The parties, Charles and Mary Ellyn Doerr, raise several issues in an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment of divorce. Charles, the appellant, claims that the trial court erred in: (1) awarding an "up-front" lump-sum payment to Mary Ellyn in lieu of maintenance; (2) ordering him to contribute to Mary Ellyn's attorney fees and to pay the fees of the guardians ad litem and an expert witness; and (3) ordering a fixed minimum child-support award based on his "potential" income. Mary Ellyn argues on her cross-appeal that the court erred in ruling that certain assets held by Charles were inherited or gifted property nоt subject to division in the divorce.
We conclude that it was error to award the lump-sum payment to Mary Ellyn, and we remand to the trial court to reconsider its division of the parties' property. In all other respects, we affirm the judgment.
The parties were married in 1974 and at the time of the divorce had four minor children. Mary Ellyn was forty-seven years old, with a degree in education and teaching certificates in both the public and Waldorf school systems. She worked part time during the marriage as a teacher and self-employed daycare provider, and the trial court found that she had "the ability to *117 earn $15,000 to $21,000 per year . . . ," 1 Chаrles was forty-two at the time of the divorce and had completed two years of college. During the marriage he worked as a carpenter, earning $12,000 to $13,000 a year. Charles's family, however, has supplied him with substantial gifts and inheritances over the years, some of which were used to supplement his and Mary Ellyn's income and to acquire marital property. Indeed, Charles is the sole beneficiary of two family trusts generating income of approximately $32,000 per year. 2 The trial court found that while the parties' "lifestyle choices" during the marriage resulted in their living a "frugal existence," 3 gifts and inheritanсes "have allowed the family to enjoy such things as Minnesota ski trips, flying lessons for [one of the children], and private school tuition for all of the children."
*118 The trial court issued three separate decisions in the case. The first, dated August 5, 1992, ruled that certain gifts and inheritances received by Charles during the marriage — including the two trusts — should be excluded from the marital estate and remain Charles's separate property. The court concluded that any increase in the value of the trusts during the marriage also remained Charles's separate property, reasoning that any such increase did not derivе from the efforts of the parties but was the result of general economic conditions and the efforts of Charles's father. As indicated, Mary Ellyn has cross-appealed from that portion of the judgment.
Then, on January 8, 1993, the court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law dividing the marital property equally between the parties, awarding $100,000 in "lump-sum maintenance" to Mary Ellyn 4 and ordering Charles to pay child support of thirty-one percent of his "gross annual income potential," but "not less than $775 per month." The court determined Charles's potential income to be $30,000, approximately $12,500 from his work аs a carpenter 5 and $17,000 representing the income from one of his trusts. The court also ordered Charles to pay $20,000 of Mary Ellyn's attorney fees and approximately $24,500 in guardian ad litem and expert witness fees.
*119 Finally, on March 12, 1993, the trial court issued "supplemental and amended" conclusions of law indicating that it had, in awarding lump-sum maintenance to Mary Ellyn, "committed an error of law" by failing to fully consider the tax consequences of the award. Then, apparently believing that it would be more advantageous to make the award part of the property division, the court concluded that unless Mary Ellyn were permitted to share in a portion of Charles's separate estate, she would suffer a "hardship." It thus ordered Charles to pay her $100,000 out of his nonmarital funds as part of the property division , and expressly stated that" [t]his property is awarded to Mary Ellyn in lieu of maintenance and maintenance is denied to both parties."
I. The Lump-Sum Payment
While the parties' briefs contain lengthy arguments on the law of maintenance, the trial court's amended conclusions and judgment unequivocally state that the $100,000 payment to Mary Ellyn was not maintenance but rather an invasion of Charles's nonmarital property in the cоurse of the property division. Indeed the court expressly denied maintenance to either party.
Nonmarital property may be subject to division in cases where to do otherwise would impose a "hardship" on one of the parties, and we have defined the term "hardship" as "a condition of financial privation or difficulty."
Popp v.
