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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
SHARON D. RAGO : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
DAVID A. RAGO : No. 1499 MDA 2019
Appeal from the Decree Entered September 11, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County Civil Division at No(s):
2013-4930
SHARON D. RAGO : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
DAVID A. RAGO :
:
Appellant : No. 1738 MDA 2019
Appeal from the Decree Entered September 11, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County Civil Division at No(s):
2013-4930
BEFORE: KUNSELMAN, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and STRASSBURGER, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED DECEMBER 16, 2020
Sharon D. Rago (“Wife”) and David A. Rago (“Husband”) cross-appeal
from the decree of divorce. The parties challenge the court’s equitable
distribution order. We affirm.
____________________________________________
* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-S41020-20
The parties were married in 1976; Wife filed a complaint in divorce in
2013. The parties had one child (“Daughter”), who was an adult by the time
of the divorce proceedings. The court held hearings on equitable distribution
in May and October 2018. At the hearings, the parties contested the date of
separation. Husband argued the parties separated in 2005, when he began to
occupy the apartment on the lower level of the marital home. Wife claimed
that the parties did not fully separate in 2005, as they reconciled in 2008, and
finally separated in 2012, when they sold their marital residence in Babylon,
New York. The parties offered conflicting testimony regarding the extent of
their relationship, their use of the residence, and their activities together
between 2005 and 2012. The court also took Daughter’s testimony.
The parties further contested ownership of a residence in Florida that
Husband purchased in 2009. Husband claimed that the property was not a
marital asset because he bought it after the 2005 separation date and made
the down payment using a $25,000 gift from his parents solely to him, and
not to Wife. Husband testified that his father attempted to give him the money
in 1994, when his mother died, but instead kept it until 1996, when he
transferred it to a bank account co-owned by Husband and his father.
According to Husband, his parents had intended the gift to be for his use only.
See Trial Ct. Opinion, 10/7/19, at 2.
The court entered an equitable distribution opinion and order on January
23, 2019. The court found that the parties initially separated in 2005, but
reconciled in 2008, when Husband moved back upstairs. Opinion and Order,
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1/23/20, at 2. The court observed that “[e]ven when Husband lived
downstairs, Wife cooked for all of them and did the laundry; Husband
maintained the house and continued to deposit his checks into their joint
account.” Id. The court determined that “final separation occurred in
November 2012 when the marital residence was sold.” Id.
The court declared that the Florida property was not a marital asset,
because “[i]t was purchased with money given to Husband by his parents
which was held in a separate account in just his name.” Id. at 4. However,
the court found Husband’s 401(k) to be a marital asset. The court divided the
marital residence and Husband’s 401(k), allocating 52% to Wife and 48% to
Husband. The court entered a final divorce decree in September 2019, and
the parties filed cross-appeals.
Wife presents the following issues for our review:
1. Whether the court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in failing to apply the date of separation to appropriately
divide the parties’ marital assets?
2. Whether the court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in determining husband received a gift of money from
his parents when husband provided no documentation or other
evidence of such a gift?
3. Whether the court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in determining husband maintained an alleged gift of
money from his parents as a separate asset when husband
provided no documentation of other evidence of such separation?
4. Whether the trial court committed an error of law and/or
abused its discretion in determining a vacation home purchased
during the marriage and prior to the date of separation is
husband’s separate property?
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5. Whether the court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in determining a vacation home was purchased with
husband’s separate property where husband failed to provide any
documentation relative to the source of the money used to
purchase the vacation home?
Wife’s Br. at 4-5 (suggested answers and answers below omitted). Husband
states his issues as follows:
1. Whether the Court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in determining that the parties separated in November
2012, at the time the marital home sold, despite the fact that
Husband lived independently in the downstairs apartment from
2005.
2. Whether the Court committed an error of law and/or abused
discretion in determining that the parties reconciled in 2008[.]
3. Whether the court committed an error of law and/or abused its
discretion in failing to find a separation in 2008 (after the parties
reconciled), when the parties’ daughter, who was a major cause
of the separation, returned home from college a short time after
leaving.
Husband’s Br. at 6-7 (suggested answers and citations to the record omitted).1
Ultimately, the parties’ issues boil down to whether the trial court erred or
abused its discretion in determining the date of separation was in 2012 and in
determining the Florida house was not marital property.
We begin with our standard of review:
We review a challenge to the trial court’s equitable distribution
scheme for an abuse of discretion. We do not lightly find an abuse
____________________________________________
1 In the Questions Presented portion of his brief, Husband also lists, “An
Additional item: The Court inadvertently failed to equitably divide the burial
plots.” Husband’s Br. at 7. As Husband makes no further mention of the
parties’ burial plots, we do not address this issue. See Commonwealth v.
Woodard, 129 A.3d 480, 502 (Pa. 2015).
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of discretion, which requires a showing of clear and convincing
evidence. We will not find an abuse of discretion unless the law
has been overridden or misapplied or the judgment exercised was
manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice,
bias, or ill will, as shown by the evidence in the certified record. .
