Richman v. Richman

555 N.E.2d 243, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 655, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 299
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 6, 1990
DocketNo. 89-P-73
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 555 N.E.2d 243 (Richman v. Richman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richman v. Richman, 555 N.E.2d 243, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 655, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 299 (Mass. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

This divorce proceeding is closely related to Apostolicas Properties Corp. v. Richman, post 671 (1990), and has been decided by the same panel of this court.

A. Procedural Background

Nanette Richman (the wife) brought this divorce proceeding in the Norfolk County Probate Court on December 29, 1986, by a complaint alleging cruel and abusive treatment and adultery. This complaint was amended on February 23, 1988, during the trial, at the suggestion of the presiding judge, to assert the ground of irretrievable breakdown of the [656]*656marriage upon which the judgments nisi were granted on March 4, 1988.1 Richman (the husband) filed a cross complaint alleging cruel and abusive treatment, amended in similar fashion on the husband’s motion allowed February 5, 1988. There was a period in 1987 and early 1988 of pretrial discovery, cross motions, and various controversies of counsel, all supervised by a special master. He was designated by the probate judge assigned to hear the case to avoid the undue use of his own time as counsel “squabbled over the proper scope of discovery.” The litigation culminated in ten court days of trial (February 3-23, 1988).

The principal issues on these appeals relate to the denial by the judge of any continuing alimony to the wife and to his division of marital property (pursuant to G. L. c. 208, § 34) on the basis of his findings. Other issues are dealt with in the appendix to this opinion. The principal issues, however, appear to be the predominant area of acrimonious disputation in what has become in the words of the probate judge “an exceedingly ugly court fight.”2 3****The judge’s findings, necessarily very much condensed,3 supplemented by some items [657]*657from the evidence, deal with the following matters among others.

B. The Findings and the Record Concerning the Marriage

The wife and husband, after some months of living and traveling together, were married on June 23, 1979. No children were born of this marriage. The wife, at the 1988 trial in her middle forties, had been married once before. She has had no children by either marriage. The husband, in his fifties, had been married twice before and has two adult children.

The husband is a senior executive and a director of a large corporation. He has or has had annual income from salary, bonuses, stock dividends, interest, and capital gains of about $732,000. This figure does not include the exercise of stock options or income in the form of debt forgiveness by his employer corporation. Such items have accounted for taxable income to the husband of several million dollars from 1984 to the date of trial. Before the 1979 marriage, the husband had already participated in founding the company of which he is an officer and in arranging for stock purchase options, loan cancellations or withdrawals, and similar benefits. His 1979 net worth was over $11,000,000.

The wife currently lives in Florida, where she is operating a horse training and horse brokerage business, started during the marriage as set out later in this opinion. Before the marriage, the wife was a graduate student at Harvard, working toward a Ph.D. in fine arts. She was earning about $100 per week as a teaching fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology when she met the husband and, during the year before they married, she earned $60,000 as a photographer. This occupation, because of her affliction with Raynaud’s disease (discussed below), she cannot now resume. She had $16,000 in a bank account, an automobile, and a collection of works by the artist Alexander Calder, her great uncle. During the marriage, the husband (through contacts by the [658]*658wife with her relatives) purchased another Calder painting (“Circus”) for the wife’s collection for $10,000 and paid an additional $6,000 for its restoration.

The wife was diagnosed in 1982 as suffering from Raynaud’s disease, a condition which results in constriction of the arteries in the hands and feet. The results are swelling and discoloration of the extremities, loss of dexterity, and skin ulcerations.4 The husband is in good health and has no disability. “It appears that the wife is employable ... as a trainer and importer of horses.” She has in varying degrees other possible vocational skills (obtained with encouragement of the husband and in part paid for by him) in the areas of fine arts, design, and broadcasting.

During their marriage, the couple enjoyed a lavish lifestyle. They had several places of abode, including one on Beacon Hill, Boston. They also owned, at different times, farms in New Hampshire, one in Hollis, and later a sixty-acre estate in Dover, Massachusetts, which cost $3,000,000, with a $600,000 riding ring added later. Hired employees or servants took care of at least some of the husband’s and wife’s daily domestic and farm needs. The parties’ station in life was that of very wealthy persons. The wife, “[fjrom the very modest life-style of a teaching fellow prior to the marriage . . . ha[d] been catapulted to a standard of living which very few have ever seen, let alone enjoy[ed].”

The husband contributed large financial resources to the marriage. The husband also provided emotional and some financial support to the wife in her attempts to take her Ph.D. degree at Harvard and in some later formal instruction in the fields of design and broadcasting. She “has had a virtually [659]*659unlimited expense account including over twenty . . . charge accounts at all of the nationally named stores.”

The wife “took over ... a horse farm, . . . run as a business for tax purposes but. . . really a hobby. . . . [The husband] received the benefit of tax write-offs for the . . . losses.” She gained “the opportunity to indulge herself in the lavish style of the horse set. . . . When she departed for Florida in December of 1987, she left with an entourage consisting of a trainer, two . . . grooms, a stable boy, and seven . . . horses. Her current [annual] payroll [which she wants her husband to support as part of her alimony claim] is over” $20,000.

The wife’s contributions to the husband were, the judge found, “more subtle and harder to define. She ha[d] not contributed financially. She ha[d] not performed [and the husband did not expect her to perform] the home making services traditional to most marriages,” as most of those services (as already stated) were performed by hired employees. “The husband was away from home about a third of the time on business. . . . What she contributed to him was a certain mark of distinction or style. Her Calder art decorated the Boston townhouse. When he brought potential executive recruits to the house for an interview, she was charming and hospitable.” Her own testimony suggested that she dealt in a helpful manner with the husband’s adult children. The wife “obviously enjoyed the benefits and position which . . . [the husband’s] money could provide.”

The parties last lived together as husband and wife on December 24, 1986.

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Bluebook (online)
555 N.E.2d 243, 28 Mass. App. Ct. 655, 1990 Mass. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richman-v-richman-massappct-1990.