NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
OF FLORIDA
SECOND DISTRICT
DARA COOLEY, )
)
Appellant, )
)
v. ) Case No. 2D16-5614
)
CHRISTOPHER COOLEY, )
)
Appellee. )
___________________________________)
Opinion filed August 24, 2018.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for
Hillsborough County; Robert A. Bauman,
Judge.
Ceci Culpepper Berman and Joseph T.
Eagleton of Brannock & Humphries, Tampa,
for Appellant.
Paul S. Maney of Paul S. Maney, P.A.,
Tampa, for Appellee.
SILBERMAN, Judge.
Dara Cooley (the Former Wife) appeals a final judgment of dissolution of
marriage in her short-term marriage to Christopher Cooley (the Former Husband) and
challenges the unequal equitable distribution of assets and liabilities. We affirm the final
judgment to the extent that it dissolves the marriage. We reverse the unequal equitable
distribution scheme and remand for the trial court to effectuate an equal equitable
distribution.
The parties were married on August 3, 2008, and separated on December
1, 2012. No children were born of the marriage. The Former Wife filed a petition for
dissolution of marriage on September 26, 2014, and the Former Husband subsequently
filed a counterpetition. In addition to requesting an equitable distribution of marital
assets and liabilities, both the petition and counterpetition sought partition of the marital
home, requesting that the property be sold and that the proceeds be divided equally.
The case was tried in September 2015. The issue before the trial court
was an equitable distribution of the parties' marital assets and liabilities. The Former
Wife sought an equal distribution while the Former Husband sought an unequal
distribution in his favor.
Prior to the marriage, the Former Wife worked as a teacher, earning
approximately $40,000 per year. She enrolled in law school in January 2008, about
eight months before the parties married. The parties had lived together before the
marriage, and the Former Husband supported the Former Wife's decision to attend law
school, viewing it as a long-term investment for their future. In October 2009, the
parties purchased the marital home for $181,649.
The parties' income decreased significantly while the Former Wife was
attending law school. At that time the Former Husband had a "good, stable job" with the
county and was earning about $50,000 per year, although he testified that he put on
hold "any other advancement or risk-taking" that would have furthered his career while
the Former Wife was in law school. The Former Wife earned some income while she
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was a law student, including approximately $30,000 one year as a summer associate
with a law firm.
During the marriage, the Former Wife took out student loans of $76,400
and the parties used joint funds to pay off the Former Husband's student loans that he
incurred prior to the marriage. The parties stipulated that as of the date of separation
the principal and interest on the Former Wife's student loans was $91,362.11. The
Former Wife testified that excess loan funds were deposited into the parties' joint
account and were used for living expenses. The Former Husband acknowledged that
excess loan funds "probably did go into some regular living expenses."
The Former Wife graduated from law school in December 2010 and was
admitted to The Florida Bar in April 2011. She initially took a job as a staff attorney with
the circuit court at an annual salary of about $40,000. In July 2012, she took a job with
a private law firm, and by the time of trial she had taken a position with another law firm
and was earning approximately $100,000 per year. She opened her own bank account
just before she moved to her own apartment in August 2012.
In May of 2015, the Former Husband was earning about $64,000 per year.
Because he had "worked [his] way up," he had a "great opportunity" to move to a new
position that increased his salary to $112,000 per year. He remained in the marital
home and paid the expenses associated with the home.
The parties agreed to use the date of separation, December 1, 2012, for
valuation of most marital assets and liabilities, though they did not agree as to the date
of valuation of the marital home and how appreciation of the home should be allocated.
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Thus, the primary issue before the court was the distribution of assets and liabilities and
whether an unequal distribution would be justified.
In the final judgment entered on September 9, 2016, the trial court
assessed the factors in section 61.075, Florida Statutes (2014), and awarded the
Former Husband an unequal distribution. Despite the fact that both the credit card debt
and the Former Wife's student loan debt were incurred during the marriage, the final
judgment made the Former Wife responsible for the entirety of these debts. The trial
court valued the home on the date of separation at $175,000, found that it had
appreciated from the separation date to the trial date in the amount of $17,000, and
determined that the Former Husband was entitled to the full appreciation. The trial court
assigned the entire mortgage debt to the Former Husband but gave him credits for
payments he made on the mortgage and other home expenses. The final judgment did
not address the legal status of the marital home going forward.
