife” and
    “apportion[ed] th[e marital] debt at a ratio of 22-percent to the wife, and 78-percent to the husband,
    and that is based on their income.”
    Upon request for clarification, the trial court reiterated,
    [W]ith regard to the military pension, the [c]ourt finds that the
    balancing the negative contributions of husband with the affair; with
    the money that was spent on his affair, and that fact that during the
    course of the marriage and the husband was military, that the wife
    worked and held the fort down while husband was . . . deployed . . . .
    So the [c]ourt balancing all of those factors found in favor of the wife
    55-percent and the husband 45-percent.
    The trial court further explained that the FERS account was to be split equally. In addition, husband
    asked the trial court, “[W]hen . . . dividing the debts at 78-22-percent based on income shares, were
    you just looking at the gross incomes before any of the other stuff?” The trial court replied, “That’s
    - 10 -
    correct, strict incomes. His income and her income.” Husband and the trial court confirmed that
    the stipulated monthly employment incomes of $9,311 and $2,437, respectively, were the basis of
    the trial court’s income shares analysis.
    The trial court then “look[ed] at the issue of spousal support, the statutory factors under
    [Code §] 20-107.1(E).” The trial court noted the “vast difference in their income status.” The trial
    court recounted the “marital decision” the parties had made whereby husband acquired additional
    education, affording him “a significant jump in income,” while wife continued “in the child-care
    arena.” The trial court found that “given their ages, the wife would have to get significant education
    in order to come close to earning what the husband is earning.” The trial court also referenced its
    award of husband’s retirement. The trial court further highlighted “their high debt” and that they
    “lived significantly over their means.” The trial court expressly stated that it specifically had taken
    “into account . . . that significant debt from the marriage that the [c]ourt . . . has apportioned to
    husband.”
    In making its findings, the trial court noted “[h]usband didn’t have rent and spen[t] huge
    amounts of money on entertainment and going out to dinner.” More specifically, it “did take into
    consideration that even though he says he is paying the lease . . . on his girlfriend’s apartment, that
    he really didn’t pay that and . . . the [c]ourt didn’t find that that was very persuasive that he has that
    obligation.”
    With respect to factor thirteen, which relates to “[s]uch factors, including the tax
    consequences to each party and the . . . factors that contributed to the dissolution . . . as are
    necessary to consider the equities between the parties,” the trial court stated that it “really did not
    receive any evidence to consider the equities between the parties, other than husband underpaid on
    his taxes and needed to pay the IRS money.” Husband queried, “[T]he tax implications, did that
    come into play at all?” The trial court responded, “[W]hat I just said is I really didn’t have the tax
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    implications; [they] weren’t really argued to me other than the fact that [husband] has a $1,000 [tax
    lien] that he pays.”
    Ultimately, the trial court, “[h]aving considered all the above factors, [wife’s] need, and
    [husband’s] ability to pay,” awarded wife $2,000 in monthly spousal support.
    After the trial court issued its bench ruling, both parties filed motions to reconsider. The
    parties agreed that federal and state law precluded awarding wife more than 50% of the marital
    share of husband’s military retirement benefits. In light of the required reduction of her award, wife
    requested a favorable adjustment of the remainder of the distribution, including an interest in
    husband’s survivor benefit plan. Wife additionally noted that the trial court “did not fully rule on
    [her] [m]otion for an [a]lternate [v]aluation date.”
    Husband challenged the trial court’s apportionment of the parties’ marital debt. He
    contended that the trial court “should not have divided the marital debt based on the parties’ income
    because it is not a factor under Code § 20-107.3 . . .[, but t]o the extent the court can use income to
    divide debts, the court failed to consider the retirement awards, spousal support awards, and tax
    implications.” Husband also argued that wife should not be awarded more than $1,000 in monthly
    spousal support.
