John J. Cronan v. Laurie A. Cronan

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 24, 2024
Docket22-219
StatusPublished

This text of John J. Cronan v. Laurie A. Cronan (John J. Cronan v. Laurie A. Cronan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John J. Cronan v. Laurie A. Cronan, (R.I. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2022-219-Appeal. (P 20-2673)

John J. Cronan :

v. :

Laurie A. Cronan. :

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published. Supreme Court

Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.

OPINION

Chief Justice Suttell, for the Court. This appeal concerns the divorce of the

plaintiff, John Cronan, and the defendant, Laurie Cronan. The defendant appeals

from a decision pending entry of final judgment entered by the general magistrate of

the Family Court. On appeal, the defendant argues that the general magistrate was

not authorized to preside over the parties’ contested divorce trial. The defendant

additionally contends that the general magistrate erred with respect to the merits of

his decision. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the decision of the

Family Court.

I

Facts and Travel

The plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce on July 8, 2020, citing

“irreconcilable differences that exist between the parties which have caused the

irremediable breakdown of the marriage.” The parties were married in July 2006

-1- and have no children together. Although the complaint requested that the case be

placed on the nominal track calendar, matters soon became contested and the case

was scheduled for trial. A justice of the Family Court heard several motions at the

outset of the litigation, but the case was eventually assigned to the general

magistrate, who presided over all subsequent proceedings.1

The trial commenced in October 2021 and was heard over five days. Five

witnesses testified at trial, including both parties. We set forth only the testimony

relevant to the issues on appeal.

The plaintiff presented Paul St. Onge, a certified public accountant, to testify

as to the value of plaintiff’s premarital assets. St. Onge testified that he has known

plaintiff since 1983 and defendant since 2007. He testified that he, in the past,

prepared tax returns for both parties and that he continues to prepare plaintiff’s tax

returns. St. Onge affirmed that “there c[a]me a time when John Cronan asked [him]

to put together a list or a summary of investment assets or accounts that [plaintiff]

had in June of 2006, which would be prior to John and Laurie’s marriage on July

4th, 2006[,]” and that he complied with this request.

According to the document St. Onge prepared, plaintiff’s funds totaled

$1,755,506.34 on June 30, 2006, prior to his marriage to defendant. St. Onge further

1 At no point during the hearings before the general magistrate did defendant object to having the general magistrate preside over the proceedings.

-2- testified as to how he prepared the document, stating that he has “a system that keeps

track of asset values on a daily basis. It keeps track of all transactions.” He testified

that this information was pulled “electronically” rather than from paper files and that

he went into his portfolio accounting system where the information is stored to

prepare the document. He further explained that plaintiff’s largest asset—his 401(k)

from Rhode Island Medical Imaging (RIMI)—was managed by Prudential Financial

in 2006 and that he submitted a request to Prudential for a statement as to that asset,

but was told that it might take a few weeks for Prudential to provide the statement.

Defense counsel objected to the document prepared by St. Onge being entered

as a full exhibit, arguing that it is not the best evidence; he suggested that statements

from Prudential would be the best evidence. Counsel for plaintiff countered that the

document was “a business record.” When questioned by the general magistrate, St.

Onge affirmed that the document is “a true and accurate record of what [he] pulled

off, the data from the databases, what the value of the accounts were” and that “[i]t’s

not a situation where [he] took the values today and tried to extrapolate back to what

they were[;] those were actual records that [he] pulled information from[.]” St. Onge

then explained that he had records dating back to the 1990s, but that paper statements

ceased to exist after 2003, when he switched to electronic means. The general

magistrate allowed the document to be entered as a full exhibit and indicated that,

-3- “with respect to the assets, if paper verification from [Prudential] can be generated,

you should submit that.” It does not appear that those statements were produced.

The plaintiff then called Jane McAuliffe, a certified divorce financial analyst,

to testify on the issue of defendant’s entitlement to alimony.2 In her testimony,

McAuliffe stated that she “work[s] with clients one on one and help[s] them navigate

the division of assets and budgeting and cash flow as they proceed through divorce.”

Her process involves three steps: (1) budgeting and identifying the client’s expenses

and cash flow; (2) identifying and quantifying the makeup of the marital estate; and

(3) financial planning, money management, and tax planning. As noted by the

general magistrate, McAuliffe “formulated a financial plan for [defendant] based on

a life expectancy of age of 90, suggested assets of $3,946,605 from the marriage,

and a listing of expenses identified in [defendant’s] DR-6.”

McAuliffe also testified that she did not include employment income for

defendant in formulating her plan. Furthermore, she testified that, based on her

projections—with an estimated 5.3 percent rate of return and with a budget of

$163,000 a year, which includes taxes, healthcare, and lifestyle expenses—

defendant would have an estimated $5.5 million left over upon turning ninety.

2 Although it does not appear from the transcript that plaintiff’s counsel moved to qualify McAuliffe as an expert witness, it is clear from the transcript and from the decision that the court accepted her as an expert witness and treated her as such. Furthermore, her experience and qualifications were thoroughly laid out in the record.

-4- McAuliffe additionally noted that 5.3 percent was “conservative” and that if

defendant “stays a little bit more growth oriented in the investments and the market

keeps on returning positively, she would do better than this scenario.”

The defendant called John E. Barrett, Jr., a certified public accountant, who

was qualified as an expert and testified as to the value of plaintiff’s equity interest

in RIMI. Barrett testified that he was hired to give the valuations for the dates of

June 30, 2021, and June 30, 2006. Barrett testified that, in preparing his report, he

spoke with the certified public accountant for RIMI, and he reviewed “financial

statements prepared by the certified public accounting firm for the calendar years

December 31st, 2016 through December 31st, 202[0]”; “[t]he federal corporate

income tax returns for the calendar years December 31st, 2016 through December

31st, 2020”; “internal year-to-date financial information for the company through

June 30th, 2021”; and “a forecast for the company for 2021.”

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John J. Cronan v. Laurie A. Cronan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-j-cronan-v-laurie-a-cronan-ri-2024.