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Economic Issues in Divorce Property Maintenance (Alimony) Child Support.

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Presentation on theme: "Economic Issues in Divorce Property Maintenance (Alimony) Child Support."— Presentation transcript:

1 Economic Issues in Divorce Property Maintenance (Alimony) Child Support

2 Property at Dissolution Classification Valuation Division

3 1.Characterization Who owns the property? An Individual? The Marriage?

4 Two Property Schemes Common Law Community Property

5 Community Property Systems Husband Wife The Marital Community

6 Community Property Keys: Three title possibilities Governs property ownership and control during marriage, at death and at dissolution Includes all property acquired during marriage except gift inheritance & bequest

7 Common Law Property Systems Husband Wife Joint Title

8 Common Law Property Keys Creates Two Title Possibilities Governs property ownership during the marriage and at death Has been abandoned as a method of characterizing property at dissolution in all states

9 Modern Common Law Property Systems at Dissolution Husband Wife Marital Property

10 Factors in Classification When acquired How acquired

11 All Property MarriageDivorce Earned Given Marital Property

12 Acquired During the Marriage MarriageDivorce Earned Given Marital Property

13 Acquired During Marriage Except Gift, Devise, Inherit. MarriageDivorce Marital Property Given Earned Excluded by Agreement

14 Missouri’s Property System: Mo. Rev. Stat. §452.330 Deferred Community Property: Marital Property is all property acquired during the marriage except: Gift, bequest or inheritance Exchanged for separate property Acquired after legal separation Excluded by valid agreement OR Increase in value of separate property unless there is a marital contribution

15 2. Valuation When to value? How to value?

16 3. Division Equal division or Equitable division

17 Equitable Distribution Factors Contribution Economic need Custody of children/ family home Need for rehabilitation Conduct of Parties

18 Discretion & Property Of these three issues, which one allows the most discretion?

19 Find the Discretion Character Value Division

20 Find the Discretion Character Value Division

21 Missouri’s Property System Deferred Community Property But Presumption of Marital Property

22 When does marriage begin? The engagement ring (Brown v. Thomas) The home purchased in contemplation of marriage The joint money market account during cohabitation

23 When does marriage end? Separate &Petition? Decree? Apart? DISCRETION?

24 General principles Marriage is an economic partnership Property division is to be used to address post-divorce economic circumstances Property division should sever economic ties of the couple

25 IMPORTANT MO. RULES Presume all property is marital Earnings during marriage are marital Separate property stays separate Passive increased value of separate property is separate Active increased value of separate property (due to spousal contributions) is marital Income from separate property is marital Character of property is determined by character of acquiring funds: If “acquired” with both separate and marital funds, source of funds calculation is used to determine proportions.

26 Some easy calls… Earnings Savings & Investments Real & Personal Property purchased with marital funds REGARDLESS OF TITLE Marital Property

27 REMEMBER… in common law states DURING MARRIAGE, OUTSIDE OF MARRIAGE, and AT DEATH Common law property system determines who owns property THERE IS NO MARITAL PROPERTY IN THESE SETTINGS.

28 Kirchberg v. Feenstra Case involves control of jointly owned property DURING the marriage. Mo. resolves this by declaring joint management but does not require joint decision-making; one party may make decisions subject to the consent, agreement or acquiescence of the other spouse

29 BUT…. AT DIVORCE Imported “community property” notions apply to the determine who owns property. PROPERTY CAN BE SEPARATE, MARITAL, OR SOME OF EACH.

30 Identify the state’s approach to defining marital property Remember there are 3 methods….

31 All Property (Ks.) MarriageDivorce Earned Given Marital Property

32 Acquired During the Marriage MarriageDivorce Earned Given Marital Property

33 Acquired During Marriage Except Gift/Inherit (Mo.) MarriageDivorce Marital Property Given Earned Excluded by Agreement

34 Missouri Statutes: Marital Property Presumption Property acquired during marriage is presumed to be marital

35 Houses and such

36 Problem E, p. 446 On date of marriage John owns a home valued at $30,000 and subject to a $20,000 mortgage. What is John’s nonmarital interest or equitable position in the home? John’s equitable position on date of marriage is 1/3 or 33 1/3 percent.

37 Problem One FMV of home before marriage = $30,000 Equity in home (paid $10,000 so equity = 10,000/30,000 So, John’s non-marital interest is 33 1/3 % of the home

38 Adding on: After John married, he and Pam add a bedroom using $10,000 in marital funds. At the time the room is added, it increases the market value of the home from $30,000 to $40,000. How does this affect John’s nonmarital or equitable interest in the property? New

39 Recalculating the value The room addition reduces John’s equitable interest in the home from 33 1/3% to 25%. ($10,000 is 25% of $40,000). New

40 Effect of inflation? Years later John and Pam divorce. The home is valued at $100,000 and has a $10,000 mortgage. John retains his nonmarital interest in the home, which is what? $10,000 or 25%?

