E.T.M. v. R.M.

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 24, 2026
DocketCL-2025-0485
StatusPublished

This text of E.T.M. v. R.M. (E.T.M. v. R.M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E.T.M. v. R.M., (Ala. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Rel: April 24, 2026

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2025-2026 _________________________

CL-2025-0485 _________________________

E.T.M.

v.

R.M.

Appeal from Jefferson Circuit Court (DR-23-900105)

FRIDY, Judge.

E.T.M. ("the wife") appeals from a judgment of the Jefferson Circuit

Court ("the trial court") divorcing her from R.M. ("the husband"),

awarding the husband periodic alimony, and dividing their property. For

the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the judgment in part and reverse CL-2025-0485

it insofar as it awarded the husband periodic alimony and divided the

marital property.

Background

On May 11, 2023, the wife filed a complaint seeking a divorce from

the husband on the ground of an irretrievable breakdown of the

marriage. The wife alleged that the husband had been verbally and

physically abusive to her, and she requested, among other things, an

equitable division of the parties' property and debts and exclusive

possession of the marital residence. The wife, at some point, also obtained

a protection-from-abuse ("PFA") order against the husband in a separate

action ("the PFA action") based on an incident that occurred at the

marital residence.

On May 24, 2023, the husband filed an answer and a counterclaim

for a divorce in which he requested, among other things, exclusive

possession of the marital residence and the vehicles that he had acquired

during the marriage. On that same date, the husband moved to

2 CL-2025-0485

consolidate the divorce action and the PFA action. The record on appeal

does not reflect that the trial court consolidated the actions.1

The trial court held a bench trial on April 11, 2025. No court

reporter was present for the trial, so there is no transcript of the trial.

However, on October 24, 2025, the trial court entered an order approving

and certifying the wife's statement of the evidence, filed pursuant to Rule

10(d), Ala. R. App. P., noting that no objection to the wife's statement of

the evidence had been filed within the time prescribed by Rule 10(d).2

1In a statement of the evidence that the wife filed pursuant to Rule

10(d), Ala. R. App. P., the wife indicated that the trial court had consolidated the divorce action with the PFA action. However, the record on appeal does not contain an order consolidating the actions, and the wife, in her notice of appeal, acknowledged that the trial court had not entered an order consolidating the two actions.

2As discussed herein, after the trial court entered a judgment in the

divorce action on May 13, 2025, the wife filed an untimely motion for the entry of findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 52(b), Ala. R. Civ. P. A day later, she filed a timely notice of appeal from the judgment entered in the divorce action. This court held the wife's notice of appeal in abeyance pending the resolution of the Rule 52(b) motion. On September 30, 2025, after the trial court entered an order denying the wife's untimely Rule 52(b) motion, this court lifted its order holding the wife's notice of appeal in abeyance.

On October 6, 2025, the wife filed in the trial court a document she titled "Statement of the Evidence Pursuant to Rule 10(c), Ala. R. App. P.," which we understand, instead, to have been filed pursuant to Rule 10(d). According to Rule 10(d), when, as in this case, "no report of the 3 CL-2025-0485

evidence or proceedings at a hearing or trial was made, or if a transcript is unavailable, the appellant may prepare a statement of the evidence or proceedings from the best available means, including the appellant's recollection." Upon preparing such a statement, the appellant must serve the statement on the appellee within twenty-eight days after filing the notice of appeal, and the appellee has fourteen days thereafter to serve objections or proposed amendments to the statement. If the appellee serves no objections or proposed amendments, the appellant has twenty- one days after serving the statement on the appellee to file the statement with the trial court for approval. If the appellee serves objections or proposed amendments on the appellant, the appellant must file the statement and any such objections or proposed amendments with the trial court within seven days of receiving those objections or proposed amendments. The trial court has twenty-one days after the filing of a statement and any objections or proposed amendments to settle any disputes and issue an approved statement of the evidence or proceedings.

On October 24, 2025, the trial court entered an order indicating that it had not received any objections to the wife's statement of the evidence. Although it titled its order a "Denial Order," the trial court approved the wife's statement of the evidence "as an accurate statement of the proceedings in lieu of a transcript."

There is nothing in the record indicating that the husband objected to or otherwise challenged in the trial court the wife's statement of the evidence or the trial court's order approving that statement. Although, in a single sentence in his appellate brief, the husband states that the wife did not provide him a copy of her statement of the evidence "prior to the filing of same," Husband's brief at p. 6, he did not make this argument to the trial court. Separately, in a single sentence in another part of his brief, the husband states that the wife's statement of the evidence "was not an agreed upon statement and is only the [wife]'s statement." Id. at p. 8. Nothing in Rule 10(d) indicates that a party's statement of the evidence must be agreed upon by both parties before the trial court is permitted to enter an order approving it. And, again, nothing in the record indicates that the husband made this argument to the trial court. 4 CL-2025-0485

According to the wife's statement of the evidence, the testimony at

the trial indicated that the parties married in October 1988 and remained

married for approximately thirty-five years. At the time of the trial, the

wife was sixty years old, and the husband was sixty-eight years old. The

parties had two children, who had both reached the age of majority at the

time of the commencement of the divorce action.

The wife testified that she had retired from the University of

Alabama at Birmingham in November 2024 and that she received

approximately $4,000 per month in retirement benefits. She testified

that, in 2010, she purchased the marital residence in Pleasant Grove for

$89,900; that the mortgage on the marital residence was in her name

only; that, because the parties were married, the lender had required the

husband's name to be added to the deed to the marital residence; and

that she had paid all the monthly mortgage payments for the entire

duration of the loan. She further testified that the mortgage on the

marital residence was paid off after the parties separated and that the

2025 tax-assessed value of the residence was $230,000. The wife also

testified that she owned a 2005 Ford Expedition sport-utility vehicle, co-

5 CL-2025-0485

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E.T.M. v. R.M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etm-v-rm-alacivapp-2026.