    After consideration of the motions to reconsider, the trial court entered a final decree of
    divorce on June 30, 2020. The parties’ stipulations and a transcript of the trial court’s October 30,
    2019 bench ruling were attached as exhibits. The decree provided that wife be awarded 50% of the
    marital share of each of husband’s three retirement accounts and allocated the credit card and
    consolidated loan debt per its bench ruling. With respect to the student loans, the trial court found
    that the total amount of student loan debt is Ninety-Three Thousand
    Two Hundred and Seventy-three Dollars and Thirty-Six Cents
    ($93,273.36) all of which is marital and which comprises
    [h]usband’s student loan with a balance on the date of the hearing of
    Six Thousand and Sixty-Seven Dollars ($6,067.00) and the parties’
    son’s college loans in the amount of Eighty-Seven Thousand and
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    Two Hundred and Ten Dollars ($87,210.00). Each party shall be
    responsible for student loan debts in his or her own name.
    Based on the trial court’s findings and rulings, the final decree ultimately concluded, with regard to
    equitable distribution, that
    the total amount marital debt is $144,933.36, less [h]usband’s
    dissipation and waste of $12,456.00, which yields a sub-total of
    $132,477.36. Wife shall pay Twenty-Two percent (22%) of the
    sub-total of $132,477.36 ($29,145.02) and [h]usband pays
    Seventy-Eight percent (78%) of this amount ($103,332.34). After
    considering the amounts of marital debt [w]ife is paying on her credit
    cards pursuant to . . . this Order ($19,577.00), [w]ife shall pay
    [h]usband a monetary award in the amount of $9,568.02 . . . .
    Finally, the decree directed, “[f]or the reasons set forth in the [c]ourt’s ruling, . . . the [h]usband
    shall pay to the [w]ife as and for modifiable spousal support the sum of Two Thousand Dollars
    ($2,000.00) per month.” In conjunction with entry of the final decree, the trial court, by separate
    orders, granted in part and denied in part the parties’ motions for reconsideration.1
    Husband now appeals, asserting five assignments of error. The first two assignments of
    error challenge the trial court’s equitable distribution decisions regarding the parties’ marital debts,
    and the remaining three assert that the trial court committed errors in crafting the spousal support
    award.
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, “we presume the judgment of the trial court to be correct and . . . sustain its
    finding unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” West v. West, 
    53 Va. App. 125
    , 132 (2008) (quoting M. Morgan Cherry & Assocs. v. Cherry, 
    38 Va. App. 693
    , 702 (2002) (en
    banc)). “[T]he party who asserts the contrary is required to overcome the presumption by record
    proof.” Hart v. Hart, 
    27 Va. App. 46
    , 70 (1998) (quoting Broom v. Broom, 
    15 Va. App. 497
    , 504
    Wife, at trial and via motion for reconsideration, had requested an interest in husband’s
    1
    survivor benefit plan, but the trial court denied the request because no evidence of its value was
    presented at trial.
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    (1992)). “[W]hen the [trial] court hears evidence ore tenus[,] its findings are entitled to the weight
    of a jury verdict and will not be disturbed unless they are plainly wrong or without evidence to
    support them.” Collins v. Leeds, 
    69 Va. App. 1
    , 12 (2018) (quoting Lapidus v. Lapidus, 
    226 Va. 575
    , 580 (1984)).
    I. Equitable distribution
    “In reviewing an equitable distribution award on appeal, we have recognized that the trial
    court’s job is a difficult one, and we rely heavily on the discretion of the trial judge in weighing the
    many considerations and circumstances that are presented in each case.” Moran v. Moran, 
    29 Va. App. 408
    , 417 (1999) (quoting Klein v. Klein, 
    11 Va. App. 155
    , 161 (1990)). Accordingly, “a
    circuit court’s ‘equitable distribution award will not be overturned unless the [appellate court] finds
    “an abuse of discretion, misapplication or wrongful application of the equitable distribution statute,
    or lack of evidence to support the award.”’” Dixon v. Dixon, 
    71 Va. App. 709
    , 717-18 (2020)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Anthony v. Skolnick-Lozano, 
    63 Va. App. 76
    , 83 (2014)).
