Appellant Judith Fernandez Payson and appellee Stanley Leon Payson were married in September 1991 and separated in April 1999. On September 8, 2000, at the close of a bench trial on their cross-complaints for divorce, the trial court issued an oral ruling in which it granted the divorce, distributed property, and resolved the issues of child custody, support, and visitation. The final judgment and decree of divorce incorporating the trial court’s oral pronouncement was filed October 20, 2000. In its equitable division of marital property, the trial court awarded Mrs. Payson a stock account which contained Home Depot stock Mrs. Payson had owned prior to the marriage, Home Depot stock she had received after exercising stock options that had vested prior to the marriage, 1 Home Depot stock that was marital property, 2 and the appreciation on the entire account. Contesting the trial court’s classification of this account as marital property subject to equitable division, Mrs. Payson obtained discretionary review of the trial court’s judgment in this Court. In granting review, we stated we were particularly concerned with
[w]hether the trial court erred in classifying Wife’s appreciated shares of Home Depot stock as a marital asset for purposes of the equitable division of property. See Bass v. Bass,264 Ga. 506 , 507 [(448 SE2d 366 )] (1994); Yates v. Yates,259 Ga. 131 [(377 SE2d 677 )] (1989); Thomas v. Thomas,259 Ga. 73 , 77 [(377 SE2d 666 )] (1989); Halpern v. Halpern,256 Ga. 639 [(352 SE2d 753 )] (1987).
1. The equitable division of property is an allocation to the parties of the assets acquired during the marriage, based on the parties’ respective equitable interests.
Byers v. Caldwell,
(a) Mrs. Payson’s property interest in the Home Depot stock she brought to the marriage and the Home Depot stock she received after exercising her pre-marital stock options was not marital property subject to equitable division since it was not generated by the marriage or accumulated during the marriage. As a matter of law, non-marital assets are not subject to equitable division, and the trial court erred when it treated the non-marital property as marital property subject to equitable division.
Yates v. Yates,
(b) Whether the appreciation in value of Mrs. Payson’s Home Depot stock during the marriage is marital property subject to division or is her separate, non-marital property is a question of fact for the trial court which served as the factfinder in this case.
Bass v. Bass,
supra,
Since the trial court erroneously considered as marital property Mrs. Payson’s Home Depot stock, her exercised stock options, and the appreciation in the value of the stock brought about by market forces, we must reverse the trial court’s equitable division of property and remand the case to the trial court in order that it might reconsider the allocation of marital property, including a determination of the amount of appreciation in value that is due to market forces and the amount due to the efforts of one or both parties to the marriage.
Mr. Payson suggests that the trial court’s error was harmless since Mrs. Payson was awarded the stock. We disagree. Our invalidation of a portion of the factfinder’s allocation of marital property “works a change in matter of substance” regarding the allocation of marital property and requires the factfinder to re-examine its equitable division of marital property.
Jones v. Jones,
2. Following the equitable division of property in paragraphs 10 and 11 of the final judgment and decree of divorce is a separately-numbered paragraph in which the trial court ordered Mrs. Payson to pay Mr. Payson $100,000 within thirty days of the entry of the judgment. The paragraph went on to state that Mr. Payson would be solely responsible for the payment of federal and state income taxes brought about by the 2000 sale of Home Depot stock in Mr. Payson’s name. Mrs. Payson contends the $100,000 constitutes an award of alimony to Mr. Payson which must be reversed since Mr. Payson had *234 not sought alimony. Mr. Payson contends the $100,000 is part of the equitable division of marital property and suggests that the award was a court-ordered repayment of marital funds earmarked for payment of taxes that Mrs. Payson had put to her personal use. The trial court’s judgment contains no findings of fact, so we are unable to discern the trial court’s rationale. In a separate but related enumeration of error, Mrs. Payson contends the trial court erred when it denied her motion which sought the inclusion of findings of fact and conclusions of law in the final judgment pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-52 (a). The trial court denied Mrs. Payson’s motion because it deemed the motion untimely since the motion had not been made prior to the trial court’s oral pronouncement of its ruling. The motion had been filed six days after the trial court’s oral pronouncement of its decision and 36 days before the written judgment was entered. We must determine whether the trial court’s determination regarding timeliness is error.
