Lead Opinion
¶ 1. (Ret.), Specially Assigned. In this appeal from a final judgment of divorce, husband challenges the family court’s exclusion from the marital estate money given to the parties’ minor child in accordance with the Vermont Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (VUGMA), 14 V.S.A. §§ 3201-3209. Husband also contests the property division as inequitable because the court awarded nearly ninety percent of the marital property to wife. We affirm.
¶ 2. Husband and wife were married in 1991, had one child together, and separated in 2002. The parties, their daughter, and husband’s son from a prior relationship lived in the Town of Waitsfield in a home that wife purchased before the parties married. Since 1985, wife used part of the home to run the Sunshine Montessori School, Inc., a nursery school she founded and continues to operate. Husband has a landscaping business. During the marriage husband also took on seasonal work in the restaurant, construction, and ski industries. Over the last four years, husband earned between $13,000- and $23,000 annually. Wife’s income from the Sunshine School averaged $21,824 in 2000-2002.
¶ 3. In 1996, wife received a series of gifts from her mother. She was given title to her mother’s home, which wife rented out until 2002 when she sold the property. Wife also received $22,000 in cash and put $40,000 from her mother into a VUGMA account for the parties’ minor daughter. The $22,000 gift to wife went into an account in her name only. Wife subsequently exhausted the money in the account by using it to pay for various family expenses. At the time of the divorce hearing, the VUGMA account had a $25,000 balance. Wife testified that she spent approximately $18,000 from the VUGMA account for family expenses, including her own medical expenses.
¶ 4. After wife sold the home her mother gave her in 2002, the parties each received $10,000 from the proceeds. The remaining proceeds of $59,000 were placed into escrow pending distribution in the divorce proceeding. After her mother died, wife used some of her inheritance to purchase a twenty-nine foot sailboat and a catamaran for the family. Husband spent time repairing and maintaining the boats for the family, and used his carpentry and other handyman skills to maintain and improve the parties’ residence. The family also owned a camper, and husband held a half interest in a seasonal camp in Rochester, Vermont.
¶ 5. Throughout the marriage, wife paid the mortgage on the marital residence and most of the household expenses. Husband paid half of the household utilities and charged many of his own expenses, and those of his landscaping business, to credit cards. At the time the parties separated, husband had over $23,000 in personal and business credit card debt. Wife’s credit card debt was a fraction of husband’s. After separating, wife remained in the marital home, and husband moved into a friend’s home where he acts as caretaker.
¶ 6. Wife filed for divorce in October 2002. She sought primary custody of the parties’ daughter and most of the parties’ property, although wife agreed that husband and their daughter should have liberal contact. Husband wanted a shared parenting arrangement — one week every other week — and asked the court to split their property roughly fifty-fifty. Both parties hired expert witnesses to testify about the value of the Sunshine School. It was undisputed that husband’s business had no value.
¶ 7. The court issued a written order following a hearing in December 2003. Wife received approximately ninety percent
¶ 8. In support of the property award, the court explained that wife had lived in the parties’ home since 1985, six years before the parties’ married. Wife paid the mortgage and property taxes. She also paid for the parties’ two boats and contributed all of her income to other household expenses. The court acknowledged that what money husband earned was spent primarily on the household, but it noted that husband “never earned much in any year.” The court found that husband had not “followed a conventional career; instead he has enjoyed the freedom of working on a seasonal basis and taking time when he wishes to work on his own business.” The court found that husband could earn more money working a full-time job in construction or some other business if he chose.
¶ 9. In his appeal, husband first claims that the court should have distributed the VUGMA account because it was part of the marital estate. He argues that wife never executed any trust documents to establish an irrevocable account for their daughter, and. that she used the money for her own purposes. Therefore, husband contends, the funds in the account are marital property subject to distribution in the divorce. The family court’s fact findings on the VUGMA account will stand on appeal if they are supported by any credible evidence in the record. Hayden v. Hayden,
¶ 10. Contrary to husband’s claim, establishing a VUGMA does not require the execution of trust documents to make the gift irrevocable. The VUGMA’s purpose is to provide a simple procedure for gifting property to minors. See In re Marriage of Hendricks,
¶ 11. To prevail on his first claim, therefore, husband must demonstrate that the record lacks evidence supporting the court’s finding that the account was created in accordance with the VUGMA. Because the record supports the court’s finding, husband’s claim must fail. The $40,000 check that wife’s mother wrote to fund the account was admitted into evidence. The check was payable to an investment firm and not to wife. On the check, wife’s mother wrote the child’s name and indicated that it was for a VUGMA account. Wife also introduced the account statements she received as custodian of the VUGMA account. The statements identify the account as a VUGMA account, they name wife as the account’s custodian, and they identify the parties’ child as the account holder. That evidence, in addition to wife’s testimony about the account, provide ample support for the court’s findings on this issue.
