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Collins v. Wassell

Intermediate Court of Appeals of Hawai‘i.
Mar 21, 2013
129 Haw. 295 (Haw. Ct. App. 2013)

Opinion

No. 30070.

2013-03-21

Colleen P. COLLINS, Plaintiff–Appellant, v. John A. WASSELL, Defendant–Appellee.

Appeal from the Family Court of the Third Circuit (FC–D No. 07–1–0206). Joy A. San Buenaventura, on the briefs, for Plaintiff–Appellant. Andrew S. Iwashita, on the briefs, for Defendant–Appellee.


Appeal from the Family Court of the Third Circuit (FC–D No. 07–1–0206).
Joy A. San Buenaventura, on the briefs, for Plaintiff–Appellant. Andrew S. Iwashita, on the briefs, for Defendant–Appellee.
NAKAMURA, C.J., and FOLEY, J., with REIFURTH, J., dissenting.

SUMMARY DISPOSITION ORDER

Plaintiff–Appellant Colleen P. Collins (Collins) appeals from the September 9, 2009, Divorce Decree entered in the Family Court of the Third Circuit (Family Court).

The crux of Collins's appeal is that the Family Court erred when it concluded that Collins and her ex-husband Defendant–Appellee John A. Wassell (Wassell) did not form a premarital economic partnership, within the meaning of Helbush v. Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i 508, 122 P.3d 288 (App.2005). Specifically, Collins argues that the Family Court erred by: (1) concluding that the parties did not participate in a premarital economic partnership between June 18, 2000, the date of their initial wedding ceremony (Ceremony), and January 19, 2005, the date on which they were legally married (DOM); (2) finding that, following the Ceremony, Collins and Wassell agreed “that each of them would maintain separate financial identities, so that Ms. Collins could continue to qualify for the financial aid she needed to send her daughters to their schools of choice”; (3) finding that “Ms. Collins believed that the financial responsibility for sending her daughters to college was hers alone”; (4) finding that Wassell owed Collins $4,239.59 for the mortgage payoff on the Hawai‘i Paradise Park residence owned by Wassell (HPP Residence); and (5) valuing Wassell's assets as of the DOM instead of the date of cohabitation (DOC) and dividing the assets and equalizing the parties' obligations using the DOM valuations. We affirm.

The Honorable Anthony K. Bartholomew presided.

I.

A.

After the parties' divorce trial, the Family Court entered its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decision of the Court, which made the following relevant findings of fact:

On June 18, 2000, Collins and Wassell “met at the park with their friends and their minister for the apparent purpose of getting married.” The couple “exchanged their vows, and they and all those assembled believed they had participated in a valid marriage ceremony.” After the Ceremony, Collins and Wassell “began to have second thoughts about the practical consequences of their union and asked the minister not to mail in the marriage license and certificate to the State Department of Health[.]” The minister gave Collins the documents “with an understanding that the newly married couple would mail them in themselves.” The following day, “the couple went on a short honeymoon[.]”

The parties' second thoughts about the marriage arose from the fact that Collins had two daughters attending expensive private mainland colleges, with tuition in excess of $30,000 per year for one daughter and approximately $22,000 per year for the other. Because “financial aid [was] calculated on the basis that Ms. Collins was a single parent, Ms. Collins actually paid approximately $8,000 a year for both daughters, a considerable savings over the full tuition.” “Ms. Collins was concerned that if financial aid for her daughters was calculated on the basis of the joint income and assets arising from her marriage to Mr. Wassell, that it would become considerably more expensive to send her daughters to the schools they were then attending.” “Ms. Collins believed that if she were to marry Mr. Wassell and disclose the financial information reflecting her change in financial status to the two colleges,” the financial aid for her daughters would be reduced and “she would likely be unable to afford the resulting tuition, with the consequence that her daughters would not be able to attend those colleges.” To avoid that consequence, Collins and Wassell agreed (1) not to mail their marriage license and certificate to the Department of Health; and (2) that “each of them would maintain separate financial identities, so that Ms. Collins could continue to qualify for the financial aid she needed to send her daughters to their schools of choice.”

Collins “believed that the financial responsibility for sending her daughters to college was hers alone, and that Mr. Wassell did not share in that obligation[.]” Similarly, Wassell believed that he was not obligated “to assist Ms. Collins with the financial burden arising from her daughters' college education.”

