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Sarandos v. Sarandos

Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, Division Four
Nov 30, 1982
643 S.W.2d 854 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982)

Summary

In Sarandos, a custodial mother chose not to work because of her limited employability and her desire to be a full-time mother to her thirteen-year-old son.

Summary of this case from Corrier v. Corrier

Opinion

No. 43653.

November 30, 1982.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT, ST. LOUIS COUNTY, NINIAN M. EDWARDS, J.

London, Greenberg Fleming by Burton M. Greenberg, St. Louis, for appellant.

Summers, Compton, Wells Hamburg by Robert F. Summers, Clayton, for respondent.


In this cause, the husband appeals from a decree of dissolution. The trial court dissolved the marriage, awarded custody of the parties' thirteen year old son to the wife, and awarded the wife $500 per month in child support. Further, the trial court awarded the wife $1,500 per month maintenance and divided the marital property. The husband appeals from the award of maintenance and the division of marital property. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

The parties were married in 1955. They had three children. Only the youngest, a thirteen year old boy, was not emancipated at the time of trial. The husband admitted to a succession of extramarital affairs with various women during the course of the marriage. These affairs commenced within a year of the parties' marriage and took place without the wife's knowledge. In the latter years of the marriage, the husband admitted to the affairs and attempted to reconcile differences which arose with his wife. The attempts at reconciliation failed, the parties separated and this action for dissolution was initiated.

On appeal, the husband attacks the division of marital property arguing that it is not "just" as required by the dissolution statute § 452.330.1. He also attacks the award of maintenance on three separate grounds. The husband argues that maintenance was improperly awarded because (1) the wife can obtain employment to meet her reasonable needs (2) the wife possesses enough property from the division of marital property to comply with her needs and (3) the husband does not have enough spendable income to meet the total obligations of the decree. We find the division of marital property was within the court's discretion and find the husband's first two attacks on the maintenance award are without merit. However, the record does not disclose whether the husband has sufficient spendable income to satisfy the decree. We remand for a determination of this issue.

On this remand, we address and, hopefully, lay to rest the attack made by the husband on the court's division of marital property. The husband argues that the division of marital property is so disproportionately weighted in favor of the wife that it is not a "just" division as required by the dissolution statute. § 452.330.1. Our response to this argument is complicated by the fact the trial court neglected to value a major asset of marital property. This asset was awarded to the husband and consists of stock held in two closely-held corporations: Pete's Market Inc. and P S Foods, Inc. The husband operates these two corporations and draws salaries from each corporation of approximately $50,000 to $60,000 per year. His after-tax income in recent years has averaged about $78,000 per year. The husband, however, claims that he must lend back to one of the two corporations, P S Foods, his entire net salary from that corporation after paying taxes on the gross amount. The husband claims it is necessary to lend this money back, because the corporation is under-capitalized and needs the money for working capital. At the time of trial, the husband's "loans" to P S Foods were not repaid and amounted to $128,710. The husband's expert witness testified that the two corporations had a book value of $152,272, or $280,982 if the $128,710 in loans of the husband to P S Foods were treated as paid-in-surplus (equity). The wife's expert valued the corporations at $405,000 based upon a capitalization of income method of evaluation.

We have set out the division of marital property in two different schedules, which vary as to the value the trial court may have placed on the stock of the closely-held corporations. (See Schedules I and II). If the corporate stock were valued at $400,000 (Schedule II) the value of the husband's portion of the marital assets would be $283,955. Compared to the value of the wife's portion, $424,550, the split would be 40% for the husband and 60% for the wife. If, however, the court considered the husband's loans to P S Foods as paid-in-surplus (equity) and valued the corporate stock at book value, the value of the corporate stock would approximate $300,000, and the husband's share of the marital assets would equal $183,955. (See Schedule I). When this amount is compared to the wife's share of $424,550, the division of the marital assets is 70% for the wife and 30% for the husband.

The values listed on these schedules were taken from the record. For the most part, they are values either agreed to by the parties or values placed on the listed items by the husband and not contested by the wife. Whether the court chose to believe the husband's valuations does not appear on the record.

