BROWN, J.
By judgments of divorce nisi that were issued on the former wife's complaint for divorce and the former husband's counterclaim for divorce, a judge of the Probate and Family Court ordered, among other things, that the husband pay the wife in their short term marriage (1) alimony in the amount of $2,100 per month for a period of one year, and (2) the sum of $29,500 as his "contribution to the debt and diminished assets incurred during the marriage." Each party has appealed. We affirm the judgments.
The parties are highly educated professionals—the husband is a physician, and the wife holds a master's degree and is a department director. They met in late 2005 while working at the same medical facility. The wife had been previously married. By June, 2006, the parties relationship had sufficiently developed so that the husband moved into the wife's apartment. The husband contributed $2,100 toward monthly rent and utilities; the wife paid the balance and "living expenses." In December, 2006, and prior to the marriage, the parties moved into a condominium unit in Boston that the wife purchased for $435,000, with a down payment of $43,500 from her own funds. While title to the property was briefly held in joint names, the parties in February, 2007, conveyed the real estate into the wife's sole name.
Some five days prior to the parties' wedding on October 4, 2008, the husband went to Las Vegas for his bachelor party. There, he met a woman with whom he eventually would become romantically involved and further incurred a $20,000 charge at a "men's club." Upon the husband's return, the parties had a "lavish" wedding that cost approximately $150,000 and that was paid for, in large part, by the wife's parents.
The parties' marriage quickly deteriorated. The husband began an intimate relationship with the woman whom he had met in Las Vegas, and the wife learned both of the relationship and the $20,000 men's club charge.
The parties separated on November 24, 2008, and, on December 15, 2008, the wife filed a complaint for separate support.
In June, 2009, the wife's condition, as described by her psychiatrist, continued to worsen. She was hospitalized on June 15 after she came to her psychiatrist's office unable to speak. Shortly thereafter, the wife received inpatient treatment at two facilities in Arizona, the combined cost of which was $81,000. After her return to Massachusetts, and by November, 2009, the wife was deemed to be "more in control and more able to plan." She was able to return to work part time.
Following the parties' separation, the husband left his position at the medical facility in Massachusetts, in part because of the inherent difficulties in working at the same location as the wife. He relocated to California to be in closer proximity to the woman he had met in Las Vegas and obtained employment as a physician. The husband's savings were substantially reduced when he moved to California, as he did not work during the several-month period before he obtained his California medical license.
At the time of trial in December, 2009, the husband was thirty-eight years old and in good health. He earns $160,000 per year, or $3,076 per week (a reduction from his previous salary at the Boston medical facility), and is eligible to earn an additional $22,400 from a performance-based bonus. He may also receive extra compensation for undertaking additional work and seeing additional patients. The husband lists weekly expenses of $2,061 or $2,361
The wife is thirty-nine years old and suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression. She continues to see her psychiatrist on a regular basis, and her condition has improved.
The judge found that neither party specifically contributed to the other's acquisition of assets, and other than a joint account used to maintain the condominium unit and pay household expenses, the parties kept their individual assets separate. The parties largely paid for their own personal expenses separately.
Finally, the judge found that when the parties were together they enjoyed an upper middle class station in life and that they should be able to maintain that station following the divorce. Although the husband will likely continue to have a have a "higher earning power," both parties should be able to support themselves and acquire assets in the future.
We touch on salient points set out in the judge's extensive rationale for decision. At the outset, the judge stated that given the brevity of the parties' relationship, they never had time to come together to form a marital partnership or to acquire a marital estate. The judge also commented at length on the wife's contention that the husband's conduct caused the breakup of the parties' marriage and left her in an emotional state that resulted in her being unable to work full time and caused her to incur substantial health-related expenses that will continue into the future.
After discussing, among other things, the parties' financial practices during the marriage (including their general practice of keeping their individual finances separate except their joint account for household expenses), the absence of "joint property" to divide, the absence of "joint debts" and the relative comparability of the parties' individual debt levels, and the sale of the condominium unit, the judge stated that "[b]ut for the issue raised by [the] wife about her health, this would be an appropriate case to return each party to status quo ante by having them keep their separate assets and separate income."
The judge also concluded that while the husband's conduct was not the sole or overriding reason for the wife's health issues, the wife "does have some emotional health issue which will require some recuperative period and for which she will need some support."
By judgments of divorce nisi dated April 20, 2010, the wife was awarded a divorce for the cause of adultery; the husband was awarded a divorce for irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. The judgments provided that the wife should retain the net proceeds from the sale of the condominium unit. The husband was ordered to pay the wife as alimony the sum of $2,100 per month (beginning May 1, 2010) for a period of one year.
