Winney v. Winney
This text of 979 So. 2d 396 (Winney v. Winney) 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.
Opinion
John Randall WINNEY, Former Husband, Appellant,
v.
Jayme Carol WINNEY, Former Wife, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*398 Corrine A. Bylund of Zisser, Robison, Brown, Nowlis & Maciejewski, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellant.
William J. Dorsey, Jacksonville; and Michael J. Korn and Mary C. Coxe of Korn & Zehmer, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellee.
LEWIS, J.
John Randall Winney, Appellant, seeks review of a final judgment dissolving his marriage to Jayme Carol Winney, Appellee. Appellant challenges the trial court's rulings regarding primary physical residency of the parties' minor child, child support, alimony, life insurance as security for child support, and the distribution of the parties' assets and liabilities. We affirm the portions of the final judgment regarding primary physical residency and the award of child support without further discussion. We agree with Appellant that the trial court erred in failing to make the required factual findings to support the requirement that Appellant obtain life insurance as security for child support. However, because this error was harmless, we affirm that portion of the final judgment as well. We also agree with Appellant that the trial court reversibly erred in failing to include the required factual findings to support the alimony award and the distribution of the parties' assets and liabilities. On the record before us, we cannot say this error was harmless. Therefore, we reverse the portions of the final judgment concerning alimony and equitable distribution and remand for entry of factual findings and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The basic facts regarding the parties' history together are undisputed. Before the parties met, Appellant acquired and lived on a tract of real property in Middleburg, Florida. He also owned some items of personal property including a mobile home, a motorcycle, a bedroom suite, and a washing machine. When the parties met, Appellee was attending stenography school with the hope of becoming a court reporter. At some point during the parties' relationship, but before they were married, Appellee quit stenography school and began working full-time. In February 2000, Appellee moved in with Appellant. Later in 2000, a new mobile home was purchased, and the parties began to live in it. Appellant traded in his older mobile home to pay part of the price of the newer home. The parties married on July 18, 2001, and continued living in the new mobile home on Appellant's previously-acquired real property in Middleburg, Florida. On the date of the marriage, Appellant still owed a substantial amount toward the primary mortgage on the home. The parties lived in the home together until November 2005, when Appellant filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. During the marriage, the parties had acquired various debts and items of personal property. Among the debts incurred during the marriage was an obligation to Volkswagen for a lease on a 2006 Passat and a $50,000.00 home equity line of credit. While the parties were separated, Appellee quit her full-time job and returned to stenography school while working part-time as a waitress. The remaining relevant facts are in dispute.
*399 At trial, Appellee testified that before the parties' marriage, she quit stenography school because Appellant would not support her and encouraged her to quit. Appellee also submitted a financial affidavit reflecting expenses that greatly exceeded her income. She requested rehabilitative alimony, arguing that Appellant had caused her to quit stenography school, that her expected career as a court reporter would benefit the parties' minor child, and that she could not work full-time while attending school. Appellee also sought a portion of the value of the marital home as part of the equitable distribution. She testified that she and Appellant had bought the new mobile home after they had begun living together and sharing expenses. She further testified that she helped select and decorate the new mobile home and that, during the marriage, she and Appellant together made substantial improvements to the mobile home and real property. Appellee argued that the value of the home had appreciated during the marriage, due in part to the substantial improvements she and Appellant made.
Appellant contested Appellee's request for alimony and her claims that part of the marital home was marital property. He argued that she voluntarily quit stenography school and began to work full-time before the marriage.[1] He further argued that because Appellee had voluntarily quit her full-time job to return to school, full-time income should be imputed to her. Appellant also submitted a financial affidavit reflecting that his expenses exceeded his income. As part of his financial disclosures, Appellant produced evidence that his employer provided basic life insurance in the amount of $97,400.00 at no cost to him and that he had elected to receive supplemental life insurance in the amount of $146,000 for a cost of $5.39 per month. As to the marital home, Appellant disputed Appellee's characterization of the changes to the home as substantial improvements. He contended that the marital home, along with any assets bought with the home equity line of credit, was his nonmarital property.
After hearing voluminous testimony regarding the contested issues of equitable distribution, alimony, and child support, the trial court entered an order with few findings related to these issues. Specifically, the trial court ordered Appellant to pay Appellee rehabilitative alimony in the amount of $300.00 per month for a period of twenty-four months, but the only finding to support this award was that Appellee "was participating in a trade school education program which was interrupted by the marriage." The trial court also ordered Appellant to maintain a life insurance policy with death benefits in the amount of $100,000.00, as security for child support, without making any findings as to the necessity or affordability of life insurance. In devising a scheme of equitable distribution, the trial court noted that each party was awarded one-half of the net value of the marital assets and liabilities, but it did not make findings as to which assets were marital and which were nonmarital. The trial court also failed to distribute all of the parties' liabilities. Most notably, the court neglected to mention the debt to Volkswagen. After distributing some of the parties' liabilities, the court ordered each party to be responsible for his or her "remaining personal debt, including credit card debt" but did not explain *400 what debt was "personal" to each party. The trial court did not assign a monetary value to this debt or explain why it was considered nonmarital.
A trial court's failure to make adequate factual findings in a final judgment of dissolution of marriage is typically reversible error because, in most circumstances, this failure precludes meaningful appellate review. See, e.g., Stalnaker v. Stalnaker, 892 So.2d 561, 563 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005); Shoffner v. Shoffner, 744 So.2d 1157, 1158 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999); Walsh v. Walsh, 600 So.2d 1222, 1223 (Fla. 1st DCA 1992). This Court has held that a trial court must make findings to address specific issues when awarding alimony, ordering a party to carry life insurance, and devising an equitable distribution scheme. Schoditsch v. Schoditsch, 888 So.2d 709, 709 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004) (addressing life insurance as security); Shoffner,
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979 So. 2d 396, 2008 WL 1774163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winney-v-winney-fladistctapp-2008.