PETER CANISIUS, JR.
vs.
ERIN JOY MORGENSTERN.
Suffolk. December 2, 2014. - August 6, 2015.Present: Rapoza, C.J., Vuono, & Meade, JJ.1 and Separation, Division of property.
Complaint for filed in the Suffolk Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on November 1, 2011.
The case was heard by Brian J. Dunn, J.
Michael P. Friedman for the husband. William Sanford Durland, III, for the wife.
RAPOZA, C.J. Peter Canisius, Jr. (Peter), the former husband of Erin Joy Morgenstern (Erin), appeals from a judgment of of the Probate and Family Court. He argues that the judge erred in treating Erin's vested contractual rights to future payments resulting from the best-selling novel, The Night
( 1 Chief Justice Rapoza participated in the deliberation on this case and authored this opinion prior to his retirement. )
Circus, which she authored, as too speculative for inclusion in the divisible marital estate. He also argues that the judge erred by finding that the parties' contributions to the marital estate were unequal, and making an unequal division of the marital estate based on that erroneous finding.
We fail to discern error in the judge's determination that the
parties' contributions to the marital estate were not equal. We
agree with Peter, however, that the judge committed an error of
law by excluding from the marital estate subject to division
under G. L. c. 208, § 34, Erin's contractual rights to future
payments arising from her novel. Our review of this issue is de
novo. As explained more fully, infra, we vacate the judgment,
in part, and remand the matter to the Probate and Family Court
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
1. Background. Peter and Erin began to live together in
August, 2004, some two years prior to their marriage. Early on,
they established a pattern that continued throughout their
cohabitation and marriage: Erin handled the cooking for the
couple while Peter performed the cleaning duties. During this
early period, Erin was unhappy with her employment situation and
wished to pursue artistic endeavors. After discussing the issue
with Peter, the parties decided that they would no longer share
equally their living expenses (as they had been) until Erin's
income from the arts would allow her to do so. By June, 2005,
Erin had ceased working outside of the creative arts, and by
February, 2006, Peter had begun to pay for virtually all of the
parties' expenses. The parties were married on October 13, 2006.
During the marriage, the parties lived a "simple lifestyle"
on a limited budget. Peter, a chemical engineer, worked long
hours to pay the parties' expenses, including those expenses
directly related to Erin's creative pursuits. He also paid off
Erin's then existing student loan debt. Erin, for her part,
engaged in writing as well as the creation of various pieces of
art. Certain of Erin's writing projects ultimately evolved into
the novel, The Night Circus.
2
In May, 2010, Erin obtained an agent (who provided her with
numerous suggestions to improve her novel) and, in November,
2010, the agent negotiated a contract with Doubleday, a division
of Random House, Inc., for the disposition of the publishing
rights to The Night Circus. Other rights, including the right to
make a movie, were optioned to Summit Entertainment (Summit)
in December, 2010.
(
2 The seeds for The Night Circus were planted shortly before the
marriage in certain of Erin's writings. The novel was primarily
worked on and completed during the marriage.
3 The judge found that there are many forms and amounts of
payments that Erin may receive under the terms of the Summit
contract. The judge further found that there is "no
participation necessary on the part of [Erin] in regard to
and producer for the movie project, the film has no timetable
for production. In 2011, Erin transferred the copyright to The
Night Circus to Night Circus LLC, which she owns. Erin received
substantial initial payments from both Doubleday and Summit.)
3 Although Summit has retained a screenwriter
As The Night Circus began to find success, the parties'
marriage, which had experienced some tension, continued to
deteriorate and, in July, 2011, the parties separated.
Subsequent to the parties' separation, Erin engaged in
significant publicity and promotional work for the novel which,
the judge found, was important to the success of the book. Erin
continues to build her "brand" by marketing herself "through
blurbs and other means, including social media."