Collins and Wassell never mailed in their marriage license or certificate. About four months after the Ceremony, they received a letter from the Department of Health inquiring about the marriage license and certificate. Collins and Wassell responded by sending “a letter to the Department of Health signed by both of them stating that they had decided not to get married after all.”

After the parties' “honeymoon,” they began living together. Wassell owned the HPP Residence, while Collins owned a townhouse in Pacific Heights (Townhouse). Although the parties “went back and forth between the two residences” for a while, they eventually decided to live in the Townhouse. While they were living in the Townhouse, Wassell rented out the HPP Residence for some of the time, but never shared the rent with Collins despite the fact that he did not pay Collins rent. Soon after the Ceremony, Wassell added Collins's name to one of his bank accounts (Joint Account). The parties “agreed that the [J]oint [A]ccount would be used for household expenses; both were to deposit funds in the account.” The parties deposited the cash gifts they received at the Ceremony into the Joint Account. Collins made regular monthly deposits of $500.00 into the Joint Account while Wassell made “few, if any, deposits” into that account. Except for the Joint Account, between the DOC and the DOM, Collins and Wassell maintained separate bank and retirement accounts.

In 2001, Collins decided to sell the Townhouse. Before the sale, Wassell made some minor improvements. Collins sold the Townhouse and received a check in the amount of $23,020.74 at the close of escrow, which was deposited into the Joint Account. Collins subsequently withdrew $13,647.26 to purchase a vehicle which was titled in her name only. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the Townhouse, totaling $4,239.59, was used to pay off the remaining balance on Wassell's mortgage on the HPP Residence. Following the sale of the Townhouse, the parties moved into the HPP Residence.

Collins's youngest daughter finished college in 2005. With no further need for Collins to apply for or receive financial aid toward her daughters' college educations, Collins and Wassell legally married on January 19, 2005. As of the DOM, Wassell owed Collins a $4,239.59 debt, the amount Collins used to pay off the remainder of Wassell's HPP Residence mortgage.

The Family Court entered further findings regarding the value of the parties' assets on the DOM.

B.

The Family Court concluded that between the Ceremony (which shortly preceded the DOC) and the DOM, “the parties did not participate in an ‘economic partnership’ within the meaning of Helbush v. Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i 508, 122 P.3d 288 (App.2005), and the division of their marital assets by the court must therefore be based upon the date of their legal marriage.” The Family Court provided the following detailed explanation of its rationale for this conclusion:

The court's determination that the parties' relationship between June 2000, and January 2005, did not amount to a Helbush economic partnership is based upon several significant factors. The Helbush court stated its holding on this issue as follows:

We conclude that a “premarital economic partnership” occurs when, prior to their subsequent marriage, a man and a woman cohabit and apply their financial resources as well as their individual energies and efforts to and for the benefit of each other's person, assets, and liabilities.

Helbush, supra, 108 Hawai‘i at 515, 122 P.3d 288.

The first conclusion to be drawn from this language is that cohabitation alone is clearly not sufficient to establish an economic partnership—there must be a commingling of finances, assets, and energies sufficiently comprehensive to establish a “partnership.” Second, there is no such thing, for these purposes, as a “partial partnership.” Parties who are emotionally involved with one another and who are cohabiting must inevitably com[m]ingle their energies and finances to some extent—the exigencies of normal life and collective activity could scarcely allow it to be otherwise. Therefore, some measure of such commingling is to be expected in every instance of cohabitation, and does not by its mere existence rise to the level necessary to establish a Helbush “economic partnership.”

The question is therefore whether the parties in this case committed their energies and their assets to one another's purposes to the extent necessary to warrant a conclusion that they were engaged in a relationship akin to that found in a business partnership. It is worth noting that the parties in Helbush spent the period of their premarital cohabitation engaged in a joint farming enterprise in which both of them commuted to and farmed 310 acres in Kau, a clear example of cohabitation joined to collective financial enterprise. By comparison, the parties in this case, although they quite explicitly commingled a portion of their funds for housekeeping purposes, simultaneously maintained distinct separate financial identities.

The most obvious example of this is clearly the parties' conscious decision not to make their first “marriage” legal for the express purpose of maintaining separate financial identities. This was done in order to realize two separate motives. [On] the one hand, it was done so that Ms. Collins could take full advantage of the financial aid available to her with regard to her daughters' college educations. On the other hand, it was done so that Mr. Wassell could refrain from shouldering any share of that not insignificant burden. Far from reflecting the parties' intention to “apply their financial resources ... to and for the benefit of each other's persons, assets, and liabilities,” Helbush, supra, at 515, 122 P.3d 288, it reflects the parties' express intention not to do so. As a consequence of that express intention, Ms. Collins saved thousands of dollars and was able to provide her daughters with an education at their colleges of choice, while Mr. Wassell was able to preserve any of his own assets from being expended for that purpose.

