Double Dipping in Equitable Distribution
August 18, 2015 § 3 Comments
When Michael and Rosie Jackson went through their divorce, the chancellor awarded the former marital residence to Rosie and ordered that she pay the mortgage debt on it. The parties agreed that the value of the home was $78,000, and that its mortgage debt was $50,103, resulting in equity of $27,897.
When the chancellor toted up the assets, he assigned the equity to Rosie. Her share of the marital assets amounted to $31,928, and Michael’s share came to $120,310.64. The difference in favor of Michael was $88,382.64.
Then the chancellor allocated the marital debts between the parties. Michael was assigned $4,950 in credit card debt, reducing Michael’s asset value to $115,360. Rosie was assigned the mortgage debt, which the chancellor found to have reduced Rosie’s asset value to minus $18, 175. In order to equalize the estates based on that arithmetic, the chancellor awarded Rosie lump-sum alimony $57,680.32.
Before going any further, take a moment and ask yourself whether there is any flaw in that arrangement.
In Jackson v. Jackson, handed down by the MSSC on August 13, 2015, the court reversed in part and remanded because the chancellor counted the mortgage debt twice: once by subtracting it from the total value of the property; and a second time by including it in the debts assigned to Rosie. The result was that Rosie’s share of the marital estate was undervalued by $50,103, which in turn affected the amount of lump-sum alimony awarded. The case was sent back to the trial court for a re-do on that issue. All other issues were affirmed.
The COA had affirmed this decision and brushed aside Michael’s complaint about the calculation, noting that our law requires only that the division of the marital estate be equitable, not necessarily equal. The COA’s decision was the subject of a prior post here dealing with homosexual behavior as habitual cruel and inhuman treatment.
Judges do make mistakes when it comes to juggling those numbers in equitable distribution cases. Always check behind the judge for errors in handling debt such as was done here. While you’re at it, check arithmetic and make sure that the figures used match up with the evidence. File a timely R59 motion if you catch an error. Better to let the judge fix it, if she will, than to have to go to the expense of an appeal.
AN ENDURING MISCONCEPTION
June 26, 2012 § Leave a comment
In a contested equitable distribution case, I require the parties to present a pre-trial order that includes a listing of all property with values. Lawyers appear with the appropriate information, get a trial date, and we proceed from there.
Then, at trial, it happens quite often that someone testifies that they omitted an item or several — some stock, interest in a trust, some furniture, a few pieces of jewelry — usually with some significant value. And we then devote considerable attention and time to something that could simply have been listed on the property list that was not.
Almost invariably the rejoinder is to the effect that “It was something I owned before the marriage,” or “That was an inheritance from my dad that I received after the marriage,” or “Those were rings that momma gave me.”
The misconception — an enduring one — is that if it was owned before the marriage, or was an inheritance or gift, it is not considered in equitable distribution. That’s not so.
All property of the parties, whether marital or non-marital, is taken into consideration in equitable distribution. Among the Ferguson factors that govern the chancery court’s adjudication of equitable distribution is the value of each spouse’s separate estate, or, in the court’s own language, “The value of assets not ordinarily, absent equitable factors to the contrary, subject to distribution, such as property brought to the marriage by the parties, and property acquired by inheritance or inter vivos gift by or to an individual spouse.” Ferguson v. Ferguson, 639 So.2d 921, 928 (Miss. 1994). Thus, proof of each party’s separate estate must be developed and considered by the court in deciding how to divide the marital estate equitably.
Even though the parties’ separate property is required to be considered, however, assets that prove to be truly separate in nature are not subject to being divided in equitable distribution, meaning that they will go into the column of the party who owns them. The aftermath of equitable distribution will be two piles of marital assets that have been divided equitably, one for each party, upon each of which is heaped the party’s separate assets.
It is only after equitable distribution has been accomplished that alimony may be considered, and alimony is appropriate only when the equitable distribution leaves a party with a deficit, or inability to support himself or herself. Among the Armstrong factors for adjudication of alimony is “The obligations and assets of each party.” The MSSC has held that the trial court must consider in determining alimony both the assets awarded to the spouse in equitable distribution, and the parties’ separate assets. Striebeck v. Striebeck, 911 So.2d 628, 634-635 (Miss. App. 2005), Sanderson v. Sanderson, 824 So.2d 623, 627 (Miss. 2004). Disparity of income and assets, including separate assets, after equitable distribution triggers consideration of alimony.
Remember, too, that assets can change character from separate to marital or mixed. Just because your client tells you that she acquired that antique armoire from her aunt before the marriage, don’t automatically assume it is out of reach of equitable distribution. The appellate courts have clung to the “family use doctrine,” and that piece of furnture may have gotten in play for equitable division simply because the husband used it for ten years to store his shirts, ties, underwear, pajamas and even love notes from his girlfriend.
List all of the assets, clearly marital as well as questionably marital. Then argue your client’s case as to why certain items should be excluded from equitable distribution, but don’t fail to list them.