¶ 12. Wife’s alleged misuse of the funds in the account does not transform the child’s property into the property of her parents. To the extent that wife violated her obligations as custodian on the account, the VUGMA provides a different remedy in a different forum. The probate court, not the family court, has jurisdiction over VUGMA accounts, 4 V.S.A. § 311; 14 V.S.A. § 3201(4), and it may require the custodian to provide an accounting of all deposits to, and expenditures from, the account. 14 V.S.A. §3208. The probate court may also remove and replace the custodian for cause, id. § 3207(d), (e), and may hold the custodian liable for losses to the account resulting from intentional wrongdoing, gross negligence or actions taken in bad faith. Id. § 3205(e). The family court correctly decided to exclude the account from the marital estate because it was not marital property, and the court had no jurisdiction over its management in light of the governing statutes.
¶ 13. Husband next argues that the court awarded a disproportionate share of the marital property to wife by ignoring some of the statutory factors in 15 V.S.A. § 751 and giving too much weight to others. Section 751 of Title 15 directs the family court to divide the marital estate in an equitable manner after considering several factors:
(1) the length of the marriage;
(2) the age and health of the parties;
(3) the occupation, source and amount of income of each of the parties;
(4) vocational skills and employability;
(5) the contribution by one spouse to the education, training, or increased earning power of the other;
(6) the value of all property interests, liabilities, and needs of each party;
(7) whether the property settlement is in lieu of or in addition to maintenance;
(8) the opportunity of each for future acquisition of capital assets and income;
(9) the desirability of awarding the family home or the right to live there for reasonable periods to the spouse having custody of the children;
(10) the party through whom the property was acquired;
(11) the contribution of each spouse in the acquisition, preservation, and depreciation or appreciation in value of thé respective estates, including the nonmonetary contribution of a spouse as a homemaker; and
(12) the respective merits of the parties.
15 V.S.A. § 751(b). The family court has broad discretion when analyzing and weighing the statutory factors in light of the record evidence. See Lalumiere v. Lalumiere,
¶ 14. Husband asserts that the property division lacks equity because the court did not consider the length of the marriage; husband’s lack of a college education and his contributions to wife’s business; husband’s credit card debt; the lack of maintenance for husband where wife earns more than him; husband’s inability to acquire capital assets or additional income; husband’s sweat equity in maintaining and improving the marital home and the rental property acquired from wife’s mother; and the lack of a proper home for their daughter when she spends time with husband. We find no merit to husband’s contention because the text of the court’s decision reflects that it considered all of those factors.
¶ 15. The court found that the parties were married for twelve years. It determined that in light of all of the factors the length of the marriage did not weigh in favor of either party. The court acknowledged husband’s lack of a college degree, but it found that husband could increase his annual income by taking a full-time position in the construction industry or in another industry in the Mad River Valley. Husband is healthy and his age — forty-eight-years old at the time of the divorce — did not preclude him from acquiring his own home or other assets in the future. On the issue of maintenance, husband did not request maintenance in lieu of property, and cannot now fault the family court for not considering this factor.
;¶ 16. As for husband’s suggestion .that the property award left him without an ability to obtain a suitable residence where his daughter can stay when she is in his care, there is no factor in § 751 that directly addresses this issue. Under § 751(b)(9), the court must consider the “desirability of awarding the family home ... to the spouse having custody of the children.” 15 V.S.A. § 751(b)(9). The court considered that factor when it determined that the child’s best interests were served by allowing her to remain in the marital residence — the only home the child has ever known — under wife’s primary care.
