SALVATORE SALSA VS. KATHERINE SALSA (FM-12-0268-19, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 10, 2021
DocketA-3363-19
StatusUnpublished

This text of SALVATORE SALSA VS. KATHERINE SALSA (FM-12-0268-19, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (SALVATORE SALSA VS. KATHERINE SALSA (FM-12-0268-19, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) 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
SALVATORE SALSA VS. KATHERINE SALSA (FM-12-0268-19, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-3363-19

SALVATORE SALSA,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

KATHERINE SALSA,

Defendant-Respondent. _________________________

Submitted October 12, 2021 – Decided November 10, 2021

Before Judges Sabatino, Rothstadt, and Mayer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part, Middlesex County, Docket No. FM-12-0268-19.

George G. Gussis, attorney for appellant.

Rozin Golinder Law, LLC, attorneys for respondent (Elizabeth Rozin-Golinder and Alyssa A. Bartholomew, on the brief).

PER CURIAM After a divorce trial that spanned over nine intermittent days between July

2019 and January 2020, the Family Part trial judge issued a final order and

eleven-page decision on March 20, 2020. The decision predominately addressed

issues of equitable distribution, as the parties each waived alimony. A central

aspect of the court's decision was its division of several parcels of real estate

purchased before and after the parties married.

Plaintiff Salvatore Salsa ("the husband") 1 appeals numerous aspects of the

final judgment of divorce. Most critically, he contests the court's division of the

parties' real estate, and its delineation of which parcels were premarital assets

owned solely by defendant Katherine Salsa ("the wife") and which ones were

marital assets subject to equitable distribution. The husband further appeals the

court's disposition of various financial accounts and motor vehicles, the court's

denial of his request to shift his counsel fees to the wife, and a few other

miscellaneous issues. The wife has not cross-appealed.

For the reasons that follow, we vacate in part the final judgment and

remand the case for further consideration of the equitable distribution award.

Most importantly, the trial court needs to reconsider that award—and make more

1 We use the terms "husband" and "wife" for ease of expression, mindful some of the relevant transactions and events occurred before the parties married and that they are now former spouses. A-3363-19 2 detailed findings—in light of undisputed evidence that the parties commingled

rental income and other funds derived from properties the wife purchased before

the marriage, but which the husband thereafter renovated and maintained, with

rental income and funds derived from properties bought after the husband and

wife married.

We also remand concerning the court's disposition of the vehicles and

certain financial accounts. We affirm as to the other issues, including the court's

ruling that both parties bear their own respective attorney's fees.

I.

Although the record is extensive, there is no need for our purposes to

describe the facts and evidence at length. The following abbreviated summary

will suffice.

The parties were engaged on March 27, 1998, a date the court chose to

separate premarital assets from marital assets. The husband was skilled in

construction, and for many years he operated a landscaping business. The wife

was a State employee. The parties married on April 25, 1999. They had two

children together. 2

2 The parties entered into a consent order resolving issues concerning the children. A-3363-19 3 Before they were married, the wife bought six residential properties in

New Brunswick and elsewhere with her own funds. The husband, who had a

real estate license and knew the local market, renovated and maintained them.

After they married, they bought numerous other properties.3 Eventually,

the couple earned rental income from the properties. The wife managed them

and eventually left her job with the State to do so. Over the years they refinanced

several of them.

At one point the parties owned close to thirty rental units across the

properties, and the husband maintained and repaired them all, the extent to

which is disputed by the parties. The husband filed for divorce in July 2018.

Hence, the marriage lasted nineteen years. As of the time of trial, the rental

properties were generating a monthly income of about $12,000.

The husband contends he is entitled to equitable distribution for the

premarital properties, based on the "sweat equity" he devoted to their repair,

renovation, and upkeep. The wife contends equitable distribution is not

3 The thirteen premarital and marital properties identified in the court's opinion were: 9 Seventh Street, 313 Townsend Street, 151 Hale Street, 74 Welton Street, 274 Ward Street, 12 Remsen Street, 17 Goodale Circle, 30 Welton Street, 384 Delavan Street, 42 S. Pennington Street, 322 S. Broad Street, 157 N. Broad Street, and 363 Cranbury Road. All of these properties were located in either New Brunswick, Trenton, or East Brunswick. A-3363-19 4 necessary because the husband was either reimbursed directly for the work he

performed on the properties, or, if not reimbursed directly, she argues he

benefitted financially from them to the extent the properties' income stream was

used to help pay their mutual household expenses.

The parties did not keep segregated accounts that separated income and

expenses for the premarital properties from the income and expenses for the

marital properties. As we will discuss in this opinion, the record appears to

show the parties commingled funds relating to the premarital properties and the

marital properties, and also combined them with revenues from the husband's

landscaping business.

Before trial, the parties sold several of the properties, and they split the

sales proceeds evenly. The husband characterized that as proof of an

enforceable commitment to divide all of the properties in half. No written

settlement agreement, however, was ever signed, and the court agreed with the

wife that she had not waived her right to argue at trial that the husband was not

entitled to half the value of those premarital properties which she argued she

exclusively owned.4

4 We affirm that sound determination, which is consistent with the wife's trial testimony that she told the husband she wanted in the divorce what she was

A-3363-19 5 The court divided the properties bought after the marriage evenly in the

final judgment, and neither party challenges that disposition. In addition, the

court equitably distributed two of the six properties (274 Ward Street and 12

Remsen Avenue), which the wife had purchased before the marriage but after

the parties' engagement upon a finding they were purchased in contemplation of

the marriage.

The court assigned to the wife, however, the rest of the properties bought

before the couple was married. The court determined the wife used her own

money to acquire them and had not bought those properties in contemplation of

marriage. It ordered the husband to return to the wife any proceeds he had

received from the sale of those premarital properties.

With respect to credibility, the court's written opinion identified

shortcomings of the rambling and digressive testimony of both parties. The

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SALVATORE SALSA VS. KATHERINE SALSA (FM-12-0268-19, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salvatore-salsa-vs-katherine-salsa-fm-12-0268-19-middlesex-county-and-njsuperctappdiv-2021.