DocketNumber: 10C30533; A148670
Judges: Armstrong, Egan, Nakamoto
Filed Date: 8/14/2013
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Wife appeals from a dissolution judgment, challenging the trial court’s award of spousal support.
The following undisputed facts, taken from the trial court’s findings and the record, suffice to explain our conclusion. Husband and wife were married in 2000 and their marriage was dissolved in 2011, when husband was 37 and wife was 32. Wife was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis during the marriage, and, at the time of trial, she had been determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration and was receiving supplemental security income. Husband was employed as a polysomnographic technician withKaiser Permanente; he earned approximately $ 55,000 annually. At trial, wife requested temporary support of $2,000 per month and $1,500 per month indefinitely. She testified that she would like to get an education and a job, but, in order to do that, she needed medication that did not yet exist. The trial court acknowledged that “there may never be” medication that would allow her to do that, but, nonetheless, declined to award indefinite support “because the best thing you guys need to do is get apart from each other but try to do it relatively equitably.” The court subsequently entered a judgment awarding wife transitional spousal support of $1,500 per month for 36 months and $1,000 per month for 24 months thereafter based on the following factors: “(a) ten year marriage; (b) [w]ife’s health issues and the anticipation she will be able to get some education and work.”
Although we appreciate the difficulty that the trial court faced in devising an equitable support award given the
Award of spousal support reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
Husband does not appear on appeal.