By the time of trial on Peter's complaint for , The Night
Circus had grossed over $3 million in royalties and between
November, 2010, and October 9, 2013 (the last day of trial),
Erin received net income derived from The Night Circus
[that contract] in order for [the] agreement to continue to have
value and [Erin's] participation is unnecessary going forward
with respect to the Summit agreement." With respect to the
Doubleday contract, that instrument provides that if Doubleday
requests Erin's cooperation in promoting The Night Circus, Erin
shall be available for such promotional activities at mutually
agreed upon times and places. Erin testified that she last
attended a book tour event in November, 2012 (although she has
been to certain other events).
of $2,853,281.4 Nonetheless, the judge found that the gross
amount of royalties was decreasing as sales were decreasing.
The judge also stated that Erin's future earnings from The Night
Circus are unpredictable. "It may become a highly successful
movie, theater production etc., which will provide a large
income stream for [Erin] for years to come, or it may not, and
[Erin] may have to rely on the past financial success of The
Night Circus to support her for a lifetime."5
Peter earns approximately $95,000 per year as an engineer.
Both parties have retirement plans. They do not own any real
property. Neither party sought alimony from the other at trial.
2. The judge's decision. The judge found that once The
Night Circus was accepted in final form by Doubleday, the
contract with Doubleday had "value and the full economic value
of the contract is dependent only upon how many books are sold
4 This amount does not include royalties from certain sales that
would not be payable to Erin by Doubleday until December, 2013.
5 The judge found that although Erin had done some work (part of
it conceptual) on a second novel, she had "barely written"
during the two years preceding trial. Erin's choice of genre for
a second novel will have a significant impact on the
marketability of that work. The judge found that if Erin can
produce a significant writing sample of a second novel, of the
same "type and quality" as The Night Circus, she has the
potential of earning a larger advance than she received from The
Night Circus. The judge noted, however, that it is not clear
whether Erin will be able to complete a second book and that the
success of any such book is not guaranteed.
worldwide. The Night Circus is marital property."
Nevertheless, the judge stated in his "Conclusions of Law" that
"[t]he Court may properly conclude on the evidence that the
present value of future income of intellectual property is too
speculative to consider, as was the case with patents on
artificial skin. See Yannas v. Frondistou-Yannas, 395 Mass.
704, 714 (1985)." Continuing, the judge stated in his
"Rationale:"
"Wife is the author of The Night Circus which has been hugely
financially successful due to her talent. The financial success
of the work was also enhanced by her efforts and abilities in
promoting the book. The book is the sole creation of Wife.
Husband admitted that not a word of the book is his creation.
However, the court notes that it seems clear from the evidence
that this work is not solely created by the author but rather
created by the author and a team of others. In this case, the
team was her agent, the agent's staff, her editor, her critique
partner, beta readers and the Husband. The value Husband added,
if any, to this editorial process compared to other members of
the team was minimal. However, Husband's editorial contributions
to this book are not his sole value to this book. Husband's
contribution to The Night Circus began well before a word of
this book was written or even conceived by Wife. Husband worked
full-time and significant overtime to allow the Wife to pursue
her dream of pursuing a successful career in the arts without
the concern for putting a roof over her head or food on the
table. In a sense, Wife was not a starving artist due to
Husband['s] efforts to fully provide for both of their needs.
Husband also served as an emotional support and companion to
Wife during the research and writing process and his reading of
drafts and offering some feedback or encouragement in difficult
times certainly impacted Wife's on-going efforts to produce a
marketable manuscript. It would not be equitable in any sense of
the word to deny Husband a portion of the fruits of this
marriage, which in this case is The Night Circus.
". . .
"The Husband provided Wife with financial and emotional support
in her efforts to pursue the creative arts. Wife then created
the world of The Night Circus from her imagination and used her
skill (and others) to develop that into a book that has grossed
over three million dollars in royalties. These contributions are
not equal. Therefore, considering all the admissible evidence
and inferences reasonable therefrom, the court is persuaded that
an unequal division of the marital estate is equitable in this
case. I find after careful consideration of the section 34
factors that payment of [$628,000] from Wife to Husband would be
an equitable division of the marital
estate."6
The judge issued a judgment of on December 19, 2013,
which contains provisions that effectuate his stated rationale,
including an order directing Erin to make a lump sum payment to
Peter of $570,000 (which takes into account previous
advancements of attorney's fees to Peter in the amount of
$58,000) as "his share of the royalty and book-related earnings
she has received to date from the publication of [her] novel
. . ." (emphasis supplied).