The record does not indicate what percentage distribution was intended by the trial court. In its decree, however, the trial court specifically noted it "considered marital conduct in the division of the ... marital property." With our scope of review limited by the standards of Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976), we believe that if the court accepted the $400,000 valuation and intended a 60-40 split, this was justified by the husband's proven misconduct. Givens v. Givens, 599 S.W.2d 204, 205-206 (Mo.App. 1980). We find a 70-30 split, created if the court adopted a $300,000 valuation, to be heavily weighted in the wife's favor. Such a split, however, is supported by precedent, see Arp v. Arp, 572 S.W.2d 232, 235 (Mo.App. 1978) and we cannot say it is a clear abuse of discretion. In Arp, the Western District upheld a 72-28 division of marital property based on the husband's misconduct. Although smaller amounts were involved, in that case as here, the husband was awarded all the income producing property. Noting that "[t]he trial court is vested with broad discretion in the division of marital property" id. at 234, we will not overturn this portion of the decree.

After the trial court had denied the husband's Motion to Amend the Decree, or, in the alternative, Motion for a New Trial, the husband filed a Motion for Reconsideration in which the husband stated the court had told respective counsel at the hearing on the first motion "that he accepted neither parties' valuation of the stock in the two closely-held corporations, but valued said stock at $300,000.00" and that the distribution of marital assets was meant to be 55% for the wife and 45% for the husband. As apparently understood by the court, it is questionable whether the court had jurisdiction to entertain the second motion, and, in any event, the statements attributed to the court are not properly part of the present record.

The husband next argues that maintenance was improperly awarded because the wife can obtain employment to meet her reasonable needs. Section 452.335.1 RSMo 1978 provides that the trial court can award maintenance "only if it finds that the spouse seeking maintenance ... (2) is unable to support himself through appropriate employment or is the custodian of a child whose condition or circumstances make it appropriate that the custodian not be required to seek employment outside the home." The trial court has discretion in applying the provisions of § 452.335 RSMo 1978. In re Marriage of Powers, 527 S.W.2d 949, 954 (Mo.App. 1975).

In the present case, the wife was 47 years old, had worked as a bookkeeper for 4 months when she was 18 and for the next five years had worked as a receptionist and in the mail room. Since she was 23, she has devoted her time to raising her three sons. She was awarded custody of the youngest son, a 13 year old boy. She was always at home raising the two older boys, who turned out well. She desired to continue to give the youngest son the same nurture and caring. Given the wife's limited experience and her desire to stay home and raise her son, "[w]e find nothing unreasonable or arbitrary on the part of the wife in placing the welfare of her son above the possible financial burden on the boy's father to provide maintenance." In re Marriage of Prenavo, 556 S.W.2d 463, 467 (Mo.App. 1977).

The husband also argues the trial court erred in awarding maintenance to the wife because she possessed sufficient property to provide for her needs. § 452.335.1 provides:

"In a proceeding for ... dissolution of marriage ... the court may grant a maintenance order to either spouse, but only if it finds that the spouse seeking maintenance

(1) Lacks sufficient property, including marital property apportioned to him, to provide for his reasonable needs."

Without the maintenance award, the wife does not receive sufficient property to provide for her reasonable needs.

The wife's reasonable needs, as shown by her income and expense statement submitted at trial, were $1,810 per month. In addition, the court awarded the wife insurance policies having a cash surrender value of $16,500 but urged the wife to keep those policies in force for the benefit of the children. The premiums on those policies came to $460 per month. Adding this to the wife's expenses results in her having $2,270 per month in expenses, or $27,240 per year.

Based upon the decree, the wife's income would come from three basic sources: (1) the possible investment of the income producing property she received as her part of the distribution of marital property; (2) the payment of her $150,000 judgment at 9% interest amortized monthly, in installments of $1,250 per month and (3) $1,500 per month as maintenance.

In the distribution of marital property, the wife was awarded income producing property worth approximately $80,000. Invested at 10%, the return on investment suggested by the husband, this property would yield income interest to the wife of $8,000 per year. As far as the payment of the $150,000 judgment is concerned, no amortization schedule is part of the record but this is unnecessary since the amortization schedule is simply determined by a known and accepted mathematical formula. See Hohlstein v. St. Louis Roofing Co., 328 Mo. 899, 42 S.W.2d 573, 576 (1931); see also Brock v. American Central Life Ins. Co., 44 S.W.2d 200, 201-202 (Mo.App. 1931).

