Karim J. Ziyad and Fatima El-Amin were divorced in March 2009, and Ziyad was awarded a certain residential property. To hold El-Amin harmless from the indebtedness on that property, Ziyad was ordered to refinance the indebtedness in his own name within six months or to sell the property to pay off the indebtedness.
It is settled law, of course, that a court cannot modify a final decree of divorce on a motion for contempt. Floyd v. Floyd,
In this case, the decree unambiguously requires Ziyad to put the property up for sale.
We cannot say that the trial court erred when it understood the decree to require the sale of the property or when it understood Ziyad to bear responsibility for making the property salable. Nor can we say that the trial court clearly erred when it found — as a fact that Ziyad does not dispute — that the property can be sold only if the principal of the indebtedness is paid down. All together, these findings lead inescapably to the conclusion that Ziyad is required by the decree to pay the principal down to the extent necessary to render the property salable. The trial court did not err when it ordered him to do just that.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In this respect, the decree provided:
[Ziyad] shall be responsible for the timely payment of the mortgage on the property, taxes, and insurance.... [He] shall refinance the property out of [El-Amin]’s name withfin] six (6) months from the date of the final decree. In the event [Ziyad] fails to refinance the property and take [El-Amin]’s name off the property, the property shall be put up for sale. All proceeds from the sale shall first go towards paying off the debts and liens associated with the property; any additional proceeds shall be awarded to [Ziyad].
It is undisputed that Ziyad did not refinance the indebtedness in his own name within six months of the final decree. Accordingly, under the plain terms of the decree, Ziyad forfeited his right to refinance and keep the property. See note 1, supra. That the decree unambiguously requires Ziyad to sell the property distinguishes this case from Floyd, where the trial court on contempt ordered the husband to quitclaim real property to his wife, but the decree made no provision for the husband to do so. See
This is not a case, therefore, in which both parties were to share the risk that the indebtedness on the property might exceed the price for which the property could be sold. This circumstance distinguishes this case from Jett, where the trial court on contempt ordered the husband to hold the wife harmless from any deficiency of the sale price to satisfy the indebtedness, but under the decree, both parties were to share the risk of such a deficiency. See
Nor could he dispute this finding, insofar as no transcript of the hearing on the motion for contempt appears in the record. In the absence of a transcript, we could not say that the trial court clearly erred with respect to its findings of fact, even if Ziyad argued otherwise. See Alstep, Inc. v. State Bank and Trust Co.,
More specifically, the trial court ordered Ziyad to pay $12,000 toward the principal by January 1, 2013 to purge his contempt, and it further ordered him thereafter to pay $12,000 annually toward the principal “until the house is sold or the note paid in full.” Notably, Ziyad takes issue with neither the finding of contempt nor the amount that the trial court ordered him to pay toward the principal. Instead, he takes issue only with the fact that the trial court ordered him to pay down the principal.