    Given the stipulations the parties reached that divided items of personal property, ownership
    of the parties’ dog, and various bank accounts, there was not much in the marital estate subject to
    equitable distribution by the trial court. The trial court noted that the husband’s retirement plans
    were the only real assets to divide with the extensive marital debt being the only other major item
    subject to equitable distribution.
    In his first assignment of error, husband contends that “[t]he trial court erred in considering
    the parties’ income shares in dividing the parties’ marital debt.” In his second assignment, he
    asserts error in the manner by which the parties’ responsibility for the outstanding student loan
    debt was assigned, arguing that “[t]he trial court erred in valuing the student loans as of the date
    of the hearing” resulting in a failure “to consider [his] use of post-separation income to paydown
    the debt.” We consider each argument in turn.
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    A. Use of income shares to divide the debt
    A trial court’s equitable distribution of a marital estate’s assets and debts is governed by
    Code § 20-107.3. The factors that a trial court is to consider in making its awards are delineated in
    Code § 20-107.3(E), which is composed of ten specific factors and an eleventh “catchall” factor.
    The “catchall” provision directs a trial court to consider “[s]uch other factors as the [trial] court
    deems necessary or appropriate to consider in order to arrive at a fair and equitable . . . award.”
    Code § 20-107.3(E)(11). Husband contends that the trial court improperly weighed the factors and
    impermissibly relied on the parties’ respective employment incomes, which is not one of the ten
    specifically delineated factors, in apportioning the marital debt. We disagree.
    It is true that a trial court distributing a marital estate “must consider each of the statutory
    factors[.]” Barker v. Barker, 
    27 Va. App. 519
    , 535 (1998) (citing Booth v. Booth, 
    7 Va. App. 22
    , 28
    (1988)). However, the trial court retains discretion regarding the “weight to assign to each of” the
    eleven factors. 
    Id.
     Indeed, “the statutory scheme recognizes . . . that a degree of imprecision will be
    inevitable in applying the factors of Code § 20-107.3(E).” Owens v. Owens, 
    41 Va. App. 844
    , 859
    (2003) (ellipsis in original) (quoting Arbuckle v. Arbuckle, 
    27 Va. App. 615
    , 618 (1998)).
    Here, there can be no serious question that the trial court considered the statutory factors.
    The trial court stated from the bench that it “considered all the factors under Code Section
    20-107.3(E)[,]” then explained in detail its consideration of those factors, and expressly invited the
    parties to ask any questions either had regarding the trial court’s consideration and weighing of the
    statutory factors. Thus, husband’s argument amounts to nothing more than arguing a trial court may
    not consider the parties’ employment incomes in apportioning marital debt.
    We disagree. It is hard to conceive of a fact outside of the ten specifically delineated
    statutory factors that would be more “appropriate to consider in order to arrive at a fair and
    equitable” assignment of marital debt than the income of the parties. Code § 20-107.3(E)(11).
    - 15 -
    Although, in other cases, other factors may dictate a different result, the trial court, having
    considered the statutory factors, concluded that a division of debt that closely tracked the parties’
    respective incomes was appropriate.2 Given the totality of the circumstances, which included a lack
    of other liquid assets, such a conclusion is reasonable. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in the
    apportionment of the marital debt.3
    B. Valuation date for the student loan debt
    Husband next contends that the trial court valued the date of the student loan debt as of the
    date of the equitable distribution hearing as opposed to the date of separation and that doing so
    2
    Our decision in Reid v. Reid, 
    7 Va. App. 553
     (1989), does not require a different result.
    In making its equitable distribution award, the trial court in Reid not only divided the parties’
    property, but also ordered that the husband make an additional cash payment based upon his
    “superior earning capacity” going forward. Id. at 563. We reversed, holding “that [equitable
    distribution] does not contemplate consideration of earning capacity of one spouse and support
    needs of the other spouse, which are expressly embodied in Code § 20-107.1 and are more
    appropriately determined” as a matter of spousal support. Id. at 565. Unlike the situation in
    Reid, the trial court’s decision here was not simply moving funds between husband and wife, but
    rather, was a determination of the parties’ respective liabilities to third parties for the existing
    marital debt, a necessary component of an equitable distribution award. See Code § 20-107.3.
