Regular Marital Savings Can Be Included in Making an Alimony Award

Oct 06, 2016
SDDM

New Jersey courts have long taken an appropriate amount of savings into account as part of the marital standard of living in making alimony determinations.  Savings as a component of alimony has been utilized to protect the supported spouse against any future decreases in alimony due to changed circumstances or the death of the supporting spouse.  But in Lombardi v. Lombardi, the Appellate Division addressed whether a couple’s rather substantial marital savings should be considered in calculating alimony where there was no financial need to protect the supported spouse.

The circumstances in Lombardi were certainly unique.  The husband and wife were married for 20 years and had 3 children together.  The wife, a part-time fitness instructor, made about $10,000 per year.  The husband, a vice president, senior portfolio manager at an investment firm, made between $1,087,000 and $2,275,000 in the 5 years before the 2010 divorce complaint.  However, the husband and wife chose to live a relatively modest lifestyle.  During the marriage, they expended about $22,900 per month, not including occasional gifts to their children, and regularly saved approximately $67,000 per month.  By the time the final judgment of divorce (FJOD) was entered in 2014, the marital savings totaled about $4.18 million.

The wife estimated that she needed $16,291 per month to support herself and the 3 children, as she was the parent of primary residence.  She requested $5,000 per month in child support, a requirement that the husband be singly responsible for the kids’ extracurricular activities, and $30,000 per month for savings.  The trial judge awarded the $5,000 in child support, but only awarded $7,600 in alimony.  The trial judge agreed that savings was part of the marital lifestyle, yet declined to include it in the award.  The trial judge approved a budget of $14,516.  It then deducted $3,610, the post-tax monthly sum that it estimated investing the wife’s equitable distribution share could generate, from the budget.  It also deducted the $5,000 child support award and the wife’s $583 after-tax wages, and found that the wife would need $5,323 to meet her budget.  After adjusting for taxes, the trial judge arrived at a monthly alimony award of $7,600.

The trial judge explained that the wife’s roughly $2.75 million as her equitable distribution from the marital estate would provide substantial investment opportunity and savings potential.  Moreover, each of the children already had individual funds to cover their college expenses, the husband would be responsible for the vast majority of the medical and dental expenses for the children, and the wife was receiving the marital residence unencumbered.  The trial judge further suggested some ways the wife might be able to accumulate savings: claiming the children as tax deductions, working more as the children get older, and taking advantage of the overlaps in the child support and alimony budgets.  Moreover, the trial judge noted that including savings in the alimony award was unnecessary to protect the wife because the husband’s substantial assets made it unlikely he would ever get his support obligation reduced, and he was required to maintain a life insurance policy in case of his death.

The Appellate Division disagreed and reversed the trial judge.  It concluded that trial courts must duly consider evidence of regular savings during the marriage in assessing marital lifestyle, even when the protection of the supported spouse is not an issues.  The Appellate Division reasoned that it does not matter whether money is spent lavishly or funneled into savings accounts because courts must consider it either way in determining the marital lifestyle.  The Appellate Division rebuffed the trial judge’s suggestions regarding how the wife might save some money because the husband and wife had “saved the lion’s share of the family’s income” and these recommendations “did not amount to a consideration of savings as part of the [] marital standard of living.”  Moreover, the Appellate Division concluded that regular savings must be taken into account even if payment of support is protected by life insurance or other financial means.  As a result of the need to recalculate alimony to take the regular savings into account, the Appellate Division also ordered the trial judge to reconsider child support on remand after alimony is determined.

If you have an issue with alimony or child support, contact the skilled matrimonial attorneys at Sarno da Costa D’Aniello Maceri LLC.  Call us today at (973) 274-5200.