Popp,
Relying on an earlier case,
Asbeck v. Asbeck,
We did the same in a later case,
Hughes v. Hughes,
*121 Thus, despite our statements in Asbeck, Popp and Hughes that we review hardship determinations under standards applicable to discretionary decisions by the trial courts, it appears that in practice we have applied a different standard. It is a three-step analysis that (1) begins with a review of the factual findings underpinning the trial court's determination, (2) moves to a consideration of whether the facts properly found by the court satisfy the definition of "hardship" and (3) examines whether, in light of that hardship, the trial court appropriately exercised its discretion in invading the nonmarital property.
Each step in the process has its own standard of review. The first step addresses the trial court's findings of fact for, as we said in
Popp,
"[a] hardship determination must... be made in light of the facts and history of the case and the relative financial circumstances of the parties before and after the divorce."
Popp,
In this case, the trial court found the following facts relating to the hardship issue:
b. Neither party brought significant assets to the marriage.
c. [Charles] has signifiсant assets which are not subject to division as part of the marital property.
e. [A]t age 47, Mary Ellyn is five years older than [Charles] and approaching a time when her chances of securing employment consistent with her level of education will begin to rapidly dimmish.
f. The parties have agreed that [Charles] should be awarded the marital home, even though Mary Ellyn has been granted sole legal custody of *123 the children. She therefore needs to receive sufficient property from the division of the marital assets to allow her to acquire a residence, which will allow her and the children to live at the level they enjoyed during the later years of the marriage.
i. The standard of living during the marriage was quite unusual: they chose to live at near poverty level; yet inheritances and gifts from [Charles's] family always provided a "safety net." From time to time these funds were used to provide modest nonessentials at [Charles's] discretion. Mary Ellyn accepted this lifestyle, which improved slightly in the later years of the marriage.
j. Their earning capacities from employment [are] about equal, but [Charles] has substantial unearned income ... while Mary Ellyn has none.
On the basis of those facts, the court ruled as follows:
The court concludes that not to include some of [Charles]'s separate, non-marital property in the marital estate would result in a hardship to Mary Ellyn, in that: (a) she will not be able to support herself at the standard of living enjoyed during the marriage; (b) the parties relied upon [Charles]'s non-marital property to supplement and augment their lifestyle throughout the marriage. 10
Neither party disputes the trial court's underlying factual findings or otherwise challenges them as unsupported by the record. Because they are not clearly erroneous, we turn to the legal question: *124 whether the trial court erred in concluding that a hardship existed.
The sum and substance оf the court's "hardship" conclusion is that, without invading Charles's nonmarital property, Mary Ellyn would have difficulty achieving the standard of living she enjoyed during the marriage — a standard that, by the parties' choice, was admittedly low.
Popp,
however, defines "hardship" in terms of "privation," and the dictionary defines "privation" as a "lack of what is needed for existence." Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 936 (1991). And while it is doubtful that any court would require a party to be in such dire straits in order to find hardship in cases such as this, the definition requires something more than an inability to continue living at the predivorce standard. In
Popp,
for example, we оverturned a determination of hardship that had been based primarily on the fact that "[the wife's] standard of living would be affected and she would be deprived of the economic benefit of her years of contribution to the family unit in the form of housekeeping, consortium and child care."
Popp,
We conclude here, as we did in
Popp,
that "[w]hile the reasons noted by the trial court undoubtedly make the [court's] hardship ruling fair, they do not reveal that inclusion of the exempt assets is necessary to eliminate or alleviate a financial difficulty or privation which would otherwise exist_"
Popp,
Because our ruling plainly frustrates the trial court's property division, we remand to the trial court to allow it to reconsider that division in light of our decision in this case.
II. Attorney, Guardian ad Litem and Expert Witness Fees
Charles next argues that the trial court erred in ordering him to contribute to Mary Ellyn's attorney fees and to pay the fees of the guardians ad litem and the expert witness retained by one of the guardians. This, too, is a discretionary determination, which must be based on a showing of need by one party and the other's ability to pay.