3. Discussion. a. Future payments/marital estate. Peter
argues that the judge erred in treating Erin's "vested
contractual rights" to future payments resulting from her
successful novel as too speculative for inclusion in the marital
estate. Put another way, he states that it was "clear error for
6 The judge also stated, seemingly with reference to Erin's
other (often undeveloped) projects, that it would be inequitable
forever to wed Erin with Peter as a business partner.
the judge to exclude from the divisible marital estate all
future compensation received by [Erin] after the trial and into
the future under the Doubleday and Summit contracts."7,8
General Laws c. 208, § 34, as amended through St. 1990,
c. 467, provides, in part, that the "court may assign to either
husband or wife all or any part of the estate of the other,
including but not limited to, all vested and nonvested benefits,
rights and funds accrued during the marriage . . . ." In S.L.
v. R.L., 55 Mass. App. Ct. 880, 882-883 (2002), we summarized
the general principles bearing upon the inclusion of an asset or
interest in, or the exclusion of an asset from, the marital
estate:
"General Laws c. 208, § 34, defines the scope of a trial judge's
discretion to assign interests in the marital estate to the wife
or husband, based on a number of
7 We construe the judge's findings, conclusions, and judgment,
as do the parties in their briefs, as excluding from the
divisible marital estate Erin's interest in contractual rights
to future payments.
8 Peter does not seek any interest in the copyright to The Night
Circus. In this regard, he cites to Rodrigue v. Rodrigue, 218
F.3d 432, 435 (5th Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 532 U.S. 905 (2001)
(conclusion that "an author-spouse in whom a copyright vests
maintains exclusive managerial control of the copyright but that
the economic benefits of the copyrighted work belong to the
community while it exists and to the former spouses in
indivision thereafter," is consistent with both Federal
copyright law and Louisiana community property law). See Berry
v. Berry, 127 Haw. 243, 256-263 (2012). Peter has expressly
waived any right in other artistic works created by Erin during
the marriage. His appeal, as he states, is limited to his claim
to vested interests arising out of The Night Circus.
specified factors. . . . Separate from the division of assets
within the estate is the question whether certain assets
properly are considered a part of the estate. In making the
determination of what to include in the estate, the judge is not
bound by traditional concepts of title or property. 'Instead, we
have held a number of intangible interests (even those not
within the complete possession or control of their holders) to
be part of a spouse's estate for purposes of § 34.' Baccanti v.
Morton, 434 Mass. 787, 794 (2001), quoting from Lauricella v.
Lauricella, 409
Mass. 211, 214 (1991). 'When the future acquisition of
assets is fairly certain, and current valuation possible, the
assets may be considered for assignment under § 34.'
Williams v. Massa, [431 Mass. 619,] 628 [2000]. Interests
considered too remote or speculative for inclusion within the
estate are instead weighed under the § 34 criterion of
'opportunity of each [spouse] for future acquisition of capital
assets and income' in dividing the marital property."
See D.L. v. G.L., 61 Mass. App. Ct. 488, 492-493 (2004).
With respect to the possibility of current valuation referenced
in S.L. v. R.L., supra, case law indicates that the
uncertainty of value of a party's interest does not necessarily
require its exclusion from the marital estate. See, e.g., Hanify
v. Hanify, 403 Mass. 184, 188 (1988) (fact that "pending
lawsuits" are of uncertain value does not require their
exclusion from the marital estate); Lauricella v. Lauricella,
409 Mass. at 217 (fact that valuation of interest may be
difficult does not alter its character as divisible asset);
Davidson v. Davidson, 19 Mass. App. Ct. 364, 372 (1985) ("We do
not think that either the uncertainty of value or the
inalienability of the interest, in themselves, are sufficient to
preclude consideration of the interest as subject to division").