It seems to the court not insignificant that Ms. Collins, in a series of financial aid applications, represented that she was single, a status she had preserved with calculation by consciously deciding not to make her apparent marriage to Mr. Wassell legal. Also, it is clearly relevant in this regard that both parties signed a letter to the State Department of Health in which they represented that they had decided not to become married.

Further, at all times during the period of their pre-marital cohabitation, in addition to their single joint “housekeeping” account, each of the parties maintained separate individual checking and savings accounts which appear for each to have been the vehicle for the bulk of their financial activity. In addition, each maintained separate retirement accounts, and separate life insurance policies. Each owned vehicles which appear from the parties' financial disclosures to have been titled in their individual names.

[Collins] attempts to deflect the import of these realities by citing to Epp v. Epp, 80 Hawai‘i 79, 905 P.2d 54 (App.1995), in which the court stated:

[T]he fact that Husband and Wife conducted their real property and financial affairs as if they were not married is not a valid basis for deviating from the Partnership Model because they were married.80 Hawai‘i at 93, 905 P.2d 54 (emphasis added).

The point of the emphasized language is obvious: when parties are married, application of the Partnership Model is necessary and automatic, regardless of their individual financial conduct. But the parties in this case were not married during the period at issue and the nature of their economic conduct during the period of their pre-marital cohabitation is clearly relevant. It is incongruous indeed for [Collins] to argue that evidence that she did not act like an economic partner during that period may not be considered by the court as evidence that no economic partnership existed.

[Collins] relies heavily on the existence of the [J]oint [A]ccount which was used primarily for household expenses in her argument that the parties were engaged in an economic partnership. [Collins] testified pointedly that she was the primary, if not the exclusive, contributor to that account, a fact which the court is prepared to accept at face value. However, it is [Collins's] clear inference that the [J]oint [A]ccount was the primary means of payment for the bulk of the living expenses of both parties, an inference the court ... finds unreasonable.

The evidence was to the effect that this account was maintained by monthly deposits of $500.00, an amount which was obviously insufficient to pay the living expenses of two adults. These apparently included food for two, utilities, internet service, telephone, cable television, and the operating expenses for two automobiles, not to mention entertainment and incidental expenses. The court notes that income and expense statements signed by the parties (Ms. Collins dated 9/26/08) and Mr. Wassell (dated 10/24/07) reflect total living expenses for the parties (not including rent paid by Ms. Collins) of $1,960.00, an amount almost four times the monthly contributions to the [J]oint [A]ccount.

The [J]oint [A]ccount no doubt reflected a measure of financial cooperation by the parties, but it seems wholly inadequate to carry the weight of establishing an economic partnership between them. This conclusion is not undermined by [Collins's] evidence that she was substantially the sole contributor to the [J]oint [A]ccount. Rather than suggesting an economic partnership, evidence of the one sided nature of [Collins's] contributions makes clear that the [J]oint [A]ccount was a “joint” account in name alone.
(Brackets in quotation from Epp v. Epp in original.)

C.

The Family Court divided the parties' assets and concluded that under strict application of marital partnership principles, Collins would owe Wassell an equalization payment of $11,807.85. However, finding that Wassell had wasted assets, the Family Court ordered a deviation in favor of Collins of $17,238.05. Therefore, the Family Court ordered Wassell to pay Collins an equalization payment of $5,430.20, the difference between $17,238.05 and $11,807.85, in final settlement of the property division in the case.

The Divorce Decree was filed on September 9, 2009. Collins filed a timely appeal.

II.

“Generally, the family court possesses wide discretion in making its decisions and those decision[s] will not be set aside unless there is a manifest abuse of discretion.” Fisher v. Fisher, 111 Hawai‘i 41, 46, 137 P.3d 355, 360 (2006). We review the Family Court's findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard and its conclusions of law de novo, under the right/wrong standard. Jaylo v. Jaylo, 125 Hawai‘i 369, 373, 262 P.3d 245, 249 (2011). The Family Court's division of property in a divorce “is discretionary with the trial court and will not be disturbed on review unless abuse of discretion is clearly shown.” Baker v. Bielski, 124 Hawai‘i 455, 458, 248 P.3d 221, 224 (App.2011) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

III.