    Furthermore, the trial court’s use of income shares in apportioning the debt did not take into
    account the parties’ respective earning capacities going forward, but rather, utilized an existing
    circumstance, the parties’ incomes at the time of the hearing.
    3
    In an attempt to support his argument, husband cites Code § 20-107.3(F), which
    provides that a trial “court shall determine the amount of any such” equitable distribution order
    “without regard to maintenance and support awarded for either party . . . and shall, after or at the
    time of such [equitable distribution] determination and upon motion of either party, consider
    whether an order for support and maintenance of a spouse or children shall be entered or, if
    previously entered, whether such order shall be modified or vacated.” Husband argues that the
    prohibition on considering any income that a party may receive as a result of a spousal support
    award represents an implicit prohibition on a trial court considering any income amounts in
    apportioning debt. The statutory language simply does not support such a contention.
    Code § 20-107.3(F) bars a trial court from considering the potential entry or modification of a
    spousal support award in making its decisions regarding equitable distribution; it does not
    prohibit, implicitly or otherwise, the trial court from considering anything else that falls within
    the scope of the eleven factors delineated in Code § 20-107.3(E). Because the trial court used
    the parties’ employment incomes without including either the pendente lite spousal support
    award or the spousal support award eventually ordered by the trial court, its apportionment of the
    marital debt did not violate Code § 20-107.3(F).
    - 16 -
    constituted reversible error. In support of his argument, he quotes on brief a portion of
    Code § 20-107.3(A), which provides that a trial court must
    determine the amount of any such debt as of the date of the last
    separation of the parties, if at such time or thereafter at least one of
    the parties intends that the separation be permanent, and the extent
    to which such debt has increased or decreased from the date of
    separation until the date of the evidentiary hearing.
    Husband contends that this language makes valuing the debt at the time of separation mandatory,
    and thus, any calculation that does not credit him for any loan payments made in the time period
    between separation and the evidentiary hearing is reversible error.
    We note that the parties’ stipulations conclusively established the value of the student
    loan debt at the date of separation. By accepting the stipulations and attaching them as exhibits
    to the final decree, the trial court “determine[d] the amount of any such debt as of the date of the
    last separation of the parties[.]” Code § 20-107.3(A)(ii). Thus, the essence of husband’s
    argument is that the trial court lacked authority to use a different value, the amount of student
    loan debt at the time of the hearing (also established by the parties’ stipulation), in apportioning
    the marital debt.
    Husband’s argument is fatally flawed because it relies upon a truncated quotation of the
    debt apportionment provisions of Code § 20-107.3(A). A fuller recitation of those provisions
    reads as follows:
    the [trial] court . . . shall determine the nature of all debts of the
    parties, or either of them, and shall consider which of such debts is
    separate debt and which is marital debt. The court shall determine
    the value of any [marital] property as of the date of the evidentiary
    hearing on the evaluation issue. The court shall determine the
    amount of any such debt as of the date of the last separation of the
    parties . . . and the extent to which such debt has increased or
    decreased from the date of separation until the date of the evidentiary
    hearing. Upon motion of either party . . . the [trial] court may, for
    - 17 -
    good cause shown, in order to attain the ends of justice, order that a
    different valuation date be used.
    Code § 20-107.3(A)(ii) (emphasis added).
    Here, wife made a motion requesting that the trial court adopt an alternate valuation date for
    all of the marital debt, including the student loan debt.4 Thus, pursuant to the very statute on which
    husband bases his argument, the trial court was authorized to use a different valuation date so long
    as good cause supported such an alternate date.5
    Husband makes no argument on appeal that wife failed to make a timely motion or that
    good cause did not support a different valuation date for the student loan debt.6 His failure to make
    such an argument on appeal means that those issues are not before us. Limited to his argument that
    a trial court lacks authority to use a different valuation date, an argument that is inconsistent with the
    text of Code § 20-107.3(A)(ii), we cannot say the trial court erred in the valuation of the student
    loan debt for purposes of equitable distribution.