In such circumstances, an asset may be divided on an "if and
when received" basis. Hanify v. Hanify, 403 Mass. at 188. See
Adams v. Adams, 459 Mass. 361, 379 & n.14 (2011); S.L. v. R.L.,
55 Mass. App. Ct. at 885. As the Supreme Judicial Court has
stated, while a "'present division of all assets ordinarily is
preferable,' because it provides an immediate settlement of the
distribution without entangling the parties in future
litigation, and the continued strife and uncertainty it
entails," Adams v. Adams, 459 Mass. at 379 n.14, quoting from
Hanify v. Hanify, 403 Mass. at 188, "where a present valuation
of [an asset] is uncertain or impractical, the better practice
is to order that any future recovery or payment be divided, if
and when received, according to a formula fixed in the property
assignment." Ibid. See S.L. v. R.L., 55 Mass. App. Ct. at 884-
885.
We have also indicated that an "expansive," rather than a
restrictive, approach to what constitutes marital property is
appropriate. D.L. v. G.L., 61 Mass. App. Ct. at 493, and cases
cited. Whether a party's interest in certain property is part
of the marital estate for purposes of G. L. c. 208, § 34, has
been said to present a question of law that we are in as good a
position as the probate judge to answer. See Lauricella v.
Lauricella, 409 Mass. at 213.9 But compare Adams v. Adams, 459
Mass. at 378.
In the instant matter, The Night Circus was created essentially
during the marriage and the Doubleday and Summit contracts were
executed during the marriage. Erin's rights in those contracts,
as Peter points out, are present and enforceable and, with
respect to value, dependent, in the case of the Doubleday
contract, on the number of books sold worldwide and, in the case
of the Summit contract, on whether Summit chooses to exercise
the option for the rights it acquired through its contract with
Erin. The contracts have already generated extraordinary
payments for Erin and have the potential for generating
additional payments in the future.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Erin suggests in her brief
that case law supports the judge's determination to exclude from
the divisible marital estate as too speculative "future royalty
9 "This determination involves neither an exercise of discretion
nor consideration of the enumerated § 34 factors." Lauricella v.
Lauricella, 409 Mass. at 213 n.2. See D.L. v. G.L., 61 Mass.
App. Ct. at 495-497, where, after stating that the question
whether a party's interest in trust property is part of the
estate for purposes of § 34 presents a question of law, we
concluded on the evidence that the husband's interest in the
trust principal "properly may be characterized as 'too remote or
speculative' to be included within the martial estate." Id. at
497.
income."10 She points to several cases. In Cabot v. Cabot, 18
Mass. App. Ct. 903, 904 (1984), we held that a probate judge
properly may decline to treat as a marital asset the present
value of future earning potential. We reasoned that future
earnings were too speculative and subject to variables, the
least of which being that they may never be achieved because of
death, illness, or simply market factors. Similarly, in Drapek
v. Drapek, 399 Mass. 240, 243-244 (1987), a case that involved
the question whether the husband's medical degree and resulting
increased earning capacity should be treated as part of the
marital estate subject to division, the Supreme Judicial Court
stated that the present value of future earned income is not
subject to equitable assignment under G. L. c. 208, § 34. "To
adopt a rule that would subject such an item to distribution
upon would foreclose consideration of the effect of
future events on the individual's earning capacity. Unlike
alimony, a property settlement is not subject to modification."
399 Mass. at 244. Finally, in Yannas v. Frondistou-Yannas, 395
Mass. at 706, the husband in the proceeding was a world-
renowned scientist who was the coinventor of an artificial skin
designed for the treatment of severe burn victims. In
10 Erin states that the judge properly could consider the future
royalty income in the context of her future opportunities to
acquire assets and income.
addressing the division of the marital estate, the court stated:
"[The judge] was not obliged to place a value on the husband's
royalties, patents or copyrights. He was warranted in declaring
uncertain the value of the husband's patents on artificial skin.