Bussewitz v. Bussewitz,
*126 The trial court noted that the Doerrs' divorce "generated much bitterness," and that it was a case "wherе substantial fees would have been incurred under the best of circumstances." According to the court, the guardian ad litem and expert witness fees were "necessarily incurred" because of the bitterness of the dispute — particularly Charles's custody contest — and while the court felt that both Mary Ellyn and Charles "share [d] some responsibility" for the difficulties encountered in the case, it found that the length of the trial and its complexity were primarily the result of Charles's insistence on litigating custody and related issues "despite very substantial evidence contrary to his position." The court noted, for examplе, that its final decision, after Charles's lengthy and expensive custody challenge, did not deviate substantially from the pretrial recommendation of the guardian ad litem. Nonetheless, said the court, Charles "insisted upon retaining an additional expert," which, while "add[ing] to the expense of the case for both parties,... provided very little evidence which was useful to the court in reaching a decision." The trial court also stated that if Mary Ellyn were required to pay her own attorney fees and to share in payment of the fees of the guardians ad litem and the expert witness, "she will be left with inadequate resources to maintain herself and the children at the standard of living enjoyed during the marriage."
As we have noted above, we will sustain a discretionary determination by the trial court if the record shows that discretion was in fact exercised and there is a reasonable basis for the court's decision.
Steinbach v. Gustafson,
Charles contends that the court must have considered his nonmarital assets in ordering him to make the payments, and that this was improper. As Mary Ellyn points out, however, the statute authorizing the court to order contributions to fees, § 767.262, STATS., contаins no language restricting the court's consideration of the parties' financial situations and resources. And we agree with her assessment that to restrict that consideration to marital assets alone "would allow one monied party to spend the other party into submission." The trial court did not erroneously exercise its discretion in ordering the payments.
III. Child Support
Charles also challenges the child-support provisions of the judgment, arguing first that the trial court improperly set support based on his potential, rather than his actual, gross income and, second, that by making it a "not-less-than" award, the court imрroperly deviated from the mandatory child support percentage standards promulgated by the Department of Health and Social Services.
As indicated, the court ordered Charles to pay thirty-one percent 12 of his gross income, but not less than $775 per month, as child support. The $775 figure was based on Charles's "potential income," in light of the fact that, when he was served with the divorce papers, he quit his carpentry business and entered art school. The court calculated that potential income at *128 approximately $30,000 by considering Charles's earnings of $12,500 from his carpentry business in the last full year of its opеration, together with the $17,000 he was receiving, and will continue to receive, from one of his trusts, and applied the thirty-one percent figure to that amount.
We first consider Charles's argument that the "fixed-amount" aspect of the support award constitutes an improper deviation from the percentage standards. Under § 767.25(lj), STATS., trial courts are to determine child support by applying the percentage standards to the payor's gross income. There is an exception, however, in cases where the court finds that application of the standard would be unfair to either the child or to аny party. Section 767.25(lm). In
Lendman v. Lendman,
In this case the trial court ruled as follows:
If the court orders [Charles] to pay the percentage standards, the potential for manipulation of child support payments is substantial. The current situation — [Charles] has ceased working as a carpenter and is now pursuing a college degree, while living off the income from gifts and inheritances — is the most obvious example. An order requiring that he pay a minimum amount each month, based upon *129 his gross annual income potential is therefore necessary.
We are satisfied that awarding a fixed minimum amount of child support in appropriate cases is within the discretion of the trial court. And while the trial court in this case did not, in contrast to the Lendman court, specifically find that the fixed award was "in the child[ren]'s best interests," such a determination is fairly inferred from the court's remarks. The trial court did not erroneously exercise its discretion in sеtting a fixed minimum award of child support.
We also reject Charles's challenge to the court's use of his "potential" income as the basis for setting support. Citing
Balaam v. Balaam,
We discussed the "shirking" concept in the context of a different issue in
Kelly v. Hougham,
Our conclusion in
Kelly
was based on the following factors: the husband delayed returning to school until his former wife had completed law school and had secured a "well-paying job"; he continued to work part time "at a respectable wage," while attending school; and it was estimated that his schooling would substantially increase his income.
