Howard A. Grad v. Judith A. Stone, f/k/a Judith A. Grad

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 17, 2007
Docket1375064
StatusUnpublished

This text of Howard A. Grad v. Judith A. Stone, f/k/a Judith A. Grad (Howard A. Grad v. Judith A. Stone, f/k/a Judith A. Grad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard A. Grad v. Judith A. Stone, f/k/a Judith A. Grad, (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, Haley and Petty Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

HOWARD A. GRAD MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1375-06-4 JUDGE WILLIAM G. PETTY JULY 17, 2007 JUDITH A. STONE, F/K/A JUDITH A. GRAD

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Randy I. Bellows, Judge

C. Dean Latsios (Peter M. Fitzner; Matthews, Snider, Norton & Fitzner, on brief), for appellant.

David M. Levy (Surovell Markle Isaacs & Levy, on brief), for appellee.

Howard A. Grad (husband), appellant, contends the trial court erred in its spousal support

award to appellee, Judith A. Stone (wife). Specifically, husband argues that (1) the evidence of

wife’s need for spousal support was insufficient to support an award of $3,500 per month; (2) the

trial court failed to follow the law of the case doctrine regarding the parties’ lifestyle during their

marriage; and (3) the trial court erred by considering husband’s post-divorce lifestyle when

fashioning the spousal support award. We disagree with husband and affirm the trial court’s

decision.

I. BACKGROUND

We view the evidence, and all reasonable inferences flowing from the evidence, in a light

most favorable to wife, the party prevailing below. Congdon v. Congdon, 40 Va. App. 255, 258,

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 578 S.E.2d 833, 835 (2003). “That principle requires us to ‘discard the evidence’ of the

appellant which conflicts, either directly or inferentially, with the evidence presented by the

appellee at trial.” Id. (quoting Wactor v. Commonwealth, 38 Va. App. 375, 380, 564 S.E.2d 160,

162 (2002)).

The evidence established that the parties were married for 25 years, and were divorced on

April 21, 1998. On August 7, 1998, the trial court held a spousal support hearing. At the

hearing, the trial judge stated as pertinent to this appeal:

I have taken into account the standard of living that the parties enjoyed during the course of their marriage. I note as an aside, however, that, I believe the evidence is that the parties lived above the standard of living during the marriage thanks – above the standard of living that their own incomes yielded thanks largely to the generosity of [wife’s] mother, Ms. Stone, who contributed not only to the parties’ household needs but private schools for their children and business ventures that [husband] began.

On September 11, 1998, the trial court ordered husband to pay wife monthly spousal support of

$1,500. At the time of the support decree, wife’s income was $990 per month and husband’s

was $4,200 per month. The trial court incorporated the factual findings it made from the bench

at the August 1998 support hearing into the September 1998 order.

In November 2003, the trial court terminated this spousal support order because husband

showed that his financial circumstances had changed and he was unable to make the spousal

support payments at that time due to his lack of employment. The November 2003 order

included a reservation for wife to seek spousal support in the future. On December 2, 2005, wife

filed a motion with the trial court seeking spousal support based on a change in circumstances.

The trial court held a hearing on wife’s motion on March 21, 2006. By his own admission,

husband’s gross monthly income, as disclosed on his monthly income and expense sheet, was

$40,961, with a total net monthly overage of $4,009.

-2- Wife testified as to the parties’ lifestyle during their marriage and her current need for

spousal support. During the course of the marriage, the parties, who were married in 1972, led a

fairly affluent lifestyle, eventually spending “about a million dollars” building their own home.

The parties took frequent vacations and cruises, their children attended private schools, and the

parties owned, at one time, a twin-engine airplane and horses. The parties also “had new cars

every couple of years.” In 1991, however, the parties’ standard of living began to decrease

dramatically, due to the effect of the economic recession on husband’s business. Wife testified

that after 1991 “it was difficult to maintain any kind of lifestyle . . . .” By the time the parties

divorced in 1996, they had no assets other than some personal property. From 1991 through

1996, wife’s mother, who is now deceased, subsidized the parties’ lifestyle, allowing them to live

somewhat above their means during that time.

Following the divorce, wife incurred a number of expenses, including her son’s college

loans and legal fees. Eventually, wife declared bankruptcy to protect the inheritance she

received from her mother from liability she had incurred in relation to the lease on the parties’

marital home. Currently, wife works as the manager of a local thrift shop, making $48,500 per

year, with the possibility of a $4,000 annual bonus. Wife owns a 1998 Toyota Rav-4, which is

completely paid off. Wife inherited approximately $275,000 from her mother, in a “very small

stock account” that she shares with the parties’ two children.

Currently, wife owns a home, which she refinanced approximately two years before the

hearing in this case in order to pay legal fees, credit card debts, and make a substantial payment

towards her son’s college loans. Wife has no savings and no retirement accounts, and has a

mortgage on her home for “about . . . $231,000.” According to wife’s monthly income and

expense sheet, she has a cash flow shortfall each month of $1,584. This figure does not account

for funds needed to plan for retirement or for expenditures such as a new automobile. Moreover,

-3- during the approximately three years between the termination of support in 2003 and the hearing

in this case, wife’s financial situation had worsened.

The trial court made factual findings and legal conclusions from the bench at a hearing on

April 7, 2006, which were later incorporated into the May 12, 2006 order, from which this appeal

was taken. The trial court noted that “[t]he parties lived above their means thanks largely to the

generosity of [wife’s] mother.” The court further found that husband “made more monetary

contributions to the marriage than [wife][,]” but that wife “made more nonmonetary

contributions to the marriage.” In 2003, husband “was underemployed and . . . an abatement of

spousal support was warranted.” At the time of this hearing, however, husband was earning

more than $40,000 per month. Thus, the trial judge found a material change in circumstances

existed since husband received an abatement from spousal support in 2003.

The trial court also found that wife’s income and expense statement showed a deficit of

$1,584 even though her post-divorce standard of living was much reduced from that which she

enjoyed during the marriage. The court also stated that while the original trial court that entered

the 1998 spousal support order did not “really address in detail the affluent nature of the standard

of living,” it found the standard of living “very affluent . . . [e]ven discounting somewhat to

reflect the fact that [the prior trial court] found the parties were living above their means . . . .”

The trial court then awarded wife $3,500 per month in spousal support. The court noted that,

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