The judge could have concluded on the evidence that the present
value of the husband's future income from this source was too
speculative to consider. The asset was not one which obviously
has current value but is difficult to appraise (such as a close
corporation)." Id. at 714. The court later summarized its
holding in the Yannas case as follows: "Similarly, in Yannas
. . . we declined to characterize the present value of a grant
of a patent as a divisible asset because any enhanced earning
potential the patent created was merely speculative" (emphasis
added).11 Adams v. Adams, 459 Mass. at 374.
In subsequent decisions, the Supreme Judicial Court has
indicated that cases such as Drapek and Yannas, which implicate
future earning potential or enhanced future earning potential,
involve "expectancies." See Hanify v. Hanify, 403 Mass. at 188;
Lauricella v. Lauricella, 409 Mass. at 216; Adams v. Adams, 459
11 A "patent" has been described as a "bundle of legal rights
granted to an inventor by [F]ederal law" which "consist in
essence of the right to exclusive use of the invention for a
limited period of time." 2 Turner, Equitable Distribution of
Property, § 6:77 (3d ed. 2005). The Yannas decision contains no
discussion of the evidence that was before the probate judge
concerning the patents there in issue.
Mass. at 374. Our courts "have drawn a line around certain
interests that are so speculative as to constitute nothing more
than expectancies, and thus, are not assignable to the marital
estate." Ibid. See Hassey v. Hassey, 85 Mass. App. Ct. 518,
531 n. 22 (2014). "Expectancies . . . do not embody either a
present or future enforceable proprietary right . . . ;" they
have only theoretical value. Adams v. Adams, 459 Mass. at 374-
375, 377. See Hanify v. Hanify, 403 Mass. at 188 ("Expectancies
. . . embody no enforceable rights accruing during the
marriage").
Here, Erin's contractual rights to future royalty and other
payments do not, in our view, involve mere expectancies as
described in the foregoing cases. While the amount of the
royalty and other payments to be received by Erin in the future
cannot yet be ascertained, the right to receive those royalties
and other payments was contractually established at the time of
the .12 Indeed, Erin's interests in the present case are,
12 A weakness in Erin's position, and her reliance upon cases
such as Cabot v. Cabot, 18 Mass. App. Ct. at 904, is manifest in
her statement in her brief that her future novel- related
payments may never be achieved due to "death, illness, or simply
market factors." While such a statement would make sense in the
scenario presented in Cabot (where the wife sought to offer the
opinion of an actuary of the present value of the earning
capacity of the husband and wife, respectively, until each
reached the age of sixty-five), it makes little sense in the
context of this case where Erin has vested contractual rights.
in certain respects, analogous to a party's interest in the
payment of pension rights which has been recognized as marital
property subject to division. See Dewan v. Dewan, 399 Mass.
754, 755, 757-758 (1987); D.L. v. G.L., 61 Mass. App. Ct. at 493
n.9. See also Mahoney v. Mahoney, 425 Mass. 441, 444 (1997)
("An employee who participates in a pension plan has an
enforceable contractual right to receive future benefits from
the plan"). We are also mindful of the proposition, set out by
the Supreme Judicial Court in Adams, that "we are unwilling to
deny one spouse, who contributed to the acquisition or
appreciation of property during the marital enterprise, 'the
right to share in what may be the most valuable asset between
the spouses' on the basis of the uncertainty or future
contingencies bound up in that asset." Adams v. Adams, 459
Mass. at 376, quoting from Baccanti v. Morton, 434 Mass. at 796
(quotation omitted). "To hold otherwise would frustrate the
intent of the Legislature in so broadly drafting § 34." Ibid.