¶ 17. According to the family court, the statutory factors that weighed most heavily in its decision were numbers (10) and (11): through whom the assets were acquired, and which party contributed more to their preservation. Id. § 751(b)(10) & (11). All of the assets in this case came through wife, either because she acquired them before the marriage or purchased them after marriage with money wife’s mother provided. All of wife’s income, as well as her inheritance, went to support the family and the family’s recreational interests. She paid the mortgage and property taxes on the marital home. Husband’s financial contribution to. the marriage was recognized through the $10,000 he received from the sale of wife’s mother’s home and the sailboat the court awarded husband. The court declined to allocate the parties’ debt because it found
¶ 18. The dissent would ignore the family court’s discretion in this case and find the court’s division of marital property “facially inequitable” because of the ninety-ten split in a twelve-year marriage. Neither of the two cases that the dissent relies on provides any support for this position. In Dreves v. Dreves,
¶ 19. Similarly, in Harris v. Harris,
¶ 20. These cases do not hold that a large disparity in a property division is facially inequitable. Rather, at most, they stand for the proposition that we will carefully examine the evidence and findings to assure that the family court made adequate findings and acted within its wide discretion in awarding one spouse the vast majority of the marital assets. Notwithstanding the dissent’s attempts to compare this case to Dreves and Hams, the evidence and findings here, which reasonably support the family court’s decision, are starkly different from the evidence and findings in those cases. The major assets in this relatively small marital estate were the family home and funds that came from wife’s mother. The court gave the vast majority of these assets to wife because (1) wife had owned and lived in the marital home for six years before the parties married; (2) wife had paid most of the home expenses during the marriage, including all of the mortgage payments and property taxes; and (3) wife had contributed nearly all of her income, including much of her inheritance, to household needs and common family interests. The court acknowledged
¶ 21. Further, notwithstanding the dissent’s claims to the contrary, husband cannot be considered a displaced homemaker, as were the wives in Dreves and Harris. There is no evidence, no findings, nor even any claim by husband, that he left the workforce to serve as a homemaker, or that he was the primary care giver during the marriage. To the contrary, the family court found that husband was a skilled carpenter and landscaper who chose a lifestyle that provided little income but allowed him to work on his own terms. In so finding, the court was not discriminating against husband, as the dissent suggests, but rather explaining why it was equitable to award the vast majority of the marital assets to wife, considering that this was not a long-term marriage and that she brought most of those assets into the marriage. We find this explanation reasonable and within the court’s wide discretion in allocating marital property.
¶22. Moreover, we expressly reject the dissent’s claim that the family court failed to give husband sufficient financial resources to allow him to obtain and maintain a place to live so that he can share physical responsibilities for his daughter. There are no findings nor any evidence in the record suggesting that father is not capable of obtaining housing that would allow him to share physical responsibilities for the parties’ daughter. In any event, husband has not even challenged the family court’s order on parental rights and responsibilities.
¶23. We recognize that wife received approximately ninety percent of the parties’ assets. Had the family court failed to explain in detail the reasons for the facially disproportionate property distribution, the outcome of this case would likely be different. But the family court carefully explained why it weighed factors (10) and (11) more heavily in reaching its decision. As trier of fact, the family court was in the best position to assess the merits of the parties’ contentions, and its decision addresses the relevant statutory factors. Therefore, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion in fashioning the property award in this case.
¶ 24. Husband next argues that the court erred by finding that the Sunshine School had no market value. He asserts that the business was an ongoing concern, it provided wife a reasonable income, and its gross sales and net profit were experiencing an upward trend at the time of the divorce proceeding. Again, we review the court’s finding on this issue for clear error. Hayden,
¶ 25. The Sunshine School’s value was the subject of competing expert testimony at trial. Wife’s expert testified that the school lacked excess cash flow and thus had no market value. Husband’s expert criticized the methodology wife’s expert used, but conceded on cross-examination that his opinion might change if the assumptions he made about enrollment and the base salary for wife were different. The court found that the business has value to wife because it provides her with a modest livelihood and personal fulfillment. But, the court noted, wife’s average income from the school over the last three years was less than the average salary for a preschool teacher. That fact, combined
¶ 26. Husband’s last claim relates to the court’s findings on the value of the marital residence in 1991 when the parties married. The home’s 1991 value is relevant only to its appreciation during the marriage and what share of that appreciation should go to husband. As husband conceded at oral argument, however, this claim is moot if the Court affirms the overall property award, which we have done. Accordingly, we decline to address this issue because it has no bearing on the outcome of husband’s appeal.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 27. dissenting. “The purpose of discretion is not to foster inconsistency.” Klein v. Klein,
¶ 28.1 do not disagree with the majority that the family court enjoys broad discretion to determine what is equitable when dividing a divorcing couple’s property. But the family court’s exercise of discretion must, in the end, achieve an equitable result. In a twelve-year-long marriage, a 90/10 split of marital property is facially inequitable. See Harris v. Harris,
¶ 29. Such a close examination convinces me that the equities here are not just and, as in similar cases, would support reversal. As the majority acknowledges, the family court weighed two statutory factors more heavily than others in its
¶ 30. In Dreves v. Dreves, the Court reversed a similar award, which, in contrast to this case, gave most (eighty percent) of .the property to husband rather than to wife. The family court’s only reasons for the disproportionate award in Dreves were the short length of the marriage, six years, and the fact that virtually all of the parties’ assets were attributable to husband.
