In re Marriage of Goldner

2023 IL App (1st) 211272-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 18, 2023
Docket1-21-1272
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 211272-U (In re Marriage of Goldner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marriage of Goldner, 2023 IL App (1st) 211272-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 211272-U No. 1-21-1272

FIRST DIVISION December 18, 2023

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ____________________________________________________________________________

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF: ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Cook County, RONNA GOLDNER, n/k/a ) Domestic Relations Division RONNA MULTACK, ) ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) No. 2012 D 1552 ) v. ) ) The Honorable SHELDON GOLDNER, ) Regina A. Scannichio, ) Judge Presiding. Respondent-Appellee. )

JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Coghlan concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm the circuit court’s order modifying Appellant’s maintenance award. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Appellee’s retirement constituted a substantial change of circumstances warranting a review of the maintenance award amount. It further did not abuse its discretion in choosing to reduce the monthly maintenance amount after considering the needs and circumstances of both parties. We also affirm the circuit court’s denial of Appellant’s plea for statutory interest on Appellee’s past-due life insurance reimbursements; however, we reverse the court’s denial of statutory interest on his withheld maintenance payments; we find that statutory interest should have been imposed on these withheld payments. Therefore, we remand the issue to the circuit court to determine the amount of statutory interest that he owes, either on the original maintenance amount or the retroactively-modified amount. 1-21-1272

¶2 In the underlying dissolution of marriage matter, Respondent-Appellee Sheldon Goldner

filed a motion asking the circuit court to terminate or, in the alternative, reduce his monthly

maintenance obligation to Petitioner-Appellant Ronna Multack because his retirement constituted

a substantial change in circumstances warranting a review of the maintenance award. Following a

five-day trial, the circuit court granted Sheldon’s motion, reducing his monthly maintenance

obligation from $25,000 to $4,867.01, retroactive to the filing of his motion. The court issued a

48-page order and opinion on May 4, 2021, which included a detailed examination of the evidence

and arguments presented by both parties and an application of the relevant caselaw and statutory

factors of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (“Act”). The court also issued

rulings on certain other matters, including granting Ronna’s Third Amended Petition for Rule to

Show Cause and ordering Sheldon to pay $150,877.31 1 in outstanding modified maintenance to

Ronna.

¶3 Ronna then filed a motion to clarify the court’s May 4, 2021 judgment, raising three issues:

(1) that the court’s opinion did not address life insurance payments identified in the parties’ marital

settlement agreement (“MSA”) that Sheldon was supposed to pay Ronna; (2) that the opinion

awarded Ronna retroactive maintenance but did not award interest at the 9% statutory rate on that

retroactive maintenance or on her requested retroactive life insurance payments; and (3) that it

was unclear whether the court’s award of retroactive maintenance was taxable. The circuit court

issued an order on September 24, 2021 denying Ronna’s request for statutory interest on both the

life insurance and retroactive maintenance, and declining to modify the income tax implications

of the maintenance payments. Ronna now appeals from the circuit court’s May 4, 2021 and

September 24, 2021 judgments.

1 This figure represents 31 months of Sheldon’s withheld maintenance payments, at the modified rate of $4,867.01 per month. This period covers the time between Sheldon’s filing his motion and the circuit court’s ruling.

-2- 1-21-1272

¶4 BACKGROUND

¶5 After 45 years of marriage, Sheldon and Ronna divorced in 2014. The Judgment for

Dissolution of Marriage was entered on September 8, 2014 and incorporated the parties’ Marital

Settlement Agreement. The terms of the MSA included: (1) Sheldon would pay spousal

maintenance to Ronna in the amount of $25,000 per month; (2) Sheldon would reimburse Ronna

75% of all premium payments of a life insurance policy; (3) Ronna would receive the marital

property and the responsibility for the mortgage on that property; and (4) in order to complete the

division of the marital estate, Sheldon would pay Ronna an amount referred to as the marital

property settlement. The parties also agreed to the division of their family business, Precious

Metals Refining Services, Inc. (“PMRS”), which had a stipulated value of $6 million during the

time relevant to the present appeal. Sheldon became the sole owner of PMRS, and Ronna was

bought out of her interest in the company by way of monthly payments.

¶6 Beginning around 2016, the parties ran into disagreements regarding Sheldon’s

maintenance obligations. Sheldon filed multiple petitions to modify or terminate the maintenance

award. In turn, Ronna filed motions to dismiss his petitions, as well as petitions for rule to show

cause claiming that Sheldon had, at various points, made insufficient maintenance payments or

failed to make payments altogether.

¶7 On October 5, 2018, Sheldon filed a successive Petition to Terminate Maintenance or, in

the Alternative, to Modify Maintenance, stating that at the time of filing, he was 72 years of age,

earned $49,050 gross income per month, and intended to retire in December of 2018 due to his

age and a heart condition that he claimed was exacerbated by work and fatigue. He argued that his

retirement constituted a substantial change in circumstances warranting a termination of his

maintenance obligation or, alternatively, a substantial reduction of that obligation. In response,

-3- 1-21-1272

Ronna argued that Sheldon had not met his burden of proof in establishing a substantial change in

circumstances, challenging, among other claims, the circumstances of Sheldon’s retirement and

whether it genuinely constituted a substantial change in circumstances.

¶8 In addition to filing her opposition to Sheldon’s petition, Ronna filed a third petition for

rule to show cause on January 10, 2019, alleging that Sheldon had stopped making maintenance

and life insurance reimbursement payments in December 2018. Ronna amended and supplemented

her petition a few times prior to the court’s ruling on her petition, claiming more unpaid

maintenance, life insurance payments, and interest.

¶9 The Court’s May 4, 2021 Maintenance Modification Order

¶ 10 Over a five-day trial, the circuit court heard testimony from the parties and witnesses,

including expert witnesses on both sides. The court issued its Memorandum Order and Opinion on

May 4, 2021. After lengthy consideration of the evidence presented by both parties, the court found

that Ronna’s needs had not changed, and continued to be adequately met by the property settlement

payments that Sheldon paid her pursuant to their MSA. The court also disagreed with Ronna’s

claim that Sheldon had not actually retired from PMRS, which she based on evidence of his

continued involvement with the company. The court stated that the evidence and testimony

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Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (1st) 211272-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-goldner-illappct-2023.