Vasa v. Vasa

263 So. 3d 720
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 13, 2018
Docket2161015
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 263 So. 3d 720 (Vasa v. Vasa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vasa v. Vasa, 263 So. 3d 720 (Ala. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

DONALDSON, Judge.

Maria Vasa appeals from an order of the Jefferson Circuit Court ("the trial court") granting a motion filed by Vasundhara Vasa ("the former wife") pursuant to Rule 60(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., and vacating a judgment. We conclude that the order granting the Rule 60(b) motion was interlocutory and, thus, that we do not have jurisdiction over the appeal. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal.

Background and Procedural History

Stanley Vasa ("the husband") and the former wife were divorced by a judgment of the trial court on May 27, 2005 ("the divorce judgment"). Pursuant to the divorce judgment, the husband was ordered to pay alimony to the former wife in the amount of $700 per month "until the death of either party, the [former wife]'s remarriage, or the commencement of her receipt of her portion of the [husband]'s pension (defined benefit) plan as provided for hereinbelow, whichever shall occur first." The divorce judgment provided that the former wife was to receive 50% of the husband's pension plan and 401(k) Employee Savings Plan. The divorce judgment ordered that the valuation of the former wife's interest in the husband's pension plan was to be determined as of the date of the judgment. The divorce judgment also provided that the husband was to

"provide, unencumbered, a policy of life insurance upon his life in the face amount of [$200,000] for so long as he has a periodic alimony obligation to the [former wife]. The [husband] shall name the [former wife] irrevocable beneficiary thereof and shall furnish a copy of said policy and beneficiary designation to the [former wife] within thirty (30) days of the date [of the divorce judgment] and at reasonable intervals thereafter."

In December 2010, the husband filed a complaint to modify the divorce judgment, *722naming the former wife as the defendant. The proceeding was assigned case number DR-14-547.01 ("the .01 case"). The husband alleged that he had been diagnosed with a chronic illness and that he could no longer afford alimony payments of $700 per month to the former wife or the premium on the life-insurance policy and that based on that change in circumstances, the divorce judgment should be modified. The former wife answered and counterclaimed, seeking a finding of contempt against the husband for his failure to maintain the life-insurance policy and his failure to comply with other provisions of the divorce judgment.

On August 8, 2011, the trial court entered an order denying the husband's requested relief and finding him in contempt for failing to make alimony payments, failing to provide proof of life insurance to the former wife, and failing to comply with other portions of the divorce judgment.

On May 13, 2013, the former wife filed a "petition for rule nisi," seeking a finding of contempt against the husband. The proceeding was assigned case number DR-14-547.02 ("the .02 case"). The former wife alleged that the husband had failed to pay alimony to her as required by the divorce judgment and that he owed her $2,800 in unpaid alimony. The former wife also alleged that the husband no longer had life insurance as required by the divorce judgment.

On June 14, 2013, the former wife filed a motion in the .02 case seeking to join Maria Vasa, who was the husband's wife at the time of the motion, as a necessary party. In her motion, the former wife alleged that Maria was the attorney-in-fact for the former husband pursuant to a power of attorney, and that Maria had participated in the husband's decision to stop making payments on the life insurance policy required by the divorce judgment. The former wife further alleged that the husband was suffering from diminished mental capacity, and that Maria, in her capacity as the husband's attorney-in-fact, was a necessary party. On that same day, the former wife filed a motion for a temporary restraining order, seeking to enjoin the husband and Maria from "selling, hiding, transferring, damaging, disposing or gifting any of [the husband]'s assets, and [enjoining Maria] from leaving the country." The trial court set the former wife's motions for a hearing.

On June 26, 2013, the husband filed an answer and a petition to modify the divorce judgment in response to the former wife's petition for contempt. The husband alleged in his answer that all outstanding alimony payments had been paid to the former wife and that he would continue to make such payments "so long as required by the [divorce judgment] or until such time as [the trial court] directs otherwise." The husband alleged that "[t]he temporary failure to make current alimony payments was due to a statement in the Summary Plan Description for his Pension Plan that stated [the former wife] would begin receiving her pension benefits whenever [the husband] began receiving his." The husband also alleged that he continued to maintain a life-insurance policy, listing the former wife as a beneficiary, in an amount sufficient to comply with the divorce judgment.

In his "counter petition to modify or in the alternative for clarification of prior order," the husband alleged that he had remarried, that he suffered from a terminal illness, and that he had elected to retire early and begin receiving payments from his pension plan. The husband alleged that his current expenses exceeded his income and that he had filed a petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code and had received a discharge. The husband *723attached to his counterpetition a copy of his budget as submitted to the bankruptcy court. The husband alleged that, based upon his age, the former wife's age, and the expected alimony owed to her under the divorce judgment, maintaining a $200,000 life-insurance policy was no longer justified. The husband alleged that a dispute existed "as to whether the life insurance policy which [he] is required to maintain until his alimony obligation ceases[ ] was intended to offset alimony arrearages that might exist at his death or were to compensate [the former wife] for future alimony payments." The husband alleged that if "[the former wife were] to receive both the life insurance benefits at [the husband]'s death and then commence receiving pension payments she would be unjustly enriched." The husband requested, as relief, that, on certain conditions, the trial court terminate his obligation to maintain a policy of life insurance and that the trial court clarify that the life-insurance provision of the divorce judgment was intended to serve only as security for any alimony arrearages owed to the former wife at the time of his death.

In response to the former wife's motion for a temporary restraining order, the husband alleged that, in January 2013, he had retired and had begun receiving his benefits under his pension plan. The husband alleged that, pursuant to the "plan summary" of his pension plan, the former wife was to begin receiving her portion of payments under the plan "by the time [his] benefit payments begin." The husband alleged that, based on the terms of the plan and the divorce judgment, the former wife should have begun receiving her benefit payments in January 2013 and that, as a result, his obligation to make alimony payments and maintain life insurance under the divorce judgment had terminated. The husband admitted that he had stopped paying alimony and maintaining the life-insurance policy but that, upon being notified of the .02 case, he had reinstated the life-insurance policy and had paid the outstanding alimony arrearage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 So. 3d 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vasa-v-vasa-alacivapp-2018.