Under the equal equitable distribution plan that the Former Wife proposed,
the Former Husband would have been required to make an equalizing payment of
$81,062.61 to the Former Wife. However, because the trial court awarded the Former
Husband an unequal distribution, the court ordered the Former Wife to make "an
adjusted equalizing payment" of $11,563.73 to the Former Husband. On appeal, the
Former Wife primarily challenges the unequal distribution of marital assets and
liabilities.
Our review of the trial court's distribution of marital assets and liabilities is
for an abuse of discretion. Witt v. Witt, 74 So. 3d 1127, 1129 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011). The
equitable distribution statute begins with the premise that the distribution should be
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equal, see § 61.075(1), but the trial court may make an unequal distribution when
proper justification is demonstrated, Rogers v. Rogers, 12 So. 3d 288, 291 (Fla. 2d DCA
2009). Section 61.075(1) sets forth factors for the trial court to consider in making this
determination, and the court must support its equitable distribution scheme with specific
factual findings. See § 61.075(3); Witt, 74 So. 3d at 1129. The factual findings must be
"based on competent substantial evidence with reference to the factors enumerated in
subsection (1)." § 61.075(3).
The trial court recited the factors of section 61.075(1) and made various
findings. The main factors the court used to support the unequal distribution were the
contribution to the marriage by each spouse, the economic circumstances of the parties,
the duration of the marriage, and the interruption of personal careers. See §
61.075(1)(a)-(d).
With respect to the contribution to the marriage, the trial court found that
the Former Husband supported the Former Wife emotionally and financially in her
career pursuit and that he was the primary income source. The fact that the Former
Husband was the primary source of income does not support an unequal distribution.
When one spouse is the primary wage earner and makes a significant contribution to
the marital assets, it "does not justify disparate treatment." Horne v. Horne, 711 So. 2d
1310, 1312 (Fla. 1st DCA 1998). Further, it was undisputed that the Former Wife had
earnings as a research assistant and one year earned approximately $30,000 as a
summer associate at a law firm.
The trial court also found that the Former Husband contributed to the
marriage by providing "substantial care for his handicapped sister-in-law while the Wife
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was in law school." Although the Former Wife does not dispute that the Former
Husband helped care for her sister, his testimony was that he cared for his sister-in-law
when the Former Wife or her mother was not available. There was no evidence that his
assistance affected his career or the parties' financial situation.
With respect to the economic circumstances of the parties, the trial court
found that their income significantly decreased when the Former Wife was in law school
and again stated that the Former Husband primarily supported the parties. The court
found "no demonstrable evidence whether the overage student loan funds were
deposited into the joint account." Although specific amounts were not presented to the
court, the Former Wife testified that excess student loan money went into the parties'
joint account for living expenses, and the Former Husband did not dispute this; rather,
he acknowledged that excess amounts "probably did go into some regular living
expenses."
The trial court also found that just prior to the separation the Former Wife
began to earn a salary significantly higher than she had ever earned and kept those
wages to herself by opening her own bank account. The court recognized that the
parties agreed to use the separation date to value all marital assets and liabilities other
than the home and noted that the Former Husband paid the majority of marital
expenses for several months before the separation date and for about three months
after separation.
With respect to the duration of the marriage, the trial court recognized that
this was a short-term marriage and stated that "a significant amount of debt was
incurred" during the marriage. The parties do not dispute that the student loan debt
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incurred during the marriage is a marital liability. See Rogers, 12 So. 3d at 291. The
trial court acknowledged that under the applicable law, "[t]he fact that one party will not
receive any benefit from the other party's education because of the dissolution is not a
factor to be considered when allocating a marital debt for student loans." See id.; Smith
v. Smith, 934 So. 2d 636, 641 (Fla. 2d DCA 2006). Yet the court also stated that "[f]or
the Husband to now be burdened with such a large amount of debt, from which he did
not benefit from the time the debt was incurred, is not equitable."
