In re the Marriage of: Cindy D. Scinto and John P. Scinto

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 28, 2022
Docket37878-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Cindy D. Scinto and John P. Scinto (In re the Marriage of: Cindy D. Scinto and John P. Scinto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of: Cindy D. Scinto and John P. Scinto, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED JULY 28, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 37878-1-III CINDY D. SCINTO, ) ) Respondent, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) JOHN P. SCINTO, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. (lead opinion) — In this marital separation case, John Scinto appeals

the superior court’s property division and the award of spousal maintenance and attorney

fees to his wife, Cindy Scinto. The appeal primarily forces this court to examine the

elasticity of discretion afforded a superior court when awarding property to separating

spouses. John complains that the trial court abused its discretion when it allocated 79.2

percent of the couple’s assets to his wife, Cindy. This opinion awkwardly presents the

majority view on affirming the superior court’s spousal maintenance award and award of

attorney fees to wife Cindy Scinto, but the minority view on affirming the trial court’s

property division. Because of the unique circumstances of this case, including Cindy’s

severe medical ailments, her inability for gainful employment, and her need for the No. 37878-1-III In re Marriage of Scinto

family residence, I would hold that the superior court did not abuse its discretion. The

majority holds otherwise.

FACTS

John and Cindy Scinto married in 1982 in New York. They separated for the third

time in June 2017. For reasons underscored later, the parties seek a legal separation, not

a marital dissolution. Trial occurred in September 2019.

In 1989, when domiciling in Arizona, Cindy and John Scinto bore a son, later

diagnosed to be on the autistic spectrum. The child, now an adult, resides on his own.

Since their marriage, John Scinto has worked for the United States Postal Service.

Between 1982 and 1988, John labored as a mail carrier, first in North Carolina and then

in New York. In 1988, the couple transplanted to Hereford, Arizona, where John worked

as a distribution window clerk. He served in the same position at Sierra Vista, Arizona

from 1989 to 1991.

From 1991 to 1996, John Scinto served as a postmaster, first in McNeal and later

in Stanfield, Arizona. Beginning in 1996, John assumed the position of customer service

analyst, a position in which he continues to serve at a higher level. In his first analyst

position, he oversaw five hundred rural delivery routes in Arizona. He scrutinized routes

to create and preserve proper sizing. This analysis demanded following contractual

provisions, handbooks, and manuals and interfacing with rural communities.

2 No. 37878-1-III In re Marriage of Scinto

John and Cindy Scinto moved, with their son, to Spokane in 1998, where John

continued as a customer service analyst. All three have resided in Spokane since. In

2000, John received a promotion to retail delivery analyst, in which position he evaluated

city delivery routes for eastern Washington and Idaho. His tasks included assessing the

amount of time a carrier spent on a route and the amount of time that the carrier should

have spent on the route.

At some unremembered time, John Scinto received another promotion, this time to

retail fleet leader. John analyzed mail counts and city delivery routes. With assistance

from computer software, John determined the most efficient methods to deliver mail. He

supervised others who walked postal routes and who reported to him numbers that he, in

turn, reviewed.

In 2006, John Scinto became an operation specialist with the United States Postal

Service, at which time he journeyed to Washington, D.C. on temporary assignment. John

developed policies and programs regarding rural delivery. He updated Postal Service

manuals. Cindy and the couple’s son continued to live in Spokane, and John periodically

returned home. John continues employment with the Postal Service today as a rural

delivery specialist working from Spokane.

At the time of trial, John Scinto accrued a monthly salary of $9,636, paid

biweekly. This salary equates to yearly income of $115,633. The Postal Service monthly

deducts $59 for Medicare and $669 for civil service retirement from John’s paycheck.

3 No. 37878-1-III In re Marriage of Scinto

He claims his net monthly income is $7,200 after also deducting for income taxes. John

also monthly deducts an amount from his paycheck into a voluntary retirement plan

known as a thrift savings plan.

Cindy Scinto’s physical condition overshadows other factors in this appeal. Cindy

suffers from relentless health problems requiring constant monitoring and resulting in

high medical expenses. The ailments include a heart transplant attended to coronary

artery disease, a pancreas transplant caused by type 1 diabetes, Graves’ disease with

labile thyroid levels, osteopenia, recurrent kidney stones, chronic kidney failure and

disease, sleep apnea, recurrent skin carcinoma due to the effects of immunosuppressant

treatment for the transplants, and actinic keratosis.

Cindy Scinto has endured diabetes since childhood. At a young age, she began

injecting herself with insulin through needles. She developed carpal tunnel syndrome

because the diabetes contributed to numbness and pain in her wrists and fingers. Because

of the diabetes, Cindy encountered a difficult pregnancy with the couple’s son, and her

physician placed her in the hospital for the last two months of pregnancy. Cindy needed

six months to recover from continued swelling after childbirth.

Cindy Scinto’s pregnancy resulted in a hormonal imbalance, which increased her

blood sugar imbalance. After the Scintos moved to Spokane, surgeons removed Cindy’s

uterus and ovaries. Cindy took estrogen for an unidentified time, which did not assist in

balancing her hormones or blood sugar.

4 No. 37878-1-III In re Marriage of Scinto

To end the practice of injecting herself with needles, Cindy Scinto acquired, at an

unidentified time, an insulin pump. She changes the pump’s catheter every three days.

Grave’s disease is an autoimmune disorder that impacts the thyroid. On an

unknown date, a surgeon removed Cindy Scinto’s thyroid as a result of the disease.

Cindy Scinto develops trigger fingers, an immune system response to synovial

tissue in her hands. The infirmity renders her fingers stiff and locked. Some surgeries

have ameliorated this finger ailment, but trigger fingers return on occasion. When a

finger sticks, she struggles to pry open the digit.

In 2001, son Jonathan and Cindy were jogging for his physical education

instruction. Cindy suddenly developed cramps, pain in her legs, and breathlessness. Her

chest felt crushed by an elephant. Cindy visited her family physician. An

echocardiogram, blood work, and blood pressure showed no abnormality. The physician

sent Cindy home with a diagnosis of acid reflux.

Three days later Cindy Scinto visited the emergency room at a Spokane Valley

hospital. The hospital immediately conveyed Cindy to Sacred Heart Medical Center in

Spokane. At the medical center emergency room, medical personnel performed a nuclear

treadmill test. A cardiologist diagnosed a large blockage in Cindy’s left anterior

descending artery, known as a widow maker. Personnel quickly carted Cindy to the

surgery theater, wherein a surgeon implanted stents.

5 No. 37878-1-III In re Marriage of Scinto

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