We note that the courts of a number of jurisdictions have
determined that, in appropriate circumstances, an interest in
future book royalties can be included in the parties' divisible
marital estate. See, e.g., Gallo v. Gallo, 184 Conn. 36, 48
(1981) (award to plaintiff of twenty percent of defendant's
royalties for period of five years upheld where right to receive
royalties was contractually established and was neither
indefinite nor speculative); Lynch v. Lynch, 135 Conn. App. 40,
51-52 (2012); In re Marriage of Heinze, 257 Ill. App. 3d 782,
783-789 (1994) (distinguishing Yannas case, supra; where
contract right to future book royalties was acquired during
marriage, future book royalties are "fruit of the shared
enterprise of marriage" and should be divided as marital
property); In re Marriage of White, 537 N.W.2d 744, 746-747
(Iowa 1995). See also Young v. Kelly, 334 P.3d 153, 160 n.34
(Alaska 2014). See and compare Morenberg v. Morenberg, 65 So.
3d 1199, 1200-1201 (Fla. App. 2011) (husband required to share
equally in royalties he receives from two books he wrote and
revised during marriage, but not future royalties on book
edition he revised after petition for dissolution). See
generally, American Law Institute, Principles of the Law of
Family Dissolution Analysis & Recommendations § 4.08 (2002).13
13 As for Erin's argument that no evidence was introduced at
trial regarding the present value of future payments, as we have
discussed, where valuation of an interest is uncertain or
impractical a judge is not precluded from dividing an asset on
an "if and when received" basis. Peter requested this form of
division in his proposed findings and judgment. Erin also
appears to argue that even assuming that her contractual rights
should have been included in the § 34 division, any future
royalty payments she receives will be income to her and the
payment of any portion of that income to Peter must be treated
as the payment of alimony, which is precluded by Peter's waiver
of alimony. This argument was not raised below and, indeed, Erin
proceeded in her proposed findings, conclusions, and rationale
on the theory that her future earning potential and post
royalty and book-related income could not be treated under
Massachusetts law as marital property (citing to Drapek v.
Based on all of the foregoing, we conclude that the judge erred
in excluding from the marital estate subject to equitable
division Erin's interest in future payments to be received by
her subsequent to the under the Doubleday and Summit
contracts.14
In view of the decision we reach on this issue, we are
constrained to vacate the order directing Erin to pay to Peter
the lump sum of $570,000 as his share of the royalty and book-
related earnings she has received to date from the publication
of The Night Circus. In fixing that specific monetary award, the
judge indicated that he had considered carefully the G. L.
c. 208, § 34, factors, which would presumably include the
opportunity of each party to acquire capital assets and income
in the future and may encompass Erin's interests in future
Drapek, 399 Mass. at 243-244) and was too speculative. While a
party "may defend a judgment on any ground based on the record
so long as raising the argument is not unfair to its opponent,"
Perseus of N.E., MA, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 429 Mass. 163, 168
(1999), it is doubtful in the circumstances presented that the
fairness aspect of the principle has been met as to Erin's
waiver of alimony argument. In any event, on the limited issue
presented, we do not consider that argument to be persuasive.
See e.g., § 71(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.
§ 71(b) (2012); Kindregan, McBrien and Kindregan, Family Law and
Practice § 16:2 (4th ed. 2013).
14 That Erin might conceivably be called upon by Doubleday to
perform some promotional activity in the future (see note 3,
supra), would not, in the circumstances presented in this case,
preclude her interest in future contractual payments from being
considered part of the marital estate.
royalty and other payments. See S.L. v. R.L., 55 Mass. App. Ct.
at 883 ("Interests considered too remote or speculative for
inclusion within the estate are instead weighed under the § 34
criterion of 'opportunity of each [spouse] for future
acquisition of capital assets and income' in dividing the
marital property"). As we are unable to determine the weight
accorded by the judge to this § 34 factor in fixing the monetary
award, and as we now hold that Erin's interest in future
proceeds under the Doubleday and Summit contracts is to be
considered part of the marital estate subject to equitable
division under § 34, the lump sum monetary award must be
reexamined.
b. The parties' contributions. Peter argues next that the
judge erred by finding the parties' contributions to the marital
estate to be unequal and making an unequal division of the
marital estate based on this erroneous finding. Although we have
concluded that the order directing Erin to pay Peter the lump
sum of $570,000 must be vacated, we address Peter's claim of
error with respect to the parties' contributions.
