Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.
ENTRY ORDER
SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2015-072
OCTOBER TERM, 2015
Ronald Covey } APPEALED FROM:
}
} Superior Court, Orange Unit,
v. } Family Division
}
}
Andrea Covey } DOCKET NO. 34-2-14 Oedm
Trial Judge: Michael C. Pratt
In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
Wife appeals a final divorce order, arguing that the family division of the superior court
abused its discretion in awarding the marital homestead to husband. We affirm.
The parties were married thirty-two years and had no adult children at the time of the
divorce proceedings. Because neither party sought maintenance, the only issue at the final
divorce hearing was the distribution of marital property, and the only real issue in dispute was
which party would be awarded the martial home. After considering each of the statutory factors,
the family court concluded that the marital property should be divided equally. The court
expressed concern that neither party could afford to buy out the other party’s interest in the
principal marital asset—the parties’ residence and adjoining real property consisting of 70
acres—but rejected wife’s suggestion that the court divide the property by awarding her the
residence and a small portion of the land, while awarding husband the rest of the land. In the
end, the court decided to award the marital residence and adjoining land to husband, but required
him to pay wife $95,750 within one year as her share of the equity in the property.
On appeal, wife argues that the family court employed a gender-based analysis in
determining that husband should be awarded the marital home. Wife contends that the court
abused its discretion by awarding husband the marital home on this basis, even though the
statutory factors set forth in 15 V.S.A. § 751(b) favor giving the property to her. According to
wife, the court awarded the marital home to husband solely because he worked at an occupation
dominated by men and was able to do the necessary mowing and logging on the property. In
wife’s view, this line of reasoning suggests that it would be more appropriate to award a marital
residence to an electrician rather than a homemaker or to an able-bodied spouse rather than a
disabled spouse. Wife further argues that the court’s reasoning was not supported by the facts,
which she claims reveal that she was a far better steward of the land than husband and had
always done extensive physical work to maintain the home.
We find nothing in the record indicating that the family court abused its discretion by
awarding husband the marital home subject to his paying wife half of the equity. See Hanson-
Metayer v. Hanson-Metayer, 2013 VT 29, ¶ 52, 193 Vt. 490 (“The disposition of property
pursuant to a divorce decree is a matter of wide discretion for the trial court.”). Regarding wife’s
contention that the statutory factors favored her, the family court carefully examined each of the
factors and concluded that most, if not all, of those factors relevant to this divorce favored an
equal distribution of the martial property, which is what the court ordered. In arguing that the
statutory factors favor her, wife appears to rely exclusively on the respective-merits-of-the-
parties factor. She does not dispute that an equal distribution of the marital property was
appropriate but apparently believes that she should have been awarded the martial home because
that factor favored her. She cites, among other things, verbal abuse by husband during the
marriage, as well as his non-supportive attitude toward her after she was diagnosed with breast
cancer. Regarding this statutory factor, the family court indicated its belief that husband
probably was difficult to live with at times, but stated that it did not make him a bad person. The
other issue that the court noted regarding the respective merits of the parties was husband
purchasing an expensive truck during the divorce proceedings. The court addressed this latter
issue by assigning to husband $9000 in equity in the truck that did not actually exist. The court
noted that this would be the only exception to an equal division of the parties’ marital property.
In other words, the court concluded that wife’s allegations of husband’s verbal abuse during the
long-term marriage did not warrant departing from an equal division of the marital property. As
noted, the court has wide discretion in weighing the statutory factors and dividing the marital
property. We find no abuse of that wide discretion in this regard.
Nor do we find that the family court awarded husband possession of the marital home as
the result of a gender-based analysis. As noted, the court’s primary concern regarding the
martial home was that neither party could afford to pay off the other party’s interest in the
property. The court, however, later noted testimony indicating that husband would be able to
obtain a loan that would produce a little over half of the money he would owe wife for her share
in the home’s equity should he be awarded the property. The court stated that husband would
have to find some other way—either by dipping into his retirement account or selling off some of
the land adjoining the house—to pay off wife’s interest within one year. Weighing the parties’
competing interests in remaining in the house, the court noted that the property had been with
husband’s family for multiple generations, and that husband had been the one who had “worked
the land” during the marriage. Further, the court found that husband was the one who built the
house and, for the most part, did the mowing and cutting of timber. The court acknowledged
wife’s deep connection to the home where she had lived since 1985, as well as to the surrounding
community, but concluded that that husband was the party best-suited, as a plumber and a
carpenter, to work the land and deal with the improvements needed to get the house insured.
In short, the family court resolved the competing interests by awarding the family home
to husband because the land had been in his family for generations, he built a large part of the
house, he was the one who had worked the land during the course of the marriage, and he was
best equipped to do the improvements necessary to get the home insured. This is not a gender-
based analysis, and the record supports the court’s findings. To be sure, wife cites instances
when she did physical work, and she also indicates that she could hire people to do work that she
could not do. But, as the court found, the parties had limited resources—to the point where the
court doubted that either party could hold onto the property over the long term following the
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divorce. Thus, the court did not abuse its discretion in awarding the property to the spouse who
had worked the land during the course of the marriage and who was more capable of making
necessary improvements to the property without hiring outside help. Considering all of the
court’s findings, we conclude that the court awarded the marital home to husband for the reasons
noted above and not because he, as a male, was more capable of handling work on the property.
Cf. Harris v. Harris, 162 Vt. 174, 182 (1994) (noting family court’s comment that male child had
natural affinity for his father, who could teach him things that boys should know, but not
interpreting comment as indicating that court “applied a preference that [the boy] remain with his
father because he was a boy”).
Affirmed.
BY THE COURT:
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Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice
_______________________________________
Beth Robinson, Associate Justice
_______________________________________
Harold E. Eaton, Jr., Associate Justice
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