    Wife’s basis for the motion was that “during the parties’ separation, [h]usband serviced
    4
    the majority of debt, including, but not limited to, school loans, credit cards, and personal loans,
    with marital funds[.]”
    5
    The record on appeal discloses no express ruling by the trial court granting or denying
    wife’s motion for an alternate valuation date. The parties appear to have recognized this in their
    post-trial motions in the trial court. Nevertheless, wife asserted that while the trial court did not
    “fully rule” on the motion, it implicitly had in part, because it “actually ruled that the marital
    portion of the [personal] loan was as of June 2019 (the date that [h]usband increased the amount
    by $7,215.00).” As with the personal loans, the student loan balances utilized by the trial court
    in apportioning the debt indicate that the trial court, in effect, resolved the issue in wife’s favor at
    least in part. Acknowledging this implicit ruling, husband, in challenging the debt
    apportionment and the basis thereof in his post-trial motion in the trial court, argued that, “[t]o
    the extent the [c]ourt did consider [w]ife’s [m]otion, there was no good cause to grant [w]ife’s
    motion for an alternate valuation date.”
    6
    Although he argued in the trial court that good cause did not exist for utilizing an
    alternate valuation date of the student loan debt, husband does not make such an argument on
    appeal. Accordingly, we do not address it.
    - 18 -
    II. Spousal support
    It is well established that a “trial court has broad discretion in awarding and fixing the
    amount of spousal support. Accordingly, our review is limited to determining whether the trial
    court clearly abused its discretion.” West, 53 Va. App. at 131 (quoting Miller v. Cox, 
    44 Va. App. 674
    , 679 (2005)). “Spousal support determinations typically involve fact-specific decisions best left
    in the ‘sound discretion’ of the trial court.” Brandau, 52 Va. App. at 641 (quoting McKee v.
    McKee, 
    52 Va. App. 482
    , 489 (2008) (en banc)). This discretion “should not be interfered with by
    an appellate court unless it is clear that some injustice has been done.” Joynes v. Payne, 
    36 Va. App. 401
    , 423 (2001) (quoting Papuchis v. Papuchis, 
    2 Va. App. 130
    , 133 (1986)).
    Like equitable distribution, a trial court’s consideration of spousal support is governed by
    statute. See Code § 20-107.1. Code § 20-107.1(E) delineates thirteen factors that a trial court must
    consider in making a spousal support determination. As with the equitable distribution factors, the
    statute requires that a trial court consider the factors, but it leaves the weighing of those factors to
    the sound discretion of the trial court. Pilati v. Pilati, 
    59 Va. App. 176
    , 183 (2011). Accordingly, so
    long as an “evidentiary foundation exists” to support the factual findings underlying a trial court’s
    spousal support award “and the record discloses that the trial court has given consideration to
    each of the statutory factors, we will not disturb its determination as to spousal support on
    appeal.” Fox v. Fox, 
    61 Va. App. 185
    , 203-04 (2012).
    Husband did not contest in the trial court and does not contest on appeal that wife is entitled
    to some level of spousal support. Rather, he challenges the methodology used by the trial court in
    calculating the award and the ultimate amount of the award. Specifically, in his third assignment of
    error, he asserts that “[t]he trial court erred in failing to consider the obligations, needs, and
    resources of the parties pursuant §20-107.1(E)(1)” in crafting the spousal support award. In his
    fourth assignment of error, he argues that “[t]he trial court erred in failing to consider the tax
    - 19 -
    consequences” to the parties of the spousal support award as required by
    Code § 20-107.1(E)(13). In his final assignment of error, husband contends that “[t]he trial court
    erred in finding that [he] had no expenses related to his residence.” We address each assignment
    below.