We resolve Collins's arguments on appeal as follows:

A.

We decline to overturn the Family Court's determination, in its division of the parties' property, that no Helbush premarital economic partnership was formed. The Family Court properly recognized that Helbush set forth the legal standard it was required to apply in evaluating whether Collins and Wassell had formed a premarital economic partnership. The Family Court provided a detailed explanation of its reasoning in determining that no premarital economic partnership had been formed under the particular circumstances of this case. The factors it cited in support of its decision were relevant to evaluating the parties' intent and the degree to which they applied their financial resources and efforts “to and for the benefit of each other's person, assets, and liabilities.” See Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i at 155, 122 P.3d at 295. As the trier of fact, it was the prerogative of the Family Court to determine credibility and the weight of the evidence, see State v. Miller, 105 Hawai‘i 394, 402, 98 P.3d 265, 273 (App.2004), and the Family Court's decision was based on factual findings supported by substantial evidence. We conclude that the Family Court did not err in determining that no Helbush premarital economic partnership had been formed.

B.

Collins challenges the Family Court's finding that the parties had agreed that “each of them would maintain separate financial identities, so that Ms. Collins could continue to qualify for the financial aid she needed to send her daughters to their schools of choice.” This finding is not clearly erroneous. Collins testified that the parties decided not to legalize their marriage in 2000 because she was afraid that her daughters might receive less financial aid for college. Thus, Collins's stated rationale for not getting married was to keep her legal financial identity separate and distinct from Wassell's. We conclude that the Family Court's finding was supported by substantial evidence and was not clearly erroneous.

C.

Collins argues that the Family Court's finding that “Ms. Collins believed that the financial responsibility for sending her daughters to college was hers alone” was clearly erroneous because Collins testified that she shared this responsibility with her daughters. However, when viewed in context, it appears clear that the import of the Family Court's finding was that as between Collins and Wassell, the financial responsibility for sending Collins's daughters to college was Collins's alone. There was substantial evidence to support the finding that as between Collins and Wassell, it was Collins's responsibility alone to finance her daughters' educations. Indeed, Collins does not challenge the Family Court's finding that Wassell did not share in, and did not believe he had, the obligation to assist Collins in financing her daughters' educations.

Moreover, it was the financial responsibility as between Collins and Wassell for Collins's daughters' college educations, and not as between Collins and her daughters, that was relevant to the Family Court's determination of premarital economic partnership.

D.

We conclude that the Family Court did not clearly err in finding that as of the DOM, Wassell owed Collins a debt of $4,239.59, which was incurred when Collins used her funds to pay off Wassell's mortgage. The evidence showed that Wassell offered to repay the debt. We conclude that there was substantial evidence to support the Family Court's finding.

E.

Collins argues that the Family Court erred in valuing Wassell's assets as of the DOM, instead of the DOC, and dividing the assets and equalizing the parties' obligations using the DOM valuations. This argument is premised on her claim that the Family Court erred in determining that no premarital economic partnership was formed. Since we have already upheld the Family Court's determination that no premarital economic partnership was formed, it follows that Collins's argument that the Family Court erred in using the DOM in valuing Wassell's assets and dividing assets and equalizing the parties' obligations must fail.

IV.

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Divorce Decree.

DISSENTING OPINION BY REIFURTH, J.

I respectfully dissent. While the Family Court properly recognized that Helbush v. Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i 508, 122 P.3d 288 (App.2005), sets out the legal standard that the Family Court must apply in evaluating whether a divorcing couple had created a premarital economic partnership, I disagree with the majority's conclusion that the factors cited by the Family Court were relevant to the analysis that it was required to make. I would vacate the decision and remand for the court to conduct a new premarital-economic-partnership analysis.

I. The Family Court improperly determined that Collins and Wassell had not created a premarital economic partnership.

The Family Court's rationales for concluding that no premarital economic partnership existed between Collins and Wassell's DOC and their DOM can be grouped into three categories: (1) except for a single Joint Account, Collins and Wassell maintained “distinct separate financial identities,” with independently-owned financial and retirement accounts, insurance policies, and automobiles; (2) the Joint Account only covered part of Collins and Wassell's living expenses; and (3) Collins and Wassell represented themselves on financial aid applications and to government officials after the DOC as being single.

The Family Court's stated reasons for concluding that no premarital economic partnership existed in this case do not accurately reflect the law of premarital economic partnerships in Hawai‘i.