Among the G. L. c. 208, § 34, factors a judge may consider in
fashioning an equitable division is the contribution of each of
the parties to the acquisition, preservation, or appreciation in
value of their respective estates and the contribution of each
of the parties as a homemaker to the family unit. Indeed,
we have stated that the "parties' respective contributions to
the marital partnership remain the touchstone of an equitable
division of the marital estate." Moriarty v. Stone, 41 Mass.
App. Ct. 151, 157-158 (1996). We may set aside a judge's
findings of fact when they are clearly erroneous. Mass. R. Dom.
Rel. P. 52(a).
Here, Peter asserts that the judge expressly rested his
unequal division of the marital estate on his conclusion that
his (Peter's) contributions were not equal to Erin's
contributions of her talent, imagination, and skill to the
creation of The Night Circus. Peter states that the notion that
one spouse's direct contribution of skills or talent to a
marital asset should outweigh the different but equivalent
marital contributions of the other spouse was rejected in
deCastro v. deCastro, 415 Mass. 787, 792-795 (1993) (rejecting
claim that husband's "genius" in cofounding and developing
highly successful corporation was factor under § 34, and stating
that concept of equitable division must be read to apply in
broad sense to value of all contributions of respective spouses
towards marital enterprise). Peter further asserts that it is
clear that the parties in this case made distinct but equal
contributions to their marital partnership. In short, Peter
argues that there was simply "no basis or adequate explanation
in the judge's findings or rationale for his conclusion that the
parties' marital contributions were not equal."
In fashioning his argument, Peter relies in part on the
following two sentences that are contained in the judge's
rationale: "The Husband provided Wife with financial and
emotional support in her efforts to pursue the creative arts.
Wife then created the world of The Night Circus from her
imagination and used her skill (and others) to develop that into
a book that has grossed over three million dollars in
royalties." Peter notes, correctly, that the judge then stated,
"These contributions are not equal." Viewed in isolation, the
sentences to which Peter points provide some support for his
position that the judge may have unduly emphasized Erin's
extraordinary talent and writing skills (while minimizing
Peter's contributions that may have allowed Erin the luxury of
writing her novel).
However, we think Peter reads too narrowly the judge's findings
and rationale. The judge considered the G. L. c. 208,
§ 34, factors and made findings concerning, for example, the
parties' contributions both before and after their separation.
Among other things, the judge found that Erin traveled to and
appeared at about seventy book signings, readings, and similar
events throughout the United States and Canada and took part in
one-half dozen European and United Kingdom promotional visits.
These activities took place primarily between mid-September and
early November, 2011 -- after the parties' had separated. Erin
continued to do publicity and marketing work in 2012 (after the
release of the paperback edition of The Night Circus) and 2013.
The judge, as we have indicated, specifically stated in his
rationale that the financial success of The Night Circus was
enhanced by Erin's efforts and abilities in promoting the
book.15
Viewing the findings and rationale in their entirety, and giving
due consideration to Erin's efforts through the date of the
, we cannot say that the judge's findings are clearly
erroneous or that he otherwise erred in determining that the
parties' contributions were not equal.
15 Erin emphasizes in her brief her significant postseparation
contributions to the enhancement of the value of The Night
Circus, and the "complete absence" of any contribution by Peter
to the novel after the parties' separation. In his reply brief,
Peter does not appear to argue that the judge could not consider
the postseparation contributions of Erin. Rather, he asserts
that the judge's unequal property division cannot be upheld
based on his finding that Erin's promotional activities enhanced
the financial success of The Night Circus "in the absence of any
findings or rationale which factored the correlative value of
the husband's post-separation marital contributions into the
decisional calculus." Notwithstanding Peter's argument, the
judge did, in fact, make findings that Peter had gone with Erin
to several local book signings and accompanied her on one
international trip. The judge also made findings concerning the
parties' postseparation interactions and circumstances (Erin has
reestablished herself in New York City), the expenses they pay,
the fact that each is self-supporting, and the fact that they
have not spoken to each other in almost two years. The judge
noted that Peter had kept Erin on his health insurance policy.