    A. Consideration of the parties’ obligations, needs, and resources of the parties
    Of the thirteen factors that a trial court is required to consider in making a spousal
    support determination, the first is “[t]he obligations, needs and financial resources of the parties,
    including but not limited to income from all pension, profit sharing or retirement plans, of
    whatever nature[.]” Code § 20-107.1(E)(1). Husband asserts that the trial court failed to
    consider this factor. Even a cursory review of the record reveals that husband’s assertion is
    unfounded.
    In outlining its spousal support award, the trial court expressly stated that it had
    considered “the statutory factors under [Code §] 20-107.1(E).” In detailing its consideration of the
    parties’ obligations, needs, and resources, the trial court made specific reference to “the vast
    difference in their income status” and the “marital decision” the parties had made whereby husband
    acquired additional education, affording him “a significant jump in income,” while wife continued
    “in the child-care arena[.]” The trial court further highlighted its division of the husband’s
    retirement accounts and the “significant debt from the marriage that [it] . . . apportioned to
    husband.” Because the record conclusively demonstrates that the trial court considered the factor
    specified in Code § 20-107.1(E)(1) in making its spousal support award, husband’s third assignment
    - 20 -
    of error is without merit.7 To the extent husband contends the trial court failed in properly
    considering this factor because it particularly did not consider tax implications or claimed rent as
    part of husband’s obligations and needs, his argument is also without merit, as we explain below.
    B. Consideration of the tax consequences
    In his next assignment of error, husband contends that “[t]he trial court erred in failing to
    consider the tax consequences” to the parties of the spousal support award as required by
    Code § 20-107.1(E)(13). In support of his argument, he cites the trial court’s statement that “the
    tax implications . . . weren’t really argued to me other than the fact that [husband] has a $1,000 a
    month lien, tax lien, that he pays.” From this statement, he reasons that the trial court must have
    ignored the fact that husband, based on his income, is and may continue to be in a higher tax
    bracket than wife. Viewing the record as a whole, we disagree with husband that the trial court’s
    statement is sufficient to establish that the trial court committed reversible error.
    Husband correctly notes that, in crafting a spousal support award, a trial court is required
    to “consider . . . the tax consequences to each party . . . as are necessary to consider the equities
    between the parties.” Code § 20-107.1(E)(13). Such consideration, however, is limited by the
    evidence the parties present. See Duva v. Duva, 
    55 Va. App. 286
    , 300 (2009) (recognizing that a
    trial court’s conclusions regarding the statutory spousal support considerations “must have some
    foundation based on the evidence presented” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)).
    7
    In reality, husband’s claim that the trial court failed to consider the
    Code § 20-107.1(E)(1) factors is not that the trial court did not consider them, but rather, is an
    argument that, if weighed differently, these factors could have led to a result more favorable to
    husband. As noted above, we do not review the absolute weight a trial court gives a particular
    Code § 20-107.1(E) factor or the relative weighting that it gives one factor when compared to the
    remaining thirteen so long as it does not amount to an abuse of discretion. Given all of the facts
    and circumstances before the trial court, its spousal support decision clearly fell within the
    “bell-shaped curve of reasonability governing our appellate review[,]” Hamad v. Hamad, 
    61 Va. App. 593
    , 607 (2013), and thus, does not constitute reversible error.
    - 21 -
    Here, there can be no dispute that the trial court heard evidence about and considered at
    least some tax consequences faced by the parties. After all, in announcing its ruling, the trial
    court recited and relied upon the evidence it had heard regarding husband’s tax lien.
    Despite this recital, husband argues that he adduced additional tax evidence that he
    contends the trial court impermissibly ignored. Specifically, he sought and gained admission of
    the adopted federal tax rate schedules for 2018 and the adopted Virginia 2019 schedules. With
    evidence of the parties’ incomes already before the trial court, husband notes that this evidence
    established that, because husband’s employment income was significantly higher than wife’s, his
    “tax obligation on income earned from employment would be higher than [w]ife’s tax obligation
    on the same.” He contends that the trial court’s statements indicate it “failed to properly
    contemplate that” fact.