The husband argues that the wife's income producing property amounted to $96,000, but this includes the $16,500 in cash surrender value of life insurance policies. We see no reason why the wife should be made to extinguish these policies when the trial court specifically suggested that she keep the policies in force. While the trial court's advice to her was not mandatory, we feel it was prudently given.

The payments on interest and principal breakdown as follows for the first five years:

YEAR INTEREST PRINCIPAL

1 $13,436.55 $1,563.45 2 13,289.88 1,710.12 3 13,129.50 1,870.50 4 12,954.01 2,045.99 5 12,762.07 2,447.87

Taking the first year as an example, and assuming the income producing property could be liquefied at the husband's evaluation, without discount and invested at the husband's suggested rate of 10% return, the wife would receive:

$ 8,000.00 — return on investment 13,436.55 — interest payment on loan 18,000.00 — maintenance ---------- $39,436.55

Although the federal tax tables are not part of the record, the trial court must have appreciated the tax impact on this income. See Gershman Inv. Corp. v. Danforth, 475 S.W.2d 36, 37 (Mo. banc 1971); see also Hall v. Bucher, 240 Mo.App. 1239, 227 S.W.2d 96, 98 (1950). The wife's federal taxes on this income for 1980 or 1981 would be approximately $11,600.00. This leaves the wife $27,836.55 net plus $1,563.45 payment on principal, or $29,400.00 spendable income for either of those years. With the wife's expenses estimated at $27,240.00 per year, the wife would be receiving approximately $2,160.00 per year, or $180.00 per month more than her estimated needs. Given the error built in the estimates and approximation needed to reach this figure and given the estimates and approximations needed to be made by the trial judge to equitably satisfy the needs of the wife, we find the trial judge well within normal error, if any indeed existed, in awarding the wife $1,500 per month maintenance. If a great discrepancy in fact arises between the wife's needs and the maintenance provided, the discrepancy can be resolved by a motion to modify.

The husband argues that the wife's reasonable needs, as shown by her income and expense statement submitted at trial, were $1,810. The husband also contends the wife received $96,060 in income producing property. Invested at 10%, the husband reasons, this property will yield an income of $800 per month, or $9,600 per year. In addition, the husband contends it will take him 25.68 years to pay the wife's judgment of $150,000 at 9% interest amortized monthly, in installments of $1,250 per month and these payments will provide the wife with an interest income of $235,000 over the next 25.68 years or $763 per month. This, according to the husband, gives the wife $1,563 per month income. "At the same time," the husband argues, "the principal of $150,000 ..., will be accruing, and if, upon receipt, is invested in the most conservative markets, should easily produce the $247 difference between the $1,810 requested by the [wife] for living expenses and the $1,563 income" provided by the investment of the income producing property plus the interest on the $150,000 judgment.

The husband contends his spendable income amounts to only $37,000 per year. Since the trial court's decree obligates him to pay the wife a total of $39,000 per year, he reasons, the maintenance award must be eliminated or lowered. As noted, the husband operates two closely-held corporations: Pete's Market, Inc., and P S Foods, Inc. and claims he must lend back to P S Foods his entire net salary. In effect, the husband contends his spendable income is only the net amount of his salary, after taxes, from Pete's Market, Inc. He argues this amounts to $37,700 per year. However, the tax returns of P S Foods do not support this contention. (See Schedule III). These tax returns show that while the husband averaged an annual salary of almost $55,000 from P S Foods, his loans back to that corporation averaged only about $26,000. In fact, for the two years immediately prior to the divorce decree, the loans from the husband to P S Foods were only $16,790 and $11,421. Accordingly, the record indicates the husband had a spendable income of $60,447 in 1979. The husband claims expenses of $29,000 per year. When we add this figure to the $39,000 per year needed to fulfill the decree, we determine the husband needs $68,000 per year to fulfill his obligations. He is approximately $8,000 short. Although the trial court could have chosen to disbelieve the husband's statement of expenses or to discount the evidence of his spendable income, it could only do so if an alternative finding which supports the decree is justifiable on the record. On the other hand, the court may have determined the husband's approximate net spendable income was sufficient after allowable deductions were taken for maintenance, child support and interest payments on the wife's judgment. This computation is not clearly shown by the record. We have carefully scrutinized the record and can find no explicit basis on which the lower court could have decided the husband had sufficient income to meet the terms of the decree. We remand this cause and direct the trial court to specifically find the husband's spendable income. In the event there is enough spendable income found, the court should re-enter its decree. If the court finds insufficient income, the decree should be modified accordingly.