In Helbush, we said that “a ‘premarital economic partnership’ occurs when, prior to their subsequent marriage, a man and a woman cohabit and apply their financial resources as well as their individual energies and efforts to and for the benefit of each other's person, assets, and liabilities.” 108 Hawai‘i at 515, 122 P.3d at 295. When a premarital economic partnership is found to exist, “the family court, in the exercise of its duty to divide and distribute property in divorce cases, allowably consider[s] [each party's] respective contributions to [the other party's] separate property during ... their premarital ... economic partnership and their subsequent marriage.” Id. at 515, 122 P.3d at 294–95 (original brackets and emphasis omitted).

The Family Court “possesses wide discretion in making its decisions, and those decision[s] will not be set aside unless there is a manifest abuse of discretion.” Fisher v. Fisher, 111 Hawai‘i 41, 46, 137 P.3d 355, 360 (2006) (quoting In re Doe, 95 Hawai‘i 183, 189, 20 P.3d 616, 622 (2001)). But “[w]here the issue is whether a trial court applied incorrect legal principles in exercising its discretion, we freely review the court's decision to determine whether the law was correctly applied.” State v. Rapozo, 123 Hawai‘i 329, 347, 235 P.3d 325, 343 (2010) (quoting Estate of James Campbell, 106 Hawai‘i 453, 461, 106 P.3d 1096, 1104 (2005)).

The Family Court's analysis emphasized its finding that Collins and Wassell attempted to maintain separate financial accounts or “financial identities.” It never explained, however, in what manner such a finding lent support to its ultimate determination that there was no partnership. Indeed, such a finding does not bear here on the issue of whether a premarital economic partnership had been created.

The court's focus on separate financial identities fails to recognize or address the fact that marital relationships exist wherein the spouses each maintain individual financial accounts from which collective expenses are paid. Certainly, a finding that parties formed a singular financial identity will generally lend strong support to a finding of a partnership. But the absence of such a finding, particularly without any findings regarding the commonality of maintaining individual financial arrangements in the marital or premarital context,

For this same reason, Wassell's contention in his answering brief that the parties, allegedly, had a “fully executed oral agreement” to “maintain separate finances” is irrelevant.

reveals little to nothing about whether each party applied his or her financial resources, energies, or efforts for the benefit of the other.

The Helbush inquiry is properly understood not as inquiring whether, as the Family Court suggested, the parties' relevant conduct resembles that of a business partnership, but rather, whether such conduct resembles the sort of economic partnership typical of marriage. See Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i at 514–15, 122 P.3d at 294–95.

See Chen v. Hoeflinger, 127 Hawai‘i 346, 358–59, 279 P.3d 11, 23–24 (App.2012) (one party's use of her income to pay for household goods in support of both parties and the other party supplementing when that income was insufficient justified conclusion that a premarital economic partnership existed). Thus, it was improper for the Family Court to conclude that no premarital economic partnership was formed on the basis that Collins and Wassell failed to maintain a singular financial identity.

Even if such a finding were sometimes relevant, I would hold here that it is not substantial evidence upon which to conclude that a partnership had not been created.

It was not necessarily improper, however, for the Family Court to inquire into the couple's motivations for delaying legal marriage, or concomitantly, for maintaining separate financial identities. That the couple did so because they believed it appropriate that Collins bear alone the liability of her daughters' college tuition appears relevant to the partnership inquiry. Of course, there is a countervailing consideration that the court does not consider, in that the couple's decision was financially beneficial for each of them, which appears not incongruent with the concept of a partnership. But these considerations properly correspond to a more general inquiry into a couple's motivations for not legally marrying, rather than an inquiry into the extent to which the couple maintained separate financial identities or the significance thereof.

Furthermore, even if such a finding were probative, it is here insufficiently supported. The Family Court, for example, made no findings as to whether the parties named each other as beneficiaries under the aforementioned insurance policies or retirement accounts.

The ultimate issues are whether, and the extent to which, prior to the DOM, the parties applied their financial resources and individual energies for each other's person, assets, and liabilities, not whether, and the extent to which, the parties created joint bank accounts or added both of their names to their cars' titles. Thus, the thrust of the Family Court's inquiry must be to consider the nature and degree of such application, and it must do so adequately.

