Elida Mezini v. Leart Mezini

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 1, 2022
Docket20-49, 50
StatusPublished

This text of Elida Mezini v. Leart Mezini (Elida Mezini v. Leart Mezini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elida Mezini v. Leart Mezini, (R.I. 2022).

Opinion

March 1, 2022

Supreme Court

No. 2020-49-Appeal. No. 2020-50-Appeal. (P 17-3886)

Elida Mezini :

v. :

Leart Mezini. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 or Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Justice Lynch Prata, for the Court. Before this Court are consolidated

cross-appeals by the plaintiff, Elida Mezini, and the defendant, Leart Mezini.1 The

appeals, arising from a contested divorce proceeding, came before the Supreme

Court on January 27, 2022. The defendant asserts that the trial justice erred in (1)

awarding the plaintiff one-half of the appreciation value of the marital domicile; (2)

awarding the plaintiff one-half of the defendant’s interest in GM Realty Associates,

LLC; (3) assigning a home-equity line of credit debt to the defendant; (4) awarding

state and federal income-tax refunds to the plaintiff; (5) setting the amount of the

defendant’s weekly child support obligation; and (6) awarding the plaintiff a 100-

percent interest in her retirement plan and a vehicle, and allowing her to claim the

1 The parties’ first names will be used throughout this opinion to avoid confusion. No disrespect is intended. -1- parties’ minor child as a dependent on both her state and federal income-tax returns.

In her cross-appeal, the plaintiff asserts that the trial justice erred in failing to award

her one-half of the value of the reduction of the mortgage on the marital home. For

the reasons set forth below, we affirm the decision pending entry of final judgment

of the Family Court.

Facts and Travel

The parties were married on May 2, 2012, in East Providence, Rhode Island.

The marriage produced one child, born January 7, 2013. Elida began working as a

bank teller at Navigant Credit Union in November 2013. She initially worked part-

time, but began working as a full-time teller when the minor child was around

eighteen months old. At the time of trial, Elida earned approximately $50,000 a

year.

Leart testified that he is employed by DEA, LLC d/b/a Wine & Cheese

Restaurant (Wine & Cheese), a corporate entity formed prior to the marriage, of

which he is a part owner. Leart devoted approximately forty to fifty hours a week

to the operation of Wine & Cheese, and, he testified, he would write himself a check

for wages based on what the restaurant could support. Leart also owns a one-half

interest in GM Realty Associates, LLC (GM Realty), a limited liability company

formed on May 2, 2013. GM Realty is a real estate investment company that has

purchased and sold approximately four to five houses. Leart testified that he claims

-2- 100 percent of the profits and losses of GM Realty. Leart’s adjusted gross income

for tax year 2016 was approximately $122,000; for tax year 2017 his adjusted gross

income was approximately $54,000.

During the marriage, the parties lived at a home on Jenckes Hill Road in

Lincoln, Rhode Island (the Lincoln property). Leart had purchased the Lincoln

property prior to the marriage, in 2003, for $490,000; it was owned exclusively by

Leart prior to and during the marriage. He had made a $100,000 down payment on

the property at the time of purchase, and, he testified, he held a twenty-year mortgage

on the property with an outstanding principal balance of approximately $340,000 at

the time of trial. The parties lived at the Lincoln property with their minor child and

Leart’s parents. Elida testified that, during the marriage, a boiler was replaced, the

exterior of the house was painted, the driveway was resurfaced every couple of years,

and Leart and his father landscaped the Lincoln property, including planting and

trimming trees. Leart disputed these improvements, instead testifying that the boiler

was never replaced and was original to the house, that the exterior of the house was

never painted, and that the landscaping was never redone aside from cleaning the

leaves and cutting the grass.

Leart testified that in January 2017 he was experiencing economic difficulties

with his businesses and Elida suggested that he apply for a line of credit secured by

the Lincoln property (the HELOC). Leart testified that he was responsible for

-3- making all withdrawals from the HELOC, as well as making payments. Leart

originally testified that he used the HELOC only to pay for “many family expenses.”

However, when confronted with his sworn interrogatory answers during trial he

admitted that in those answers he stated that the HELOC was used “for legal fees

prior to this divorce involving [a] dispute with * * * my partner at Wine and Cheese

restaurant” and that Elida “is not responsible for any of these debts.” Leart also

testified that, although he customarily paid the real estate taxes for the Lincoln

property in cash, in 2018 he used the HELOC to pay the tax bill. At the time of trial,

the HELOC had an outstanding balance of approximately $82,500.

Regarding child-rearing and domestic work, Elida testified that, while she was

working, Leart or his parents would take care of the minor child. Leart testified that

if he and Elida were both working, his mother would care for the minor child. Elida

also testified that, when she was not working, she would do the laundry, dishes, and

cleaning, would take the minor child to activities and doctors, and would take time

off from work to care for the minor child if the child was sick. Elida admitted that

Leart’s mother did most of the cooking, and Leart testified that his parents were

“always helping, helping with the child and helping with the house chores, cooking,

cleaning.”

Elida testified that the parties’ marital problems began approximately a year

after the minor child was born and included arguments over “[v]ery silly little

-4- things,” including house décor, clothes, and what was on the television. Elida stated

that arguments with Leart also ensued regarding raising the minor child, including

whether the child should be allowed to continue bottle feeding and whether the child

should be allowed to sleep during the day.

In July 2017 the parties separated, and Elida initiated divorce proceedings on

July 20, 2017, citing irreconcilable differences. Leart filed a counterclaim for

divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable differences. The case was heard on six

dates between July 2018 and early 2019 before a justice of the Family Court. Leart

and Elida both testified, and each party presented an expert witness relative to the

appraisal of the Lincoln property and another real estate parcel, located on Scituate

Avenue in Cranston, Rhode Island (the Scituate Avenue property).

On November 22, 2019, the trial justice issued an extensive written decision

granting each party a divorce “on the grounds that irreconcilable differences exist

* * * which have cause[d] the irremediable breakdown of the marriage[.]” The trial

justice reviewed the testimony adduced at trial, and found that Elida’s “testimony

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Elida Mezini v. Leart Mezini, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elida-mezini-v-leart-mezini-ri-2022.