¶ 1. Husband Brian J. Mizzi appeals from the family court’s final divorce order dividing the parties’ marital property. Husband contends that the court abused its discretion by: (1) failing to consider wife Sheila Mizzi’s interest in property owned jointly with her mother as part of the marital property; (2) awarding possession of the marital home to wife; (3) dividing the marital property inequitably; and (4) allowing a relief-from-abuse order to remain in effect against husband until the end of the nisi period. We affirm.
¶ 2. The parties were married in Tampa, Florida on April 20, 1990. They had met in 1986 at a cat show, where husband was an exhibitor and wife, who also owned and operated a dog-grooming business, was a judge. Husband moved to Vermont in May 1994 and began construction of a three-bedroom marital residence on a 150-aere parcel of land in Fairfax, Vermont, which the parties owned as tenants by the entirety. Wife stayed in Florida until the summer of 1995, when she sold her business and joined husband in Vermont.
¶ 3. In addition to the Fairfax property, each of the parties held a one-third share in a piece of lakeshore property in Odessa, Florida, in which wife’s mother held the other one-third share. Wife, her sister, and her mother were also listed as joint tenants on the deeds of four other properties in Florida and a house in St. Albans, Vermont. The parties stipulated to the division of most of their personal property, none of which is specifically at issue in this appeal.
¶ 4. The parties separated in September 2000, although they both continued to live at the marital home. Husband moved out of the marital home on March 11, 2002, after a dispute that resulted in a relief-from-abuse order against husband. On April 28, 2004, the family court issued an order granting the parties’ divorce and dividing the marital property. The
¶ 5. The property settlement section of Vermont’s domestic relations law, 15 V.S.A. § 751, requires equitable division of marital property upon divorce, and provides twelve nonexclusive criteria to guide the family court in making this determination, including the length of the marriage, the role of each spouse in acquiring the property, the opportunity of each spouse for future earnings, and “the respective merits of the parties.” 15 V.S.A. § 751(b). We have recognized, however, that “[dividing property to achieve an equitable result is not a science susceptible to hard and fast rules.” Slade v. Slade,
¶ 6. Husband first contends that the court abused its discretion in dividing the marital property by failing to consider wife’s interest in the properties she held jointly with her sister and her mother. Husband maintains that because wife is listed on the deeds to these properties as a joint tenant, one-third of each property should have been included for equitable division by the court. Husband relies on Chilkott v. Chilkott and Lynch v. Lynch for the proposition that any form of property, no matter how or when it is acquired by either or both of the spouses, is subject to equitable division. See Chilkott,
¶ 8. Husband also argues that the court abused its discretion by dividing the marital property inequitably. In some respects, this contention echoes husband’s previous argument that the court erred in refusing to include wife’s mother’s properties for the purposes of equitable division. Had the court included wife’s share of wife’s mother’s properties in the marital property, husband’s award would have totaled approximately one-third of the property. Without including wife’s mother’s properties in the calculation, husband received greater than one-half of the property. Husband also contends, however, that the court’s refusal to find in his favor on several statutory factors resulted in an inequitable division of property. Specifically, husband argues that the court should have awarded him a larger share of the marital property based on wife’s greater opportunity for future earnings and her greater responsibility for the failure of the marriage. The guidelines for property division in the statute allow the family court to consider both of these factors. 15 V.S.A. § 751(b) (listing twelve factors the court may consider, “including but not limited to ... (8) the opportunity of each for future acquisition of capital assets and income ... and (12) the respective merits of the parties”).
¶ 9. With respect to the parties’ future earnings, husband again refers to wife’s mother’s wealth. The court considered this wealth in making its determination, stating that wife “has employable skills and, in time, she will be receiving a sizable inheritance from her mother.” Nevertheless, the court found that the parties’ opportunities for future acquisition of wealth favored neither husband nor
¶ 10. The court was equally justified in determining that the final statutory factor, “the respective merits of the parties,” favored neither husband nor wife. Husband argues that wife bears greater responsibility for the failure of the marriage. He bases this argument primarily on wife’s adulterous affair, and on evidence that she lied to the police about certain details of the violent dispute on March 11, 2002 that resulted in the relief-from-abuse order and husband’s removal from the marital home. The court may consider extramarital affairs and other conduct during the marriage in making property awards. Weaver,
¶ 11. Finally, husband argues that the court abused its discretion by refusing to lift the relief-from-abuse order against him until the end of the nisi period. As the nisi period has ended, this contention is moot.
Affirmed.
