WILLIAMS v. WILLIAMS
S97A0236
Supreme Court of Georgia
June 9, 1997
Reconsideration denied June 30, 1997
268 Ga. 126 | 485 SE2d 772
Thompson, Justice.
John L. Strauss, Harvey J. Kennedy, Jr., for appellant. Tommy K. Floyd, District Attorney, James L. Wright, Assistant District Attorney, Thurbert E. Baker, Attorney General, Angelica M. Woo, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
This case is before the court pursuant to the grant of an application for discretionary appeal in an action for modification of alimony and child support. We inquired whether a change in the financial condition of the provider, which arises from an increase in the value of an asset allocated in a property settlement, may be a change warranting modification of alimony and child support obligations. We answer in the negative and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Sue Z. Williams and Sam A. Williams were divorced in October 1994. During the marriage, husband acquired minority interests in more than 15 limited partnerships and subchapter-S corporations through his employment with the Portman Companies. In the divorce proceedings, he retained the accounting firm of Arthur Anderson to prepare a financial report regarding the value of the partnership interests. Wife obtained independent financial and tax advice from the firm of Ernst & Young, and an individual certified public accountant, and these experts were permitted access to the financial data regarding husband‘s partnership interests, to his accountants, and to the Arthur Anderson financial report. Husband represented that due to lack of marketability, uncertainty of future distributions, and recapture of tax liabilities effective on various events of transfer of the interests, the value of the partnership interests after liabilities and offsets was “basically a wash.”
After extensive negotiations, the parties entered into a settlement agreement allocating various assets between them and obligating husband for alimony and child support. As part of that agreement wife relinquished any interest in the partnership interests and instead settled for a division of other marital assets; husband received 100 percent of the Portman interests as part of the marital estate. The settlement agreement was incorporated in the final judgment and decree, both of which were placed under seal by order of
Eight months after the divorce, husband filed suit in federal court against the Portman Companies seeking $9.5 million in compensatory and punitive damages for alleged attempts to interfere with his partnership interests. The parties in that litigation entered into a confidential settlement agreement that was placed under seal pursuant to federal court order.
Wife then filed the present petition for upward modification of alimony and child support, asserting that the terms of the divorce settlement “are no longer an equitable division of assets acquired in the marriage.” Her claim for modification was based on the sole contention that the Portman settlement resulted in a substantial change in husband‘s financial status or condition. Wife subsequently filed various discovery motions, including a motion to compel discovery of the sealed federal documents. After a hearing, the trial court granted husband‘s motion for summary judgment on the modification action, and dismissed wife‘s pending discovery motions as moot.
[The statutory law] in
OCGA §§ 19-6-18 through19-6-27 [provides] the “exclusive method by which the alimony provisions of a divorce decree may be revised and modified.” [Cit.] . . . However, not all provisions in a divorce decree may be modified through the statutory procedure. [Cit.] Fixed allocations of economic resources between spouses, those that are already vested or perfected, are not subject to modification by the court. . . .
Recognizing that
In arriving at the terms of the property settlement, the parties were given full opportunity to vigorously contest the value of the marital assets, and to arrive at a mutually satisfactory negotiated settlement agreement. Each had the benefit of counsel as well as extensive business and financial advice. The parties agreed, after full disclosure, that husband would accept the full risk of gain or loss associated with the partnership interests. Though valuation was difficult then, and any future value was clearly uncertain, neither party was prevented from providing for the future contingency that a radical increase or decrease in liquidation value might occur. On the contrary, any potential benefit from liquidation of these assets was bargained away during the property settlement. By agreement of the parties, husband was unequivocally awarded the partnership interests (along with any future gain or loss in their value) as property in the dissolution decree.
Conversion of an asset awarded in the dissolution decree will not be considered income for the purpose of assessing whether there has been a change in the financial status of the obligor spouse. To allow modification of husband‘s support obligations on this basis would permit re-litigation of matters already settled, and would allow wife to obtain indirectly that which is directly prohibited by the current state of our law. Spivey, supra; Holler, supra. Other jurisdictions have reached similar conclusions. See, e.g., Denley v. Denley, 661 A2d 628 (Conn. App. 1995) (husband‘s exercise of divorce allocated stock options at a profit was not a change in financial circumstances to be considered in modification action); Innes v. Innes, 569 A2d 770 (N.J. 1990) (annuity payments purchased with divorce allocated assets excluded for purposes of alimony modification); Flach v. Flach, 606 A2d 1153 (N.J. Super. 1992) (assets equitably distributed in divorce, and all assets acquired with equitably distributed assets, when repaid, not deemed income for purposes of modification); In re Marriage of Norvall, 237 Cal. Rptr. 770 (Cal. App. 1987) (divorce allocated community property settlement excluded); Beltz v. Beltz, 466 NW2d 765 (Minn. App. 1991) (promissory note awarded in divorce settlement not considered as earnings in modification action);
Finality in law is well served by this Court‘s established policy that a fixed allocation of a property right that is already vested or perfected is not subject to modification. See Spivey, supra; Holler, supra. And an unexpected increase in the value of a risky asset is insufficient grounds to upset the policy disfavoring modification of fixed allocations of economic resources distributed in a property settlement. Id. Therefore, we hold that an increase in value of an asset allocated in a property settlement is not a change in financial status warranting modification of alimony or child support under
Since wife‘s claim is based solely on an alleged increase in an asset allocated in the divorce, and she alleges no other change in husband‘s financial status, her modification claim must fail as a matter of law.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Sears, Hunstein and Carley, JJ., who dissent.
HUNSTEIN, Justice, dissenting.
Mr. Williams, in the course of his employment as an executive in companies controlled by John Portman, Jr., obtained interests in over a dozen limited partnerships (hereinafter the “Portman interests“). In the equitable division of the Williamses’ marital property, Mr. Williams received all the Portman interests allegedly based on the understanding of the parties that these interests were essentially valueless. Less than a year after the divorce, Mr. Williams filed a lawsuit regarding the Portman interests, which led to a settlement and the apparent liquidation of his Portman interests. Thereafter, Ms. Williams petitioned the trial court for an upward modification of her former spouse‘s alimony obligation, claiming that Mr. Williams sustained a significant increase in his financial status as a result of the settlement. The evidentiary basis for Ms. Williams’ claim was never litigated, however, because the trial court found as a matter of law that Ms. Williams was “not entitled to any interest in the Portman [companies] nor to the proceeds derived from its liquidation” and thus granted Mr. Williams’ motion for summary judgment.
Nothing in Georgia statutory or case law bars a party as a matter of law from seeking the modification of a former spouse‘s obligations for alimony and/or child support based upon a claim that there has been a change in the former spouse‘s income or financial status due to post-divorce appreciation in the value of property awarded the former spouse as a marital asset in the equitable division of the couple‘s property. Modification actions are governed by
The majority‘s position also is not supported by the two Georgia cases it references. Those cases either involve actions to change the terms and conditions under which a spouse was awarded a share of the marital property4 or else recognize that marital property that has
The majority‘s holding is not mandated by
I am authorized to state that Justice Sears and Justice Carley join in this dissent.
