OPINION
11 Dеbra Boyer (Wife) appeals the trial court's property distribution and alimony award in her divorce action against Darren Boyer (Husband). We affirm but remand for the trial court to clarify some aspects of the alimony award.
BACKGROUND
12 Wife and Husband were married on July 10, 1998. During the marriage, Husband had an affair, which may have resulted in Wife contracting a sexually transmitted disease from Husband, requiring her to have a hysterectomy. Wife filed for divorce in March 2007.
€ 3 During the marriage, Wife worked part time as a bookkeeper, earning $11.50 per hour. The trial court found that Wife was capable of securing "full-time employment at a rate at least equal to her current wage." The trial court therefore imputed to Wife a $1,993 gross monthly salary and estimated her net monthly income to be $1,594. Husband's income from his work as a stockbroker and financial advisor was disputed. The trial court made detailed factual findings regarding Husband's income and ultimately concluded that his gross income was $110,000 per year, resulting in an estimated net monthly income of $6,600.
T4 The trial court found that Wife had a reasonable monthly need of $4,967 and that Husband had a reasonable monthly need of $5,762. Taking into account Husband's $677 monthly child support obligation, the trial court determined that Wife had an unmet need of $2,696 per month and that Husband had a surplus of $161 per month. 1 The trial court awarded Wife alimony as follows:
To equalize the parties' standard[s] of living, the Court orders [Husband] to pay [Wife] $1,428.00 in alimony each month for a period of five (5) years, commencing on July 1, 2008. Thereafter, the alimony is reduced to $1,000.00 per month on July 1, 2018, for another five (5) years and then the alimony is reduced to $800.00 per month until December 31, 2015, at which time the alimony shall terminate.
The trial court later explained that it was "of the opinion that a gradual diminution of alimony is equitable and gives [Wife] incentive along the way to improve her job skills and become increasingly self-sufficient."
1 5 The trial court also found that Husband had a partnеrship interest in a commercial building in Ogden. The trial court found the net value of Husband's interest to be $20,300 and awarded Husband the entire value of the interest.
16 The trial court found that the parties had almost $79,000 in marital credit card debt. Because Husband was concerned about how a bankruptcy might affect him professionally, the trial court ordered Husband to pay the entire amount of this debt. Husband was also ordered to pay between $60,000 and $125,000 2 that the parties owed to Husband's brother.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
18 First, Wife objects to the trial court's property division. Specifically, she argues that she should have been awarded half of the parties' partnership interest in the commercial property and that the trial court should have divided the parties' retirement accounts equally between them.
We afford the trial court considerable latitude in adjusting financial and property interests, and its actions are entitled to a presumption of validity. - Accordingly, changes will be made in a trial court's property division determination in a divorce action only if there was a misunderstanding or misapplication of the law resulting in substantial and prejudicial error, the evidence clearly preponderated against the findings, or such a sеrious inequity has resulted as to manifest a clear abuse of discretion.
Davis v. Davis,
19 Second, Wife challenges the trial court's alimony award on several grounds. Specifically, she argues that (1) the trial court failed to take into account Husband's fault and Wife's health in determining the appropriate amount of alimony and whether to award permanent alimony, (2) the trial court abused its discretion by fashioning a gradually decreasing alimony award, and (8) the trial court's order misstаted the alimony termination date and the amount of alimony awarded. "Trial courts have considerable discretion in determining alimony ... and [determinations of alimony] will be upheld on appeal unless a clear and prejudicial abuse of discretion is demonstrated." Id. 17 (alteration and omission in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
ANALYSIS
I. Property Division
110 In fashioning a divorce decree, trial courts are expected to make "equitable orders relating to ... property, debts or obligations." - Utah Code Ann. § 80-8-5 (Supp. 2010). "The major purpose of a property division ... is to achieve a fair, just, and equitable result between the parties.
3
Haumont v. Haumont,
111 Wifes argument incorrectly characterizes the trial court's award of the entire interest in the commercial building and Husband's retirement account to Husband as an unequal distribution of property that must be justified by a specific finding of exceptional cireumstances, see Stonehocker,
True, [Husband] received his business value of $20,800 and his retirement of $12,500, compаred to [Wife's] retirement of $2,500. However, he is assuming most of the marital debt. ... Thus, while there is a disparity in the allocation of their personal property, it pales in comparison to the stress and responsibility, including mounting interest payments, [Husband] assumes to timely discharge the debt. The alternative was to equalize the property and assess [Wife] with a huge debt responsibility that the Court felt she could not and would not discharge.... The Court also felt that these parties needed а clean break from each other without lingering property ownership entanglements.... Thus, everything considered, the property division and debt allocation seems equitable.
It is apparent from the record that the trial court carefully considered its ruling regarding the marital property and made metieu-lous findings in support of its ruling. We see no abuse of discretion in the trial court's decision.
II. Alimony
112 With respect to the trial court's alimony award, Wife first argues that the trial court erroneously failed to consider Husband's fault in reaching its decision. While the Utah Code permits trial courts to consider fault in awarding alimony, it provides only that the trial court "may consider the fault of the parties." Utah Code Ann. § 30-8-5(8)(b) (emphasis added); it does not require the trial court to do so. The court therefore did not err in failing to adjust the alimony award based on Husband's fault.
