Kirkland v. Kirkland
Decision Date | 11 October 1990 |
Docket Number | No. 90-856,90-856 |
Citation | 568 So.2d 494 |
Parties | 15 Fla. L. Weekly D2535 Betty F. KIRKLAND, Appellant, v. Joe Ray KIRKLAND, Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
William J. Haley and Nancy Staff Slayden of Brannon, Brown, Haley, Robinson & Cole, P.A., Lake City, for appellant.
Raymond E. Makowski, Jacksonville, for appellee.
Appellant, Betty F. Kirkland, appeals the trial court's judgment dissolving the marriage between her and her former husband, appellee Joe Ray Kirkland. She contends that the court erred in dividing the parties' property in general, and the husband's pension plan in particular; in awarding certain real property to the husband as a special equity; in granting the husband exclusive use and possession of the marital home beyond the minor child's age of majority, without providing for termination of such use upon the husband's remarriage; in failing to award the wife permanent periodic and rehabilative alimony; and in refusing to require the husband to pay the wife's attorney's fees. We reverse the trial court's distribution of the husband's pension plan, its award of exclusive use of the marital home, and its denial of permanent, periodic alimony to the wife, and affirm the other points raised.
At the time of the final hearing, the husband and wife were each forty-five years old and had been married for twenty-two years. We find no abuse of discretion in the manner in which the court distributed the majority of the parties' assets and liabilities. We conclude, however, that there is no competent, substantial evidence in the record to support the court's distribution of the husband's pension plan. The husband was employed by the Columbia County School Board and had been in the State Retirement System twenty-three years. He will be entitled to receive full retirement benefits once he has been in the system thirty years, or when he reaches age sixty-two. Although the trial court awarded the wife $420.99 as her equitable share of the present value of the husband's pension plan, it does not appear that the evidence presented at the hearing was sufficient to enable the court to determine the present value of the plan. See Trant v. Trant, 545 So.2d 428 (Fla. 2d DCA), review denied, 551 So.2d 464 (Fla.1989). We therefore reverse and remand for the trial judge to make further findings of fact and to equitably distribute the husband's pension.
Next, the trial court awarded husband exclusive use of the marital home until the minor child "shall have completed four consecutive years of post-secondary education as a full-time student but not longer than the date upon which the minor child attains his twenty-second birthday." This constituted an abuse of discretion. In Duncan v. Duncan, 379 So.2d 949 (Fla.1980), the court rejected a rigid rule that exclusive possession of the home must terminate when a minor child reaches majority. It cautioned, however, that such award "must be determined by the equity of the cause" and constitute "a facet of support." Id. at 952. "A grant of exclusive possession of property to one of the parties in a final judgment must serve a special purpose." Id.
In the case at bar, the wife's child-support obligation terminates when the son reaches age eighteen. There was no showing of special circumstances that warranted extending use of the marital home beyond the son's attainment of the age of eighteen while he attends college. See Gonzalez v. Gonzalez, 563 So.2d 813, 813 (Fla. 3d DCA 1990) ( ); Hirst v. Hirst, 452 So.2d 1083, 1085 (Fla. 4th DCA 1984) ( ); Thomas v. Thomas, 427 So.2d 259, 259 (Fla. 5th DCA 1983) ( ).
The trial court also erred in awarding the husband exclusive use of the home for the benefit of the minor child without providing for termination in the event of husband's remarriage. We explicitly required such a provision in Messal v. Messal, 424 So.2d 932 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983). "This result is not affected by the fact that the custodial spouse was required to make the mortgage, tax and insurance payments on the ex-marital home as an incident of such exclusive possession." Anderson v. Anderson, 424 So.2d 943, 944 (Fla....
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