$ 1,500 — per month maintenance 1,250 — per month payment of $150,000 judgment 500 — per month child support ------- $ 3,250 — per month x12 — months ------- $39,000 — per year =======

We can assume the trial court chose 1979 as the base year since the husband's spendable income for 1977 and 1978 were considerably lower and the figures for 1980 are not complete (See Schedule III).

SMITH, P.J., and PUDLOWSKI, J., concur.

APPENDIX

SCHEDULE I HUSBAND WIFE

I. NON-INCOME PRODUCING Boat I $ 5,500 Marital Home (Net) $ 73,500 ASSETS Boat II 4,000 Household Property 80,000

Motorcycle 1,200 Jewelry 15,000

2 Cars 10,000 -------- -------- SUBTOTAL: $10,700 $178,500

II. INCOME PRODUCING Business ASSETS Property (1,870) Stock (Misc.) 8,000 I (net) Business Property II 21,375 Silver Coins 10,000

Bank Account 3,750 CD's 54,800

Bank Account 3,750

Promissory Notes 3,000

Life Insurance 16,500 -------- -------- SUBTOTAL: $23,255 $96,050

III. CLOSELY HELD Corporate $300,000 Judgment Against $150,000 BUSINESS Stock Husband

Less Judgment to Wife (150,000) -------- -------- SUBTOTAL: $150,000 $150,000

TOTAL: $183,955 $424,550 ===== ======== ========
SCHEDULE II HUSBAND WIFE

I. NON-INCOME PRODUCING Boat I $ 5,500 Marital Home $ 73,500 ASSETS (Net) Boat II 4,000 Household Property 80,000

Motorcycle 1,200 Jewelry 15,000

2 Cars 10,000 -------- -------- SUBTOTAL: $10,700 $178,500

II. INCOME PRODUCING Business (1,870) Stock (Misc.) 8,000 ASSETS Property I (net) Business 21,375 Silver Coins 10,000 Property II Bank Account 3,750 CD's 54,800

Bank Account 3,750

Promissory Notes 3,000

Life Insurance 16,500 ------- ------- SUBTOTAL: $23,255 $96,050

III. CLOSELY HELD Corporate $400,000 Judgment Against $150,000 BUSINESS Stock Husband

Less Judgment to Wife (150,000) -------- -------- SUBTOTAL: $250,000 $150,000

TOTAL: $283,955 $424,550 ====== ======== ========
SCHEDULE III

SARANDOS — BALANCE SHEET AND INCOME ANALYSIS AS REFLECTED IN THE RECORD

------------------------------------------------- 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 ================================================= a) P S Salary * $ 60,000 $ 51,643 $ 48,937 $ 55,080

b) Pete's Market Salary * 50,453 57,063 57,001 48,253 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- c) Total Wages Salary $123,839 $110,453 $108,707 $105,938 $103,333

d) Plus Other Income — — — — —

e) Total Income (Adjusted $142,788 $111,000 $130,831 $119,943 * Gross)

f) Less Tax Paid -57,499 -40,000 -53,485 -42,706 * -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- g) Net Spendable Income $ 85,289 $ 71,000 $ 77,346 $ 77,237 *

h) Less Amount Lent Back -19,596 -40,045 -40,857 -16,790 $ 11,421 to P S Inc. -------- -------- -------- -------- --------

i) Adjusted Spendable $ 65,693 $ 30,955 $ 36,489 $ 60,447 Income After Loan to ========= ======== ======== ======== ======== P S Corporation --------------------------------------------------


Summaries of

Sarandos v. Sarandos

Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, Division Four
Nov 30, 1982
643 S.W.2d 854 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982)

In Sarandos, a custodial mother chose not to work because of her limited employability and her desire to be a full-time mother to her thirteen-year-old son.

Summary of this case from Corrier v. Corrier

referencing husband's admissions of adulterous relationships throughout the marriage as contributing to separation and divorce and considered in division of marital property

Summary of this case from McNair v. McNair
Case details for

Sarandos v. Sarandos

Case Details

Full title:PETER SARANDOS, APPELLANT, v. BLANCHE ANTOINETTE SARANDOS, RESPONDENT

Court:Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, Division Four

Date published: Nov 30, 1982

Citations

643 S.W.2d 854 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982)

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