¶ 1. This case calls upon us to determine the effect of an arrearage accrued under a temporary order following a final divorce decree when the arrearage was not incorporated into the final order or otherwise reduced to judgment. Wife Andrea Joseph appeals the family court’s denial of her motion to enforce husband Neil Joseph’s obligations under a temporary divorce order after a final divorce decree issued. We affirm.
¶ 2. In December 2011, wife filed for divorce after twenty-three years of marriage to husband. In October 2012, the parties entered into a stipulation agreeing to equally divide certain joint *111 Morgan Stanley accounts. They also agreed in the stipulation that husband would continue to pay, out of the portion of the joint accounts designated to him, “those obligations that were being paid prior to the divorce action, which would include but not be limited to: mortgages, taxes, insurance and utilities for the properties that are owned by either one or both of the parties.” The trial court approved the stipulation and entered it as a court order.
¶ 3. The trial court held a two-day contested divorce hearing in March 2013. Wife concedes that in the context of the final divorce hearing she did not raise any questions about whether husband fulfilled his obligations under the October 2012 stipulation, and the question was not in any way addressed at the final divorce hearing. The court issued a final divorce decree on April 9, 2013 that distributed the marital estate nearly equally between wife and husband. Neither party appealed the final divorce decree nor sought any relief from the judgment.
¶ 4. On May 10, 2013, wife filed a motion for enforcement and contempt with respect to the October 2012 stipulated order, alleging that husband had failed to make some of the required payments during the pendеncy of the divorce and up to the entry of the final divorce decree. Wife alleged that she made a number of payments during the period between the trial court’s acceptance of the stipulation and the issuance of the final decree for which she was not reimbursed, including mortgage, utility, and insurance payments. She also claimed that some obligatiоns under the stipulation remained unpaid altogether, including insurance, utility payments, and property taxes on the marital property. Wife requested that the trial court take an accounting of husband’s unpaid obligations, order payment, and find husband in contempt of the temporary order.
¶ 5. The trial court denied wife’s motion, concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction tо enforce a temporary order after the final divorce decree became final. The trial court, citing this Court’s decisions in
Chaker v. Chaker,
¶ 6. Neither party disputes that prospective obligations under the stipulation arе superseded by the final order. The issue on
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appeal is whether arrearages accrued under a temporary order, which were not reduced to a separate judgment and were not raised or addressed at the final divorce hearing, are enforceable after the final hearing. Because this is a question of law, our review is nondeferential and plenary.
Our Lady of Ephesus House of Prayer, Inc. v. Town of Jamaica,
¶ 7. Wife acknowledges that a final divorce decree may extinguish prospective obligations based on a temporary order, but argues that the final order cannot extinguish obligations already accrued while the temporary order was in effect. She further argues that obligations accruing through the temporary period cannot be fully litigated at the final hearing because arrearages may accrue while the temporary order continues to be in force between the final hearing and the court’s issuance of the final divorce decree. Husband responds that he relied on the final hearing to resolve all issues as to property, debt, and othеr assets and that wife is now precluded from seeking enforcement of the temporary order.
¶ 8. We have not previously addressed the central issue in this case, and the two decisions featured most prominently in the parties’ briefs and the trial court’s opinion provide little guidance. In
Choker,
the trial court had issued a temporary spousal maintenance order in September 1984. It issued a final spousal maintenance order in a different amount, as well as an order for arrearages that had accrued under the temporary order, in May 1985. This Court subsequently reversed that spousal maintenance order.
¶ 9. Although two statements in
Choker
highlight that case’s potential relevance to this case, ultimately the decision provides little relevant guidance. First, we pointed out that the applicable statute authorizes a court to award temporary maintenance “pending final hearing and further order of the cоurt.”
Id.
at 29,
¶ 10. In
Camara,
we addressed a -wife’s request that the husband continue to pay spousal maintenance under a temporary order during the pendency of the appeal of the final divorce decree. We explained that the purpose of temporary maintenance is to maintain the status quo between the рarties while the divorce is pending and cited
Choicer
for the proposition that a temporary order is replaced by a final order.