"In making a property division and alimony determination under G.L. c. 208, § 34, a judge must make findings indicating that he has considered all factors relevant under § 34, and has not considered any irrelevant factors." Bowring v. Reid, 399 Mass. 265, 267 (1987). "While the judge must consider and weigh all the factors, she must keep in mind that `the statutory authority of a court to award alimony continues to be grounded in the recipient spouse's need for support and the supporting spouse's ability to pay.'" Pierce v. Pierce, 455 Mass. 286, 296 (2009), quoting from Gottsegen v. Gottsegen, 397 Mass. 617, 624 (1986).
If a judge has made findings consistent with the obligations imposed by § 34, a judgment for alimony may not be reversed unless "plainly wrong and excessive." Bowring v. Reid, 399 Mass. at 267, quoting from Redding v. Redding, 398 Mass. 102, 107 (1986).
We turn first to the husband's argument concerning the order for alimony. Pointing to the language of the judge's rationale that "[b]ut for the issue raised by Wife about her health, this would be an appropriate case to return each party to status quo ante by having them keep their separate assets and separate income," the husband states that the judge "made clear" that alimony was only appropriate because of the wife's fragile emotional health. Thus, the husband asserts, "without Wife's mental health problems, the court would not have awarded alimony." In the husband's view, the judgment must be reversed "because it is based entirely on Wife's emotional health without due regard to the other statutory factors" contained in G.L. c. 208, § 34. See Pierce v. Pierce, supra at 295. The husband also argues that an application of the § 34 factors (including, in his view, an absence of "need" on the part of the wife) demonstrates that this case is not an appropriate one for an award of alimony.
The husband reads too narrowly the judge's statement in her rationale for decision. The judge did, in fact, consider and make detailed findings concerning each of the § 34 factors, and discussed a number of those factors specifically in her rationale in the context of the alimony award. It is apparent that the judge, in according weight to the wife's emotional health issues, viewed that factor as the proverbial stone thrown into the pond, its ripple effects touching on other factors, including the wife's present ability to work full time, her current income, and her needs.
The husband's remaining arguments challenge, in large part, the weight the judge accorded to each of the § 34 factors, a matter that is "committed to the judge." Ross v. Ross, 385 Mass. 30, 37 (1982), quoting from Langerman v. Langerman, 9 Mass.App.Ct. 869, 870 (1980). Certain of the husband's contentions, however, merit additional comment. The husband asserts that "[t]he brevity of this marriage [effectively seven weeks] must preclude alimony," in that there was no time to form a marital station or standard of living. In so arguing, he invokes the oft-repeated language that "[t]he standard of need [in an alimony case] is measured by the `station' of the parties—by what is required to maintain a standard of living comparable to the one enjoyed during the marriage." Grubert v. Grubert, 20 Mass.App.Ct. 811, 819 (1985). Moriarty v. Stone, 41 Mass.App.Ct. 151, 158 (1996). It is the husband's position that "[w]hen no standard of living is established, no alimony is required to maintain it."
The judge found that this was a very brief marriage. While "[i]n general, the shorter the marriage the less justification for alimony," Kindregan & Inker, Family Law and Practice § 38.3, at 615 (3d ed. 2002), a short term marriage does not necessarily preclude an alimony award. See Freedman v. Freedman, 49 Mass.App.Ct. 519, 523 (2000) (alimony may be appropriate to a short term marriage). As we have observed, all the § 34 factors must be considered; no single factor is determinative. See Gottsegen v. Gottsegen, supra at 623. See also Gordon v. Gordon, 26 Mass.App.Ct. 973, 975 (1988); Kindregan & Inker, supra (in determining an alimony award other factors, in addition to the length of the marriage, come into play). It is also apparent that the judge had in mind the so-called "station/standard" of living of the parties. Among other things, the judge found that "[w]hen together [the] parties enjoyed an upper middle class station in life,"
Furthermore, in fashioning her award for alimony of limited duration, the judge sought to provide the wife with support to meet her "realistic" needs (as found by the judge, see note 14, supra) for a period that would allow her to recover sufficiently from her emotional health issues to engage again in full-time employment. In the circumstances of this case, and as discussed further, infra, we do not think that the judge's order constitutes an abuse of discretion.
We comment briefly on the wife's challenge, through her cross appeal, to the durational limits to the alimony award. Starting with the premise that the husband's conduct triggered "extreme consequences to [her]," both emotional and financial, the wife asserts that "accommodation" is appropriate here to provide financial assistance to her for as long as is necessary.
As to the wife's assertions with respect to the husband's conduct, we note that the judge stated expressly that she did not find that the husband's conduct was the sole or even principal cause of the wife's health issues. That aside, to the extent the wife now urges that the present case is not an appropriate one for an award of limited duration alimony, her position is at odds with her request for short term alimony in her opening statement at trial and her further request (as the judge noted) for alimony in the amount of $700 per week for a period of two to three years.
