Renato Bruno SQUINDO, Appellant,
v.
Olga J. OSUNA-SQUINDO, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Paul Morris; Linda C. Singer, Miami, for appellant.
*233 Perez-Abreu & Mаrtin-Lavielle, P.A., and Andy W. Acosta, and Ana Martin-Lavielle, Coral Gables, for appellee.
Before GREEN, RAMIREZ, and SUAREZ, JJ.
GREEN, J.
The former husband appeals a final dissolution judgment that awarded to the former wife permanent periodic alimony and a lump sum alimony award. On cross-appeal, the former wife appeals the trial court's failure to award her retroactive alimony. We reverse the permanent alimony and lump sum alimony awards on the main appeal; the issue on the cross-appeal is thereby rendered moot.
The parties, who both hold the equivalent of high school degrees, were married in 1978. They lived in Switzerland until 1995 where the former husband was employed by his family's music business. He earned approximately $120,000 per year. The former wife did not work outside of the home throughout the course of this marriage, which exсeeded twenty five years.[1] Two children were born of this marriage, but both had reached the age of majority and were no longer living at home at the commencement of this dissolution proceeding.
Although the parties enjoyed a lavish lifestyle in Switzerland while the former husband was employed by his family's business, they made a joint decision to relocate to Florida in 1995. At the time, the former husband had no employment awaiting him in Florida. The parties sold their home in Switzerland in 1995 for $1.4 million and purchased a home in Pinecrest, Florida, that same year for $330,000. Their minоr children were enrolled in and attended expensive private schools through their high school graduations.
Upon arriving in Miami and despite his best efforts and previous work history, the former husband was unable to secure employment comparable to that which he had in Switzerland. He eventually secured a commission-based position, but it did not yield earnings sufficient to support the family. He then started his own business, which proved unprofitable. Meanwhile, the parties continued to enjoy an affluent lifestyle and live off of their assets brought from Switzerland. Eventually, these assets were depleted and the marriage ran into trouble.
The parties separated in 2003 and the former husband filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage. They sold their only significant asset, the Pinecrest marital home, at a profit of $448,000.[2] By agreement, the parties each initially received $113,500 from these proceeds. The remainder was held in trust. Upon resolution of the dissolution action, these remaining funds were also to be distributed equally.
When the parties separated, the former husband moved to an apartment in Gаinesville, Florida, to be near the parties' college-aged son. The former husband secured employment with the University of Florida at an annual salary of $33,000. According to his financial affidavit, he has a net monthly income of $1,941 and a monthly deficit of $3,340.
The former wife, on the other hand, purchased a new condominium in Miami, for $255,500. She is unemployed. Her financial affidavit shows a monthly deficit of $5,581.
*234 At the conclusion of the dissolution trial, the trial court entered a final judgment that approved the parties' agreement as to the distribution of their assets. In addition, the court awarded the former wife permanent periodic alimony in the amount of $1,333 per month. In finding that the former husband has the ability to pay the amount the trial court observed, among other things, that the former husband comes from a wealthy Swiss family and has the ability to seеk his family's assistance; the former husband may be entitled to a future inheritance that might form the basis for a future increase in alimony; and the alimony amount awarded would provide each party with the same net income.
The final judgment also awarded the former wife $15,000 in lump sum alimоny for what the court found to be the former husband's dissipation of marital assets. This finding was based on evidence at trial that, for several years during the course of the marriage, the former husband and the parties' son had restored a 1966 Ford Mustang as a father/son project. Thе cost of this restoration project was found to be approximately $30,000 by the trial court.
The former husband takes this appeal and argues that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding permanent periodic alimony, which he has no ability to pay. He further argues that the trial court reversibly erred in awarding lump sum alimony to the former wife based upon its conclusion that he had dissipated marital assets when he expended $30,000 for the car restoration project. The former wife cross-appeals the trial court's failure to award her permanent alimony retroactively from the date of former husband's new employment.
