Reiss v. Reiss

478 A.2d 441, 195 N.J. Super. 150
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 23, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 478 A.2d 441 (Reiss v. Reiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiss v. Reiss, 478 A.2d 441, 195 N.J. Super. 150 (N.J. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

195 N.J. Super. 150 (1984)
478 A.2d 441

RONALD A. REISS, PLAINTIFF,
v.
SHERRY A. REISS, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division Somerset County.

Decided January 23, 1984.

*154 W.S. Gerald Skey for plaintiff (Sterns, Herbert & Weinroth, attorneys).

Donald M. Lomurro for defendant (Lomurro, Eastman & Collins, attorneys).

IMBRIANI, J.S.C.

"Reimbursement alimony" received the approbation of the Supreme Court in a trilogy of cases including Mahoney v. Mahoney, 91 N.J. 488 (1982) which recognized the inequities arising when one spouse finances the education of the other, and then shortly after a professional degree is received, the parties divorce. When this occurs, Mahoney stated:

there will be circumstances where a supporting spouse should be reimbursed for the financial contributions he or she made to the spouse's successful professional training. [at 501]

Remaining to be resolved is precisely what expenses are to be reimbursed and how should they be calculated, appreciating as we must, that since the expenses were incurred many years earlier, records of actual expenses will generally be attenuated or unavailable.

Dr. & Mrs. Reiss met while both were freshman in college, got "pinned" in their sophomore year and married immediately following graduation. While in college they agreed to do everything possible to obtain a medical degree for the husband. She received a degree in mathematics, with a minor in computer sciences, and after graduation she postponed graduate school to become the sole wage earner while he devoted full time to his medical studies in Madrid, Spain, where they lived from September 1973 until he graduated in July 1978 when they returned to the United States.

In Spain they lived modestly in a one bedroom apartment in the center of town. In addition to the normal amenities of life they were able to attend movies and ballets, occasionally dine out and generally took two European trips each year to ski or sightsee. Once they went on a lengthy trip to Greece which *155 cost $2,000. In Spain the wife earned $3,500 in 1973, $11,000 in 1974, $14,000 in 1975, $16,000 in 1976, $20,000 in 1977 and $19,829 for the partial year 1978, or a total income of $84,329. During this entire period the husband earned nothing, although his father did send some money that was used to pay some of the tuition bills. They returned to the United States with no savings and minimal personal property.

Upon returning to the United States the wife began taking evening courses to obtain a Masters-in-Business-Administration (MBA) degree which she still has not received. She testified that in her opinion, without an MBA, she will be unable to advance further in her profession.

The husband completed his residency requirements, then became associated with a hospital medical group and recently entered into private practice. His earnings in 1978 were only $4,426, but increased substantially thereafter and will approximate $70,000 in 1983. The marriage which was a happy one in Spain, began to deteriorate after they returned to the United States and finally ruptured in June 1982 when they separated — which coincidentally was the day after the husband completed his residency. There were no children.

The wife seeks: 1. reimbursement alimony of $80,829, which represents her full income in Spain less $3,500 used for vacations; 2. rehabilitative alimony to enable her to obtain an MBA degree; and 3. permanent alimony because she believes he is now and will continue generating greater income than she.

She now has an excellent position as a staff manager at American Telephone and Telegraph Co. (AT & T) at an annual salary of $46,500. And it remains unclear whether she will continue evening courses or leave her employment to attend classes full time. In the latter event, even she admitted, it would be extremely difficult to match her present position and salary. She appeared very reluctant to resign and the court is satisfied that not only would it be unwise for her to do, but also highly unlikely that she would.

*156 Rehabilitative alimony which was sanctioned by Turner v. Turner, 158 N.J. Super. 313 (Ch.Div. 1978) and Lepis v. Lepis, 83 N.J. 139, 155, n. 9 (1980) is not applicable here. A spouse who earns $46,500 per year which enables her to live comparably, if not higher, than the standard of living to which she became accustomed during coverture does not need rehabilitation. While she is entitled to receive funds from the marital assets before distribution to enable her to complete her education, this does not constitute rehabilitative alimony. The two philosophies are dissimilar. The husband used marital assets to educate and advance himself and she is entitled to do likewise. While she would be entitled to rehabilitative alimony if she left AT & T to attend college full time (which would be in addition to the marital assets given to her to finance the costs thereof), since it is unlikely that she will leave AT & T, it is not needed here. At most she will need sufficient marital assets, before they are equitably distributed, to pay the costs of obtaining an MBA degree to the extent they are not paid by her employer.

And for the same reasons permanent alimony must also be denied. Her present annual income is greater than their joint incomes in every year from 1973 through 1980. Her 1983 income is almost double what she earned in 1980 and is sufficient to enable her to live in the same, if not better, style than the one to which she became accustomed during coverture.

Nonetheless, as clearly as rehabilitative and permanent alimony do not apply, the evidence in this case unmistakably requires an award for reimbursement alimony. Indeed, this is the precise type of case envisioned by Mahoney for such a remedy. The only valuable asset accumulated during the marriage through the joint efforts of the parties is the husband's increased earning capacity. It would be unfair and inequitable to hold this asset free of the claim by his wife. The husband took:

the benefits of his spouse's support in obtaining a professional degree, with the understanding that future benefits will accrue and inure to both them, and *157 [since] the marriage ... [has been] terminated without the supported spouse giving anything in return, an unfairness has occurred that calls for a remedy. [91 N.J. at 500]

The only genuine issue is in what amount. The husband argues that at best it should be the rather minimal education expenses at medical school (which he asserted were paid with his own savings and gifts from his father) and, perhaps, the estimated household expenses for rent and utilities in Spain which totalled $9,436.

The theories under which reimbursement alimony has been awarded vary widely. One group of states holds that a professional degree constitutes a "marital asset" subject to equitable distribution, which is valued by determining the present value of the "additional earnings" that could be expected during his or her lifetime. This sum could be substantial. For instance, a Massachusetts trial court recently determined that the present value of the additional earnings which a doctor in his 20's with an orthodontic degree would earn in his lifetime was $800,000. See "Whose Law Degree Is It?," National Law Journal, Nov. 28, 1983, at 1, 7. This philosophy was rejected by Mahoney

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