Andrew Hamerlinck v. Danielle Hamerlinck

2023 Ark. App. 475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 25, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 475 (Andrew Hamerlinck v. Danielle Hamerlinck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Hamerlinck v. Danielle Hamerlinck, 2023 Ark. App. 475 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 475 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-22-646

ANDREW HAMERLINCK Opinion Delivered October 25, 2023

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 26DR-18-908] V. HONORABLE CECILIA DYER, JUDGE

DANIELLE HAMERLINCK AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND APPELLEE REMANDED IN PART

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

This is the second appeal involving appellant Andrew Hamerlinck and appellee

Danielle Hamerlinck. In Hamerlinck v. Hamerlinck, 2022 Ark. App. 89, 641 S.W.3d 659

(Hamerlinck I), this court affirmed the decision of the Garland County Circuit Court

awarding the Hamerlincks joint legal and physical custody of their two children. We

dismissed the remaining issues on appeal, however, because we lacked a final order.

Hamerlinck I, 2022 Ark. App. 89, at 12, 641 S.W.3d at 665. Following the issuance of this

court’s mandate, the circuit court entered an amended decree in which it restated its initial

decree and denied and dismissed all other pending motions. Andrew timely appealed from

the amended decree, and he now argues that the circuit court erred in its division and

distribution of the couple’s property. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part. In Hamerlinck I, we set forth the underlying facts of the parties’ “contentious and

aggressive litigation” that resulted in the decree at issue on appeal. Id. at 2, 641 S.W.3d at

660. Those facts dealt almost entirely with the Hamerlincks’ custody dispute and are largely

irrelevant to this appeal. Briefly, however, Andrew and Danielle married on September 4,

2010, and separated in 2018 when Danielle filed a complaint for separate maintenance.

Andrew answered and filed a counterclaim for divorce. Over the course of the next two years,

the circuit court held multiple hearings and issued multiple temporary custody orders. Over

two days in December 2019 and July 2020, the circuit court held a final divorce hearing at

which it heard considerable testimony that focused on each party’s desire for custody. A

portion of the hearings, however, also addressed three of the couple’s financial accounts, the

marital home, and certain business assets. These topics form the crux of the arguments

presented in this appeal. We therefore turn to the substance of the testimony presented at

trial and the circuit court’s findings regarding these matters.

The financial accounts that are the subject of Andrew’s first argument on appeal are

a Fidelity Roth Individual Retirement Account (the “Roth IRA”), a Fidelity rollover IRA (the

“rollover IRA”), and an Arvest money market account (the “money market account”).1

Andrew testified that he established the Roth IRA in 2004 but had not made contributions

1 The court also heard evidence regarding a fourth account––Andrew’s Fidelity brokerage account––but Andrew does not dispute that this account was a marital asset because it was created after the couple’s marriage with marital funds. In addition, Andrew had a Wells Fargo retirement account through his current job at Cardinal Health, which he agreed had been “acquired and accumulated during the course of [the] marriage.” This retirement account is likewise not an issue in this appeal.

2 to that account in “eight plus years, probably” because he and Danielle made too much to

contribute to a Roth IRA. Andrew’s exhibit 1 included a Roth IRA investment report for

the period ending September 30, 2010, showing a balance of $19,484.59. Exhibit 1 also

reflected that Andrew made postmarital contributions to the account of $5000 in April

2011, $5000 in March 2012, and $5135.37 in February 2013. The latest account summary

that was part of exhibit 1 indicated that the account’s value was $97,854.53 as of September

30, 2019.

The rollover IRA was funded with $70,689.69 in February 2013. Andrew testified

that the funds for the rollover IRA came from retirement benefits that he accrued during his

time working for both Sanofi Pasteur, which was between 2008 and 2011, and Eli Lilly,

where he began working “in 2011 [or] 2012.” It was unclear from Andrew’s testimony

whether contributions associated with his Eli Lilly retirement were still being made.

Nonetheless, Andrew’s exhibit 2, a collection of investment reports for the rollover IRA,

indicated that the rollover IRA was valued at $115,164.50 as of June 2019.

And finally, as it is pertinent to the financial-account issues raised on appeal, Andrew

presented testimony about the money market account. Andrew opened the account before

he and Danielle married, but he put her name on the account after they wed. He

acknowledged that Danielle withdrew money from that account and repaid it during the

course of the marriage, although he denied she deposited money into the account on a

regular basis. In the weeks before the parties filed for divorce, Andrew closed the money

market account and opened a new one in order to prevent Danielle from withdrawing any

3 more money from it. Andrew estimated that the balance in that account when they got

married was around $130,000, and his exhibit 4 reflected that the final balance when he

closed the account in October 2018 was $91,502.78. Danielle disputed the value of the

account at the time of the marriage and testified that she made multiple deposits into and

withdrawals from the account during the marriage, treating it as her own.

In addition to the financial accounts, Andrew and Danielle both testified about their

home on Vector Lane in Hot Springs. The house was built in 2015. Andrew testified that

he was the general contractor on the job and that he made all the mortgage payments from

his income. Although he admitted that the house was built during the marriage, Andrew

asserted that Danielle had nothing to do with the construction of the house and claimed

that she should receive no more than 25 percent of its value. Danielle testified that the

mortgage was placed in both their names from the beginning and that it remained in both

names at the time of the divorce hearing.

Danielle offered testimony about her business, Dignified Dietitians. She explained

that she started the LLC after she and Andrew had married. She estimated the value of the

company to be between $50,000 and $80,000, although she did not present any

documentation in support of that figure.

At the conclusion of the final hearing, the court granted the divorce and asked both

parties to prepare proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law on all issues, including

their finances and the allocation of property. The court subsequently issued a decree of

divorce that made the following pertinent findings:

4 4. 108 Vector Lane, Hot Springs, AR 71913 is marital property within the scope of Arkansas Code Annotated § 9-12-315(b). The property was acquired during the marriage of the parties, each participated in the construction and design of the home and it is mortgaged in the names of Plaintiff and Defendant.

5. The Court finds no reason to deviate from the equitable presumption of one-half (1/2) to each party with regard to the marital home and all other marital property.

6.

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