Thibault v. Thibault

632 So. 2d 261, 1994 WL 51100
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
Docket92-1279
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 632 So. 2d 261 (Thibault v. Thibault) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thibault v. Thibault, 632 So. 2d 261, 1994 WL 51100 (Fla. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

632 So.2d 261 (1994)

John F. THIBAULT, Appellant,
v.
Sylvia W. THIBAULT, Appellee.

No. 92-1279.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

February 23, 1994.

*262 Lyman T. Fletcher, Jacksonville, for appellant.

Barry L. Zisser and Nancy N. Nowlis, Jacksonville, for appellee.

SMITH, Judge.

Appellant, John F. Thibault, appeals from a final judgment of dissolution of his marriage to Sylvia W. Thibault, appellee. Appellant raises issues concerning the evaluation and distribution of marital assets, the award of permanent periodic alimony, and attorney's fees to the wife. We reverse.

In order to properly review the arguments of counsel, we have found it necessary to undertake an independent review of the record so as to determine, with as much accuracy as is reasonably possible, the essential facts of the case. Our review has revealed that the findings contained in the final judgment are inadequate, and in some instances not supported by the record. We also find *263 that in certain respects the statements of fact found in the briefs of counsel are irreconcilable with the record.

The parties were married in May, 1983. No children were born of their marriage; however, each had been previously married and had children, and grandchildren, from their former marriages. The wife filed her petition for dissolution in August 1989. At the time of the final hearing in November 1991, the wife was 56, and the husband was 61 years of age. The wife claimed no health problems. The husband claimed a general numbness in his right arm, which he stated interfered with his work as an auditor; otherwise, he reported no health problems.

At the time of the marriage the wife was a city councilwoman of the City of Jacksonville, an elected position. In 1983, her income from that position amounted to $11,500.00. The husband did auditing work as an independent contractor, performing audits of accounts payable and receivable for various companies, operating under a contractual arrangement with a firm headquartered in Dallas, Texas. He was paid for his work on a commission basis, the amount being determined based upon his client's claims for reimbursement of overpayments made to their suppliers, or underpayments by customers, as disclosed by his audits.

The income tax returns for the parties were not placed in evidence; however, testimony established that the wife's compensation from her city council position increased to $22,000.00 during the last year the parties resided together. The wife testified that the husband's income for the three years prior to the dissolution were as follows: 1987-$97,364; 1988-$121,000; and for 1989-$123,000. These figures were represented as the "bottom line," but no break-down was given as to the sources of this income, although she did testify that he had income from the rental condominium in South Carolina and interest income. The wife also failed to state whether these figures purported to be gross or net income of the husband. The husband testified, on the other hand, that he had income from his primary occupation for 1991, to the date of the final hearing, of $108,000; but that if he received the $25,000 due him from his "advance", and had to pay income taxes on it for 1991, the total would be $133,000. He further testified, however, that his "net" income from that amount would be $63,000. In other testimony the husband explained that from his gross income, he was required to pay expenses including the employment of sub-contractors to assist him in the auditing work, travel and lodging expenses, purchase of supplies and equipment used in the work, and other business expenses. He projected his earnings for the following year at $75,000 from his auditing work, with expenses of $35,000.

Prior to the marriage, the wife had received the sum of $135,000.00 in life insurance proceeds from the death of her first husband. She used part of this money to buy a new car, to run for office, and for repairs on the home she owned prior to her marriage to appellant.[1] These expenditures reduced the insurance proceeds to $74,000.00. She then sold the home for $32,000.00, paying off the mortgage of $4,000.00 and leaving a net sales price of $28,000.00. Thus, at the time of the marriage, the wife had $74,000.00, plus $28,000.00, for a total of $102,000.00.

The husband owned two houses in Pennsylvania at the time of the marriage.[2] In addition, according to his testimony, he had $10,000.00 in a money market account, a $4,000.00 IRA account, and a $19,000.00 IRA or KEOGH account. The two homes were sold after the marriage, yielding a net sales price of $20,000.00 each, for a total of $40,000.00. In addition, according to his testimony at trial, he had an estimated $50,000.00 to $80,000.00 in accounts receivable, together with two automobiles which he valued at a total of $13,000.00. The husband also either *264 owned prior to the marriage, or acquired in connection with the sale of one of the pre-marital homes, a lot located in the Pocono Mountains in Pennsylvania, which he valued at $15,000.00.

From the foregoing, based upon our independent review of the record, it fairly appears that the parties entered the marriage on relatively equal terms so far as their respective financial worth was concerned. The income and earning ability of the husband, on the other hand, far exceeded that of the wife.

At the time of the marriage, the wife had no IRA, no deferred compensation plan, and no pension plan. At the urging of the husband, the wife subsequently established an IRA account or accounts, a deferred compensation plan with the City of Jacksonville, and she also "bought into" the City of Jacksonville Pension Plan for officers and employees of the city.

The primary assets for distribution between the parties consisted of the parties' Jacksonville condominium, which served as the marital home; a rental condominium in South Carolina; several bank accounts, and certificates of deposit; the parties' respective IRA accounts; automobiles and other personal property and household goods; the husband's Merrill Lynch Pension Trust account; and a one-half stock ownership in a closely held sub-chapter "S" corporation, Records Storage Systems, Inc., otherwise known and referred to by the parties as "File Minders." The corporation was formed in 1984 by the parties, as the sole stockholders, each receiving a certificate for 35 shares of the capital stock. In 1985, shortly after File Minders commenced business, the 35 shares of stock in the wife's name were surrendered to the corporation leaving only the 35 shares in the name of the husband outstanding. In 1987, the corporation issued 35 shares of stock to John Griner, a close friend of the wife, for which he paid $31,500.

A great deal of the testimony below, and the argument on appeal, revolves around the issue of what assets were pre-marital assets, and what assets must be regarded as marital assets for distribution. It is not disputed that the Pocono lot owned by the husband is a non-marital asset. In the same vein, it is undisputed that the husband's pension trust account, which at the time of final hearing amounted to some $323,000.00, is a marital asset, since it was established during the marriage from earnings of the husband. The most vigorously disputed issue at trial, and here, involves the wife's claim of a special equity in File Minders. Her claim is that the initial contribution of $25,000.00 for start-up of the business came from her pre-marital funds, and that an additional $10,000.00 was contributed by her mother.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
632 So. 2d 261, 1994 WL 51100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibault-v-thibault-fladistctapp-1994.