113 Wife further claims that the trial court erred in not considering Wife's
Y14 Wife next argues that the trial court erred by ordering periodic decreases in the amount of alimony awarded. "[P Irospective changes to alimony are disfavored" unless they are based on "[a] future event [that] is certain to occur within a known time frame." Richardson v. Richardson,
(15 Prospective changes to a traditional alimony award are distinguishable from structured decreases in rehabilitative alimony intended to ease the recipient spouse's financial adjustment period. A prospective change in alimony alters the award to which the recipient spouse would otherwise be entitled based on the trial court's anticipation of a future event that will materially change the parties' cireumstances. When that anticipated event is certain, the trial court is in as good a position to make the adjustment at the time of the decree as it would be later. See Richardson,
116 A decreasing rehabilitative alimony award, on the other hand, defines
117 The question, then, is whether the trial court intended the alimony award in this case to be rehabilitative or whether it improperly made prospective changes to a traditional alimony award. "[The length of the marriage, the age of the recipient spouse, and the employment history and employability of the recipient spouse" are relevant factors to consider in determining whether an award of rehabilitative alimony, rather than traditional alimony, is appropriate. Id. The trial court found that Wife was thirty-eight years old at the time of the divorce, that she had been employed part time at a rate of $11.50 per hour, and that she possessed significant professional skills. It also observed, in its ruling on Wife's objections to the proposеd findings, that the parties did not have a long-term marriage. This is precisely the context in which a rehabilitative alimony' award may be appropriate. Compare, e.g., Jensen v. Jensen,
4 18 One aspect of the trial court's ruling does give us pause, however, in classifying the award as rehabilitative alimony: It is unclear how long the trial court intended for the alimony to continue. The divorce decree contains an error in that the termination date is inсonsistent with the number of years the decree states that the alimony is to continue. The divorcee decree provides that alimony is to terminate at the end of 2015, after six-and-one-half years. This length of time would be consistent with an award of rehabilitative alimony. - However, the findings also indicate that the first alimony amount of $1,428 per month is to continue for five years, that the second alimony amount of $1,000 per month
19 It is impossible to tell from the trial court's findings what length of time it actually intended for the alimony to continue. We must therefore remand for the trial court to clarify its finding. The trial court should also clarify, on remand, whether its award was intended to be rehabilitative or traditional. Given the cireumstances of this case, neither ruling would bе an abuse of the trial court's discretion. 6 However, if a traditional alimony award was intended, then the periodic decreases in alimony, which do not coincide with any certain future change in circumstances, should be eliminated.
€ 20 Wife also argues that the divorce decree does not reflect the trial court's oral finding with respect to the initial amount of alimony. Although the trial court initially found that alimony should begin at $1,457 per month, it later acknowledged a misstаtement in its oral findings and a mathematical error in its calculations. Because the parties' combined needs exceeded their combined income, the trial court's calculation of the initial alimony amount was intended to leave the parties with equal monthly shortfalls In its oral findings, the trial court stated that Husband's income left him with a $217 shortfall in meeting his monthly expenses before alimony. However, the trial court's $1,457 alimony calculation was actually based on Husbаnd having a $217 surplus. The trial court subsequently acknowledged this and also discovered that it had made a mathematical error in calculating the $217 surplus, as Husband's $6,600 per month income, his $5,792 monthly expenses, and his $667 child support obligation actually left him with a $161 per month surplus. The trial court adjusted its caleulations accordingly and ordered Husband "to pay a corrected sum of alimony in the amount of $1,428 per month" for the first alimony period. Thus, the divorce decree's provisiоn of $1,428 per month for the first alimony period was not an error.
CONCLUSION
1 21 The trial court did not abuse its discretion either in dividing the marital property or in setting the amount and duration of alimony. Nevertheless, we remand for the trial court to clarify its intent as to the duration of the alimony award and to make additional adjustments to the award as nee-essary in a manner consistent with this opinion.
T 22 WE CONCUR: J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. and MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN, Judges.
Notes
. Although the trial court's findings of fact actually stated that Husband had a shortfall of $217 per month, the trial court later acknowledged that finding to be incorrect and adjusted it. See infra % 20.
. The exact amount of this debt was unclear, but the trial court declined to make a finding as to the exact amount because, given the amount of 'the other marital debt Husband was ordered to pay and the fact that Husband had agreed to pay
. The term "marital property" in this context encompasses not only the assets of the parties, but their debts as well. See Utah Codе Ann. § 30-3-5 (Supp.2010) (providing for equitable distribution of debts); Stonehocker v. Stonehocker,
. Wife argues that this court's decision in Riley v. Riley,
. We also observe that this is not a case where Husband has surplus income sufficient to fill the gap between Wife's income and her unmet needs. See Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5(8)(a)(iii) (Supp.2010) (listing payor spouse's ability to pay as a factor to consider in alimony). In order to pay Wife $1,428 per month in alimony, Husband must decrease his own monthly budget by $1,267. Although it is appropriate for the trial court to equalize the parties' standards of living in cases such as this, see Batty v. Batty,
. "Trial courts have broad discretion in making alimony awards so long as they consider [the statutory alimony factors]" and arе "mindful of the primary purposes of alimony" to maintain the standard of living the parties enjoyed during the marriage, to equalize the parties' standards of living, and to prevent either party from becoming a public charge. Jensen v. Jensen,
