MARJORIE MARTIN MORRIS v. HARRY ARTHUR MORRIS, JR.; HARRY ARTHUR MORRIS, JR. v. MARJORIE MARTIN MORRIS
No. 0606-85; No. 0637-85
Norfolk
October 21, 1986
303
Diane L. Abdelnour (Smith and Abdelnour, on brief), for Marjorie Martin Morris.
D. Wayne Moore (Moore and Moore, on brief), for Harry Arthur Morris, Jr.
OPINION
BARROW, J. — Both Marjorie Martin Morris (wife) and Harry Arthur Morris, Jr. (husband) appeal this divorce case. Wife complains that the marital property was not properly determined and that the court improperly ordered the transfer of jointly owned property to husband. Husband claims the court erred in awarding spousal support to wife and, in the alternative, in awarding an excessive amount of spousal support. The trial court was correct in all of its rulings except the order requiring the transfer of jointly owned property to the husband. For this reason, we reverse the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.
Four properties were the subject of controversy in determining a monetary award. These were the marital residence, husband‘s office building, husband‘s law practice and a fifteen acre parcel of land. The trial court placed a value on each item except the law practice, the value of which was never proved, and determined that the properties, with the exception of the law practice, were marital property. The trial court awarded wife a $70,000 monetary award conditioned upon wife conveying the marital home and
Before addressing the issues raised by the parties on appeal we must dispose of a procedural concern which they did not raise. The trial court reserved in its decree of divorce certain collateral issues which it disposed of in a subsequent decree. On April 3, 1984, the decree of divorce was entered granting the husband a divorce on the ground of a one-year separation. This decree also made the monetary award described previously but reserved decision on attorney‘s fees, spousal support and custody for a later determination. On April 18, 1984, within twenty-one days after the decree of divorce, the court on the wife‘s motion vacated its decision “as to property rights, equitable distribution and partition” and reserved “its jurisdiction and authority” to dispose of these matters along with spousal and child support, child custody, visitation rights and attorney‘s fees. On April 15, 1985, the trial court entered an order disposing of those issues it had reserved for a later determination. The monetary award in the second decree was identical to that provided for in the first decree.
This court has previously held that a trial court has the power to reserve in a decree of divorce the authority to make a monetary award under
Although the wife filed a notice of appeal to the monetary award provision contained in the first decree, the husband did not. Since no timely notice of appeal was filed with respect to the decree of divorce itself we do not consider any issue concerning the correctness of the decree of divorce and only consider evidence of the grounds for divorce to the extent that it relates to the award of spousal support.
I. MARITAL PROPERTY
Wife complains that the trial court erred in determining that the fifteen acre parcel of land titled in her name was marital property. The property was purchased by the wife after the marriage. She paid for it by selling stock and by obtaining a loan which was repaid from child support monies she received for two dependent children from a previous marriage.
In her appeal, wife claims the stock, the proceeds of which were used to buy the fifteen acre parcel, belonged to her prior to the marriage.
However, there was no evidence that the stock was acquired prior to the marriage or by gift or inheritance. The trial court found that she purchased the fifteen acre parcel for “$7,500 by selling $3,000 worth of stock and obtaining a bank loan” and that “[w]hile she testified that she brought $35,000 including some stocks into the marriage, no evidence was presented tracing those funds or stocks to this purchase.” Based on the presumption that all property acquired by either spouse during the marriage is marital property,
The trial court refused to reopen the proceedings at the wife‘s request to hear additional evidence concerning the source of funds used to purchase the fifteen acre parcel. Since the request came six weeks after the evidentiary hearing consisting of two full days of testimony during which each party had ample opportunity to present evidence, it was within the court‘s discretion to refuse to take further evidence on this subject. See Mundy v. Commonwealth, 161 Va. 1049, 1064, 171 S.E. 691, 696 (1933); Wilkie v. Richmond Traction Co., 105 Va. 290, 296, 54 S.E. 43, 45 (1906).
II. SUPPORT
Husband and wife had a stormy relationship during the last few years of their marriage. They were involved in several altercations, and they verbally abused one another.
Husband is a lawyer who has a successful practice as a sole practitioner. Wife worked periodically during the marriage, but she was not employed at the time of the divorce hearing. She contracted bladder cancer and was very ill for the past few years; however she apparently recovered and is capable of working.
