Marcia L. Arena appeals the trial court’s final judgment awarding her bridge-the-gap alimony instead of permanent alimony, as she had requested, and the trial court’s order requiring her former Husband, John F. Arena, to pay only 60% of her attorney’s fees and costs. We affirm the alimony award without discussion. However, we reverse the order granting the former Wife only a partial attorney’s fee award because neither the record on appeal nor the trial court’s fee order contains sufficient factual findings to support the award.
We review an award of attorney’s fees, whether in whole or in part, for abuse of discretion. Anciaux v. Anciaux,
To begin, it can be an abuse of discretion to grant only a partial attorney’s fee award where, on balance, there is a substantial disparity between the parties’ incomes. See, e.g., Lowman v. Lowman,
After considering all applicable factors, the trial court must then make specific findings of fact — either at the hearing or in the written judgment — supporting its determination of entitlement to an award of attorney’s fees and the factors that justify the specific amount awarded. See Rogers v. Rogers,
In its final judgment of dissolution of marriage in this case, the trial court found that each party would leave the marriage with $296,000 in assets, including a substantial amount of cash from the sale of the marital home. It also found that the Husband’s gross annual income was $152,000 and imputed income to the unemployed Wife in the range of $70,000 to $80,000 annually. The trial court concluded that the Wife should be able to obtain employment in three to nine months, if she made a diligent effort. Those findings are supported by the record.
However, more than six months after the final hearing on dissolution, the trial court held a two-day hearing on attorney’s fees. Its subsequent fee order noted that the Wife was still unemployed but also concluded that she had “limited assets remaining” and that she had demonstrated “a need for assistance in paying her attorney’s fees and costs.” It also noted the obvious: that the Husband’s income was substantially greater than the income imputed to the Wife and that he had, therefore, the ability to contribute to her attorney’s fees and costs. Then, without further elaboration, the court concluded that the Husband was required to pay only 60% of the Wife’s $45,816 total fees and costs ($27,489.60), and that the Wife was responsible for 40% of her own fees and costs. This was error because the court’s award failed to set forth factual findings regarding any factors that justified the specific amount awarded, and we have been otherwise unable to discern the basis for the award. While the trial court may have had a rationale in mind for its award, without either an oral or written explanation, on the record before us the 60% award thus appears arbitrary.
The Husband contends that the trial court considered the Wife’s actions in the litigation in determining that he should only pay 60% of her fees and costs. But, if the trial court did so, its order does not explain that. In fact, the only discussion of litigation behavior in the order pertains to the Husband’s actions, not the Wife’s. And even if the trial court had intended to award some portion of the Wife’s fees and costs as a sanction for the Husband’s litigation misconduct, the fee order contains insufficient findings. See, e.g., Gagnon v. Gagnon,
Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s fee order and remand with directions that the trial court reconsider fees and make findings of fact sufficient to permit review of its decision.