Kelly,
[Charles] is a skilled carpenter and enjoys a reputation as a reliable and diligent worker .... However, the distraction of this divorce and the financial security provided by the gifts and inheritances he has received from his family have diminished his carpentry income. Whether he will pursue employment as a carpenter in the future is unknown. He .. . needs incentives to maximize his *131 earnings in order that he might contribute his fair share tо the support of his children.
(Emphasis added.)
As Mary Ellyn points out, in the years 1988 to 1990, Charles earned an average of $13,500 per year as a carpenter and, in January 1991, immediately after these proceedings were commenced, he quit his carpentry business and enrolled as a full-time student. Then, on January 17, the day after the initial temporary order hearing, he withdrew from the university and worked only minimally after that.
We agree with the language in
Balaam
and similar cases that a divorced husband should be permitted "a fair choice of a means of livelihood" in order to "pursue what he honestly feels are his best opportunities."
Balaam,
The trial court found that there was a "substantial" potential for Charles to manipulate his child support, and that, as a result, Charles needed an "incentive" so that he would contribute a "fair share" to his children's support. We think it was within the trial court's discretion, in light of its factual findings and all the circumstances of this case, to base its support award on the inсome Charles relinquished, together *132 with that from the trust. The court's explanation of its reasons for so ruling satisfies us that the decision was the result of a reasoned application of law to the facts and it is thus a sustainable exercise of discretion.
IV. The Nonmarital Status of the Charles A. Doerr Trust
Mary Ellyn's cross-appeal challenges the trial court's ruling that the assets held in the Charles A. Doerr Revocable Trust are gifted or inherited property not subject to division. We glean the following facts concerning the trust from the trial court’s findings.
In 1985, at his father's suggestion, Charles consolidated his assets — mostly cash and stocks he had received from his family — into an аsset management trust. The trust corpus was held in a custodial account, and the bank reported to Charles. Charles's father, however, who had always managed Charles's funds, managed the new account and the trust investments. Additional gifts and inheritances of cash and stocks were added to the trust from time to time, and in 1989 Charles's father terminated the asset management trust and transferred all assets to the newly created Charles A. Doerr Revocable Trust, which he continued to manage. As the settlor, Charles could amend or terminate the trust at any time and the entire net income and principal were payable to him on demand. Over the years, disbursements from the trust, which always exceeded its income, were made to Charles, who used them to acquire marital property and pay family expenses.
The trial court ruled that while the disbursements were used for marital purposes, under applicable law the trust corpus remained Charles's separate property.
*133
Division of a divorcing couple's property is, as we have noted above, a discretionary determination which is entitled to deference on review.
Lendman,
Citing § 767.255, STATS.,
14
and
Torgerson v. Torgerson,
In
Torgerson
we expressly noted that no such "commingling" or "transmutation" claim was being made. Torgerson,
The trial court heard testimony from both Charles and his father as to the source of the funds and the various trust transactions over the years and made its
*134
findings and conclusions accordingly. Mary Ellyn's argument challenges the trial court's acceptance of that testimony. She claims, for example, that Charles's testimony was inconclusive on the source of some of the trust funds and that his father's testimony should not be believed because he "did not prepare any of the exhibits marked at his deposition." She asserts that some of the exhibits offered by Charles and his father did not "accurately portray" income flow in the trust and that they amounted to no more than a "fantasy portrayal of the facts as Charles wished them to be." These arguments, and others on the point put forth by Mary Ellyn, go to the weight to be accorded the evidence, and that is a matter left to the trial court, not this court, to determine.
Rucker v. DILHR,
Charles's father testified that he had managed Charles's finanсes "all his life" and had personal knowledge of Charles's accounts, including the various trusts. His testimony was based on his firsthand knowledge and review of various documents, and that testimony, believed by the trial court, supports the court's determination that the trust assets are traceable to "gifts and inheritances received by Charles." 15
Mary Ellyn also claims that the trial court erred in ruling that Charles's father had been the principal manager of the trust and that, as a result, any increase in the trust's value occurred as a result of the father's efforts and general economic considerations and thus
*135
remained nonmarital property.
