Clementine Joseff v. Arnold F Joseff

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 2019
Docket345209
StatusUnpublished

This text of Clementine Joseff v. Arnold F Joseff (Clementine Joseff v. Arnold F Joseff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clementine Joseff v. Arnold F Joseff, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CLEMENTINE JOSEFF, UNPUBLISHED September 12, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v Nos. 344423; 345209 Oakland Circuit Court ARNOLD F. JOSEFF, LC No. 2017-851574-DO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and METER and STEPHENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

These consolidated appeals arise out of postjudgment proceedings in the parties’ divorce action, which dissolved their marriage of more than 50 years. In Docket No. 344423, plaintiff, Clementine Joseff, appeals as of right the trial court’s order holding her in contempt and awarding defendant, Arnold F. Joseff, sanctions including costs, attorney fees, and moving expenses. In Docket No. 345209, plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order that, in pertinent part, largely denied plaintiff’s postjudgment motion concerning certain “status quo” disputes and her request for attorney fees. We would have preferred a better record regarding the trial court’s contempt order, but nevertheless, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Shortly after plaintiff initiated this action, the trial court entered the first of many mutual restraining orders concerning the parties’ finances, which were essentially intended to maintain the parties’ fiscal status quo. Plaintiff was later awarded spousal support, and defendant was ordered to continue paying certain expenses related to the marital home, in which plaintiff continued to reside. Shortly before the parties’ judgment of divorce was entered, the trial court entered an “interim injunctive order” that, in pertinent part, forbade either party from engaging in a long list of conduct that might affect any property identified in the judgment of divorce.

The parties’ consent judgment of divorce was subsequently entered on March 21, 2018. In pertinent part, it provided:

INTERIM STATUS QUO

-1- 3. Through December 31, 2017, the interim status quo Order previously filed in this case shall remain in full force and effect as to all covered bills accrued through that date. This shall include reasonable and necessary repairs to the marital home. Thereafter all of Defendant’s responsibilities and obligations as set forth under said order shall terminate . . . Post Judgment briefs regarding status quo disputes will be filed with the Court . . . This includes payment of attorney fees claimed to be status quo expenses of Defendant.

* * *

MUTUAL RELEASE OF CLAIMS

11. Except as otherwise specifically provided in this Judgment, the parties release one another, assigns and successors in interest from all claims that either may have against the other, known or unknown, arising at any time through the date of entry of Judgment, whether in tort, contract or otherwise, except claims arising out of fraud, nondisclosure of assets, the terms of the DCT Deal or obligations created by or specifically preserved in this Judgment. The parties give this release freely and voluntarily in consideration for the awards, benefits and concessions reflected in this judgment.

ATTORNEY FEES

24. Except as set forth in paragraph 27 below,[1] each party shall pay their own respective attorney fees and costs. The attorneys and financial experts of the parties are granted liens on their respective client’s property interests to secure payment of fees and expenses[.]

25. No later than February 15, 2018 the Defendant shall pay to Jorin Rubin the sum of $15,000 as attorney fees on behalf of the Plaintiff. He shall have no further responsibility for fees or costs paid on behalf of the Plaintiff.

FINAL ORDER

26. This Judgment constitutes a full and final order resolving all pending claims between the parties.

Defendant was also ordered to pay $5,000 a month to plaintiff in spousal support, pending the sale of his interest in DCT, which was one of his businesses, and its subsidiaries. Following completion of that sale, defendant was to pay plaintiff $3.3 million, after which his obligation to

1 The referenced ¶ 27 regards the parties’ obligations to modify certain estate planning documents in conformity with the terms of the consent judgment.

-2- pay further spousal support would “terminate immediately[.]” Subject to existing mortgages, plaintiff was awarded the marital home in Bloomfield Township and two condominiums in Boca Raton, Florida, along with all contents of those properties not specifically awarded to defendant. She was also awarded an SUV, “[h]er jewelry,” and several bank accounts. The parties would equally split several other financial accounts and an unspecified number of shares of “MetLife stock.” Defendant was specifically awarded certain enumerated property located at the marital residence, including copies of photographs of the parties’ children, a desk, chair, desk pad set, and a bookshelf. Those items were to be “made available to him by Plaintiff within 21 days of entry of Judgment.”

On April 11, 2018, the parties filed competing motions to enforce the divorce judgment. In relevant part, defendant alleged that his attorney had repeatedly requested dates for retrieving the enumerated items of personal property (“the subject personalty”), but those requests had “been consistently ignored.” The trial court ordered plaintiff to permit defendant to remove such items from the marital home on May 5, 2018, using professional movers to do so. Four days later, defendant filed a second motion, alleging that plaintiff’s attorney had refused to give defendant access on the basis of a fictitious pretext.

At the ensuing motion hearing, the trial court agreed with defendant, stating, “I don’t think I should have to say it three times. All right . . . [H]e should’ve been allowed in the house. I was very clear in my order before.” Accordingly, the court entered an order on May 16, 2018, providing that defendant and his movers, accompanied by local police, would be permitted to enter the marital home to remove the subject personalty on May 22, 2018. The court further ordered that neither party would “have any third party present other than the police” and defendant’s movers. The court ordered plaintiff to provide defendant, “through counsel, all family photographs for copying, or in the alternative, high quality digital prints of all said photographs.” On May 23, 2018, defendant filed a show-cause motion, in which he argued that when he was finally allowed into the marital home, the desk, chair, and desk pad set were missing and had been replaced by cheap substitutes. Defendant further stated that he tried to go upstairs to look for the items, “all of the upstairs bedroom doors were locked.” Defendant requested an order holding plaintiff in contempt, appointment of a receiver, attorney fees, sanctions, and moving costs and other fees.

At the outset of the ensuing hearing, the trial court expressed its frustration with plaintiff’s continued failure to comply with the court’s orders, describing the situation as “beyond ridiculous.” Plaintiff nevertheless testified that the inlay desk and associated chair had never been present in the marital home, and she denied that she had moved a desk out of the first-floor den. However, plaintiff admitted that the computer desk and chair that defendant had found in the first-floor den had previously been upstairs. Plaintiff also admitted that some desk, which “belonged to” defendant, might have been in the basement of the marital home, again behind a locked door.2 When asked whether there remained any family photographs in the

2 Upon questioning, defendant indicated that the door to the basement had also been locked during his visit to the home.

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Bluebook (online)
Clementine Joseff v. Arnold F Joseff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clementine-joseff-v-arnold-f-joseff-michctapp-2019.