With respect to interruption of personal careers, the trial court found that
the Former Husband delayed pursuing advancement opportunities due to the reduced
household income and that the parties chose not to take additional financial risks. But
the Former Husband's testimony also showed that he suffered no financial harm. He
worked his way up with the county and then had a "great opportunity" with the Port of
Tampa. He nearly doubled his salary to $112,000 per year by May of 2015.
The trial court found that there were no allegations of waste or dissipation
of martial assets, see § 61.075(1)(i), but the court stated that the Former Wife "failed to
account for her expenditures of her income after the filing of the petition." Because the
assets and liabilities were valued on the date of separation, this finding is irrelevant to
whether an unequal distribution is warranted. Further, under the catch-all factor, see §
61.075(1)(j), the trial court found that after the Former Wife was earning a significant
income, she took vacations in the United States "rather than pay down her massive
student loan debt" and that she "incurred unnecessary credit card debt." Yet the
evidence established that the Former Wife was making payments on the student loan
and credit card debt. Moreover, because the parties agreed to value the liabilities, apart
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from the home, as of the date of separation, any expenses the Former Wife incurred
after separation are irrelevant to the equitable distribution. Indeed, the Former Wife
points out that she is not asking the Former Husband to pay for her credit card charges
made after separation.
To support an unequal distribution, the trial court stated that "a lengthy
separation is a legally sufficient justification for a court's disparate treatment of marital
assets," quoting Heslop v. Moore, 716 So. 2d 276, 278 (Fla. 3d DCA 1998). In Heslop,
the appellate court reversed a temporary injunction that prevented lottery winnings from
being distributed for the benefit of the former wife. Id. at 277. The court suggested that
in a situation where the parties had been separated for over five years and during the
separation the former wife had won a $28.52 million lottery prize, the former wife may
be entitled to an unequal distribution. See id. at 277-78.
The trial court also relied on Boyle v. Boyle, 30 So. 3d 665 (Fla. 5th DCA
2010), and referred to it as factually similar to the present case. There, the parties had
been married for twenty-five years and had an almost six-year-long separation in which
they had separate households. Id. at 665-66. The trial court used the filing date to
identify marital assets but adjusted the distribution to account for the assets and debts
accumulated during the separation when the parties lived separate lives. Id.
Here, the parties were married for eight years and separated after four
years. The petition for dissolution was filed less than two years after the separation
date. Significantly, the parties agreed to use the date of separation for identifying and
valuing nearly all of the marital assets and liabilities. Although they did not agree to the
valuation date for the marital home, the trial court chose to use the date of separation
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for that asset as well. Under these circumstances, there was no need for an unequal
distribution based on the parties living separate lives when the trial court used the
separation date rather than the filing date for valuation.
In reviewing the evidence and the trial court's findings, we conclude that
the trial court's decision to make an unequal distribution, particularly one in which the
Former Wife is saddled with all the marital student loan and credit card debt, must be
reversed. While the trial court addressed various factors in its decision, looked at as a
whole, the evidence does not support an unequal equitable distribution. We recognize
that the trial court was concerned regarding the Former Wife's student loan debt.
Indeed, the trial court correctly recognized that the loans are marital debt. The court
also correctly noted that under the law the fact that the Former Husband would not
benefit from the Former Wife's education, which was obtained with the assistance of the
loans, is not a factor to be considered. Despite this, the court found that it was
inequitable for the Former Husband to "be burdened with such a large amount of debt,
from which he did not benefit." Because we conclude that an unequal distribution is not
supportable, we reverse the unequal distribution and remand for the trial court to
effectuate an equal equitable distribution as is contemplated by section 61.075(1).
For purposes of remand, the trial court shall use the values as of the date
of separation to which the parties agreed. With respect to the marital home, we note
that the Former Husband is entitled to credits for the payments he made of the Former
Wife's share of the expenses, that is, one half of the total expenses. He is responsible
for the other half of the expenses. Finally, although the parties sought partition of the
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marital home, the trial court did not address the legal status of the home and must
address this on remand.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
LaROSE, C.J., and ROTHSTEIN-YOUAKIM, J., Concur.
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