On September 10, 2014 the New Jersey Legislature amended the alimony statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23. The Legislature provided for various standards related to a supporting spouse’s retirement,
In the recent case of Landers v. Landers, (No. A-3931-14T3), 2016 WL 687132, — N.J. Super. — (App. Div. Feb. 22, 2016), the Appellate Division addressed this question. In Landers, the parties divorced in 1991 after a 22 year marriage. The divorce judgment required the Husband to pay a declining amount of unallocated support for the Wife and unemancipated children. He complied with the divorce judgment. There were few post-judgment disputes between the parties and no arrearages accrued. When the Husband turned 66 years old, he filed an application in family court to terminate his alimony obligation, asserting that the Wife was still working and collecting social security retirement benefits as his former spouse, whereas his income was limited to social security retirement benefits and his share of his pension that he received in equitable distribution in the parties’ divorce. The Husband also described some medical issues that had contributed to his desire to retire. The Wife sought a continuation of alimony, described her own medical conditions, and indicated that her income was her derivative share of the Husband’s social security retirement benefits and a social security disability award.
The Wife cited to the legislative statement accompanying the modification to the alimony statute suggesting that the provisions of the new statute did not affect divorce judgments entered prior to September 10, 2014. The family court judge disagreed and applied the statute as revised in September, 2014 with its’ rebuttable statutory presumption and its factors. The court found that the Wife had failed to overcome the statutory presumption that alimony terminates when an obligor attains full retirement age, and that the Wife had not supplied her income tax returns, listed her assets on her Case Information Statement, and that she did not address her ability to save for retirement during the 24 years after the divorce.
The Wife filed an appeal, asserting that the family court judge had not properly followed the statutory factors of N.J.S.A. 2A34-23(j)(1), that the court had incorrectly placed the burden of proof on her as opposed to her former husband, and that the court omitted applicable factors in its analysis. The Appellate Division reversed the family court’s decision.
The Appellate Division noted that unlike other amended portions of the alimony statute, subsection (j) distinguishes alimony orders entered September 10, 2014 and those that were entered after the alimony statute was amended. N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(j)(1), (3). The Appellate Division found it “unambiguous” that that this directive governs a family court’s examination of a request to modify alimony when an obligor spouse retires, depending on the date that alimony was originally awarded. N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(j)(3) applies when a spouse files a retirement application in which “there is an existing final alimony order or enforceable written agreement established prior to the effective date” of the statute, September 10, 2014. The Appellate Division pointed out that the factors of section (1) and section (3) of N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(j) are different and, therefore, the focus of the courts in their analysis must be different. Subsection (j)(1), which applies to requests to modify alimony orders entered after September, 2014, places the burden on the spouse receiving alimony to demonstrate to the court why alimony should continue when the payor spouse has reached full retirement age (the age at which a person is eligible to receive full social security retirement benefits under the federal Social Security Act).
Subsection (j)(3), which applies to requests to modify alimony orders entered before September, 2014 does not have this requirement as it more closely follows the Lepis v. Lepis analysis of changed circumstances. This section puts the burden of proof on the obligee spouse to overcome a rebuttable presumption that alimony would be modified or terminated when the obligor spouse reaches full retirement age. The Appellate Division found it noteworthy that subsection (j)(3) also elevated the requirement that the court consider whether the obligee spouse had saved adequately for retirement. Section (j)(1) only has it as one of its factors, whereas section (J)(3) separates this factor and requires explicit analysis by a court.
The Appellate Division concluded that it could not ignore that the Husband sought an application to modify an alimony order that was established prior to the September, 2014 effective date of the alimony statute, which required the trial court to have reviewed his application pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(j)(3), and NOT subsection (j)(1) as the trial court had done. As such, the Appellate Division reversed the trial court’s decision and remanded back to the family court for further proceedings. Hence, on remand, not only would the family court judge have to consider whether the Wife had saved adequately for retirement, but it will be the Husband who bears the burden of proof to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence why alimony should be terminated or modified, and the court will have to examine:
(a) The age and health of the parties at the time of the application;
(b) The obligor’s field of employment and the generally accepted age of retirement for those in that field;
(c) The age o the obligor becomes eligible for retirement at the obligor’s place of employment, including mandatory retirement dates or the dates upon which continued employment would no longer increase retirement benefits;
(d) The obligor’s motives in retiring, including any pressures to retire applied by the obligor’s employer or incentive plans offered by the obligor’s employer;
(e) The reasonable expectations of the parties regarding retirement during the marriage or civil union and at the time of the divorce or dissolution;
(f) The ability of the obligor to maintain support payments following retirement, including whether the obligor will continue to be employed part-time or work reduced hours;
(g) The obligee’s level of financial independence and the financial impact of the obligor’s retirement upon the obligee; and
(h) Any other relevant factors affecting the parties’ respective financial positions.
Applications to modify alimony, even in situations involving retirement, can be complex and fact sensitive matters. As such, the attorneys at the law firm of James P. Yudes, A Professional Corporation can assist you.