J.D.H. v. P.A.H.

882 N.E.2d 348, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 285, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 208
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 2008
DocketNo. 06-P-965
StatusPublished

This text of 882 N.E.2d 348 (J.D.H. v. P.A.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.D.H. v. P.A.H., 882 N.E.2d 348, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 285, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 208 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Brown, J.

J.D.H., the former husband of P.A.H., appeals from a judgment of divorce nisi of the Probate and Family Court that, in pertinent part, divides the parties’ property, allocates the “marital debt,” and orders the husband to pay alimony to the wife in the amount of $250 per week. We affirm the judgment.

[286]*2861. Background. In February, 2004, the husband filed a complaint for divorce alleging an irretrievable breakdown of the parties’ thirty-year marriage. Following the issuance of temporary orders (including an order requiring the husband to pay alimony to the wife in the amount of $100 per week), the husband filed a motion, assented to by the wife, to appoint a guardian ad litem (G.A.L.) for purposes of investigating the mental competency of the wife and her ability to understand the nature and consequences of the divorce proceedings. The motion was allowed by a probate judge and an order was issued appointing a G.A.L. and directing that the G.A.L. be paid from the cash surrender value of a life insurance policy owned by the wife.

Some three months after the appointment of the G.A.L., the husband filed a complaint for contempt alleging that the wife had failed to meet the G.A.L. and that the wife, in fact, had cashed in her life insurance policy without paying the G.A.L. Thereafter, the wife moved to reassess the need for a G.A.L. (citing her lack of ability to pay the G.A.L. and asserting that she had agreed to the appointment on the belief that her life insurance policy had a cash surrender value). On September 7, 2005, the judge terminated the appointment of the G.A.L.1 On the judge’s order, a judgment entered dismissing the husband’s complaint for contempt.

On November 28, 2005, the day scheduled for trial of the divorce complaint, the husband filed a “motion in limine to preclude [the wife] from introducing evidence at trial including any documentary evidence and evidence of her psychological condition.”2 The motion was allowed and the case was heard. After the issuance of the judgment of divorce nisi, the husband [287]*287filed his notice of appeal. Upon the entry of the appeal in this court, and at the suggestion of the husband, we remanded the matter to the Probate and Family Court with directions that the judge make detailed findings of fact and explicate the reasons for his decision. The judge has now filed his findings, which we summarize below.

The parties were married in September, 1974, and last lived together in January, 2004. Two children were bom of the union, both of whom were adults at the time of trial.

The husband is fifty-four years old and is in good health. For the past twenty-eight years, he has owned and operated a bakery sales company (valued at $75,000) in which he picks up and delivers bakery products and makes a profit on the markup. The husband earns $885 per week in salary and an average of $200 per week from overtime and commissions. The husband has been carrying the costs of two households (i.e., the former marital home and the apartment in which he resides) and lists his weekly expenses at $1,010.63 per week.

The wife is fifty years old and, the judge found, has had ongoing “mental health issues.”3 During the early years of the marriage, the wife cared for the parties’ children. She later sold real estate and worked as a teller and in customer service for banks and credit unions. During the last four years of the mar[288]*288riage, the wife worked as a procurement technician with the United States Department of Defense, earning $34,917 annually. She left that job in July, 2004, because she felt “unsafe and uncomfortable” at her workplace.4 By reason of the wife leaving her employment, the parties lost their health insurance (which had been provided through the wife) and the wife subsequently incurred $38,000 in uninsured medical expenses as a result of her treatment at McLean Hospital (see note 3, supra). The wife’s attempts to revive her real estate career5 and to obtain other employment since leaving the Department of Defense have been unsuccessful. At the time of trial, the wife’s only source of income was the $100 she received each week from the husband as temporary alimony.

The primary asset owned by the parties is the former marital home, which has an equity value of $370,697. The parties enjoyed a modest middle class lifestyle during the marriage. The judge concluded that the wife’s over-all employment prospects are poor and that her “mental health issues will continue to impede her ability to find and maintain consistent work, so as to allow her to meaningfully produce income sufficient for her needs for the foreseeable future.” The judge found that the wife requires support from the husband to maintain even a modest standard of living. Moreover, the judge found that upon the sale of the former marital home (which was on the market at the time of trial), the husband’s weekly expenses should diminish substantially and that he has the ability to pay support to the wife. The judge also concluded that the unpaid medical expenses (in the amount of $38,000) incurred by the wife since the parties’ separation were properly marital debts.

The judgment of divorce nisi, entered December 12, 2005, ordered in pertinent part that the husband receive full ownership of his business, that the wife receive fifty-eight percent and the husband forty-two percent of the net proceeds from the sale of the former marital home,6 and that the husband pay the wife as [289]*289alimony the sum of $250 per week (which sum was to be taxable to the wife and deductible by the husband). The judgment stated that the judge had considered all of the factors specified in G. L. c. 208, § 34, including the parties’ health.

2. Discussion, a. The alimony award. A primary thrust of the husband’s argument is that the alimony award must be set aside as it is based on the judge’s improper judicial notice of facts concerning the wife’s mental health that were contained in his pretrial memorandum (see note 1, supra). The husband’s argument is essentially two-pronged. First, he asserts that “[d]espite allowing a [mjotion in [fjimine regarding the exclusion of all evidence of wife’s mental health history for purposes of determining alimony, the [judge] in fact considered, gave weight to, and ultimately determined alimony based upon the excluded evidence” (emphasis supplied). In the husband’s view, the judge, in essence, allowed the wife to circumvent the order requiring a mental health investigation and violated its own “curative” order.7 Second, the husband appears to assert that the facts concerning the wife’s mental health issues were not a proper subject for judicial notice, which requires that the facts be so commonly known in the community as to be indisputable among reasonable persons or, if not generally known, that they are capable of immediate and accurate verification by resort to easily accessible and authoritative sources. See Bostwick v. Hurstel, 364 Mass. 282, 293 n. 3 (1973); Yankee Atomic Elec. Co. v. Secretary of the Commonwealth, 403 Mass. 203, 208 (1988); Commonwealth v. Barrett, 1 Mass. App. Ct. 332, 334-335 (1973). See also Brodin & Avery, Massachusetts Evidence § 2.8 (8th ed. 2007); Young, Pollets, & Poreda, Evidence § 201.1 (2d ed. 1998).

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Bluebook (online)
882 N.E.2d 348, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 285, 2008 Mass. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jdh-v-pah-massappct-2008.