Joseph Leo Loofboro v. Teresa Marie Loofboro

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 2017
Docket330164
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joseph Leo Loofboro v. Teresa Marie Loofboro (Joseph Leo Loofboro v. Teresa Marie Loofboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Leo Loofboro v. Teresa Marie Loofboro, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JOSEPH LEO LOOFBORO, UNPUBLISHED May 18, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 330164 Allegan Circuit Court TERESA MARIE LOOFBORO, LC No. 11-048871-DO

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: MARKEY, P.J., and MURPHY and METER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Teresa Marie Loofboro, appeals by right the judgment of divorce that the trial court entered after a bench trial. Teresa argues, among other things, that the trial court erred when it awarded the marital home to plaintiff, Joseph Leo Loofboro, when it refused to order Joseph to pay spousal support, but instead allowed her to retain possession of the marital home as a form of spousal support; and erred when it inequitably divided the marital estate. For the reasons more fully explained below, we affirm the judgment of divorce in every respect, except the award of spousal support. Because the trial court clearly erred when it determined that Joseph was not working and that error likely affected the trial court’s calculation of an appropriate award of spousal support, we remand for the recalculation of the support award.

I. BASIC FACTS

Joseph and Teresa married in 1988. They had two children, who were both adults by the time of the divorce. Joseph sued Teresa for divorce in August 2011. At the time of the complaint, Joseph was 53 years of age, and Teresa was 52 years of age.

The parties led a modest lifestyle and had limited assets. Testimony and evidence showed that Teresa suffered from various ailments and received approximately $800 per month from disability. Joseph also had some health issues but was still working as a bus driver with the local school district when the parties separated. Testimony established that he earned somewhat over $1,000 per month in the previous year. Joseph, however, had an annuity that paid him more than $1,800 per month as part of a settlement. Although the marital estate included a home and acreage, the parties had only about $12,000 in equity on their real property.

The divorce proceedings dragged on for some time in part because the trial court had a congested docket but also because the parties refused to cooperate or compromise in any way.

-1- The parties also failed to conduct discovery, failed to inventory the numerous items of personal property, and did not marshal the proofs necessary to support their claims about the property disputes. The trial court held a bench trial over two days in November 2012 but was unable to complete the proofs. It continued the bench trial in May 2013. Later in May 2013, the trial court issued an interim order disposing of some personal property.

In August 2013, Joseph moved to hold Teresa in contempt of the interim order after she allegedly interfered with his attempt to retrieve property awarded to him. The trial court entered an order compelling Teresa to give Joseph access to the marital home and property in order to retrieve his property during a specified period of time. On two separate occasions in August and September 2013, Joseph forced his way into the pole barn on the marital property to take possession of personal property.

In October 2013, Teresa moved to have Joseph held in contempt for needlessly damaging the pole barn. She also alleged, among other things, that he took personal property that had not been awarded to him. In January 2014, Teresa amended her motion to include additional details and to assert that Joseph wrongfully took tens of thousands of dollars of marital property.

In May 2014, before it had resolved the newest contempt dispute, the trial court issued an opinion and order addressing the division of the marital estate, the award of spousal support, and Teresa’s request for attorney fees. The court found that the real estate had a value of $77,000 and that the parties had $12,007 in equity. It noted that the appraisal took into consideration that the home was deteriorating and had “missing roof shingles, a collapsed outbuilding, a non- functional furnace, interior mold, a well problem and questionable electrical service.” The court stated that Teresa did not convince it that she took any steps to maintain the property, let alone improve it.

The trial court determined that the real property should be awarded to Joseph, subject to Teresa’s right to possess the property for one year while Joseph continued to pay the mortgage. The court indicated that the award of possession was in lieu of spousal support. It did, however, condition her possession on the payment of property taxes and insurance. The court also ordered her to remove the mold, correct the water damage, and repair or replace the missing roof tiles, and repair or reimburse Joseph for the repair of the well from her share of the proceeds from an auction of the parties’ personal property. The court also ordered her to maintain the property during the year. The court ordered Joseph to pay Teresa one-half of her equity in the home upfront and the remaining half after she vacated the real property.

The trial court indicated that the identified personal property had been disposed by order or at the auction. It provided further that the property that had not been adequately identified at trial was awarded to the current possessor, whoever that might be. It divided the Wiser retirement account equally between the parties. The court recognized that Joseph had a retirement account with the school district that was not yet vested and found that its present value was uncertain. It nevertheless ordered Joseph to pay $1,000 over the next two years to Teresa for her share of that account and ordered the remaining value to go to Joseph.

The trial court ordered the parties to pay their own outstanding debts and authorized Joseph to pay his lawyer an amount equal to the amount paid to Teresa’s lawyer from the

-2- proceeds of the auction. The remaining balance was to be split equally. The court ordered the parties to pay their own attorney fees. It explained that neither party conducted any discovery to narrow the issues and “unjustifiably generated controversy, provoked each other, bickered . . . and thus ‘fueled the litigation fires’ to their mutual financial disadvantage.” The court also ordered each party to pay his or her own debts incurred after the separation.

The trial court found that the parties’ marriage had been deteriorating for some time and that both parties took actions to provoke the other. Accordingly, it found that neither party was significantly more at fault than the other. It also stated that neither party proved that the other was capable of working and found that it was unknown whether either would return to work. The court indicated that “equity warranted” an award of spousal support to Teresa, but stated that it was awarding her possession of the home for one year in lieu of spousal support and that the award would be “modifiable after one year and terminate[d] upon death or remarriage or cohabitation . . . with an unrelated male.” It also “found” that Teresa had “in effect” been receiving temporary spousal support by her exclusive use of the marital home for the past three years. Finally, the court stated that, barring a significant change, such as Joseph’s return to work, it would not order additional spousal support after the first year.

The trial court signed the judgment of divorce on June 10, 2014. The judgment was for the most part consistent with the court’s opinion and order. The court specified in the judgment that Teresa would have her sole occupancy from May 7, 2014, to May 7, 2015. It also wrote that the Wiser retirement account would be divided “equitably” rather than equally.

In June 2015, after the trial court denied her motion for relief from judgment, Teresa appealed by right the judgment of divorce in this Court.

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Joseph Leo Loofboro v. Teresa Marie Loofboro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-leo-loofboro-v-teresa-marie-loofboro-michctapp-2017.