This inquiry properly considers more than just monetary contribution to the partnership. See Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i at 515, 122 P.3d at 294–95;see also Aiona–Agra v. Agra, No. 30685, 2012 WL 593105, at *3 (App. Feb. 23, 2012) (SDO) (concluding that a finding of premarital economic partnership was not clearly erroneous where evidence was presented that the “[w]ife contributed some individual energy and efforts to the construction of the home and [h]usband lived rent-free with [his][w]ife and [her] family” (internal quotation marks omitted)), aff'd, No. SCWC–30685, 2012 WL 3309639.

Besides being misfocused, the Family Court's inquiry fell short of the mark. Its determination that the Joint Account was insufficiently funded to pay for all of the parties' monthly living expenses does not tend to establish the absence of a premarital economic partnership. Furthermore, the Family Court's analysis was incomplete as it did not make findings on how Collins and Wassell accounted for the difference between their living expenses and what was taken out of the Joint Account to defray those expenses. Clearly, one or both of them made up the difference, and thereby contributed to the joint enterprise, but, based on the Family Court's findings, it is unclear who did so, or to what extent. While the weight to be assigned to those contributions is for the Family Court to decide, Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i at 515, 122 P.3d at 295, it is error to ignore them entirely. Thus, it was improper for the Family Court to conclude that no premarital economic partnership was formed on the basis that the Joint Account was insufficiently funded to cover all of Collins and Wassell's joint expenses.

Finally, the fact that Collins truthfully represented on a financial-aid application that she was single and the fact that Collins and Wassell truthfully informed the Department of Health that they had decided to stay unmarried are likewise immaterial. Before Collins and Wassell's DOM, they were legally single and unmarried. To have said otherwise would have misrepresented the actual legal status of their relationship. There is no requirement that a couple must have a demonstrated intent to get married before a premarital economic partnership can be created; what is required is that “premarital cohabitation matured into marriage.” Helbush, 108 Hawai‘i at 514, 122 P.3d at 294. It was improper for the Family Court to conclude that no premarital economic partnership was formed on the basis that Collins and Wassell truthfully stated their marital status.

Similarly, a couple's decision to enjoy the fruits of living as if married, but deciding to avoid legal marriage for the purpose of avoiding negative tax consequences (i.e., the so-called “marriage penalty”), does not appear probative of whether a partnership had been formed.

II. Conclusion.

I am mindful of the deference that we afford to the family court and to family court decisions. Furthermore, I take no issue with the majority's observation that it is the prerogative of the family court to determine credibility and the weight of the evidence. Op. at 9. Rather, I conclude that the Family Court erred here, not in determining credibility or the weight of evidence, but in failing to utilize the analysis required by Helbush and its progeny.

It may be, upon remand, that the Family Court would reach the same conclusion with regard to the premarital economic partnership as it has herein. And it may be, upon review of that decision, that I might agree that the Family Court correctly applied Helbush in reaching that conclusion. So long, however, as that analysis ignores the fact that a premarital economic partnership can be created even where none of the parties' assets or monies are commingled, see Chen, 127 Hawai‘i at 358–59, 279 P.3d at 23–24; fails to adequately consider the nature and degree to which the parties applied their resources, energies, and efforts for each other's benefit; or credits against the partnership the fact that the parties truthfully described the legal status of their relationship; I submit that it is conducted in error.

In sum, I would vacate the Family Court's conclusion of law no. 3 (“COL 3”) that no premarital economic partnership was formed because the court took into consideration multiple irrelevant factors without considering multiple relevant factors that focus less on the form of the relationship and more on the day-to-day reality of how it worked, when making its decision.

Consequently, I would vacate findings of fact 47 and 67 relating to Wassell's debt of $4,239.59 to Collins, which depends entirely on the court's COL 3, as well as the Decision and the property-division and equalization provisions in the Divorce Decree, which incorporate in part COL 3.

While the parties' decision that Wassell should not pay for Collins's daughters' higher education might be a relevant consideration on remand, it is not dispositive on appeal given the substantial evidence presented at trial that the parties did in fact apply their financial resources and energies for each other's benefit.

I would remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this decision.


Summaries of

Collins v. Wassell

Intermediate Court of Appeals of Hawai‘i.
Mar 21, 2013
129 Haw. 295 (Haw. Ct. App. 2013)
Case details for

Collins v. Wassell

Case Details

Full title:Colleen P. COLLINS, Plaintiff–Appellant, v. John A. WASSELL…

Court:Intermediate Court of Appeals of Hawai‘i.

Date published: Mar 21, 2013

Citations

129 Haw. 295 (Haw. Ct. App. 2013)
298 P.3d 1059