Steffen v. Steffen, Unpublished Decision (6-7-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2002
DocketC.A. Case No. 2001-CA-117, T.C. Case No. 78-DR-919.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Steffen v. Steffen, Unpublished Decision (6-7-2002) (Steffen v. Steffen, Unpublished Decision (6-7-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steffen v. Steffen, Unpublished Decision (6-7-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION
Joycelyn Steffen appeals from a judgment of the Greene County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division, ordering her to remit $52,000 from a certain investment account to Barbara Louise Steffen and pay $1000 attorneys fees from the account to Barbara Louise Steffen.

Barbara and Alfred Dean Steffen were divorced in 1979. Pursuant to the final divorce decree, Alfred was obligated to pay alimony to Barbara for her lifetime or until she remarried. Paragraph 5 of the Decree of Divorce provided as follows:

Defendant [Alfred] shall provide an insurance policy in the amount of Fifty-Two Thousand ($52,000.00) Dollars on his life and payable to Plaintiff [Barbara] as beneficiary, shall supply evidence thereof as requested by Plaintiff, and shall keep same in full force and effect so long as he is required to pay alimony as set forth herein.

In 1995, Barbara and Alfred reached an agreement with respect to a motion to terminate or reduce spousal support that Alfred had filed. Pursuant to an Agreed Entry filed on October 25, 1995, the amount of Alfred's spousal support (formerly alimony) obligation was modified. In addition, the parties further agreed that "Paragraph #5 of the Final Decree regarding Life Insurance shall remain in effect."

On July 28, 1999, Barbara filed a "Motion to Show Cause" in which she asked the trial court to order Alfred to appear and show cause why he should not be held in contempt for failure to provide evidence that he was maintaining in force the required life insurance policy. On February 1, 2000, Barbara filed a motion in which she again asked the court to find Alfred in contempt for failure to provide evidence of the required life insurance policy. In addition, she moved for an order "[r]estraining the Defendant, Alfred D. Steffen, from removing, transferring or distributing those funds in the Payne Webber [sic] Retirement Account, . . ., to the extent of $52,000.00" and "[r]equiring the Defendant, Alfred D. Steffen, so long as he is alive and Plaintiff has not died or re-married, that he name as beneficiary the Plaintiff, Barbara L. Steffen, to the extent of $52,000.00 of his Payne Webber [sic] Retirement Account. . . ."

On February 10, 2000, the trial court's magistrate issued a Decision and Order continuing the matter at the request of counsel for both parties in order for Alfred "to obtain the proper life insurance coverage or otherwise secure the obligation owed to the Plaintiff [Barbara]." The magistrate's order further stated that Alfred was "restrained from transferring, spending, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of assets including but not limited to the Paine-Webber account. The Defendant [Alfred] will be permitted to spend funds from his assets for normal living expenses only."

Following a hearing on March 17, 2000, the magistrate issued a further Decision and Order on March 24, 2000. The magistrate found that Alfred had not provided Barbara with evidence that he was maintaining in force the required life insurance policy and that he currently did not have in force the required policy. The magistrate further found that Alfred had sufficient assets from which he could secure the $52,000.00 obligation, but had failed to do so. The magistrate recommended that the trial court find Alfred in contempt and that it impose a thirty-day jail sentence and $250.00 fine on him. The magistrate further recommended that Alfred be permitted to purge himself of the contempt by securing the $52,000.00 obligation to Barbara from his current assets or by providing the required life insurance policy.

In addition, the magistrate found that it was likely that Alfred would transfer or otherwise encumber assets he currently owned; thus, the magistrate recommended that the trial court issue an order to Alfred restraining him from transferring, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of any of his assets. The magistrate recommended that Alfred be permitted to use his assets to make monthly payments of spousal support to Barbara, but that no other use of his assets be permitted until further order of the court.

On April 6, 2000, Alfred filed a "Motion to Reconsider" the magistrate's decision. Specifically, Alfred objected to that portion of the magistrate's decision that restrained him from disposing of any of his assets, including his pension, except to pay his spousal support obligation. Alfred argued that his sole source of financial support was his pension, that he was in poor health, and that he required income to pay his health and other living expenses. Alfred argued that by withholding all income from him, the magistrate's order was arbitrary, unreasonable, and capricious (i.e., an abuse of discretion). Alfred asked the trial court to modify the magistrate's order by permitting him to "expend funds for `normal living' expenses including health care expenses."

The trial court treated Alfred's "Motion to Reconsider" as an objection to the magistrate's "Decision and Order" of March 24, 2000. The trial court overruled Alfred's objection and adopted the magistrate's decision and order as its own, stating that Alfred's "current state of health is precisely why the Magistrate issued the March 24th Decision and Order' and that Alfred's "remedy is clear, he can comply with the Magistrate's Decision and Order."

Alfred appealed the judgment of the trial court and we affirmed the trial court in Steffen v. Steffen (February 2, 2001), Greene App. 2000-CA-42. In the appeal, Alfred contended that the provision in the decree requiring him to maintain life insurance in favor of Barbara was an invalid provision. We overruled that assignment of error because Alfred had failed to raise that objection to the magistrate's decision and we did not find that the trial court's judgment constituted plain error. We noted the following in our opinion:

We do not find that the trial court committed plain error in finding Alfred to be in contempt of court for failing to comply with the divorce decree's provision concerning life insurance. The provision in the divorce decree that Alfred now challenges has operated in this case since 1979 and was reaffirmed by an agreed entry between the parties in 1995. Principles of res judicata preclude Alfred from now challenging the lawfulness of that provision. Moreover, we do not find the provision in question to be unlawful. This court has previously held that "[i]t is within the trial court's discretion to order that one spouse maintain a life insurance policy for the other spouse's benefit." Jump v. Jump (October 13, 1993), Montgomery App. Nos. 13714, 13965, unreported.

On January 16, 2002, Alfred died survived by his second wife, Joycelyn Steffen. Prior to his death, Alfred transferred his assets from the Paine Webber account to an account with Suntrust Securities. On March 7, 2001, he transferred those assets to Joycelyn Steffen in an account with National Financial Services, Inc.

On July 21, 2001, Barbara filed a Motion for a Restraining Order asking the trial court to essentially freeze fifty-two thousand dollars ($52,000) of any funds maintained in accounts held with the National Financial Services Company in the name of Alfred or his widow, Joycelyn Steffen ("Joycelyn"). The trial court filed its Entry Granting Restraining Order on the same date, July 12, 2001, stating Alfred's estate, Joycelyn, and National Financial Services Company were restrained from "moving, selling, giving away, transferring, disposing of, or encumbering fifty-two thousand dollars ($52,000.00) from any account in the name of the Defendant or the Defendant's wife, Joycelyn Steffen, which is being held in the National Financial Services Company account."

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Bluebook (online)
Steffen v. Steffen, Unpublished Decision (6-7-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steffen-v-steffen-unpublished-decision-6-7-2002-ohioctapp-2002.