¶ 1. Husband, Mark Atherton, appeals the trial court's order denying his motion to modify spousal maintenance payments to wife, Holly Atherton, for failure to show a real, substantial, and unanticipated change in circumstances as required by 15 V.S.A. § 758. We reverse.
¶ 2. Husband and wife married in 1986. They lived in Vermont for most of their married life, though prior to their separation, they briefly lived together in Florida. They separated and filed for divorce in May 2016 in Vermont. The trial court signed and issued the final divorce order, which incorporates the terms of a stipulation agreed to by the parties, on June 27, 2017. The final order requires husband to pay $ 1500 per month in spousal maintenance from 2017 until 2027. If husband chooses not to retire in 2027, he will continue making payments of $ 1500 per month until 2029, when payments would be reduced to $ 350 per month until 2031. If husband chooses to retire in 2027, the spousal maintenance will be reduced to $ 350 per month and continue until 2031.
¶ 3. Prior to and throughout the pendency of the divorce proceedings, husband was employed by a national insurance company and made $ 5895 per month.
¶ 4. In April 2017, husband took a paid leave of absence, during which he received disability benefits. Husband requested the leave due to his mental health-he was "consumed with the divorce," which manifested as anxiety and depression and made it challenging to function at work. When he returned from his leave of absence, husband believed that he was going back to work in the same capacity. Instead, upon his return in early August 2017, husband's employer placed him on unpaid leave and terminated him on August 22, 2017.
¶ 5. After his termination, husband returned from Florida to Vermont to look for work. Husband found two part-time jobs but was unable to afford housing and was struggling to pay his monthly bills. Husband asserted that the primary cause of his financial challenges was his obligation to pay alimony when he no longer earned as much as he did when employed by the insurance company. As a result, husband filed a motion to modify his spousal maintenance on September 13, 2017, seeking a temporary reduction to $ 500 per month while he looked for better-paying work, with a revised determination once he had secured long-term employment. In his motion, he explained that he was unable to find a job that would pay him what he earned when he was employed at the insurance company and argued that his termination was a real, substantial, and unanticipated change in circumstances and thus was grounds for modification pursuant to 15 V.S.A. § 758 and Vermont Rule forFamily Proceedings 4.2(d).
¶ 6. Wife opposed husband's motion to modify, and two hearings were held-the first in December 2017 and the second in March 2018. At the first hearing, husband informed wife and the trial court for the first time about the warning letter he received in June 2016 and the leave of absence he took in April 2017. Husband testified that he understood if he did not improve his performance and address the issues outlined in the warning letter, his employment could be terminated. He further testified that after the warning letter, he attempted to maintain a level of acceptable conduct and performance in order to avoid further sanctions and did not feel as though his job was in jeopardy.
¶ 7. In an April 2018 order, the trial court denied husband's motion to modify spousal maintenance. The trial court reasoned that husband alone knew of the warning letter, the behavior that led to said warning, and his leave of absence from work when he signed the stipulation agreeing to the spousal maintenance arrangement. And although he was terminated from his employment one month after the final order, the fact "[t]hat [husband's] employer's known, expressed dissatisfaction with his conduct could ripen into actual termination was a reasonable possibility at the time the stipulation was entered into." Therefore, the trial court concluded that husband failed to meet his burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that a real, substantial, and unanticipated *606change in circumstances existed to support modification.
¶ 8. This appeal followed. Husband argues that the trial court's determination that his termination was not a real, substantial, and unanticipated change in circumstances was in error because it was based on the erroneous conclusion that husband's knowledge that he might be terminated eliminated his ability to move for modification when he was actually terminated. Wife counters by asserting that not only was husband's termination not unanticipated, husband should also not benefit from the failure to disclose the warning letter and leave of absence during the negotiations on the stipulation for the final order.
