Steinhoff v. Sommerfelt

798 A.2d 1195, 144 Md. App. 463, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 31, 2002
Docket0385, Sept. Term 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 798 A.2d 1195 (Steinhoff v. Sommerfelt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinhoff v. Sommerfelt, 798 A.2d 1195, 144 Md. App. 463, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 102 (Md. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

CHARLES E. MOYLAN, Jr., Judge

(Retired, Specially Assigned).

This appeal requires us to take a close look at the time limits prescribed by Maryland Code, Family Law Article, § 8-203 on the designating of marital property and on the sanction, if any, for a violation of those prescribed deadlines.

The appellant, Mark Steinhoff, and the appellee, A. Elisabeth Sommerfelt, were divorced by a Judgment of Absolute divorce issued by Judge Raymond Kane, Jr., in the Circuit Court for Howard County on October 12, 2000. On this appeal, the appellant raises the three contentions

1. that Judge Kane erroneously granted a monetary award to the appellee;
2. that Judge Kane erroneously granted counsel fees and costs to the appellee, while failing to rule on the appellant’s request for counsel fees; and
*467 3. that Judge Kane earlier erred in granting alimony ;pendente lite to the appellee.

Factual Background

The appellant and the appellee were married in Valparaiso, Indiana on October 21, 1972. Three sons were born of the marriage. Eirik, the oldest, born in 1974, had left home by the time of the divorce. The second, Kristoffer, born in 1979, was in his second year at the University of Chicago. The third, Andreas, born in 1983, was a senior in high school at the time of the trial in this case and turned eighteen on January 8, 2001. The custody of Andreas, while contested early in these protracted proceedings, is not a direct issue on this appeal.

Both the appellant and the appellee are medical doctors. The appellant is a graduate of the University of Chicago Medical School and is employed as a tenured professor of pediatrics and public health at the Johns Hopkins University. The appellee, born in Norway, was also graduated from the University of Chicago School of Medicine, obtained a Master of Science degree in public health from the University of Rochester, and was employed from 1988 to 1999 as a research associate in the Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health.

The parties separated in early May 1997. Andreas, who was 14 at the time of the parties’ separation, remained with appellee in the marital home until November 1997, when he went to live with appellant in a nearby apartment. He experienced difficulties with his parents’ separation and underwent coufiseling and a brief period of hospitalization. Each of the parties sought custody; an attorney for Andreas was appointed by the court; and the matter was finally resolved with the agreement of all parties three years later, with custody being awarded to the appellant.

The appellee continued to work full time until September 1998 and then began a reduced schedule of 80% until her employment was terminated in September 1999. Prior to 1998 she had taken some periods of unpaid leave of absence, *468 primarily the three months of November and December 1997 and January 1998. After her separation, she tried unsuccessfully to do some consulting work. Later testimony in the trial on December 21, 2000 established that the appellee had been treated by a.psychiatrist since 1996 and that the separation and divorce had a profoundly adverse effect on her mental condition and ability to work. She suffered major depression; anxiety disorder; and obsessive compulsive anxiety disorder which, even though treated with medication and psychotherapy, caused her to stop work and, in the opinion of her psychiatrist, would have prevented her return to work in the next year.

Pertinent Procedural Background

The appellee had requested alimony, both pendente lite and permanent. A master’s pendente lite hearing was held on March 16, 1999, which resulted, on April 20, 1999, in the master’s recommendations 1) that the appellee pay child support in the amount of $536 per month to the appellant and 2) that the appellant pay alimony pendente lite in the amount of $1,500 per month to the appellee. 1 Neither party had made any payments to the date of the master’s hearing, so the master computed the arrearage owed by appellant at $5,676 accounting from June 1998 to April 1999 and using the above child support and alimony figures.

Exceptions were filed to the master’s report by the appellant. A hearing was held by Judge Kane on January 4, 2000. He overruled the exceptions in a written opinion filed on January 14, 2000. On the same day, the court signed the pendente lite order recommended by the master.

The parties on the same date, January 4, 2000, executed an agreement covering child custody, support and visitation, the division of personal property, provisions for the purchase of the marital home by the appellee, creation of a college fund for Andreas, and agreement that the appellant would proceed *469 with his divorce action based on two years’ separation. The agreement further provided that the appellee would not be prohibited from seeking alimony, counsel fees, and a marital judgment award based on a division of assets.

The judgment of divorce, signed on October 11, 2000, granted the appellant an absolute divorce, awarding him care and custody of Andreas; continuing the respective child support and alimony pendente lite awards; determining the respective arrearages of the parties; and retaining jurisdiction in the court “for determination of alimony, marital property, attorney’s fees and litigation costs, said matters to be heard by the Court within 90 days of the date of this judgment.”

The trial of the reserved issues occurred on December 21 and 22, 2000. Between October 12 and December 21 various discovery matters were filed, as well as motions for contempt, all of which were disposed of in Judge Kane’s Memorandum Opinion. On January 10, 2001, Judge Kane signed an order on the appellee’s motion, consented to by the appellant, extending the time for making the marital property determination to February 9, 2001.

Following the issuance, on February 12, of the court’s Opinion and Order, the appellant moved to alter and amend the judgment to permit payment of the monetary award by way of a QDRO. He did not raise any challenge to the fact that the court’s Opinion and Order of February 12 came after the ostensible deadline of February 9 placed by Judge Kane on the extension.

The Memorandum Opinion and Order Of February 12, 2001

Judge Kane’s Memorandum Opinion and Order of February 12, 2001, resolved the four areas of remaining contention. On the subject of alimony, Judge Kane rejected the appellee’s request for indefinite alimony and ordered the appellant to pay rehabilitative alimony of $2,500 a month for a period of one year.

*470 With respect to the monetary award, Judge Kane found that the appellant’s share of the marital property had a value of $714,213 and the appellee’s share had a value of $331,407. He granted the appellee a monetary award of $191,403, representing one-half of the disparity between the two shares.

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Bluebook (online)
798 A.2d 1195, 144 Md. App. 463, 2002 Md. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinhoff-v-sommerfelt-mdctspecapp-2002.