Randazzo v. Randazzo

875 A.2d 916, 184 N.J. 101, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 811
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 28, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 875 A.2d 916 (Randazzo v. Randazzo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randazzo v. Randazzo, 875 A.2d 916, 184 N.J. 101, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 811 (N.J. 2005).

Opinion

Justice WALLACE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This matrimonial action presents the issue of whether a trial court may order the sale of marital real property prior to a final judgment of divorce. We hold that a trial court has the equitable power to order such a sale and, if the circumstances warrant, to order the proceeds be distributed to serve the best interests of the parties.

I.

We recite the facts pertinent to the disposition of this appeal. Plaintiff Laura Randazzo and defendant Joseph J. Randazzo, Jr. were married on November 14, 1954. The parties have two emancipated children. Plaintiff and defendant both graduated high school. Although defendant did not have any subsequent education, plaintiff studied accounting at Bloomfield College for two years.

In 1961, the parties acquired commercial property and an adjoining two-family residence in Clifton, New Jersey. They operated an auto repair facility and a licensed used car dealership at that location. Defendant repaired and sold high-end cars and plaintiff did the bookkeeping for the businesses as well as becom *103 ing a realtor in 1978. The businesses grew to gross between $350,000 and $400,000 annually. A substantial part of that income resulted from a towing contract "with the City of Clifton that grossed approximately $100,000 annually. The parties also leased out commercial building space at the Clifton location. In 1975, they purchased a home in Montclair, New Jersey, and later they purchased a vacation home in Sanibel, Florida (the Florida property).

Subsequently, the parties acquired a fifty-two-acre horse farm in Hardwick Township, New Jersey, that contained a track, barn, horse paddocks, and other features conducive to raising and training about seventy race horses. In 1992, defendant’s mother gifted to the parties a home on Louise Street in Clifton, subject to a life estate in her favor. The following year the parties sold their Montclair home and purchased their final marital home next to the horse farm in Hardwick Township. The parties also bought a 3.2-acre lot adjacent to the marital home and a twenty-seven-acre lot consisting of mostly wetlands. Since 1993, plaintiff has managed and worked on the horse farm full time, but has earned little or no profit.

After approximately forty-three years of marriage, plaintiff filed for divorce on July 28,1997. At the time of the filing, plaintiff was sixty-one years old and defendant was sixty-four years old. In her Case Information Statement, plaintiff listed no monthly income and $13,482.86 in monthly expenses. She also listed $2,802,190 in net assets and $440,916.32 in liabilities. The parties’ real estate included

(1) the commercial property in Clifton, including the two-family residence;
(2) the horse farm and wetlands;
(3) the marital residence and adjacent 3.2-acre lot;
(4) the Florida property; and
(5) the Clifton house that defendant’s mother gifted to both parties subject to a life estate.

After filing for divorce, plaintiff obtained defendant’s consent to sell the Florida property. Afterwards, defendant resisted the sale and plaintiff filed a motion, among other things, for the sale of the *104 Florida property, pendente lite support, and appraisals of the real estate owned by the parties. In his answering certification, defendant acknowledged that he and plaintiff had worked hard to obtain considerable economic wealth, but that the loss of the towing contract with the City of Clifton had reduced their income and had caused them to exhaust their savings. He claimed that an appraisal of the Clifton commercial property had not been undertaken because neither party had the money to pay for it. Further, he asserted that plaintiffs operation of the horse farm was a drain on their finances and until they liquidated their assets, primarily the Florida property, there would be no money available for support. He acknowledged the need to liquidate assets to raise cash and admitted that he had agreed to sign the listing agreement for the sale of the Florida property.

The motion court ordered defendant to pay temporary support of $200 a week, to obtain appraisals of the residential and business real estate properties, and to pay the real estate taxes for the properties in Clifton. The court noted in the paragraph of the order authorizing the sale of the Florida property that plaintiffs request was “moot,” presumably because defendant had agreed to the sale.

After defendant failed to pay the temporary alimony, plaintiff moved for additional support and other relief. On September 11, 1998, the court entered an order denying plaintiffs request for additional support, authorizing plaintiff to collect rent from the Clifton residential and commercial properties, and requiring the parties to list the horse farm and the Clifton commercial property for sale. In addition, plaintiff was authorized to sign defendant’s name to the listing agreements if he refused to do so.

In October 1998, plaintiff filed an Order to Show Cause seeking authorization to sign the agreement of sale and to execute all closing documents for the Florida property, to pay the delinquent taxes on all of their real estate holdings' with the proceeds, and to evenly divide the balance. Defendant certified in response that he had signed the agreement of sale for the Florida property, but *105 that he would not release the agreement until they reached an understanding regarding the disbursement of the proceeds. Defendant, in part, sought to use the proceeds to pay the outstanding tax liens on the Clifton properties in excess of $100,000, and the unpaid taxes on the farm and the marital residence.

The trial court granted plaintiffs request to sign the agreement of sale and the closing documents necessary for the sale of the Florida property. The court also required plaintiffs counsel, after paying the outstanding real estate tax liens on the New Jersey real estate, to place the net proceeds of the sale in a trust account. Subsequently, on December 14, 1998, the motion court authorized additional disbursements from the proceeds from the sale of the Florida property to pay certain obligations.

Trial on the outstanding issues of equitable distribution and alimony was conducted on various dates from June 14, 1999, to January 14, 2000. During that time, the trial court entered several additional orders compelling defendant to pay real estate taxes, interest, and penalties owed on the farm and the commercial property. At the conclusion of the trial, the parties requested an “early decision” limited to a determination of which offer the parties should accept for the sale of the Clifton commercial property and whether the horse farm should be listed for sale separately or with the marital home.

On January 81, 2000, the trial court rendered a written decision directing which offer should be accepted for the Clifton commercial property and ordering that the farm should be sold separate from the marital home. Eventually, the parties agreed to sell the Clifton commercial property to a different buyer.

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Bluebook (online)
875 A.2d 916, 184 N.J. 101, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randazzo-v-randazzo-nj-2005.