    Although husband offers a plausible interpretation of the trial court’s statements, other
    readings are plausible given the record as a whole and the full context of all of the trial court’s
    comments. As noted above, we review the record in the light most favorable to wife because she
    was the prevailing party in the trial court. Brandau, 52 Va. App. at 635. Furthermore, as we
    have noted on many occasions,
    we presume trial judges know the law and correctly apply it. An
    appellant can rebut the presumption by showing, either by the
    ruling itself or the reasoning underlying it, the trial judge
    misunderstood the governing legal principles. We are particularly
    skeptical of appellate efforts to piece together such a conclusion
    from fragmented remarks from the bench. And we decline
    invitations to fix upon isolated statements of the trial judge taken
    out of the full context in which they were made, and use them as a
    predicate for holding the law has been misapplied.
    Hamad v. Hamad, 
    61 Va. App. 593
    , 602 (2013) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Viewed through this prism, the trial court’s statements do not establish that it committed
    reversible error by ignoring the tax consequences of its award. The record is replete with
    - 22 -
    instances in which the trial court engaged in colloquies with counsel for the parties regarding tax
    issues and implications related to both the spousal support award and the equitable distribution of
    husband’s retirement accounts. Clearly, the trial court considered tax issues in crafting its
    decision.
    Given the totality of the record and the standard of review, the trial court’s statements
    about a lack of evidence and argument regarding tax consequences are properly read as husband
    having failed to offer any convincing reason why the tax consequences merited a change in the
    spousal support award. After all, husband’s evidence in this regard was nothing more than tax
    rate schedules, the historical tax rates applied to the parties’ prior returns, and the parties’
    respective incomes coupled with his argument that he was in a higher tax bracket. No testimony,
    expert or otherwise, established which brackets each might fall within given various potential
    rulings by the trial court or what the dollar amount of being in different brackets as a result of
    such a ruling from the trial court was likely to be each year. Other than arguing the general
    principle that people in higher brackets pay more and demonstrating how that had played out in
    the past, husband’s presentation was nothing more than providing incomes and tax rate tables
    and sending the trial court off to conduct calculations about any conclusion it might reach. As
    many trial courts would, the trial court appears to have found the presentation unpersuasive and
    certainly concluded that nothing about the tax bracket evidence presented warranted a different
    result. This was not error.
    In reaching this conclusion, we stress the “broad discretion” a trial court enjoys “in
    awarding and fixing the amount of spousal support.” West, 53 Va. App. at 131. Accepting
    husband’s argument that he would pay taxes at a higher rate does not require an adjustment to the
    trial court’s spousal support award. Code § 20-107.1(E)(13)’s mandate is that the trial court
    consider tax consequences; it does not entitle a litigant to a particular result or a lessening of an
    - 23 -
    award because it is only one of the thirteen delineated statutory factors that the trial court must
    consider and balance to achieve an appropriate result. Code § 20-107.1(E). Given the trial
    court’s findings regarding the “standard of living established during the marriage[,]”
    Code § 20-107.1(E)(2), husband’s affair that ended the marriage representing a negative,
    nonmonetary contribution “to the well-being of the family[,]” Code § 20-107.1(6), the parties’
    “earning capacit[ies], including the skills, education and training of the parties[,]”
    Code § 20-107.1(E)(9), and “[t]he decisions regarding employment, career, economics,
    education and parenting arrangements made by the parties during the marriage and their effect on
    present and future earning potential, including the length of time one or both of the parties have
    been absent from the job market[,]” Code § 20-107.1(E)(11), it is clear that any differences in
    marginal tax rates reasonably were viewed by the trial court as relatively insignificant. Such
    differences did not merit a different spousal support award given the totality of the
    circumstances, and thus, the record is insufficient to establish that the trial court erred in the
    manner asserted by husband.