See Wierman v. Wierman,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded.
Notes
In plain violation of this court's rules, the recitation of facts in Charles's brief contains no citations to the record. We thus disregard all facts so stated and rely instead on the trial court's findings.
One of the trusts, the Charles A. Doerr Revocable Trust, generates income to Charles of approximately $15,000 per year. That trust is the subject of Mary Ellyn's cross-appeal. The other trust provides Charles with additional annual income of approximately $17,000. Charles also has a remainder interest in that trust and a future interest in a third trust, and the court found his interests to have a present value in excess of $420,000. The court noted that Charles "may also inherit monies or property on the death of various relatives and may receive substantial gifts in the future," although it found it "impossible to determine ... when or whether [he] will gain control of these assets, or how much they may be worth now or in the future."
The court found, for example, that "their home lacked many of thé amenities which most people of more modest means would take for granted."
The trial court's supplemental conclusions of law, which we discuss below, indicate that this lump-sum payment was expected to come from the liquidation of some of Charles's nonmarital assets.
The figure was derived from the income Charles earned "[i]n his last full year of employment as a carpenter." At the time of the divorce, Charles had quit working and had returned to school to pursue a degree in art, while "living off the income from gifts and inheritances."
We discussed the limited scope of our review of discretionary rulings in
Steinbach v. Gustafson,
Generally, "[w]e will not rеverse a discretionary determination by the trial court if the record shows that discretion was exercised and we can perceive a reasonable basis for the court's decision." Prahl v. Brosamle,142 Wis. 2d 658 , 667,420 N.W.2d 372 , 376 (Ct. App. 1987). Indeed, "[b]ecause the exercise of discretion is so essential to the trial court's functioning, we generally look for reasons to sustain discretionary determinations." Schneller v. St. Mary's Hosp.,155 Wis. 2d 365 , 374,455 N.W.2d 250 , 254 (Ct. App. 1990), aff'd,162 Wis. 2d 296 ,470 N.W.2d 873 (1991).
See § 805.17(2), Stats., which states that findings of fact made by a trial court shall not be set aside on appeal "unless clearly erroneous."
"[W]hether the facts fulfill a particular legal standard is a question of law,"
Nottelson v. DILHR,
It is a process similar to the оne we employ in considering whether a trial court properly ruled on whether a modification of child support is warranted by changed circumstances. In
Peters v. Peters,
On a point irrelevant to the hardship issue, the court also concluded that including the nonmarital property in the marital estate would have more beneficial tax consequences than the "lump-sum maintenance award" made in its earlier decision.
It is also instructive to compare the facts in this case with those in Hughes, where we held that the following findings supported the trial court's determination of hardship:
*125 (1) [the court's] concern for [the wife's] comfort and convenience; (2) [the wife's] age and health problems; (3) [her] meager income, lack of education and bleak job future; (4) [the husband's] concealment and diversion of marital assets to the detriment of the marital estate; (5) [his] commingling of marital funds with [other] property to the detriment of the marital estate; (6) [his] inability to pay present or future maintenance; (7) the necessity for [the wife] to live off her property division if only marital assets were considered; and (8) [her] inability to provide herself a proper lifestyle were the inherited property not divided. This last factor particularly considers and satisfies the financial privation or difficulty test set out in Popp.
Hughes v. Hughes,
The percentage standard for four children is thirty-one percent. WISCONSIN Adm. CODE § HSS 80.03(l)(d).
He refers to the following passage in
Balaam:
"[a] divorced husband should be allowed a fair choice of a means of livelihood and to pursue what he honestly feels are his best opportunities even though he might for the present, at least, be working for a lesser financial return."
Balaam v. Balaam,
Section 767.255, Stats., states that gifted or inherited property is exempt from division in divorce actions.
As Charles notes in his brief, once he establishes a prima facie case that the property was gifted or inherited and thus exempt from division, the burden shifts to the opposing party to establish that the property was not gifted or inherited, or that it has lost its exempt status.
Brandt v. Brandt,