Camara,
¶ 11. The applicable statutes likewise provide limited guidance. As noted above, the statute authorizing temporary orders contemplates that a tеmporary order will be replaced by a final order, but does not purport to address the question of what happens to an arrearage accrued under a temporary order. 15 V.S.A. § 594a. Parties can reduce arrearages accrued pursuant to temporary orders for maintenance, child support or suit money to judgment pursuant to 15 V.S.A. § 606(a), (b). This statute doеs not apply to property awards.
¶ 12. The statute governing property division,
id.
§ 751, gives the court broad authority in dividing marital property with respect to both the factors the court may consider in its distribution and the property subject to the court’s jurisdiction.
Id.
§ 751(b) (allowing court to consider “all relevant factors,” including twelve statutory factors, when making a property settlement);
id.
§ 751(a) (“All property owned by either or both of the parties, however and whenever acquired, shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the court.”). Moreover, a court’s property distribution is generally not subject to modification absent certain limited circumstances.
Boisselle v. Boisselle,
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¶ 13. Other state courts are divided on the question of whether a final divorce decree extinguishes a party’s right to collect an arrearage accrued under a temporary order that was not reduced to judgment before or in the final order. Some courts have held that accumulated arrearages undеr a temporary order are enforceable even after a final decree issues. See, e.g.,
Newton v. Newton,
¶ 14. Others have concluded that the issuance of a final decree terminates any rights acquired under a temporary order, including arrearages accrued during the pendency of an order. See, e.g.,
Maddox v. Maddox,
¶ 15. After reviewing authorities on both sides of this question, we agree with those courts that have held that a final
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decree extinguishes the right to enforce an arrearage arising under a temporary order that has not been included in the final order or otherwise reduced to judgment. This approach “serves the salutary purpose of consolidating the adjudicated rights and duties of the parties into a single document, and prevents the resurrection of the interlocutory matters after the [final] decree.”
Colom,
¶ 16. We recognize the arguments against such an approach. See
Lewis,
*116 [W]here a final decree of divorce has been rendered, any orders regarding pendente lite alimony are merged in the final decree and thereafter, no independent action for contempt based on the temporary alimony order can be properly brought. Review may be made, howеver, of that part of a final order which fails to . . . incorporate an accumulated arrearage of pendente lite alimony .... Indeed, it would be error for a trial court ... to fail to incorporate an accumulated arrearage of pendente lite alimony in a final order granting dissolution.
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¶ 17. Moreover, the countervailing considerations are substantial. The resolution of all the issues and claims between the parties to a divorce in one proceeding will add necessary predictability and clarity to a process that can all too often be complex and acrimonious. Just as modification of property distribution is disfavored in order to preserve finality, so too must piecemeal litigation of issues arising out of the marriage be avoided. We have recognized that “[t]here is no area of law requiring more finality and stability than family law” and that finality is of paramount importance in the divorce context.
Arbuckle v. Ciccotelli,
¶ 18. If arrearages under a temporary order accrue prior to the final hearing unbeknownst to the party who would seek enforcement — for instance unрaid property taxes may not become evident until some time after the final decree is entered — the newly discovered evidence may well support a claim for relief from the final divorce order. See V.R.C.R 60(b) (court may relieve a party from final judgment on account of newly discovered evidence which could not by due diligence have been discоvered in time to move for a new trial); V.R.F.R 4(a)(1) (rules of civil procedure apply in actions for divorce).
¶ 19. In this case, wife seeks to enforce the terms of a temporary order. She concedes that she did not raise the issue of whether husband had been fulfilling his obligations under the stipulation at the final hearing, and did not present any evidence on the subject. * The recоrd reflects that wife made no mention of these arrearages, or of the stipulations, in her requests to find prior to the hearing or the supplemental requests to' find filed with the court’s permission after the hearing. To the extent that *118 wife now seeks to enforce obligations that were, to her knowledge, unsatisfied at the time of the final divorce hearing, she cannot escаpe the effect of the final divorce order in extinguishing those debts.
¶ 20. We agree with the trial court’s analysis as to the impact of the final divorce order on the allegedly unsatisfied obligations pursuant to the temporary order, and affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
Wife indicated, pursuant to Vermont Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(b)(1), that a transcript was not necessary for this appeal and we have not reviewed one.