¶ 31. Similarly, in Harris v. Harris, the Court reversed an award that gave wife only eight to twelve percent of the parties’ property. The parties in Harris were married for only seven years, five years fewer than the parties in this case. Like husband here, Mrs. Harris brought no property to the marriage. And, like wife and her mother in this case, Mr. Harris and his family were the source of most of the parties’ property. On appeal, the Court held that the property’s origin alone is not enough to warrant a one-sided award when other factors were present.
¶ 32. This case is not meaningfully different from cases like Harris and Dreves involving a displaced homemaker where the spouses decide to allocate their time and labor in a manner that allows one- spouse to pursue a career. Like a homemaker, husband spent his time caring for the parties’ minor daughter and making in-kind contributions to the family’s welfare. The family court found that during the marriage husband contributed most of his earnings to pay a share of the parties’ household expenses, even though it also found that he never earned very much. The court found that husband had to charge some of the family’s expenses to his credit cards because of his low earnings. Husband invested sweat equity to improve the marital home for use as a school, thereby contributing to wife’s professional development. Husband spent both money and time working on the sailboat wife purchased with funds that her mother gave her. Husband’s active participation in caring for the parties’ minor daughter was the reason the court ordered the shared parenting arrangement. Husband has limited education in comparison to wife, and he suffers from a learning disability. At nearly fifty-years old, husband has a work history consisting mostly of seasonal labor. While the court found husband “receives compensation for his work on the house through the $10,000 he has already received from the sale of [wife’s] mother’s house,” $10,000 for twelve years of contributions
¶ 33. The only meaningful differences between the circumstances of this case and the circumstances leading to the Court’s reversal of the property division for the homemakers in Dreves and Harris are: (1) the parties here were married for nearly twice as long as the couples in Dreves and Harris, and (2) the family court in this case shortchanged husband and not wife. The first difference should presumably weigh in favor of giving husband a greater share of the parties’ property under the theory that the longer the marriage, the more entitlement each spouse has in the other’s property. The second difference is one that concerns me.
¶ 34. Husband and wife together chose a lifestyle in which both parties earned less than their potential. The family court viewed husband’s lifestyle and under-earnings differently from wife’s without any rational explanation, however. The court’s negative view of husband’s lifestyle is most apparent in the court’s discussion of the parties’ education and employment histories. The court explained that husband decided not to pursue a “conventional career,” rather he worked on a “seasonal basis and taking time when he wishe[d] to work on his own business.” It denied husband a share of the $128,000 of equity in the marital home because, in the court’s view, husband’s career choices “d[id] not entitle him to a share of the equity.” The family court observed that husband could make more money by working full time doing construction or some other work in the Mad River Valley. It made no findings, however, on how much more money husband could earn in light of his age, limited education, dyslexia, and seasonal work experience.
¶ 35. In contrast, the family court characterized wife’s employment and earning decisions in a positive light. The court found that wife has a college degree in psychology and arts and is a certified Montessori teacher. The court found that on average a preschool teacher earns more than wife does running her own school at home. It also found that wife’s business has no value, and, in fact, would lose money if she were to relocate the school to another building. The court explained that wife’s chosen path provided her with a living and that it “fulfills her personal interest in childhood education.” The court fails to explain why it treated these similarly situated parties differently, and no rational reason to do so is apparent from the record.
¶ 36. The award here also fails as a sustainable exercise of discretion because it gives husband shared parental rights and responsibilities but does not give him sufficient financial resources to obtain and maintain a place to live so he can share physical responsibilities for his daughter. Cf. Hams,
¶ 37.1 do not favor giving undue scrutiny to the discretionary decisions our trial courts are responsible for making, decisions they make hundreds of times each day. And, I believe that the party seeking reversal of a family court judgment under the abuse-of-discretion standard has a very high hurdle to overcome. Here, husband has plainly overcome that hurdle. The family court’s decision in this case places far too much weight on wife’s financial contributions to the marital estate where other factors were present, just as the family court did in Hams and Dreves. Moreover, it is apparent that the ninety/ten split in wife’s favor arises in great part from the family court’s negative view of husband’s under-earning, a view the court notably did not hold about wife’s similar history of under-earning. Finally, the award leaves the parties’ daughter with no suitable place to live when father has physical responsibility for her under the shared parenting arrangement, an arrangement that all agree is in the child’s best interests. For those reasons, the property division in this case is inequitable and I would reverse the judgment. I am authorized to state that Justice Johnson joins in this dissent.
Notes
I do not disagree with the Court’s analysis of husband’s claim regarding his daughter’s Uniform Gifts to Minors Act account. My dissent relates solely to the glaring inequity in the family court’s properly apportionment given its findings and its award of parental rights and responsibilities.