Here, although the judge found that the wife has emotional health issues that will require some recuperative period for which she will need some support, the judge did not find persuasive the medical testimony that the wife will need up to three years to recover. The judge stated that the wife had been in treatment for some sixteen months, that she was currently able to work twenty-four to twenty-six hours per week, and that she herself acknowledged that her emotional health should improve and that she should be able to return to work full time. In the circumstances, the judge did not abuse her discretion or otherwise err as matter of law in ordering that the husband pay the wife alimony for a period of one year.
General Laws c. 208, § 34, as amended by St.1990, c. 467, provides, in part: "In addition to or in lieu of a judgment to pay alimony, the court may assign to either husband or wife all or any part of the estate of the other...." The term "estate" has been interpreted to include "all property to which a party holds title, whenever and however acquired, and includes property obtained by a party before marriage." Moriarty v. Stone, 41 Mass.App. at 156-157. "The equitable factors which are to be considered under § 34 reflect a view of marriage as an implied partnership for the purposes of distribution of property." Savides v. Savides, 400 Mass. 250, 252 (1987). See Davidson v. Davidson, 19 Mass.App.Ct. 364, 369-370 (1985). "Overall, the purpose of a § 34 property division is `to recognize and equitably recompense the parties' respective contributions to the marital partnership.'" Kittredge v. Kittredge, 441 Mass. 28, 44 (2004), quoting from Heacock v. Heacock, 402 Mass. 21, 24 (1988). See Moriarty v. Stone, 41 Mass.App.Ct. at 157 ("The parties' respective contributions to the marital partnership remain the touchstone of an equitable division of the marital estate"). See generally Kindregan & Inker, supra at § 40:6. "According broad discretion to the judge's division of property under the § 34 factors `is necessary in order that the courts can handle the myriad of different fact situations which surround divorces and arrive at a fair financial settlement in each case.'" Kittredge v. Kittredge, 441 Mass. at 43-44, quoting from Rice v. Rice, 372 Mass. 398, 401 (1977). Adams v. Adams, 459 Mass. 361, 371 (2011).
As a preliminary matter, the husband argues that the property division must be set aside as inconsistent with the judge's findings of fact. He first asserts that the judge incorrectly stated in her rationale that he had spent "at least $22,000 during the marriage" (emphasis supplied) in connection with his involvement with the woman he met in Las Vegas and at the men's club, when, in fact, the parties' stipulated that the men's club bill was incurred prior to the marriage.
The judge found that the men's club costs were incurred by the husband about five days before the parties' wedding. In context, it is apparent that the judge's statement in her rationale refers to the fact that the husband paid the sum of $20,000 in settlement of the men's club charges during the marriage. As to the husband's additional challenge to the judge's findings of fact, although the judge stated at one point that "[t]he only asset acquired together during the marriage, their condominium, has been sold" (emphasis supplied), the judge was well aware that the condominium unit was purchased prior to the marriage, and she made findings with respect to the purchase and the parties' use of the condominium unit as their residence both before and during the marriage.
In arguing that the judge failed to evaluate the totality of the parties' financial situations, the husband asserts briefly, and in general terms, that the judge erred "by enriching the wife in the absence of [as found by the judge] a marital partnership or [marital] estate." He argues that a judge "may not apportion shares of a marital estate to one spouse without relation to that spouse's contribution," and that the judge, in the present case, "failed to explain why, in the absence of a marital estate, a contribution was required."
While the concept of marital partnership may be said to form a basis for a division of property, we have indicated that the absence of such a partnership does not, in itself, prohibit a judge from fashioning in appropriate circumstances orders for property division. See Freedman v. Freedman, 49 Mass.App.Ct. at 524 (in fashioning the financial components of the judgment, which included a division of property, the judge "could take into consideration that the marriage had not lasted long enough to attain the character of a marital partnership"). Moreover, the judge's finding that given the brevity of the relationship the parties were never able to acquire a "marital estate," in context, appears to reflect the judge's view that there was no property that was the product of the marriage itself.
In concluding that it was equitable for the husband to pay the wife the sum of $29,500 as his contribution to the diminished assets and "debt," the judge considered the § 34 factors, and in doing so, made findings concerning, as we have discussed, the men's club expenditures paid by the husband during the marriage,
On her cross appeal, the wife argues that "[i]n a short term marriage, where the immediate cause of the parties' breakup was the husband's infidelity resulting in significant and substantial losses to [her] ... it was an abuse of discretion to limit a division of property to [her] of $29,500" (emphasis supplied). The wife requests that the case be remanded with instructions that the judge review and revise the property division to award her appropriate sums on account of her medical treatment (and particularly her treatment at the Arizona facilities at a cost to her of $81,000).
The judgments are affirmed. The wife's request for appellate attorney's fees and costs is denied.
So ordered.