Jaynee ADINOLFE, Appellant,
v.
John ADINOLFE, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Michael David McDonough, Wellington, for appellant.
Sharon P. Talbot of Sharon P. Talbot, P.A., Palm Beach, for appellee.
FRUSCIANTE, JOHN A., Associate Judge.
The Appellant seeks to have this court find error in a number of decisions made by the trial court and to reverse accordingly. The trial judge made the relevant decisions in a family law case in which he also entered a detailed twenty-page Final Judgement of Dissolution of Marriage. We affirm the lower court on all points presented, but single out two matters for special comment.
First of all, in reference to the trial judge's refusal to recuse himself and the wife's supporting affidavit requesting such recusal, Appellant argues that the Appellee failed to mention any case which holds that such an affidavit of recusal must include a transcript or other record of the trial judge's actions. While it is true that we have not made a transcript or other record mandatory under such circumstances, we have clearly expressed our desire for a record when circumstances fail to deliver the context in which a trial judge's comments were made. See Pressey v. State,
The second matter refers to the trial judge's mistaken belief that a nine-year marriage was of such short duration that it would not entitle the wife to permanent periodic alimony. Although not cited by either party, Echols v. Elswick,
While this court will not go so far as to state nine years is a short-term marriage (it may very well be in the "gray area," Young v. Young,
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court on these issues, as well as on all the remaining issues.
POLEN and TAYLOR, JJ., concur.