A trial court presiding over a bench trial or ruling on an interlocutory injunction in a court of record is statutorily required to make findings of fact and conclusions of law “upon [the] request of any party made prior to such ruling. . . .” OCGA § 9-11-52 (a). When the request for findings is made after judgment is entered, a trial court may make the findings. OCGA § 9-11-52 (c). The question is whether Mrs. Payson’s motion for findings of fact and conclusions of law, filed after the trial court orally announced its decision but before the trial court issued its written judgment, was made “prior to such ruling” so as to require the trial court to make findings of fact. Mr. Payson contends that “ruling” in § 9-11-52 (a) refers to the trial court’s oral pronouncement of its decision, making Mrs. Payson’s request untimely since it was filed six days after the oral decision. Mrs. Payson, on the other hand, contends that “ruling” is synonymous with “judgment,” making her request timely since it was made before the trial court entered the written judgment. For the reasons that follow, we agree with Mrs. Payson’s position.
A ruling is “[a]n order made by a court, at the instance of one of the parties to a suit, commanding a ministerial officer or the opposite party to do some act or to show cause why some act should not be done. It is usually upon some interlocutory matter.” Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed.). Any trial, including a bench trial, is replete with trial court rulings concerning the admission of evidence and the allowing or disallowing of the parties’ various motions. Id. The trial court’s final ruling in a case, i.e., the order or decree from which an appeal lies (OCGA § 9-11-54 (a)), or
“the final
result of pleadings, evidence and law in the case”
(Blandford & Thornton v. McGehee,
Under the Civil Practice Act, findings of fact are integral only to
*235
those judicial rulings that are judgments. Each of the purposes of findings of fact is linked to the trial court’s final determination in a case. “ ‘The purpose of findings of fact is threefold: as an aid in the trial judge’s process of adjudication; for purposes of res judicata and estoppel by judgment; and as an aid to the appellate court on review.’ [Cit.]”
Gen. Teamsters Local &c. v. Allied Foods,
In recent cases, the Court of Appeals has implicitly construed the second “ruling” in § 9-11-52 (a) as “judgment”: in
Progressive Preferred Ins. Co. v. Aguilera,
It makes sense from a practical standpoint to conclude that a party’s § 9-11-52 (a) request for findings and conclusions in a bench trial is timely if made before the judgment is entered. The filing of a judgment is a certainty in every case, its timing is not subject to manipulation, and it is the point from which action on the judgment so entered may be taken. On the other hand, the oral pronouncement of the trial court’s determination is not a mandatory part of every bench trial and has no legal force or effect as a judgment until reduced to writing, signed by the trial court, and filed with the clerk of court.
Crowell v. State,
A seamless statutory scheme incorporating OCGA § 9-11-52 (a) and (c) results when “ruling” in § 9-11-52 (a) is read as being synonymous with “judgment.” See
Houston v. Lowe’s of Savannah,
In sum, we vacate those portions of the trial court’s judgment in which the equitable division of property is made (Paragraphs 10 and 11) and in which Mrs. Payson is ordered to pay $100,000 to Mr. Pay-son (Paragraph 12). The case is remanded to the trial court with direction that Mrs. Payson’s separate, non-marital property be awarded to her; that the portion of appreciation in value of Mrs. Pay-son’s Home Depot stock that is attributable to market forces be awarded to her as separate, non-marital property; that the appreciation in value of said stock due to the efforts of either or both spouses be subject to equitable division; and that findings of fact and conclusions of law be entered pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-52 (a).
Judgment reversed and case remanded with direction.
Notes
Prior to the marriage and for 18 months after the marriage, Mrs. Payson was employed by Home Depot and took advantage of the company’s employee participation plan to obtain stock and stock options. When Mrs. Payson left her employment with Home Depot, she had 30 days to exercise her vested right to stock options to purchase 10,260 shares. She liquidated premarital assets in order to exercise her stock options.
Mrs. Payson conceded that 169 shares of Home Depot stock in the account is marital property subject to equitable division.