41 The theory: The present value of John’s nonmarital interest is the proportion his net equity at the time of improvement ($10,000 (25%)) bore to the aggregate of the value of the property on the date of the improvement ($40,000).

42 John’s Non-marital share 25% x 100,000 (All nonmarital) $25,000 is set aside for John as his separate property. Remainder of the house’s equity = $75,000 - $10,000 mtg.= $65,000 This equity will be subject to equitable distribution between the spouses as marital property.

43 What about the debt? Should each have to share in payment of existing mortgage or should they each share in proportion to their interest?

44 Transmutation Changing separate property to marital property Critical proof INTENT What’s Mine is Ours.

45 How to Prove Intent? Puts title in name of H&W? Uses marital funds to pay off mortgage? Treats house as family home?

46 Transmutation Suppose John mortgages house in order to pay for room addition, and changes the title to “H&W, husband & wife.” Does John still retain separate interest in the property?

47 Title: Will joint title transmute character of property? Can property be separate if jointly titled? Can separately titled property be marital?

48 Commingling Will commingling separate and marital property change the character of the property? 452.330.4 - commingling in and of itself insufficient

49 Family Farms Cases involving family farms are less likely to result in transmutation Why?

50 Ongoing Acquisition How do we determine title to property that is purchased over a period of time?

51 Schmitz v. Schmitz. Where nonmarital down payment was made on real estate, contributing spouse shares proportionately in increased value of the asset.

52 Approaches: Inception of title rule Source of funds rule

53 Source of funds Start with presumption Marital funds becomes marital property What about separate funds of non-titled spouse?

54 Marital source of “funds” Marital funds used to purchase property. Marital funds used to improve separate property. Marital efforts used to improve separate property.

55 Exchanges of separate property If separate property changes form (e.g., money becomes house; stock splits) it remains separate. Marital contributions must be used to reduce a debt or enhance the value of an asset in order to create marital lien.

56 Income & Inflation Income from separate property is marital (Missouri rule) Increase in the value of separate property is separate

57 The Fixer-Upper H’s House at marriage (paid $50,000) Loan to put on roof ($8,000) W’s work on interior ($?) House’s value at divorce ($90,000)

58 How much, if any, is marital? Has the property transmuted? What are the marital source of funds/efforts? Were those funds/efforts used to to reduce a debt or enhance value of asset? What percentage of the increase in value is due to marital funds and efforts?

59 The Marital Share NMC/TC X EQUITY = SEP. PROP. MC/TC X EQUITY = MARITAL PROP.

60 Marital Efforts as Funds contribution of substantial services, directly correlated to increase in value, amount of increase in value, services were during marriage, and value of services, lack of compensation or inadequate compensation.

61 Proving causation in increased value Is going to the office party a contribution? Hosting the office party? Staying home with the kids so wage-earning spouse can go to the party? See: http://www.madkane.com/officeparty.html http://www.madkane.com/officeparty.html

62 House example: Marital contribution: $8,000 loan plus value of interior decorating ($2,000) Non-marital contribution: $50,000 Total contribution: $60,000 Equity: $90,000

63 Calculations Non marital is 5/6 x 90,000 = 75,000 Marital is 1/6 x 90,000 = 15,000

64 Of Earnings and Income

65 Income from Earnings Earnings from labor during the marriage are marital property. Other Human Capital is not marital property. (e.g., earning capacity, professional degrees) (but see the O’Brien case)

66 Vacation & Severance Pay Is it earned from labor during the marriage? If not, what does it represent? When does one earn the right?

67 Human Capital - General rule: Human capital not reduced to earnings is not considered marital property

68 Future Payments When the payment is earned is the key issue, not when it will be paid If the right to the payment is clear and its present value can be determined, include it as marital property

69 In re Marriage of Estes Attorney husband’s contingent fee cases were marital property and fees were to be awarded upon receipt based on the percentage of hours worked during the marriage.

70 Human capital earning capacity professional licenses business goodwill

71 O’Brien v. O’Brien Medical license of husband acquired during marriage is marital property and can be equitably distributed upon divorce. New York is unique in this approach – why? How else can law protect the contributing spouse?

72 Arguments Who decides? Is it property? Can it be valued? How should it be valued?

73 Alternatives to Protect Supporting Spouse Separate claim for restitution Factor in considering division of other property Factor in granting maintenance

74 In re Studyvin “It is not necessary to hamstring our trial courts by confining them to a marital property theory or a lump sum maintenance theory, or any other particular approach.”

75 Benefits Compensating Loss Insurance, Personal Injury, Disability, etc.

76 Insurance Payments Mechanistic approach: timing of the award Source of contribution: character of funds used to purchase policy (reimbursement or recharacterization?) Analytic: character of asset intended to replace.

77 Lopiano v. Lopiano a) separate property of injured spouse b) look at purpose of compensation– pain and suffering personal, lost wages marital (Missouri’s approach) c) marital property

78 Insurance Interest Property insurance Disability insurance Life insurance

79 Characterization Questions What does the payment represent – what is is “replacing”? How is the right to payment earned? Does the payment represent a form of compensation? What are the source of funds used to gain the right?

