RAMESH GUDUR v. KAVITHA GUDUR

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 28, 2019
Docket16-3127
StatusPublished

This text of RAMESH GUDUR v. KAVITHA GUDUR (RAMESH GUDUR v. KAVITHA GUDUR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RAMESH GUDUR v. KAVITHA GUDUR, (Fla. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

RAMESH GUDUR, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D16-3127 ) KAVITHA GUDUR, ) ) Appellee. ) ___________________________________)

Opinion filed June 28, 2019.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Collier County; Mary C. Evans, Judge.

Allison M. Perry of Florida Appeals, P.A., Tampa; and Cary A. Cliff of Cary Alan Cliff, P.A., Naples, for Appellant.

Cynthia L. Greene of Cynthia L. Greene, P.A., of counsel, Young, Berman, Karpf & Gonzalez, P.A., Miami; and Jeffrey C. Quinn, Naples, for Appellee.

SILBERMAN, Judge.

Ramesh Gudur (the Former Husband) appeals an amended final

judgment of dissolution of marriage (the Judgment). He challenges the equitable

distribution, the alimony that Kavitha Gudur (the Former Wife) was ordered to pay, and

the denial of his request for an award of attorney's fees, raising five issues. We affirm to the extent that the Judgment dissolves the parties' marriage. We also affirm regarding

the Former Husband's debt to Deloitte and Touche because the Former Husband has

shown no entitlement to relief. However, we reverse the equitable distribution and

remand for the trial court to reconsider the distribution of the Former Wife's interest in a

medical building and the Former Husband's student loans incurred during the marriage.

After the trial court reconsiders the equitable distribution, it must also reconsider the

alimony award to the Former Husband and his request for attorney's fees.

The parties were married in January 1998. They have one daughter who

was a minor at the time of trial but who has since reached the age of majority. The

Former Wife filed the petition for dissolution of marriage on October 10, 2012. Their

marriage of over fourteen years is of moderate duration. See § 61.08(4), Fla. Stat.

(2012). At the time of trial, the Former Wife was forty-six years old, and the Former

Husband was sixty years old.

The Former Wife was a medical student and moved to the United States

from India after the parties married. They lived in Houston, Texas, where the Former

Husband was working and attending law school. In 2000, after the Former Husband

was fired from his job, the parties moved to Brooklyn, New York, for the Former Wife to

complete her internal medicine residency. During the period of 2000-2003, the Former

Husband did not work continuously and was unemployed for about eighteen months.

After the Former Wife completed her residency, the parties moved to Florida.

The Former Wife practiced as an internist with the Naples Medical Center.

She has a 6.4% ownership interest in Naples Medical & Professional Center, Inc., which

owns the building that formerly housed the Naples Medical Center. By the time of trial,

-2- the Former Wife was working for herself at Wellness Dimensions, LLC, and at a

chemical dependency rehabilitation facility. Based on the evidence presented, including

her expert's testimony, the trial court determined that her gross monthly income was

$31,600 per month. Her net monthly income, as shown on the child support guidelines

worksheet, was $17,322.22.

The Former Husband had an MBA degree when the parties married, and

he completed law school in July 1999. When the parties moved to Florida, he first

worked as an attorney for the Florida Department of Health. Later, he obtained

employment as an assistant public defender in Naples. He worked there for seven and

a half years until he resigned in September 2011. The Former Husband had taught

college classes as an adjunct in the past, and he entered a Ph.D. program so that he

could work as a professor. He was terminated from the Ph.D. program in 2013. The

Former Husband remained unemployed at the time the trial concluded in November

2015.

The Former Husband was making close to $50,000 per year when he left

his employment as an assistant public defender. At trial, the Former Wife presented a

vocational rehabilitation and career counselor who evaluated the Former Husband and

testified regarding the Former Husband's job search and earning potential.

The trial court ordered an equitable distribution that awarded each party

$361,194. The court did not find the Former Husband's testimony regarding his job

search credible and imputed income of $3000 per month to the Former Husband. The

court awarded to the Former Husband durational alimony for seven years of $5000 per

month and denied the Former Husband's request for attorney's fees.

-3- I. EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION

The trial court made an equitable distribution that awarded $361,194 to

each party. Thus, in accordance with the premise of section 61.075(1), the trial court

sought to equally distribute the marital assets and liabilities. We conduct a de novo

review of the "trial court's characterization of an asset as marital or nonmarital" but

review for competent substantial evidence the "factual findings necessary to make this

legal conclusion." Dravis v. Dravis, 170 So. 3d 849, 852 (Fla. 2d DCA 2015). We also

review the trial court's valuation of marital assets for competent substantial evidence to

support the valuation. Id. at 853. The trial court's distribution of the marital assets and

liabilities is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Cooley v. Cooley, 253 So. 3d 1223,

1226 (Fla. 2d DCA 2018). Here, the distribution of one asset and one liability that the

Former Husband contests requires that we reverse the equitable distribution and

remand for further proceedings.

A. Interest of 6.4% in Naples Medical & Professional Center, Inc.

The Former Wife owns a minority interest of 6.4% in Naples Medical &

Professional Center, Inc. She presented competent substantial evidence of the value of

her minority interest via expert testimony. The expert, taking into account the minority

interest, employed a discount for a lack of control and lack of marketability and

determined the value of the Former Wife's 6.4% interest to be $380,000. The trial court

distributed the asset as follows:

The Wife's approximate 6.4% ownership in Naples Medical & Professional Center, Inc. is a marital asset that is split equally between the parties. The corresponding liability is shown as the Wife's responsibility because it will be her responsibility whether she makes payments now or whether the amount is deducted from her share at a future sale. The Husband received less distribution

-4- from the Wife's Millennium Physician's 401k to make up for not being responsible for the repayment of the NM&PC liability. The Husband shall be distributed $190,000.00 upon the Wife's receiving her approximate 6.4% share of NM&PC. The Wife is not responsible for paying the Husband his share unless and until her approximate 6.4% is turned into cash funds or is otherwise liquidated. If any cash calls occur and the Wife is required to remit maintenance funds, she shall remit 100% of the amount called for and she shall receive a credit for one-half of those amounts from the $190,000.00 to be distributed to the Husband pursuant to this order.

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RAMESH GUDUR v. KAVITHA GUDUR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramesh-gudur-v-kavitha-gudur-fladistctapp-2019.