Emmel v. Emmel
This text of 671 So. 2d 282 (Emmel v. Emmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Doris M. EMMEL, Appellant,
v.
David T. EMMEL, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*283 Randall J. Silverberg, Jacksonville, for Appellant.
Geoffrey B. Dobson of Dobson & Brown, P.A., St. Augustine, for Appellee.
PETERSON, Chief Judge.
Doris M. Emmel appeals the denial of her counter-petition for an increase in alimony and the denial of her request for attorney's fees. David T. Emmel cross-appeals the trial court's denial of his petition for a downward modification of alimony. We affirm the trial court on all matters except the issue of attorney's fees.
The parties were married in 1952 and divorced in 1984. Under the final judgment of dissolution, the former wife was awarded alimony of $900 per month and an additional $75 per month for her health insurance costs if the former husband failed or was unable to provide coverage for her from his business' policy.
The couple moved to Florida in the seventies and the former husband began a wholesale tool supply business with the parties' son. The final judgment of dissolution indicated that:
*284 the son has been the principal actor in this operation, and a living has been sustained by him. The husband (litigant here) has used the business as a tax shelter to assist in the accumulation of retirement income and has not drawn much salary except for investment and/or loans back to the corporation.
The final judgment contained a finding that no portion of the business was subject to equitable distribution "due to the uncertain condition of the ... business." Three days after the trial court entered this final judgment, the parties entered into an agreement in which the former wife received the benefit of certain monetary consideration and the former husband received the benefit of a promise that no appeal would be made of the final judgment.
On March 7, 1994, the former husband filed a petition for modification of alimony in which he sought a reduction in the alimony obligation based on his tool supply business having taken a downturn and the former wife being in receipt of social security benefits. The former wife counter-petitioned for an increase in alimony based on an increase in her cost of living and the former husband's own receipt of social security benefits. The trial court entered a final order denying both parties' modification requests and denying each of the parties' requests for attorney's fees. The final order stated that the agreement which the parties entered into was a "pure" marital settlement agreement and that, even if it were not, neither party had carried the burden of proving a substantial change in circumstances to justify a modification. On rehearing, the trial court declared that the parties' agreement was not a "pure" property settlement agreement and was therefore modifiable, but that, as the court had stated earlier, neither party had met their burden to substantiate a modification. The order on rehearing also noted that the former wife had sought rehearing of the denial of attorney's fees to her. On this issue the trial court stated, "Although the former husband has greater total assets than the former wife, he does not have sufficient liquid assets with which to pay the former wife's attorney's fees."
A "pure" marital property settlement agreement is one in which "the parties each relinquish valuable property rights in return for receiving other rights, including the right to receive periodic payments" and "is generally held to be non-modifiable where the parties by their division of the property evince the intent that the settlement be a final division of their property." Draper v. Draper, 604 So.2d 946, 947 (Fla. 2d DCA 1992). Although the agreement in the instant case indicates that the former wife both received and surrendered valuable property rights the agreement failed to clearly evince an intent that the alimony awarded to the wife could not be modified subsequent to the entry of the final judgment upon the requisite showing of a substantial change of circumstances. In Vargas v. Vargas, 654 So.2d 963 (Fla. 5th DCA 1995), this court recently noted that, "there is no doubt that Florida recognizes the right of the parties to contract away the right to seek modification of even alimony awards." Id. at 964. In Vargas, the parties signed an agreement with a release containing the following language:
The parties mutually accept the provisions herein in full satisfaction of all property and all obligations whatsoever arising out of the marital relationship of the parties.... Each party ... does hereby release the other ... from all causes of actions, claims, rights or demands whatsoever, which either ever had or now has against the other, and specifically relinquishes any right, title and interest in or to any past, present or future holdings, accumulation, money or property of the other party.
Id. This court held that the above language failed to constitute a waiver of "causes of action for modification of support ... which might arise in the future." Id. at 965. Given the above language used in Vargas did not constitute a waiver of the right to seek modification of alimony, the simple agreement in the instant case to not appeal the final judgment likewise did not, as the trial court ultimately concluded, preclude either party from attempting to modify alimony in the future.
*285 On the issue of modification, the former wife presented evidence below that the cost of living, according to the United States Consumer Price Index, had increased since the amount of her alimony was established. The former husband, in arguing both that the former wife is not entitled to an increase, and that he is in fact, entitled to a decrease, relies solely on what he describes as a decline in his tool supply business.
The former husband's argument that he is entitled to a reduction in his alimony obligation is without foundation. The final judgment of dissolution of marriage specifically stated that the former husband had "used [the tool supply business] as a tax shelter to assist in the accumulation of retirement income and has not drawn much salary except for reinvestment and/or loans back to the corporation." The former husband presented testimony at the modification proceeding that the income of his tool business was not "as good" as it was a few years ago. But, that income, according to the original final judgment, was never expected to be relied upon for the payment of the wife's $975 of monthly alimony.
The former husband failed to show any substantial change of circumstances justifying a decrease in the alimony payment. The former wife, in contrast, showed that, according to the Consumer Price Index, the cost of living has increased some 42 percent between 1984, the year of the dissolution, and 1994, the year of the modification request. She also testified generally as to the cost of items being more expensive than they were in 1984.
In Waldman v. Waldman, 520 So.2d 87 (Fla. 3d DCA), rev. denied, 531 So.2d 169 (Fla.1988), a case upon which the former wife relies, the court held that merely reciting an increase in the Consumer Price Index is not sufficient proof that inflation has caused a reduction in one's standard of living and that "[t]here must be a showing that the national problem of inflation impacts specifically on the individual claiming inflation as the basis for modification. Inflation must have in fact created a need." Waldman at 89. We interpret
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671 So. 2d 282, 1996 WL 168911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emmel-v-emmel-fladistctapp-1996.