Gloria Hobson v. Edwin Hobson

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 19, 2016
Docket2016-038
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gloria Hobson v. Edwin Hobson (Gloria Hobson v. Edwin Hobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gloria Hobson v. Edwin Hobson, (Vt. 2016).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2016-038

AUGUST TERM, 2016

Gloria Hobson } APPEALED FROM: } } Superior Court, Washington Unit, v. } Family Division } } Edwin Hobson } DOCKET NO. 208-6-11 Wndm

Trial Judge: Thomas J. Devine

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Wife appeals pro se from a final divorce judgment.1 She challenges the trial court’s property division. Although we uphold nearly all of the trial court’s findings and conclusions, we reverse and remand so that the trial court can address one outstanding issue.

The trial court made the following findings of fact. The parties were married in 1984 and separated in 2009. Their children are grown. At the time of the trial, husband was sixty-five years old and wife was sixty-four. Husband is an attorney in a solo private practice. Wife has worked for many years for the Vermont Department of Taxes. The parties maintained separate bank accounts throughout the marriage; husband paid the mortgage, property taxes and utilities from his accounts, and wife paid for the groceries, insurance, most expenses relating to the children (from a prior relationship), gifts, and miscellaneous expenses. The parties lived a middle class lifestyle. Wife’s income was $77,000, and she hoped to retire soon. Husband’s earnings varied significantly from year to year, and his present earning capacity was at least $100,000 per year.

The marital property was limited. At the time of the marriage, husband owned property and a house under construction in Middlesex which ultimately became the marital home. The court found that wife contributed significantly to the work on the house. The court valued the property at $194,500. In 1994, husband purchased a 20-acre lot and camp adjoining the marital property. The court found that it had a value of $114,000. Wife has a credit union savings account of about $6,500, stock worth $500, and revolving credit card debt of $9,000. Husband had an IRA worth $986 and two kinds of stock worth $5047 and $282, respectively. He had credit card debt of $88,500.2 Wife had two retirement plans, a deferred compensation plan worth $21,370, and a state pension which, based on the testimony of wife’s expert, the court found to have present value

1 Both parties were represented by counsel at trial. 2 In its specific findings, the trial court listed husband’s credit card debt borne by husband totaling $88,500. In its conclusions, the court describes husband’s debt as exceeding $68,000. We use the more specific finding of $88,500. of $260,000 - $280,000.3 Wife’s estimated monthly benefit from the pension is $3267. These valuations are largely uncontested on appeal.

At the center of this dispute are several other assets and debts considered by the trial court. First, husband is the beneficiary of a 1/11th interest in three irrevocable family trusts, one of which was set to terminate in 2013. The value of his 1/11th interest was $346,193. However, during the course of the marriage, unbeknownst to wife, the trust provided husband more than $500,000. The co-trustee, husband’s brother, testified that in light of the substantial past advances to husband, the trust would not be making further distributions to him. Husband testified that he did not intend to seek to enforce any rights he might have to further distributions. The court expressed doubts that the trustee had authority under the terms of the trust to treat the prior payments as advances, and to withhold further payment, and found that husband’s testimony was sincere, but that husband’s receiving no distribution on termination of the trusts was not mandated or inevitable.

Second, husband’s law practice had accounts receivable listed on its books in the amount of $400,000. The court found that despite substantial investments into the law practice (funded in part from the family trusts), the investment has not resulted in acquisition of capital assets for the firm such as buildings, new computers, or other equipment with tangible value. Recoupment of the investment would depend on the husband’s ability to collect on his receivables.

Third, in 1997 husband and wife executed a promissory note for $40,000 to husband’s father, secured by a mortgage on the marital home. The funds were used to sustain husband’s law practice. No payments were made on the loan, husband’s father died, and the debt was assigned by will to the family trusts. The trust has never sought to collect the debt, and the court expressed doubt that the debt was still collectable in light of the applicable statute of limitations.

In dividing the property, the court noted that the uncertain status of husband’s interest in the family trust made property division especially challenging. If husband received a future distribution from the trust, that would affect his opportunity for future acquisition of capital assets and income. See 15 V.S.A. § 751(b)(8). If he did not, on account of the prior distributions, his spending of over $500,000 of past distributions during the marriage constituted significant depreciation of the marital estate that the court could consider under 15 V.S.A. § 751(b)(11). In either event, the court could properly consider husband’s interest. On account of these considerations, the court awarded the trust to husband and concluded that regardless of whether husband ever received any more funds from the trust, wife would be entitled to a greater share than husband of the remaining assets.

Of the remaining assets, the court awarded the home to wife, finding that she had made significant financial and non-financial contributions over the course of a long marriage. It also awarded wife her deferred compensation benefit, savings account, and stock. The court awarded husband the camp, his IRA, and stocks. The court assigned each party his or her outstanding credit card debt.

3 In its findings the court did not specify whether this value represents the entire value of the pension benefit or only the value of the marital portion of wife’s pension. In its findings, the court credited wife’s expert’s valuation in finding a value of $260,000-$280,000. That figure represents wife’s expert’s valuation of the marital portion of wife’s pension only, as the expert applied a coverture fraction to the total value of the pension. 2 With respect to wife’s pension, the court found that both parties had need of some retirement income. It rejected husband’s request to divide the pension equally without limitation to the marital portion, and instead ordered that the marital portion of the pension be divided equally by QDRO. In considering its division of the pension, the court noted that wife has hopes to retire soon, but husband will need to retire someday, and has variable income from his solo law practice. The court acknowledged that husband’s vocational skills and employability were greater than wife’s, but concluded that all the other relevant factors pointed to an equal division of the marital portion of the pension.

The court concluded that the present value of husband’s law practice was unclear, and that it had not acquired any capital assets. It awarded the law practice to husband. To the extent that the promissory note was enforceable, the court assigned it to husband and ordered him to indemnify and hold wife harmless from any attempts by third parties to collect from her.

The court subsequently denied cross-motions to alter amend the judgment. This appeal by wife followed.

We review the trial court’s findings “in the light most favorable to the prevailing party below, disregarding the effect of modifying evidence, and we will not set them aside unless they are clearly erroneous.” Solsaa v. Solsaa, 2008 VT 138, ¶ 6, 185 Vt.

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Bluebook (online)
Gloria Hobson v. Edwin Hobson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloria-hobson-v-edwin-hobson-vt-2016.