As to the first issue on the main appeal, we agree with the former husband that the record evidence does not support the trial court's conclusion that he has thе present ability to pay the permanent periodic alimony amount. Permanent periodic alimony is awarded "to provide for the needs and the necessities of life to a former spouse . . . [based on] the needs of one spouse for the funds and the ability of the other spouse to provide the necessary funds." Canakaris v. Canakaris,
Although the final judgment of dissolution did not explicitly impute income to the former husband, it did contain the *235 following suggestive findings that he is underemployed:
The Husband failed to make a good faith effort to earn a living after relocating to Miami and choose [sic] to be self-employed in a field thаt he had no experience rather than work a job that was beneath him. In fact, the Husband failed to seek and obtain employment until September 2004, when he was hired by the University of Florida at a low salary. The Husband previously had earned in excess of $100,000 per year more than 10 years prior when he was employed in Switzerland, yet claims the only employment he could not obtain would only pay $33,000. Additionally, even though the Husband is able to speak fluently five different languages, he limited his job search to the Gainesville, Florida area which has a lоwer standard of living, lower pay scale, and limited employment opportunities.
Contrary to the lower court's findings, we do not believe that the record supports a conclusion that the former husband is currently underemployed.[3] The former husband has the equivalent of only a high school education. It is generally unrealistic to expect a high school graduate to command a six figure salary in the American job market. The former husband's ability to do so in Switzerland was probably more attributable to the fact that he was employed by his family's business.
Moreover, the fact that the former husband has the ability to request financial assistance from his wealthy Swiss family is an irrelevant justification for this alimony award. See Thilem v. Thilem,
We find that the permanent periodic alimony award in this case, which is over two-thirds of the former husband's income, is excessive and erroneous. See Vega v. Vega,
We next address the court's lump sum alimony award. We also agree with the former husband that this award cannot *236 be justified by a "dissipation" of marital assets. The evidence at trial reveals thаt during the course of the marriage, the former husband purchased a 1966 Ford Mustang for $2,800 to restore it with the parties' son. Upon completion of this project, the former husband intended to present the car to his son as a gift.
The trial court found that the former husband spent aрproximately $30,000 of marital assets toward this restoration project over the course of several years. The trial court also found that when the parties were having serious financial problems, despite the expenditure, the vehicle still was not in driving condition. As а result, the court essentially concluded that the former husband dissipated $30,000 in marital assets and as a result the former wife was entitled to receive $15,000 as a lump sum alimony award.
We do not agree with the characterization of these expenditures as a dissipation of marital assets. Indeed, we view them more in the nature of an unwise expenditure. That is, although the former husband could (and should) have expended these marital funds more wisely, given his family's other financial needs, these funds were nevertheless expended on an endeavor within the ambit of the family.
The dissipation of marital assets has thus far been confined to a situation "where one spouse uses marital funds for his or her own benefit and for a purpose unrelated to the marriage at a time when the marriage is undergoing an irreconcilable breakdown." See Gentile,
To allow the parties to litigate whether one spouse invested the parties' money contrary to a "prudent man" standard entitling the other spouse to a grеater share of the marital pie and economic devastation for the other spouse raises the consideration of "marital misconduct" to new and uncharted levels of fault finding. The next step of course would be to insist on a financial accounting of аll of the marital years to determine which spouse was the more prudent investor and spender. We do not choose to start down such a path with this case.
Id. at 823. We likewise decline to extend the concept of dissipation of marital assets to include imprudent or unwise investment decisions made for the benefit of the family. Here the former husband's expenditures of the marital funds were made for the benefit of the parties' son. As such, we conclude as a matter of law, that these expenditures did not constitute a dissipation of the marital assets. The lump sum alimony award therefore must be reversed.
Given our reversal of the permanent periodic alimony award, we find it unnecessary to address the issue raised by the former wife on the cross-appeal.
In conclusion, we recognize that this was a difficult case and that the trial court may have been understandably moved by the dire financial circumstances of these parties, particularly those of the former wife. This was a case where two parties with limited educational backgrounds made the joint decision during their marriage to live far above their economic means on fixed assets that have now been depleted. It will now unfortunately cost them more to live separately and to maintain two households. "A trial court cannot really solve this common and frustrаting aspect of domestic relations work but neither can the trial court order an obligor to pay more *237 than the court has found that obligor has the ability to pay." Marsh v. Marsh,
Reversеd and remanded in part with directions and affirmed in part.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Prior to the marriage, the former wife had been employed as a medical transcriber and as a secretary for an airline.
[2] There were no marital liabilities.
[3] Indeed, the former wife presented no evidence to meet her burden of establishing that the former husband was underemployed. See Andrews v. Andrews,
