Hayden v. Hayden
This text of 662 So. 2d 713 (Hayden v. Hayden) 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.
Opinion
Carolyn S. HAYDEN, Appellant,
v.
Roger C. Hayden, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*714 Philip M. Burlington of Caruso, Burlington, Bohn & Compiani, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Roger C. Hayden, Dayton, OH, pro se.
*715 WARNER, Judge.
After being twice held in contempt for failure to pay child support and alimony, the husband filed a petition for reduction of those payments. The trial court granted that request in its final judgment, although it gave the wife a judgment for alimony arrearages. The wife appeals claiming that the court erred in preventing the wife from inquiring into some pre-divorce stock transactions of the husband and the finances of the husband's second wife; that it erred in the amount of income imputed to the husband; and finally, that it erred in failing to enter a qualified domestic relations order to secure the arrearages judgment from the husband's pension. We agree as to the first two points and because we reverse as to them, we remand for further consideration of the entry of a qualified domestic relations order.
The parties were divorced in October 1990. In the final judgment of divorce, the court found that the husband had abandoned his family, and it ordered the husband to pay $1,250 in monthly alimony and $1,656 in monthly child support for his four minor children. The trial court found that the husband made $4,500 per month as president of a company owned by his brother and noted that the wife had not worked outside the home for nearly twenty years of the marriage. Less than three months later, the wife filed a motion for contempt for failure to pay child support and alimony, and the court found the husband in willful contempt of the order, requiring him to make specific payments to make up the arrearages. Again, in February 1992, the trial court found the husband in willful contempt for failure to pay child support and alimony and again the trial court ordered certain payments to be made to avoid incarceration.
A year later, the husband petitioned for modification, while still in arrears on his obligations. The husband claimed that he had lost his job with his brother's company, and even though he had an MBA degree, he was working as a warehouseman and insurance agent, making less than $1,000 per month. While he claimed that he had made an extensive job search, the court found his testimony not to be credible. Nevertheless, the court imputed income to the husband and found that his income was $2,000 per month. Although the wife was not working at the time of the hearing, the court imputed $1,400 per month in income to her. The trial court awarded her a judgment for the accumulated alimony and child support arrearages but refused to enter a qualified domestic relations order so that a pension of the husband's could secure the judgment.
During the proceedings, the wife sought to obtain financial records of the new wife, who had made substantial payments to the husband during their marriage to buy stock and to pay for the husband's attorney's fees. The trial court refused to allow the appellant to delve into the new wife's finances. In addition, the trial court also refused to allow the wife to inquire into the husband's pre-divorce finances regarding certain stock sold prior to the divorce. Under the facts of this case we hold both of these rulings to be error.
The wife's accountant obtained some information from portions of the new wife's tax returns which were produced. Based on the income interest reported, he estimated that the new wife had between $40,000 and $125,000 in income producing assets between 1991 and 1992. However, because she filed no income tax return in 1990, he surmised that she made below the minimum necessary to file a tax return. Moreover, it was established that the new wife did not work outside the home at least from the time she married the husband. It was also revealed that the husband made a gift of stock to her after their marriage and also transferred the title to his car to her. In other words, as the wife testified, the husband was transferring everything of his into the new wife's name to avoid his alimony and child support obligations.
In Condon v. Condon, 295 So.2d 681 (Fla. 1st DCA 1974), the court held that discovery of a new spouse's finances can be conducted only upon a clear and convincing showing that the remarried parent is unable to provide for the needs of the child out of her or his own funds. Relying on Condon, this court in Schneider v. Schneider, 348 So.2d 612 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977), reversed an order *716 allowing discovery by the former wife of the new wife's finances in the husband's action for modification, stating:
Unless there is some showing on the part of the wife that the husband terminated or reduced his employment in order to keep from paying alimony and that he was relying upon his present wife for his living expenses in completion of the scheme, we can see no possibility of relevance concerning the present spouse's income.
Id. at 613 (emphasis supplied).
The emphasized language sets the standard of relevance for discovery of the present spouse's income. To that we would add that if there is a showing that the husband has transferred significant assets to the wife's name, and as a result has no assets of his own with which to satisfy his support obligations, then the present wife's finances are relevant to the question of the ability of the husband to pay alimony and child support to the former spouse. We cannot condone the voluntary and deliberate divestment of assets by the husband when he is obligated to pay support to his former wife and children. In the instant case, the showing was made that over the five years of the marriage between the husband and his new wife, he did just that. It is relevant to the proceeding for the wife to show the value of the new spouse's assets acquired from the husband.
We also hold that on the facts of this case, the trial court erred in refusing to allow the wife to question the husband on the stock transactions which occurred just prior to the divorce. The husband filed a financial affidavit in the proceedings in 1990 which listed the subject stock as having a value of $16,000. Yet the month after the affidavit was filed, he sold those stocks for $296,000, declaring capital gains of $164,000. What happened to the sale proceeds is relevant to the husband's petition for reduction of alimony and child support and his present ability to pay. While the trial court has broad discretion in determining what evidence to hear regarding assets of the parties in a modification proceeding, see Dixon v. Moody, 352 So.2d 950 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977), given the disappearance of this substantial amount of money, the trial court should have allowed the wife to make limited inquiry into these pre-divorce stock transactions so that the court could be fully informed as to the husband's finances.
We also reverse that portion of the order imputing income to the husband in an amount not supported by the evidence. The final judgment of divorce determined that the husband was earning $4,500 per month in his brother's company. He was terminated from that position after the divorce, but the trial court found that the termination was his own doing. Moreover, the court determined that the husband's testimony concerning his job search was not credible, nor was his search diligent.
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662 So. 2d 713, 1995 WL 566008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-hayden-fladistctapp-1995.