In re the Marriage of Stern

37 Fla. Supp. 2d 201
CourtCircuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida
DecidedJuly 5, 1989
DocketCase No. 64C-4751-FC (05)
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Fla. Supp. 2d 201 (In re the Marriage of Stern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida 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 Stern, 37 Fla. Supp. 2d 201 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

JON I. GORDON, Circuit Judge.

FINAL ORDER CANCELLING ARREARAGES AND TERMINATING ALIMONY

THIS MATTER came on for trial on June 13, 14 and 15, 1989. The Petitioner, Ex-Wife, MARTINA PRECIADO STERN (hereinafter referred to as “MARTINA”) seeks to have unpaid child support and alimony reduced to judgment and enforced against the Respondent, her Ex-Husband, DAVID SACHS STERN (hereinafter referred to as “DAVID”). DAVID answered with affirmatives defenses, including parental alienation, laches, estoppel and reprehensible conduct on the [202]*202part of MARTINA. DAVID also counterpetitioned for the termination of MARTINA’s alimony rights.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The parties were married August 11, 1941. They separated in 1963, after nearly twenty-two (22) years of, marriage. A Final Decree of Divorce incorporating the parties’ Property Settlement Agreement, was granted June 22, 1965 in this same action in Dade County, Florida. MARTINA received custody of the three (3) minor children, who were of the following ages at the time of the divorce:

MARY ELIZABETH, fifteen (15) years of age;

ROBERT CHARLES, thirteen (13) years of age;

ANNA MARIE, three and one-half QVi) years of age.

Another son, DAVID PRECIADO, was twenty-five (25) years of age at the time of the parties’ divorce.1

2. MARTINA remained in Miami, Florida with the children. DAVID, a law professor, pursued teaching positions at various universities and even tried opening his own law practice. Occasionally between jobs, DAVID relied upon loans from his mother, Florence Lemon. In 1974, DAVID accepted the position of Associate Dean at Lewis University College of Law in Illinois. DAVID remained with the institution until he retired and moved to Florida in 1985. DAVID’S mother, Florence Lemon died April 11, 1986 in New York. She left a Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) bequest to each of the STERN children. DAVID, as executor, had correspondence sent to MARTINA’s address in Miami in an effort to locate and advise the children of their bequest. After MARTINA learned that DAVID had received an inheritance from his mother, she filed this action in March, 1988.

3. Pursuant to the Property Settlement Agreement, DAVID was obligated to pay monthly child support and alimony,2 but was re[203]*203stricted to visitation with the minor children at Canterbury House on the University of Miami campus. MARTINA insisted upon this restriction without justifiable cause. It is manifest to the Court, from the testimony and reasonable inferences therefrom that this visitation restriction was a reflection of MARTINA’s animosity toward DAVID, calculated to construct a “barrier” between DAVID and his children.

4. DAVID sent some, but not all, support payments for two (2) years following the divorce. Thereafter, it is admitted that DAVID ceased all payment commencing January, 1968. MARTINA filed one (1) URESA Petition through the State Attorney’s Office, Dade County, Florida, in January of 1966.

This action was transmitted to the State of Washington where DAVID then resided. Apparently, after some communications between DAVID and the Prosecuting Attorney’s office in Washington, the URESA Petition was subsequently dismissed. Even though MARTINA knew, or had the opportunity to discover DAVID’s whereabouts at all times material to this action, she did not institute further enforcement proceedings until this action was commenced March 18, 1988.3

5. Immediately following the divorce, DAVID attempted to maintain contact with the children, but was blocked in his attempts by MARTINA and her influence over the children. DAVID testified that his letter to the children were returned unopened. In describing MARTINA’s attitude toward DAVID after the divorce, Professor Clifford Alloway (a friend of both parties and a godfather to the youngest son, ROBERT CHARLES), testified: “MARTINA was furious, probably madder than any woman I have ever seen.” Harriet French, godmother to the oldest daughter, MARY ELIZABETH, would personally carry gifts from DAVID to the children. These gifts were summarily rejected. MARTINA gave them away! Harriet French would advise DAVID of the children’s welfare after her visits with them. In one such letter to DAVID, Harriet French advised him that it was foolish, under the circumstances, for him to try to keep up any personal contact with his children.

6. Over several years, DAVID attempted without success to renegotiate the Property Settlement Agreement in order to secure visitation with the children. His efforts encountered resistance and indifference. MARTINA testified that upon her receiving legal documents from [204]*204DAVID’s attorney, she didn’t bother to read them, she just pitched them into the trash.

7. MARTINA admitted that she never encouraged the children to maintain contact with their father. She never encouraged any of the children to write a letter or place a phone call to DAVID. On the contrary, there is substantial evidence to conclude that MARTINA discouraged any relationship between the children and DAVID. For example, the eldest son, DAVID PREDIADO, testified that his mother, MARTINA, gave him a choice: he could continue his relationship with his father’s mother (paternal grandmother, Florence Lemon) or he could be part of the family, a family which did not include his father or his father’s mother. The testimony of MARY ELIZABETH, who appeared at trial, the videotape depositions of ANNA MARIE and DAVID, and the deposition transcript of ROBERT CHARLES, dramatically manifest that these children, raised to adulthood by MARTINA, are devoid of any feelings for their father. The expert witness in this case, Dr. Eli Levy, testified that these now-adult STERN children are suffering from “Parental Alienation Syndrome,”4 a negative and lasting emotional impact as a result of the denial of a basic psychological need during their childhood, that of a relationship with their father. Dr. Levy stated:

“They are relatively withdrawn people who are generally negative in their attitude. They are difficult. The reasons they are difficult is because they are very defensive and their defensiveness is not because they are bad people, but because they are generally insecure and inadequate.”

Dr. Levy concluded that the children were raised under the influence of parental alienation, which he described as negative messages from the mother to these children with the goal to remove or to destroy any relationship with the father.

8. MARTINA is sixty-seven (67) years of age, has never remarried, and has approximately $160,000.00 in liquid assets. She holds a one-half (iá) interest in the home in Mexico5 from which she receives [205]*205rental income. She also receives social security payments and a monthly salary from her retirement plan with Burger King Corporation. She has sufficient assets and income to enable her to live suitably without necessity of alimony from DAVID.

9. DAVID is sixty-nine (69) years old, has remarried, is retired from his teaching profession and has no income other than that generated as interest through an inheritance from his mother.

10. The children, being adults, are not legally dependent upon either party.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Fla. Supp. 2d 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-stern-flacirct-1989.