Crombez v. Crombez

319 N.W.2d 660, 114 Mich. App. 750
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1982
DocketDocket 54770
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 319 N.W.2d 660 (Crombez v. Crombez) 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
Crombez v. Crombez, 319 N.W.2d 660, 114 Mich. App. 750 (Mich. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Cynar, P.J.

Plaintiff appeals as of right from a judgment of divorce filed August 18, 1980, and from an amendment to that judgment filed on November 17, 1980. She seeks relief from the judgment with regard to the pension plan, medical and repair bills and from cancellation of arrearages in child support payments.

Defendant has cross appealed from the judgment of divorce and the order modifying the property *752 settlement. Defendant seeks relief with regard to one item of property (the rototiller) and from an award of alimony to be paid by defendant to plaintiff in the amount of $30 per week for five years.

Plaintiff, Janice Crombez, age 38 at the time of trial, filed her complaint for divorce on March 21, 1979. Defendant was 40 years of age. This 18-year marriage was the first for both parties.

Three children were born to the parties: James, born February 13, 1963; John, born November 8, 1965; and Kathleen, born October 6, 1973.

Both plaintiff and defendant had high school educations. Plaintiff, at the time of trial, was attending Oakland Community College on a part-time basis to gain a degree in accounting.

Plaintiff was employed as a secretary at the time of their marriage, and quit her employment because of the pregnancy with the first child, remaining unemployed until September 1978, when she started to work at a factory job, at the urging of defendant. From March 1979 until September 1979 she was employed part time as a receptionist, earning about $47 net per week. In September 1979, she began to work full time as a receptionist. At the time of the trial, she was working full time, making $200 gross and $151.86 net pay per week. Plaintiff receives no medical, hospital, retirement, pension, or profit-sharing coverage at her employment.

Defendant, at time of trial, had been employed 14-1/2 years by General Motors as a senior checker. His 1978 yearly gross income was $40,324.06. In 1979, he earned $38,309 in wages and received $2,313 from a cash refund of his 1976 stock purchase contributions.

At the time of trial, defendant had netted *753 $966.16 for a two-week period ending June 15, 1980, and $955.13 for the period ending June 30, 1980.

Defendant refused all overtime which had been available to him from March 1980 to the time of trial in August 1980, giving the reason that he was unable to handle it emotionally. Defendant had worked a substantial amount of overtime during the period prior to March 1980, earning an estimated $520 per week net in 1979.

At the time of trial, plaintiff had $212 in a savings account; defendant had $67 in a savings account and $6 in a checking account.

The major asset of the marriage was the jointly owned home built by the parties in 1971 for approximately $53,500, including the price of the lot. The house was later improved with, among other improvements, a swimming pool and barn. The house had a mortgage balance of $23,500. By stipulation, the parties introduced into evidence two real estate appraisals, which estimated the value of the house at $100,000 and between $110,-000 and $120,000.

The parties owned two automobiles. One was a 1978 Chevrolet, leased by the defendant from General Motors and later titled in the name of the husband but subject to a lien of approximately $5,000. The other was a 1979 Chevrolet van, titled in the name of the defendant and subject to a lien of approximately $4,000 at the time of trial.

Other assets jointly owned by the parties included 152 shares of General Motors stock, which were received through defendant’s participation in a stock purchase program with his employer. The parties also owned two motorcycles belonging to the two male children (the children had used their own money to pay one-half of the purchase price *754 of the cycles), miscellaneous furniture and lawn and household furnishings, as well as a rototiller and other garden equipment.

Evidence was presented at trial and at later hearings as to the nature of a pension plan and stock purchase plan contributed to by the defendant through his employer. Defendant also contributed to an Employee Stock Ownership Plan, which had a market value of $1,224.95 as of December 31, 1979.

Defendant lived in the marital home with the rest of the family from the filing of the divorce until October 15, 1979. When he moved out, he took with him various items of furniture, the value of which was disputed.

Plaintiff testified that the breakdown of the marriage resulted from defendant’s involvement with a female neighbor. The affair was admitted by defendant’s counsel at trial. Defendant attributed the breakup to other causes.

The parties were referred to the friend of the court for an evidentiary hearing in September 1979. Defendant was asked to remove himself from the marital home and was ordered, following the friend of the court’s recommendation, to pay $172 per week in child support and $88 per week towards the utility and mortgage payments on the marital home. These payments were made retroactive to May 9, 1979. Defendant was further ordered to pay for reasonable and necessary repairs of an emergency nature to the homestead, to continue to make available to the plaintiff the use of the 1978 Chevrolet, to continue to make the installment payments on that automobile, and he was required to pay any arrearage under the terms of the temporary order. The arrearage pursuant. to the order of the court was contended to *755 be $5,758. The court also granted plaintiff and the children exclusive occupancy of the house during the pendency of the case.

Plaintiff was able to keep the mortgage and utilities payments current until about May 1980, when, because of the defendant’s default in payment of the temporary support and mortgage payments, she had insufficient funds to make the payments and fell into arrears. At the time of trial, she owed the June and July payments and the house was under threat of foreclosure.

Testimony was presented at trial as to dental, optical, and pharmaceutical bills paid by plaintiff on behalf of the children. The temporary support order required defendant to pay for these items. In addition, bills for emergency furnace and electrical repairs were presented. The medical and repair bills totaled $481.

The trial took place on August 11 and 12, 1980. The court’s opinion was filed on August 18, 1980. The trial court, after taking into consideration the testimony of the parties and the exhibits admitted, and after finding fault on the part of the defendant, made the following property disposition. Plaintiff was given exclusive use and occupancy of the home for a period of two years from the date of the judgment, after which time the home was to be sold and the net proceeds divided 55% to plaintiff and 45% to defendant. Each party was to retain the household furniture presently in each party’s possession. Both vehicles were awarded to the defendant and each party was awarded one motorcycle. The 152 shares of General Motors stock (total value $7,542) and the dividends received (total value $852) were divided equally.

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Related

Perry v. Perry
350 N.W.2d 275 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
319 N.W.2d 660, 114 Mich. App. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crombez-v-crombez-michctapp-1982.