Husband contends that his wife‘s conduct toward him constituted cruelty which amounted to constructive desertion; thus barring her right to spousal support. He testified that she locked him out of the house occasionally, threw his clothes outside, destroyed his personal belongings, used profanity and struck him once with a dust pan. The wife claimed that the husband stayed out late at night, was seeing another woman and physically assaulted her on several occasions. The evidence was conflicting and was resolved by the judge who concluded that the wife had not constructively deserted the husband. This finding has “the weight of a jury verdict,” and we will not disturb it since it is not plainly wrong and is supported by evidence. See Alls, 216 Va. at 14, 216 S.E.2d at 17. Thus, the wife‘s right to spousal support was not barred. Thomas v. Thomas, 217 Va. 502, 504, 229 S.E.2d 887, 889 (1976); Ro-wand v. Rowand, 215 Va. 344, 346, 210 S.E.2d 149, 150-51 (1974);
The wife asserts that if she is barred from receiving spousal support because of her conduct, then the husband‘s alleged adulterous conduct after their separation reimposed his obligation to pay her spousal support. Since we affirm the trial court‘s conclusion that the wife‘s conduct did not bar her right to spousal support, we need not reach this issue.
Husband also claims that the award of spousal support was excessive. His anticipated gross income for 1983 was approximately $73,000, and the wife, who was unemployed at the time of the hearing, had only held unskilled jobs during the marriage. Upon dissolution of the marriage her only source of income will be $622 per month from the Veteran‘s Administration. In determining spousal support, a trial court has broad discretion and “the appellate court will not interfere with such discretion, unless it is clear that some injustice has been done.” Oliver v. Oliver, 202 Va. 268, 272, 117 S.E.2d 59, 62 (1960). In this instance there was no apparent injustice in the award of spousal support, and we do not consider it excessive.
III. MONETARY AWARD
The trial court erred in ordering the wife to convey her interest in the jointly owned marital home and office building to the husband upon his payment of the $70,000 monetary award. The trial court did not have authority to order this transfer as part of a monetary award. Venable v. Venable, 2 Va. App. 178, 185, 342 S.E.2d 646, 650 (1986). However, the husband argues that the court accomplished this through its authority to partition jointly owned property. We disagree.
The authority to partition jointly owned property included in
Even more significantly,
Since
For these reasons we conclude that the trial judge erred in conditioning the wife‘s monetary award on her conveying her interest in the jointly owned home to the husband. He had authority to make a monetary award as well as authority to partition the jointly owned property, but he had no authority to condition one on the other.
IV. CONCLUSION
Since we must vacate the trial court‘s order requiring the wife to convey her jointly owned property to the husband, we must also vacate its determination of the monetary award and spousal support. Determination of the monetary award necessarily involves a consideration of the interest that each of the parties has in the marital property.
Reversed and remanded.
Hodges, J., concurred.
Baker, J., dissenting.
Insofar as the opinion of the majority holds that the trial court was empowered to enter an order relating to equitable distribution more than one year after it entered a final decree of divorce dissolving the bonds of matrimony between the parties, I respectfully dissent. The decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony was entered on April 3, 1984, and became final and binding twenty-one days thereafter. Rule 1:1. The decree of equitable distribution was entered on April 15, 1985, more than one year after the final decree of divorce. The view expressed and authorities cited in the dissent in Parra v. Parra, 1 Va. App. 118, 336 S.E.2d 152 (1985) are applicable here.
Prior to the 1986 session of the Virginia General Assembly, no section of the Code dealing with awards of equitable distribution modified the express language of Rule 1:1. In 1986,
The court, on the motion of both parties, may retain jurisdiction in the final decree of divorce to adjudicate the remedy provided by this section when the court determines that such
action in (sic) clearly necessary because of the complexities of the parties’ property interests, and all decrees heretofore entered retaining such jurisdiction are validated. (emphasis added).
It is clear from this amendment that the legislature never intended that the parties be permitted to bestow equitable distribution jurisdiction on the trial courts beyond the twenty-one days provided in Rule 1:1. Even after the 1986 amendment, the trial court may extend the time in which it must act only after a motion by both parties and a showing that the issues are complex.
The jurisdictional issue is resolved by the majority by reference to the Parra decision. For the reasons expressed in my dissent in that case, I believe that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to make the equitable distribution award in this case.
While nothing in the majority opinion suggests that the majority relies on the 1986 amendment to
I also dissent from that portion of the majority opinion which addresses the constructive desertion issue. If husband had a right to appeal the issue whether wife was guilty of constructive desertion that right arose on April 3, 1984, the day the decree of divorce was entered. To have appealed that issue to this court he was required by our rules to note his appeal within thirty days after the entry of the decree. His failure to note his appeal on that issue until after the entry of the decree awarding equitable distribution was at least one year too late, and yet the majority addresses the issue as it relates to issues of spousal support. While the majority purports to address the constructive desertion issue
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the opinion expressed by the majority.