4. Disposition. The matter must be remanded to the
Probate and Family Court with instructions that Erin's interest
in future proceeds under the Doubleday and Summit contracts
arising from her novel, The Night Circus, is to be considered a
part of the marital estate for G. L. c. 208, § 34, purposes. In
the circumstances presented, that interest would seem
particularly suited to division on an "if and when received"
basis, with the judge determining the percentages of any future
payments to be assigned to Erin and Peter.16 See e.g., Gallo v.
Gallo, 184 Conn. at 48; In re Marriage of Heinze, 257 Ill. App.
3d at 785-787.
We recognize that the division of future royalty and other,
similar payments may present special challenges to the probate
judge. Among other things, the future book sales, upon which the
royalties are based, may be enhanced by the post efforts
of the writer-spouse through promotion, marketing, brand
building, and the creation of subsequent works (which may
generate interest in an earlier work). See In re Marriage of
Heinze, 257 Ill. App. 3d at 788. Future promotional and other
16 We do not rule out the possibility that other cases may
present facts that would support a judge's decision not to
divide future royalty payments on an if and when received basis.
For example, there may be circumstances, including those in
which there has been a history of modest royalty payments, where
the judge might assign to the writer-spouse's side of the ledger
the entire interest in future royalty payments. Efforts by a writer-spouse, even if not required by contract,
may also contribute to the success of a motion picture or
theatrical production which may, in turn, enhance the sales of
the underlying work on which the movie or other production is
based. The point we make here is, with the passage of time, the
respective contributions of the parties to the marital
partnership, which allowed for the creation of the work, may
become attenuated. A judge properly may consider such factors,
in conjunction with all of the G. L. c. 208, § 34, factors, in
determining the percentages of any future payments to be
allocated between the parties. See ibid. (petitioner's
continuing efforts entitled her to larger share of future
royalties). See and compare Baccanti v. Morton, 434 Mass. at
798-799.17
We recognize, in addition, that royalty payments, particularly
on a highly successful work, have the potential of extending
well into the future, perhaps beyond the death of one or both of
the parties. That the future royalty, and other,
17 Such other matters as may be relevant can be considered and
addressed in the Probate & Family Court. We point out that Peter
took the position in his proposed judgment that, in the
circumstances of this case, an if and when received division
should be of the "net" proceeds Erin receives, i.e., the total
amount of monies paid to Erin less amounts deducted for certain
commissions and management and business expenses as well as
income taxes paid in conjunction with the receipt of such
monies.
payments in the present case are to be divided on an if and when
received basis does not require that such payments continue
indefinitely. Cf. Gallo v. Gallo, 184 Conn. at 48. For the
reasons we have expressed concerning the potential attenuation
of the parties' contributions to the marital partnership, as
well as our concern for future administrative costs and other
possible hardships, a judge reasonably may limit the duration
of, and the amount to be received under, the if and when
received division.18
As we have discussed, the judge's order directing Erin to
pay to Peter a lump sum of $570,000 as his share of the royalty
and book-related earnings she has received to date must be
vacated. The judge may recalculate, if necessary, the lump sum
owed in light of our decision that Erin's contractual interest
in the future royalty (and other) payments is to be included in
the marital estate. Any amounts Peter has received from the
order for payment of the $570,000 shall be considered an advance
against the property division established in the amended
judgment that is to be entered, which may or may not have to be
repaid.
18 We do not exclude the possibility of creative approaches by
the probate judge, including, for example, a sliding scale of
decreasing percentages, which has a specific termination date.
As neither the judge nor the parties had the benefit of the
principles we enunciate in this opinion, as a matter of fairness
we think that the parties should be afforded the opportunity to
present, and the judge to consider, additional evidence bearing
on the amount of the royalty and other payments to be received
by Erin under the Doubleday and Summit contracts. The judge
shall hold additional hearings as may be necessary to receive
such evidence. An amended judgment containing new orders shall
be supported by findings of fact and a rationale.
Erin's request for appellate costs and attorney's fees is denied.
So ordered.