Brenner, B. v. Brenner, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 15, 2017
DocketBrenner, B. v. Brenner, M. No. 2017 MDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brenner, B. v. Brenner, M. (Brenner, B. v. Brenner, M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brenner, B. v. Brenner, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-S37003-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

BARBARA A. BRENNER IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

MICHAEL J. BRENNER

Appellant No. 2017 MDA 2016

Appeal from the Order Entered November 15, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County Civil Division at No: CI-16-04938

BEFORE: STABILE, MOULTON, and MUSMANNO, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED AUGUST 15, 2017

Michael J. Brenner (“Husband”) appeals from the November 15, 2016

order entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County (“trial

court”) denying his petition to terminate alimony. Upon review, we affirm.

Barbara A. Brenner (“Wife”) filed for divorce in November 26, 2007,

and a divorce decree was issued on November 9, 2009. On June 24, 2016,

Husband filed a petition to terminate alimony. Wife filed a response on July

14, 2016. The trial court held a hearing on September 16, 2016, on

Husband’s petition. Following briefs by the parties, the trial court denied

Husband’s petition on November 15, 2016. Husband filed a timely notice of

appeal on December 8, 2016. On December 13, 2016, the trial court

ordered Husband to file a concise statement of errors complained of on J-S37003-17

appeal, which Husband complied with on January 3, 2017. The trial court

issued a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion on February 3, 2017.

The trial court summarized the factual history of the matter as follows.

The parties were married on July 10, 1976, and separated around August 2007. They entered into a Postnuptial Agreement (“Agreement”) on October 19, 2009, pursuant to which [Husband] agreed to pay to [Wife] seven thousand seven hundred ninety-one dollars and fifty-eight cents ($7,791.58) per month in alimony (subsequently modified by the parties to seven thousand seven hundred seventy-nine dollars and eleven cents ($7,779.11) per month). [Wife’s] attorney drafted the Agreement. [Husband], a sophisticated, successful and self- employed businessman with a college degree, chose to represent himself. [Husband] acknowledges that he had the opportunity to hire his own attorney before executing the Agreement but did not do so. He admitted that he understood what he signed. The Agreement, specifically section seven, permits either party to modify and/or terminate an alimony order if either party has changed circumstances of a substantial and continuing nature citing 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3701 et seq. No specific date to terminate alimony based upon [H]usband’s retirement is identified in the agreement.

[Husband] is sixty-three years old and wishes to retire sometime in the year 2017. In 2013, he married his business (Elite Staffing Services, Inc.) office manager. His income for 2015 was approximately three hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($350,000) which consisted of his net profit from the business, approximately twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) in rental income, and approximately forty thousand to fifty thousand dollars ($40,000 - $50,000) that his wife earned. In 2007, the years of separation, [Husband] earned approximately four hundred eleven thousand dollars ($411,000). [Husband] has faithfully paid [Wife] approximately ninety-six thousand dollars ($96,000) per year in alimony since separation.

[Wife] is sixty-two years old and a college graduate. In addition to alimony payments, she receives a total of approximately twenty-one thousand dollars ($21,000) from a part-time receptionist position at Interiors Home and her pension as a retired Hempfield School District reading tutor. In 2015,

-2- J-S37003-17

[Wife] received one hundred fourteen thousand three hundred sixty-six dollars ($114,366) of which ninety-three thousand three hundred forty-nine dollars ($93,349) was alimony. As a reading tutor, [Wife] usually earned between twenty-two thousand to twenty-five thousand dollars ($22,000-$25,000) a year. Consequently, [Wife’s] earnings as a reading tutor roughly equals her current income from part time receptionist work and her pension.

[Husband’s] petition seeks to terminate his contracted alimony payments when he retires. He argues that with reduced income in retirement along with the obligation to support his new wife he will be unable to continue his alimony payments. [Husband] asserts that there is no date to terminate alimony in the Agreement because he did not when know [(sic)] he would retire. [Husband] contends that he believed the Agreement would allow him to retire and cease his alimony obligations as it was discussed by the parties prior to the execution of the Agreement.

[Wife] on the other hand asserts that the parties never discussed [Husband’s] future retirement or its impact on his alimony obligations. [Wife] testified that she would have pursued more of the marital assets when she entered into the Agreement if alimony payments had been limited in duration. She expected, and bargained for, perpetual alimony which would terminate only if she remarried or cohabitated. She contends neither she nor [Husband] has had a substantial change in circumstances since entering into the Agreement. She has been able to secure employment which together with her pension and alimony provides her with an income comparable to her pre- separation position and his income similarly has not changed.

Trial Court Opinion, 2/3/17, at 2-4 (capitalization and citations omitted).

Husband asserts four claims on appeal, including multiple subparts,

which we quote verbatim.

I. Whether the trial court committed an abuse of discretion and erred in denying the petition to terminate alimony by finding that the [Agreement] in fact “specifically, permits a party to modify and/or terminate an alimony order if either party has changed circumstances of a substantial and

-3- J-S37003-17

continuing nature citing 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3701(e)” and failed to consider that:

a. The Agreement itself only cites the Divorce Code;

b. The [trial court] construed the Agreement against [Husband] in requiring that [Husband] must have the only substantial and continuing change in circumstances to warrant a modification or termination of alimony, while ignoring [Wife’s] substantial and continuing change in circumstances, namely her voluntary retirement/reduction in income;

c. Failing to consider the testimony of the parties that neither party knew what circumstances would warrant a modification or termination in alimony, nor that neither party knew what the duration of the alimony would be, nor what the effect either party’s retirement would have on the alimony clause, making that term of the contract ambiguous;

d. That the [trial] court failed to consider parole [(sic)] evidence to interpret the ambiguous term nor did the [trial] court consider the mutual mistake of the parties;

e. That the [trial] court failed to consider that [Wife] was the drafter of the Agreement and that any ambiguous term should be construed against her?

II. Whether the trial court committed an abuse of discretion and erred in finding that “[Husband] asserts his desire to voluntarily retire next year and his remarriage three years ago are substantial and continuing changes in circumstances warranting the termination of his alimony payments” in that the [trial court] ignored evidence that:

a. [Husband] is of age to retire and should not be forced to continue to work simply to provide alimony to [Wife];

b. [Husband] will have difficulty saving for retirement while [Wife] continues to collect alimony, thereby preventing [Husband] from ever retiring; and

c. [Wife’s] voluntary retirement is a change in circumstance that warrants termination or modification of alimony?

-4- J-S37003-17

III.

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Bluebook (online)
Brenner, B. v. Brenner, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brenner-b-v-brenner-m-pasuperct-2017.