Escudero v. Escudero

739 So. 2d 688, 1999 WL 682602
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 3, 1999
Docket98-1833
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 739 So. 2d 688 (Escudero v. Escudero) 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.

Bluebook
Escudero v. Escudero, 739 So. 2d 688, 1999 WL 682602 (Fla. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

739 So.2d 688 (1999)

Santiago ESCUDERO, Appellant,
v.
Gloria ESCUDERO, Appellee.

No. 98-1833.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

September 3, 1999.

*689 Gary R. Dorst of Gary R. Dorst, P.A., Maitland, for Appellant.

Gina R. Perez-Calhoun, The Center for Professional Legal Services, Orlando, for Appellee.

W. SHARP, J.

The former husband, Santiago Escudero, appeals from a final judgment dissolving his marriage to Gloria Escudero. He argues on appeal that he should have been granted a special equity in the marital *690 home, that the trial court erred in awarding the marital home to the former wife, and that it erred in awarding the former wife permanent alimony. This is a most unusual case. For the reasons given below, we affirm.

Some of the facts and circumstances in this case were not in dispute. Others were so bitterly contested the trial judge had to conclude that one party was making extremely false accusations, and was being deceptive and untruthful. The trial judge found that party was Santiago.

This was the second marriage for these parties. They were first married in 1955 and divorced in 1978, in New Jersey. Three children were born to them, and they, together with Gloria's daughter by a prior marriage, were raised in the parties' home during that time. After the first divorce, the parties lived together off and on.

Santiago experienced three heart attacks in 1985. He also had surgery for lung cancer in 1988. At the time of the dissolution in 1998, he was no longer being treated for cancer, although he was seeing doctors to treat his heart condition. While Santiago was recuperating in the hospital in 1988, he and Gloria decided to remarry. Their plan was to move from New Jersey to Florida, and to purchase a home with $50,000 from a settlement Santiago had received when he retired from his work as a longshoreman.

At the time of the dissolution, Santiago was retired. His financial affidavit and testimony established he received social security disability and a pension, in the amount of $1,721 per month. He testified he had no other income or resources other than the marital home, which he valued at $100,000, subject to a $37,000 mortgage. He testified he owned a new car, which was fully paid for by himself and his insurance company when a prior vehicle was totaled in an accident. He denied he had or ever used credit cards, although his financial statement disclosed a credit card debt of $2,700. He disclosed no bank accounts or deposits of any kind.

He also claimed that Gloria had given him a "bad life." He had to do everything at home—cook, clean the pool, cut the grass, wash the dishes. He said Gloria spent her time playing Bingo and gambling. She kept all the money she earned from her job as a clerk in a hospital and her retirement income to herself, and spent it only on herself. He claimed she was violent, abusive and had turned his children against him. He testified she had found out he had a secret bank account (totaling some $26,000) in New Jersey in the joint names of himself and his youngest daughter, Yvonne, and that Gloria had instigated and manipulated Yvonne to take the funds and absconded with them while he was recuperating in Spain in 1989, after the parties remarried. Everything in this paragraph was refuted by subsequent testimony, and the trial judge clearly rejected his credibility.

The record further established that at the time of the dissolution, Gloria had retired from her clerking job. She was 68 years old. Her only income was from social security and a pension totaling $998 per month. She was under psychiatric care for depression caused by the abusive treatment she endured during the marriage. In 1993 she purchased (on credit) a new car, to replace an older car which had ceased to run. She must pay $270 per month towards the car. Her financial affidavit, which the trial judge said he accepted as "true," shows no bank accounts or liquid assets of any kind.

She also has an extremely high credit card debt—$10,601.72 (not counting the car). She testified that most of the credit card debt arose from the necessity to furnish, fix-up and improve the marital home, and pay living expenses. Other than making the mortgage payments, she testified Santiago refused to pay any of the parties' living expenses or purchases. She was only able to make ends meet by paying by credit cards, borrowing money from her *691 cousin, Maria Rosado, and receiving funds her children sent her from time-to-time. Her cousin testified that she often accompanied Gloria on shopping trips to purchase furnishings for the house and that Gloria always paid for the purchases with her credit cards, even though sometimes Santiago accompanied them.

Three adult children testified. Linda Celiano, Gloria's daughter by a prior marriage, testified she lived in Santiago's household from the time she was three years old until she was nineteen. Santiago was extremely abusive and violent. Police were called to the house many times. There were continual beatings while he was in the home and verbal and emotional abuse. She was extremely intimidated by him. Although she witnessed the abuse during the parties' first marriage, she thought the pattern continued in the second.

Yvonne Escudero, the parties' daughter, testified her father was very abusive to her mother—arguing, yelling, fighting, physically hitting her, throwing things at her. Police were called to the house too many times to count. She ceased to live with them when they moved to Florida, but she thought the abuse continued.

Yvonne denied her mother turned her against her father. His own behavior had done that. She also testified her mother had nothing to do with the bank account in New Jersey. Her mother had known nothing about it until Yvonne later told her. In 1988, while Santiago was in the hospital, he told Yvonne about having a $50,000 account in a New Jersey bank in their joint names. He told Yvonne to take $25,000 out for "forgiveness, for things he had done when she was growing up." It was a kind of atonement.[1] Yvonne testified she left $27,000 in the account, and had no idea what had become of it. No such asset was disclosed on Santiago's financial statement.

George Escudero, a son of the parties, testified that while he was growing up in the parties' household, their relationship was bad. His father was very cruel to his mother and to all of them. There were times when his father beat his mother up in front of him. Santiago tried once to throw Gloria out of a window. The police were called to the house many times.

George maintained contact with Gloria since the parties moved to Florida. He thought the abusive pattern of the marriage had continued. One time when he was speaking with his mother on the telephone while she was in Florida, he overheard his father screaming, cursing and threatening her. She told him she had locked herself in the bathroom and he advised her to call 911. Santiago admitted that while the parties were living together in Florida he had been arrested and convicted of spouse abuse. He said he pled guilty because he wanted to go to jail.

George also testified that while he was growing up in the parties' household, Santiago refused to contribute any funds to support the family. His mother had to pay the rent, utilities, groceries and tuition for the children. She worked overtime and held second part-time jobs. She was unable to save any money for herself. George was forced to take a job at age sixteen to help feed the family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
739 So. 2d 688, 1999 WL 682602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escudero-v-escudero-fladistctapp-1999.