Kogod v. Cioffi-Kogod

439 P.3d 397
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 2019
DocketNo. 71147; No. 71994
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 439 P.3d 397 (Kogod v. Cioffi-Kogod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kogod v. Cioffi-Kogod, 439 P.3d 397 (Neb. 2019).

Opinion

By the Court, PICKERING, J.:

This is a divorce action with a $ 47 million community property estate, in which the district court awarded alimony not based on need and also unequally distributed the parties' community property due to one spouse's extramarital affairs, gifts to family, and excess spending. In this opinion, we recognize that alimony can be just and equitable even when not based on financial need, but we reverse the alimony award in this case because the receiving spouse's share of community property will produce passive income sufficient to maintain her marital standard of living. We also hold that community funds spent on extramarital affairs are dissipated such that the district court has a compelling reason to make an unequal disposition of community property. Finally, this opinion addresses whether monetary sanctions were appropriate for expenditures in violation of the automatic joint preliminary injunction ordering the parties not to spend money outside the usual course of business; whether expert witness and attorney fees were warranted; and when a community property estate properly ends. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

I.

Dennis Kogod and Gabrielle Cioffi-Kogod married in 1991 in New York City. They lived in various cities throughout their marriage, moving each time to advance Dennis's career in the healthcare industry. In 2003, Dennis and Gabrielle moved to Las Vegas. Dennis worked for a healthcare company based in southern California and Gabrielle worked part-time in Las Vegas as a nurse consultant. Dennis traveled frequently for work and spent his weekdays either traveling or at his office in southern California. He spent most weekends with Gabrielle in Las Vegas.

Dennis and Gabrielle considered themselves upper-middle class until 2004, when Dennis took a more senior role at his company. By 2009, Dennis was promoted to Chief Operating Officer of a Fortune 500 healthcare company. With his new promotion, he *400earned an average base salary of $ 800,000 per year, but received bonuses that put his average annual income at almost $ 14,000,000. Gabrielle, as a part-time nurse consultant, earned approximately $ 55,000 per year. Dennis describes this time period after he and Gabrielle moved to Las Vegas as one in which they were essentially living separate lives, but Gabrielle disputes Dennis's characterization and claims that they spoke every day, sometimes multiple times a day.

Unknown to Gabrielle, Dennis had started a separate family in southern California. He met Nadya in November 2004 and by June 2005 they participated in a wedding-type ceremony in Mexico. Shortly after, Dennis informed Nadya he was already married. Despite this, Dennis and Nadya remained together and, after participating in in-vitro fertilization, had twin girls in 2007. Dennis paid for all of Nadya's and his daughters' expenses, including a condominium in southern California, luxury cars, shopping trips and vacations, cosmetic surgery, and Nadya's college classes-he even invested in a business on Nadya's behalf. Dennis and Nadya remained together until 2015 when Nadya discovered that Dennis had another girlfriend.

Dennis initially filed for divorce from Gabrielle in 2010, but the action was dismissed and the couple instead became informally separated as of July 2010. Gabrielle then filed this divorce action in December 2013, at which time she still did not know about Dennis's extramarital family. Had Dennis and Gabrielle divorced in 2010 when they informally separated, just one year after Dennis was promoted to COO, the marital estate would have been significantly smaller than the approximately $ 47 million ultimately divided by the district court.

The district court entered its divorce decree in August 2016. Because the district court previously awarded more than $ 6 million to each Gabrielle and Dennis as separate property throughout the divorce proceedings, $ 35 million of community property remained in the marital estate. Due to Dennis's expenditures on extramarital affairs, gifts to his family during the divorce proceedings, and spending in excess of his self-declared expenses, the district court found that Dennis dissipated $ 4,087,863 in community property and unequally divided the parties' community property on that basis. The district court also awarded Gabrielle alimony in the lump sum of $ 1,630,292 to compensate for economic losses as a result of the marriage and divorce, but recognized that she did not need alimony to support herself. In total, Gabrielle, 58 years old, received nearly $ 21 million in the divorce decree and Dennis, 57 years old, received just under $ 14 million. Gabrielle received mostly cash assets, which she does not contest can passively earn her between $ 500,000 and $ 800,000 per year, whereas Dennis's assets largely consist of real property.

In addition to the unequal disposition of community property and the alimony award, the district court sanctioned Dennis $ 19,500 for purported violations of an automatic joint preliminary injunction and awarded $ 75,650 in expert witness costs to Gabrielle to pay for the forensic accounting firm that analyzed over 27,200 of her and Dennis's financial transactions from between 2008 and 2016. Dennis appealed from the district court's orders, and Gabrielle cross-appealed.

II.

Dennis first challenges the award of alimony to Gabrielle. Permanent alimony is financial support paid from one spouse to the other for a specified period of time, or in a lump sum, following a divorce. NRS 125.150(1)(a) ; Rodriguez v. Rodriguez , 116 Nev. 993, 999, 13 P.3d 415, 419 (2000) ("Alimony is financial support paid from one spouse to the other whenever justice and equity require it."). When granting a divorce, a district court may award alimony to either spouse "as appears just and equitable." NRS 125.150(1)(a). The decision of whether to award alimony is within the discretion of the district court. Buchanan v. Buchanan, 90 Nev. 209, 215, 523 P.2d 1, 5 (1974) ("In determining whether alimony should be paid, as well as the amount thereof, courts are vested with a wide range of discretion.").

When determining if alimony is just and equitable, a district court must consider *401the eleven factors listed in NRS 125.150(9).1 See DeVries v. Gallio, 128 Nev. 706, 711-13, 290 P.3d 260, 264-65 (2012).

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Bluebook (online)
439 P.3d 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kogod-v-cioffi-kogod-nev-2019.