DocketNumber: No. ED 105239
Judges: III
Filed Date: 7/3/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
David Sulkin ("Husband") appeals from the trial court's judgment ordering him to pay Laura Sulkin ("Wife") $5,000 per month in maintenance. We reverse and remand.
*795I. BACKGROUND
Husband and Wife were married on June 22, 1994. Two children were born of the marriage and remained unemancipated at the time of trial.
Husband filed a post-trial motion to set aside, amend, or clarify the judgment, or alternatively, a motion for new trial asserting, inter alia , the trial court erred in ordering him to pay Wife $5,000 per month in maintenance. The trial court heard arguments related to Husband's post-trial motion and took the matter under submission on January 9, 2017. On January 23, 2017, the trial court entered its Amended Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage ("Judgment"). In relevant part, the Judgment found Wife's reasonable expenses to be $5,000 per month, imputed potential employment income to Wife in the amount of $2,667 per month, and ordered Husband to pay Wife $5,000 per month in maintenance. Husband appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
In Husband's sole point on appeal, he argues the trial court erred in ordering him to pay Wife $5,000 per month in maintenance. We agree.
A. Standard of Review and General Law Related to Maintenance
As with any court-tried case, our review of a dissolution of marriage action is guided by the standards set forth in Murphy v. Carron ,
The trial court is vested with broad discretion in awarding maintenance. Coleman v. Coleman ,
*796Woodard ,
The trial court may award maintenance only upon finding the spouse seeking maintenance, (1) lacks sufficient property, including marital property apportioned to her, to provide for her reasonable needs; and (2) is unable to support herself through appropriate employment. Section 452.335.1 RSMo 2000;
Once a spouse has established the threshold requirements for maintenance, the trial court shall award maintenance in an amount it deems appropriate based on all relevant factors. L.R.S. ,
In determining the amount of maintenance, the trial court is not required to perform an exact mathematical calculation and may award a reasonable amount above the itemized expenses of the party seeking maintenance. Bryant v. Bryant ,
B. Relevant Facts and Analysis of Husband's Point on Appeal
During the dissolution proceedings, Wife requested the court to award her $7,500 per month in maintenance. Wife submitted to the trial court statements of her income and expenses, with the most recent statement including monthly expenses totaling $9,262. Additionally, the court heard testimony regarding Wife's claimed expenses. During such testimony, Wife acknowledged the court could properly find the amount of Wife's reasonable needs was lower than her stated expenses if it decided to subtract amounts claimed for vacations and the children's expenses.
Although Wife had earned a master's and a bachelor's degree, she had not worked outside the marital residence since 1996. Wife received income from one of the *797two businesses Husband owned during the marriage, but the trial court found Wife provided no services for the business. During his testimony, Husband's vocational expert opined, based on Wife's background including her lack of experience in the field in which she received her degrees, that Wife could earn between $28,000 and $36,000 per year working in "a non-degreed position."
Based on the foregoing, the trial court included the following relevant findings of fact and conclusions of law in its Judgment. The court decided the appropriate amount for Wife's reasonable monthly expenses was $5,000. In accordance with the testimony of Husband's vocational expert, the court imputed income to Wife in the amount of $32,000 per year, or $2,667 per month, as her potential employment income. The trial court then declared, "Having previously found Wife's reasonable expenses to be approximately $5,000[,] she is in need of maintenance to meet these expenses. After considering the imputed salary, [t]he [c]ourt awards Wife $5,000 per month in maintenance."
Herein lies the dispute giving rise to this appeal. Under the preceding declarations, Wife's monthly income is $2,667 from potential employment and $5,000 from maintenance, for a total of $7,667. This figure exceeds Wife's reasonable needs of $5,000 by $2,667. As such, Husband contends the trial court erred in awarding Wife an amount of maintenance that substantially exceeds her reasonable needs. In contrast, Wife maintains that based on the statement, "After considering the imputed salary , [t]he [c]ourt awards Wife $5,000 per month in maintenance[,]" the court found her reasonable needs to be $7,667, or $5,000 over and above the imputed salary. (emphasis added).
Our review of the Judgment leads us to conclude the court's findings setting out how it determined the amount of Wife's maintenance award are inconsistent or conflicting. On the one hand, the trial court could have properly found from the evidence that Wife's reasonable expenses were $5,000 per month. This is supported by Wife's statement of income and expenses as well as her testimony as to her reasonable needs. However, such a result renders Wife's maintenance award of $5,000 improper because, (1) it does not account for the potential employment income the trial court imputed to Wife; or (2) it exceeds Wife's reasonable monthly expenses by $2,667, i.e., fifty-three percent. See
Because the Judgment is based on inconsistent and ambiguous findings, we find it necessary to reverse and remand the maintenance award. See McGahan v. McGahan ,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court's Judgment is reversed and remanded with instructions to reevaluate the maintenance award in a manner consistent with this opinion.
Gary M. Gaertner, Jr., P.J., and Angela T. Quigless, J., concur.
Wife also filed a notice of appeal, but Wife's brief solely responds to Husband's brief and does not assert any points of error. Accordingly, Wife's cross-appeal is deemed abandoned and is hereby dismissed. Gross v. Helm ,
Because neither party has appealed issues relating to child custody or child support, all references to the children are only to provide context for the present appeal.
To avoid unnecessary repetition, the relevant evidence adduced at trial will be set out as part of our discussion of Husband's point on appeal in Section II.B. of this opinion.
All further references to Rule 73.01(c) are to Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2016), which was the version of the Rule in effect at the time the Judgment was entered.
All further statutory references to section 452.335 are to RSMo 2000, which is the latest version of the statute.
Our review of relevant precedent demonstrates the maintenance award, which represents $2,667 (fifty-three percent) more than Wife's reasonable monthly expenses, substantially exceeds her reasonable needs. See In re Marriage of Ross ,
Although Wife is not required to deplete her distribution of the marital property before being entitled to maintenance, the trial court must consider potential income Wife could earn if she were to invest the marital property awarded to her in interest-bearing accounts because maintenance shall not be awarded for the purposes of building an estate or an accumulation of capital. See generally, e.g., Lee v. Lee ,