80 Business Interests: General Rule Business acquired during marriage is marital property. Goodwill is a component.

81 Wood & Nardini Wood: Husband’s separate medical practice increased in value during the marriage Nardini: valuing a closely held corporation Determining spousal contributions

82 Valuing a Business Inventory, receivables, etc. Goodwill (but what is enterprise goodwill and what is personal goodwill?)

83 Professional Practices Should goodwill in professional practices be recognized as marital property? How to value?

84 Concerns: Difficult to distinguish goodwill from personal professional reputation Value may be based in part on future (non- marital) income Professional spouse must give up tangible assets in exchange for intangible he/she retains Double dipping Valuation is difficult: capitalization formulas? FMV/ Buy-sell agreement?

85 Approaches to Bznz Goodwill ^______________^_________________ ^ Prof. GW GW marital GW Is separate only if sep. marital WI/Tex from reputation. even MO/ NE solo pr OR/NJ

86 Marital efforts used to increase the value Were services substantial? Is there a direct correlation between services and increase in value? How much is increase? Were services performed during marriage? What was value of services, was there compensation?

87 Retained earnings as marital If owner ‑ spouse:  took no or very little salary  had the power to influence compensation paid and  owner ‑ spouse received inadequate compensation.

88 Pensions Clearly compensation, but difficulties lie in valuing, apportioning & dividing

89 Pensions General rule: treat as deferred compensation and characterize according to the source of funds earning the right

90 “Stages” of Pension Benefits Current cash value or right to withdraw contributions Not Vested Not Mature Vested but Not Mature Vested & Mature

91 Vocabulary of Pensions Defined Benefit or Defined Contribution Relative value or Relative time ERISA QDRO

92 Early in the career divorces Current cash value or right to withdraw contributions Not Vested Not Mature Vested but Not Mature Vested & Mature

93 The New Career Divorce Contingencies in a non-vested pension Pay now or pay later? Discount for contingencies?

94 Mid-career divorces Current cash value or right to withdraw contributions Not Vested Not Mature Vested but Not Mature Vested & Mature

95 The Mid-career divorce Difficulties in valuation, especially in defined benefit plans Project work life Project payment Apportion marital / non-marital

96 Apportionment Relative value or relative time Defined benefit plans make apportionment difficult

97 Paying pensions Make H pay now, even if doesn’t retire now Make W wait until H retires Bifurcate the pension Order H to buy out W’s interest Trade off property

98 QDRO Covers ERISA pensions Makes ex-spouse the “alternate beneficiary” Directs Administrator to make direct payments to ex-spouse Cannot alter terms of plan Can take 10 years before normal retirement date but must assume any penalties

99 End-of-career divorce Current cash value or right to withdraw contributions Not Vested Not Mature Vested but Not Mature Vested & Mature

100 Some difficulties if employee wishes to delay retirement QDROs solve most of these problems Question: is the pension also post- divorce income? End of Career Divorce

101 Special Forms of Pensions Teacher Retirement Funds Military Pensions Medical Benefits Social Security

102 Exam Questions Increase in value of bank account Sources of deposits: Interest income Income from rental property Income from labor Social security Pension payments

103 Characterize: Bank account in H’s name, opened prior to marriage but into which some marital funds have been deposited. Interest on the bank account Rental income from H’s separate duplex, managed by W during marriage for no compensation. Profit H generated by buying, restoring, and selling automobiles during marriage. Payments from H’s pension plan, which vested and matured prior to marriage.

104 Dividing the Marital Estate Characterization Valuation Division

105

106 What is Separate Property? Which property is clearly separate? What arguments did you have about characterization? Did you divide separate property?

107 Valuation Which was the most difficult asset to value? How did you arrive at values?

108 Dividing the Property Could you agree? What made it difficult? How do you think it would have been different had I assigned clients as well?

109 Division Methods Equal Equitable (Single-factor) Equitable (Multi-factor)

110 Equal Division (Cream v. Cream) Clear but inflexible Must use maintenance to balance inequalities Need to ignore contributions Increases stakes of characterization Mine Yours

111 Division based on Contribution Saff v. Saff What is a contribution? How do you value it? Note the relationship to the inception of title approach to characterization.

112 Equitable Division Issues Burden of proof? List of factors exclusive? List of factors weighted? Basic principles?

113 Critical factors Length of Marriage Contribution Need Custody of minor children Economic misconduct

114

115 Which factors most influenced your division?

116 Division methods Need not be in-kind Can create liens and contingent interests (especially family home) Can order lump-sum payments to equalize, even if not liquid assets available.

117 Some Methods of Division Arbitration or mediation In-kind Trade off Piece of cake One values; other chooses Appraisal and turn taking Sale Auction or sealed bid

118 Dividing debts Courts will apportion debts, but this can’t affect third party creditors rights Use indemnification agreements to protect rights Same factors used to apportion debts as to divide property


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