¶ 9. Pursuant to 15 V.S.A. § 758, the trial court may modify a spousal maintenance order only "upon a showing of a real, substantial, and unanticipated change of circumstances." This is "a jurisdictional prerequisite" for modification of spousal maintenance, and "the burden is on the moving party to establish the requisite change." Golden v. Cooper-Ellis,
¶ 10. We take this opportunity to emphasize and clarify the standard a trial court must apply when determining whether a change in circumstances is "unanticipated" in the context of a motion to modify spousal support. Three of this Court's opinions are instructive: Shaw v. Shaw,
¶ 11. In Shaw, the husband was terminated from his job ten months after the final divorce order due to wrongdoings that occurred eight years prior. The trial court denied the husband's motion for modification of spousal support, reasoning that because the husband was terminated "for wrongdoing of a serious nature" that had been criminally investigated a year prior to the divorce, his termination was not unanticipated. This Court disagreed with the trial court. Shaw,
¶ 12. We further clarified this standard in Herring,
¶ 13. This Court explained that " 'unanticipated' in § 758 must be interpreted by reviewing the facts and circumstances underlying the divorce order and determining whether incarceration, or another condition causing a reduction in income, was taken into account in establishing the original maintenance order." Id. ¶ 8. If the condition was considered, then it was anticipated-if it was not, then it was unanticipated. We also emphasized, regarding voluntary termination of employment, that "in a situation where a job was lost due to wrongdoing that occurred before a divorce, the loss of employment was not voluntary." Id. ¶ 10.
¶ 14. We again revisited the "unanticipated" standard in Zink,
¶ 15. Here, the trial court found that because husband had received the warning letter and had taken a leave of absence, it was a "reasonable possibility at the time the stipulation was entered into" that husband could be terminated. And, wife argues on appeal that husband's warning letter, coupled with his subsequent leave, yielded his termination "not surprising." We conclude that the trial court applied, and wife advocates for, an improper standard when determining whether husband's termination was "unanticipated." The question is not whether there is a "reasonable possibility" that husband could lose his job in the future-as we noted in Zink, it is almost always a reasonable possibility that someone "might remarry, take or lose a job, or incur increased expenses for one reason or another." Id. ¶ 14. The question is whether subsequent developments depart substantially from the assumptions considered in the maintenance order.
¶ 16. While husband's termination may have been foreseeable based on his receipt of the warning letter and his leave of absence to address mental health concerns,
¶ 17. Furthermore, there is nothing in the record that reflects that husband's termination was a direct result of a violation of the expectations set out in the warning letter, or his leave of absence. See Shaw,
¶ 18. We acknowledge wife's argument that husband "should not benefit from his failure to disclose material facts." While this Court always encourages full candor in all court proceedings and negotiations, husband's failure to disclose his warning letter and leave of absence does not change the outcome of this case, and thus *609it cannot be said that he benefited from it. Even if husband had disclosed the two factors, the same assumptions-husband was employed and earning a specific salary-would have been "baked into" the maintenance order. Zink,
¶ 19. At oral argument, wife asserted for the first time that husband's failure to disclose potentially constituted fraud because as part of the stipulation, husband certified that he "fully disclosed to [wife] all assets, income and financial information." However, this Court does not agree that failure to disclose a warning letter from an employer or a medical leave of absence violates the provision that requires disclosure of "all assets, income and financial information."
¶ 20. In summation, we conclude that the trial court applied an erroneous standard when determining whether husband's termination resulted in a "real, substantial, and unanticipated change in circumstances" for the purposes of modification of the spousal maintenance order. We remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this order.
Reversed and remanded.
Husband was an adjuster for the majority of his employment with the insurance company but transitioned to a position as an auditor when husband and wife moved to Florida.
Specifically, husband was accused of: (1) falsifying company documents as a result of an inaccurate mileage report; (2) making misrepresentations to his supervisor regarding fuel records; (3) failing to get time off approved in advance; (4) not working business hours after he visited with a friend during regular business hours; and (5) failing to complete expense reporting in a timely and accurate fashion. The sanctions required that husband's performance rating not fall below a certain standard, prohibited husband from applying for internal jobs for the following twelve months, and restricted husband's eligibility for a salary increase during the next salary adjustment cycle.
We note that it was not clear from the record before this Court, nor was it addressed in the trial court, whether or not the leave husband took was under the Family and Medical Leave Act,
