Foto v. Foto (In Re Foto)

258 B.R. 567, 45 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1150, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1696, 2000 WL 33201228
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 20, 2000
Docket19-22570
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 258 B.R. 567 (Foto v. Foto (In Re Foto)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foto v. Foto (In Re Foto), 258 B.R. 567, 45 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1150, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1696, 2000 WL 33201228 (N.Y. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AFTER TRIAL

AD LAI S. HARDIN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

In this adversary proceeding plaintiff Julia Foto (“Julia”) seeks determinations of non-dischargeability of matrimonial debts against her former husband, debtor-defendant Frank Foto (“Frank”) under 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(5) and (15).

This Court has jurisdiction of this core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and 157(a) and (b)(2). The following constitute the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law under Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

Background

Frank and Julia were married in or about 1979. From then until 1991 Frank pursued his medical education in Mexico, Iowa and Long Island. Julia went with him to all these places, worked to support the family and bore three children. Afflicted since age 12 with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, Julia was forced to give up work after her and Frank’s third child was born in 1990. She has not been able to work since.

Frank completed his studies and obtained his license to practice medicine in 1991. The same year he signed a contract and began working full time in the emergency room of the Mather Memorial Hospital at a salary that soon rose to be between $115,000 and $120,000 a year.

In October 1991 Frank left Julia and their three children. At that time, Frank, Julia and the children were living in the lower floor of Julia’s parents’ split level home in Long Island. Julia and the children still live there.

In November 1991 Frank commenced an action for divorce against Julia, in which it *569 appears that Juba counterclaimed for a divorce against Frank. After a hearing on July 31, 1992 Justice Marvin E. Segal granted an absolute divorce in favor of Julia against Frank on the ground of Frank’s constructive abandonment of Julia. The balance of the Fotos’ matrimonial action concerning custody, visitation, child support, maintenance, counsel fees, equitable distribution and related issues continued in protracted and acrimonious fashion and resulted in hearings before Justice Kenneth D. Molloy, an eleven-page decision dated July 21, 1994 by Justice Molloy and a final Judgment of Divorce dated February 14,1995.

This adversary proceeding is to determine the dischargeability of Frank’s obligations under the Judgment of Divorce in respect of support, maintenance and equitable distribution. The Judgment of Divorce requires Frank to pay Julia $23,200 per annum for child Support (26 pay periods per annum in the amount of $892.30 each), Maintenance in the amount of $24,150 per annum (26 pay periods per annum in the amount of $928.84 each), and a Distributive Award of $353,592 payable over twenty years at the rate of $17,677.60 per year in equal monthly payments of $1,473.20. The Support payments diminish and finally terminate as each of the Fotos’ three children reaches age 21 (their ages are 17, 13 and 10), and the Maintenance payments terminate upon the sooner happening of Julia’s remarriage, Frank’s death or Frank’s retirement. 1

Frank has never made any payment to Juha on account of the Distributive Award. Nor has Frank ever voluntarily made a payment to Julia in respect of either Support or Maintenance. All Frank’s payments of Support and Maintenance have been made under compulsion of court order subsequent to the Judgment of Divorce, by garnishment and by sheriffs im-poundment and sale of Frank’s minivan in 1997.

Frank met a woman named Diana Cal-imeri (“Calimeri”) in 1993 and moved into her apartment in Westchester the same year. Calimeri is 38 years old (Frank and Julia are both 42) and at all material times has resided in a three-bedroom condominium apartment overlooking the Hudson River at 404 Kemeys Cove, Scarborough, New York of which she acquired ownership in the late 1980s in connection with her divorce from her prior husband. The primary reason Frank moved to Scarborough was to live with Calimeri, but he also perceived an opportunity in Westchester to practice his medical specialty, rheumatolo-gy. Frank has asked Calimeri to marry him several times, but she has declined. Frank lived with Calimeri at her apartment in Scarborough continuously from 1993 until August 1999. During this period Frank paid Calimeri a monthly amount to share expenses, or in lieu of rent, initially $1,000 a month and subsequently $800 a month, generally paid in cash without receipts. Frank testified that he and Calim-eri each paid his/her own expenses for food, entertainment, vacations, holidays and the like.

After Calimeri was served with a subpoena for the production of documents and for deposition by Julia’s attorneys in this adversary proceeding, and after retaining her own attorney, James Michael Leni-han, 2 Calimeri instructed Frank to move *570 out of her apartment, and Frank complied. Since August 1999 Frank has shared a small two-bedroom apartment with another man (who was theretofore a stranger to Frank), for which Frank pays $610 a month. However, Frank continues to spend several nights a week at Calimeri’s apartment.

Calimeri is and for many years has been employed at IBM as an accounting manager. As appears from her income tax returns, Calimeri’s income for 1998 was $98,133, of which she testified $78,000 was from IBM and $20,000 was from Hudson Valley, described below. No evidence was presented at trial as to her income in 1999 or 2000.

As noted above, Frank was employed on a contract basis in the emergency room at Mather Memorial Hospital in Suffolk County commencing in 1991. This employment continued full time until some time in 1995 at a salary of up to $120,000 per annum. At some point in 1994 Frank started practicing medicine in Westchester as a rheumatologist, renting office space from two different doctors in Croton and Briarcliff Manor. As he increased his private practice in Westchester he began to decrease his hours and therefore Ms salary at Mather Memorial Hospital.

One month after the Judgment of Divorce, in March 1995, Frank organized Hudson Valley Rheumatology, P.C. (“Hudson Valley”) as a corporate vehicle through which to conduct his rheumatology practice. Frank is the sole shareholder of Hudson Valley, and Hudson Valley is Frank’s economic alter ego. In 1999 Frank terminated his office sharing arrangements in Croton and Briarcliff Manor and rented, equipped and opened a new suite of offices occupied by Hudson Valley alone in a new building in Ossining, New York.

As appears from its tax returns, Hudson Valley earned gross receipts of $171,673 for 1997 and $208,382 for 1998. According to Lawrence H. Hochberg, C.P.A., 3 the gross receipts for Hudson Valley in 1999 were $216,472. On his individual tax returns for 1997 Frank reported income of $101,461, of which $44,344.92 is reflected on a W-2 form from Mather Memorial Hospital and $57,115.53 is reported on a W-2 form from Hudson Valley.

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258 B.R. 567, 45 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1150, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1696, 2000 WL 33201228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foto-v-foto-in-re-foto-nysb-2000.