Goicochea v. Goicochea

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 2022
Docket0877/20
StatusPublished

This text of Goicochea v. Goicochea (Goicochea v. Goicochea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goicochea v. Goicochea, (Md. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Juvenal Goicochea v. Rosa Goicochea, No. 0877, September Term 2020, Opinion by Moylan, J.

HEADNOTES:

THE CONTENTIONS – BACKGROUND – I. HUSBAND’S DISSIPATION OF

MARITAL FUNDS – A. CASH WITHDRAWALS – B. EXPENDITURES ON THE

TERN DRIVE PROPERTY – C. $79,050 OF PAYMENTS TO HUSBAND’S

PARAMOUR AND HER FAMILY; $61,765 FOR HUSBAND’S PARAMOUR’S

GIFTS, EXPENSES, TRAVEL, AND DINING – D. HUSBAND’S RELIANCE ON

SMITH V. SMITH, 18 VA. APP. 427 (1994) IS UNAVAILING – II. WIFE’S

ALLEGED DISSIPATION OF FUNDS IN THE PARTIES’ HOME EQUITY LINE

OF CREDIT – III. THE VALUATION OF THE HUSBAND’S MINORITY

INTEREST IN MASC – IV. THE NON-MARITAL PORTION OF FUNDS IN

WIFE’S UBS ACCOUNT – V. THE COURT’S ALIMONY DETERMINATION Circuit Court for Montgomery County Case No. 157200FL

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 877

September Term, 2020

JUVENAL GOICOCHEA

v.

ROSA GOICOCHEA

Graeff, Shaw, Moylan, Charles E., Jr. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ.

Opinion by Moylan, J.

Filed: December 6, 2022

*Tang, J., and Albright, J., did not participate in Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State the Court’s decision to designate this opinion for Government Article) this document is authentic. publication pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1. 2022-12-06 12:40-05:00

Gregory Hilton, Clerk This matter stems from a divorce proceeding in the Circuit Court for Montgomery

County. In November 2018, the appellee, Rosa Goicochea (“Wife”), filed a Complaint for

Absolute Divorce, or, alternatively, Limited Divorce, Alimony, and for Other Appropriate

Relief. In October 2019, the appellant, Juvenal Goicochea (“Husband”), filed a

Counterclaim for Absolute Divorce. After a trial in March 2020, the court entered a

judgment of absolute divorce, granting Wife indefinite alimony in the amount of $7,155

per month and a monetary award in the amount of $667,750.1 Husband timely appeals.

The Contentions

Husband presents the following questions2 for our review, which we have rephrased

and reformatted as follows:

1 The judgment of absolute divorce also included the following conditions. As requested by the parties, the court ordered an equalization of their retirement assets. To accomplish that equalization, the court ordered Husband to transfer $644,365 from his profit-sharing plan. The court ordered a sale of the former marital home and an equal division of the net proceeds from that sale. The court denied Wife’s request for attorney’s fees. 2 Husband phrased his questions presented as follows:

1. Did the trial court err by finding the appellant had dissipated marital funds?

2. Did the court err by finding the appellee had not dissipated the entire $200,000.00 she removed from the parties’ home equity line of credit without appellant’s knowledge or consent and deposited in her secret bank accounts?

3. Did the court err in valuing appellant’s minority interest in Massachu[s]etts Avenue Surgery Center based on the price paid for a majority interest? 1. Did the court err in finding that Husband had dissipated marital funds?

2. Did the court err in finding that Wife had not dissipated $200,000 from the parties’ home equity line of credit?

4. Did the court err by finding that the appellee’s reasonable needs were $15,623.81 per month when her testimony contradicted the trial court’s findings regarding her expenses?

Husband also presented two additional questions, which the parties agree are now moot:

5. Did the trial court err by denying appellant’s motion to reopen the record because the appellant’s surgical practice income had plummeted as a result of COVID?

6. Did the court err by granting appellee’s motion to alter [or] amend filed after the appellant filed his notice of appeal and entered an amended judgment of divorce?

During oral argument before this Court, both parties’ attorneys agreed on the mootness of Husband’s fifth and sixth questions presented. As to Husband’s fifth question presented, Wife’s counsel stated that the Husband had filed a motion to modify alimony almost simultaneously with his notice of appeal. Wife’s counsel then said that the issue “was withdrawn recently, and the matter was resolved, and alimony of the amount that the appellant had not been paying as alimony as directed by the court was rectified, so I believe that that issue as far as how COVID impacted the appellant’s income” is moot.

As to Husband’s sixth question presented, Wife’s counsel stated during oral argument: “the parties conceded that the court erred in entering two judgments for the same exact monetary award, that matter has been rectified, and that was the significant point made by the appellant regarding the motion to alter or amend, so I believe that issue is essentially moot at this point.”

This Court then asked Husband’s counsel to address Wife’s counsel’s argument about the mootness of the fifth and sixth questions presented, and Husband’s counsel conceded: “That is correct. Your Honor, that is correct.” Husband’s counsel did not otherwise argue against mootness, and thus Husband’s counsel agreed that the fifth and sixth questions presented are moot. As a result, our opinion does not decide those questions. See Bond v. Slavin, 157 Md. App. 340, 353-54 (2004) (“[a]ppellate courts generally do not decide academic or moot questions.”). 2 3. Did the court err in valuating Husband’s interest in the Massachusetts Avenue Surgery Center (“MASC”)?

4. Did the court err in ruling that Wife’s UBS account x9816 contained non-marital funds?

5. Did the court’s alimony award amount to an error?

BACKGROUND

Wife and Husband met while they were attending medical school in Trujillo, Peru.

They married each other in July 1974. Their daughter was born in Peru, and they moved to

the United States in 1977 for Husband’s residency, when their daughter was two-and-a-

half years old. The parties’ son was born six years after their daughter was born. At the

time of the trial, the parties’ daughter was 44 years old, and their son was 38 years old.

The parties’ daughter testified about the parents’ roles in the household during her

adolescence:

So, my father was the primary breadwinner, or the sole breadwinner. He had his practice and he was very busy. So, when we first moved to the States, he was a resident of the Washington Hospital Center. So, he had those weird resident hours, 24 on/24 off, and my mom was 100 percent responsible for taking care of me, cooking and cleaning, things that she had never done before when we were in Peru, things that she had to learn here.

And then when my brother was born, she continued to be, like, the sole caretaker during that time. It was only, I think around when I was eight or nine, I believe my parents hired someone, a live-in, who was a housekeeper/nanny.

Husband opened a solo surgical practice in 1982, and he maintained his surgical practice

at the time of the trial. Wife began working for the practice in 1989, and she completed

billing work for the practice.

3 Husband began an adulterous relationship with his first paramour by 2006, and he

moved out of the marital home until 2008. Husband returned home in 2008 after he

promised Wife that he would cease contacting his paramour. Husband broke that promise,

and he continued financially supporting his paramour through December 2016.

Around December 2016, Husband admitted to Wife that he was having an

adulterous relationship with his second paramour. Husband rented an apartment for his

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Bluebook (online)
Goicochea v. Goicochea, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goicochea-v-goicochea-mdctspecapp-2022.