. . If we fail to find an abuse of discretion, the order must stand.
[I]t is within the province of the trial court to weigh the evidence
and decide credibility and this Court will not reverse those
determinations so long as they are supported by the evidence.
Conner v. Conner, 217 A.3d 301, 309 (Pa.Super. 2019) (citations and
quotation marks omitted).
Husband argues the date of separation was 2005. He claims this was
when he fixed up the basement apartment and moved there “in anticipation
of leaving the marriage.” Husband’s Br. at 18. Husband states that after 2005,
he would only periodically go upstairs, and that in 2006, Wife told the police
she did not want Husband upstairs anymore. Husband claims he did his own
chores and the parties did not go out in public together and only cooperated
on financial matters, such as filing joint tax returns and applying for food
stamps, because both were unemployed. Husband claims he never moved
back upstairs and never intended to resume the marital relationship. Husband
argues any contrary testimony that Daughter offered was disingenuous
because she has an interest in Wife’s share of the equitable distribution. He
maintains that the court’s finding that the parties reconciled in 2008 penalizes
Husband for acting civilly.
Wife argues the court correctly determined that the parties separated in
2012, when they sold their marital residence. Wife claims there is a
presumption the parties separated when Wife filed the complaint in 2013, and
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that Husband failed to carry his burden to prove a separation date seven years
earlier. Wife claims the evidence reflects that after 2005, Wife would regularly
prepare meals that she and Husband would share, she would wash Husband’s
laundry, and Husband and Wife shared common living areas. Wife also asserts
that they fully reconciled in 2008. Wife claims Daughter’s testimony confirms
a separation date of 2012.
The parties agree that the issue requires determination of when the
parties began to live “separate and apart” according to the Divorce Code. See
Wife’s Br. at 10; Husband’s Br. at 16. The Code defines “[s]eparate and apart”
as “[c]essation of cohabitation, whether living in the same residence or not.”
23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3103. The phrase thus focuses on the existence of separate
lives, not separate roofs. See Frey v. Frey, 821 A.2d 623, 628 (Pa.Super.
2003). In addition, the Code provides that “[i]n the event a complaint in
divorce is filed and served, it shall be presumed the parties commenced to live
separate and apart not later than the date the complaint was served.” 23
Pa.C.S.A. § 3103; McCoy v. McCoy, 888 A.2d 906, 912 (Pa.Super. 2005).
The party seeking to rebut the presumption bears the burden to prove that
before the complaint was filed, one of the parties had the “‘independent intent
. . . to dissolve the marital union’ and that the intent was ‘clearly manifested
and communicated to the other spouse.’” McCoy, 888 A.2d at 912 (quoting
Sinha v. Sinha, 526 A.2d 765, 767 (Pa. 1987)).
Here, Husband and Wife resided together until they sold their marital
residence in 2012. The parties presented conflicting evidence regarding their
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relationship and the intertwinement of their affairs prior to that time. The
court, as fact finder, was charged with determining the credibility of the
parties and assigning weight to their testimony. After a review of the record,
we find the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that neither
party clearly expressed its intent to dissolve the marriage in 2005. See
McCoy, 888 A.2d at 912 (affirming trial court’s finding that parties did not live
separate and apart until wife filed divorce complaint). We therefore affirm the
court’s finding that the date of separation was in 2012.
Next, Wife argues that the court erred in determining that the Florida
house was not marital property because Husband purchased it using money
he had received from his parents and kept in a separate account. Wife claims
Husband provided no documentation of the gift or separate account in which
he kept it, and the evidence at trial showed that Husband promptly spent any
lump sums of money he received. Wife asserts Husband bought the property
using marital funds before the parties separated in 2012. Husband contends
the court properly credited his testimony regarding the source of funds for the
Florida residence and found it equitable to award the Florida home to him.
Marital property subject to equitable distribution does not include
“[p]roperty acquired by gift, except between spouses, bequest, devise or
descent or property acquired in exchange for such property.” 23 Pa.C.S.A. §
3501(a)(3); see also Harvey v. Harvey, 167 A.3d 6, 13 (Pa.Super. 2017).
“Whether the interest is marital property or separate property for purposes of
distribution of the marital estate is a matter within the sound discretion of the
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trial court.” Perlberger v. Perlberger, 626 A.2d 1186, 1196 (Pa.Super.
1993). “The trial court’s findings of fact, if supported by credible evidence, are
binding upon a reviewing court and will be followed.” Id.
Here, the court credited Husband’s testimony that his mother left him
an inheritance of $25,000, which Husband kept separate from the parties’
joint finances until he used it to buy the Florida house. Trial Ct. Opinion at 2-
3. The court noted Wife did not present any evidence that the value of the
home exceeded $25,000. Id. at 4. The court thus determined that the Florida
house was not marital property. Id. at 4-5. As the court’s factual finding has
support in Husband’s testimony, it is binding upon this Court. We therefore
affirm.
Decree affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 12/16/2020
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