    C. Consideration of husband’s expenses
    Husband correctly asserts that, in crafting a spousal support award, a trial court is
    required to consider the living expenses of a party. See Code § 20-107.1(E)(1) (providing that
    the trial court must “consider . . . [t]he obligations[ and] needs . . . of the parties” in determining
    spousal support). On appeal, husband asserts that “[t]he trial court erred in finding that [he] had
    no expenses related to his residence[,]” specifically the $600 a month he claims to pay in rent for
    the residence he shares with his now girlfriend.
    Although a trial court must consider the parties’ expenses in crafting a spousal support
    award, its consideration is cabined by the evidence actually presented. Duva, 55 Va. App. at
    300. If the evidence fails to establish an expense, the trial court has nothing to consider.
    - 24 -
    Furthermore, given its role as factfinder, the trial court remains free to find evidence or
    testimony incredible or unworthy of belief. See, e.g., Wright v. Wright, 
    61 Va. App. 432
    , 450
    (2013) (recognizing that it is the trial court’s responsibility to “ascertain[] . . . witness’ credibility
    [and] determine[] the weight to be given to” each witness’ testimony, leaving the trial court free “to
    accept or reject any of the witness’ testimony” (quoting Street v. Street, 
    25 Va. App. 380
    , 387
    (1997) (en banc))).
    Here, the parties stipulated that husband and his now girlfriend “live together . . . [and] share
    the costs of living expenses . . . .” The stipulation, however, did not address how those living
    expenses were allocated or the amount of those living expenses paid for by husband, requiring
    additional evidence to establish those amounts with sufficient precision to allow the trial court to
    utilize them in crafting the spousal support award.
    To address this evidentiary void, husband points to an expense statement he filled out that
    listed his rent expense as $600 a month and testimony he gave regarding his shared expenses,
    including his purported share of the rent. In testifying about his expenses, husband claimed that his
    rent and other living expenses (utilities, cable, etc.) were far below market because “of the kindness
    of friends” and noted that the reduced amounts he paid for some of the expenses was the result of
    his willingness to pay for the relatively high dining and entertainment expenses he and his now
    girlfriend incurred. Furthermore, in attempting to justify these expenses, husband acknowledged
    that, when he initially left the marital home, “I was living rent free, and I wasn’t paying for any of
    the utilities, I wasn’t paying for entertainment or for cable. Someone helped me out in a high-rent
    area. I wasn’t able to afford two addresses at the same time, so I was grateful.” (Emphasis added).
    Despite his own testimony that, at least for a time after leaving the marital home, he was
    living “rent free[,]” husband contends that the trial court was required to conclude his living
    expenses at the time of the hearing included at least $600 a month in rent because his income and
    - 25 -
    expense statement so stated and he testified to the same. His argument ignores that the trial court, as
    factfinder, could find that his claims in this regard were not credible. See Wright, 61 Va. App. at
    450.
    Having heard and considered husband’s testimony regarding periods of living rent free and
    then his claim of receiving discounted rent in exchange for his willingness to pay for dining and
    entertainment, the trial court simply did not believe husband’s claims that he was incurring such a
    rental expense. Specifically, the trial court found that “[h]usband didn’t have rent” and “that even
    though he says he is paying the lease of his girlfriend on his girlfriend’s apartment,” it “didn’t find
    that that was very persuasive that he has that obligation.” In short, the trial court determined that
    husband’s claims regarding a $600 a month rent expense were not worthy of belief, and therefore, it
    was not required to include such a figure in its spousal support calculation.8 Accordingly, the trial
    court did not commit reversible error.
    CONCLUSION
    Based on the foregoing, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s apportionment of
    the parties’ marital debt or in its award of spousal support. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of
    the trial court.
    Affirmed.
    8
    Furthermore, we note that, given the broad discretion a trial court is granted in crafting a
    spousal support award, West, 53 Va. App. at 131, a change in the amount of support awarded to
    wife would not be required even if the trial court accepted as true husband’s claim that he spends
    $600 a month for rent.
    - 26 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0885204

Filed Date: 3/30/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/30/2021