Arp v. Arp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1998
Docket03A01-9808-CV-00273
StatusPublished

This text of Arp v. Arp (Arp v. Arp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arp v. Arp, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE FILED AT KNOXVILLE June18, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate C ourt Clerk

ANGELA M AE ARP, ) C/A NO. 03A01-9808-CV-00273 ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) POLK CIRCU IT ) v. ) HON. LAWRENCE PUCKETT, ) JUDGE RICHARD LEE ARP, ) ) AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED Defend ant-App ellant. ) AND REMANDED

ROBERT S. THOMPSON, LOGAN, THOMPSON, MILLER, BILBO, THOMPSON & FISHER, P.C., Cleveland, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

B. PRIN CE M ILLER , JR., Clevela nd, for D efendan t-Appellan t.

O P I N IO N

Franks, J.

In this divorce action, the husband was dissatisfied with the

classification of property, the division of marital property, and the custody

arrangem ent ordered by the Trial Jud ge, and ha s appealed numero us issues to th is

Court.

The parties were m arried on January 6, 1990, an d two children w ere

born to the ma rriage.

The trial of the divorce was heard on March 13, 1998, and the wife

testified that when she was eighteen she met the husband and they immediately started

dating. They dated for six years before marriage, and lived together for four of those

years. During that time, the wife took care of the house and did cooking, and worked at Goody’s Family Clothing Store as assistant manager. She also helped the husband

with his businesses, by cleaning Peoples Bank and picking up money or washing the

bays at the car wash.

The Trial Court, in resolving the issues, noted that the marriage was an

eight year marriage, and found both in good health and to have the ability and

vocationa l skills necessa ry to maintain a b usiness. Th e Court fo und that ne ither party

contributed to the educ ation, training o r increased e arning po wer of th e other, but b oth

parties worked in the businesses, contributing to one another’s enhanced financial

state. The Court found the husband to be the motivator behind the businesses, and

further that the wife made significant contributions, both as a homemaker and

business partner, toward acquisition, preservation and appreciation of marital and

separa te prop erties.

The husband presents eight issues for review, as follows:

1. The Court erred in the determination of separate property. The evidence does not support the Court’s finding that the parties had been in a partnership for six years prior to their marriage.

2. The Court erred in its valuation and division of Professional Janitorial Supply Corporation.

3. The Court erred in finding that there was a $108,000.00 cash asset which is a separate asset of the parties.

4. The Court erred in failing to find that the tax liabilities for the real estate, com mercial and business p roperties, is a liab ility that should have been addressed in the division of the assets and liabilities.

5. The Court erred in assessing Mr. Arp with one-half of the elective ortho dontic proc edure that M rs. Arp incu rred imme diately before trial and for credit card debt which she incurred after an order for Tempo rary Mainten ance and Support.

6. The Court erred in the division of the marital estate.

7. Appellant respectfully submits to the Court of Appeals that the division of the property attempted by the trial court cannot be complied with because of the cross-collateralization agreement that the parties executed to the People’s bank of Fannin County, Georgia.

2 8. The Court erred in placing the care, custody and control of the parties’ two minor children with their mother, Angela Mae Arp.

Our standard of review in this case is de novo upon the record of the

Trial Court, accomp anied by a presumption o f correctness of the Trial C ourt’s

findings, unless the eviden ce preponderates oth erwise. T.R.A.P. R ule 13(d).

First, the husb and insists the Court erred in the determ ination of se parate

prop erty.

At the time of the marriage, the husband owned an interest in several

pieces of property. Under T.C.A. §36-4-121(2)(A), all of these properties would be

considered separate pro perty, because they were own ed before marriage . The Court

found some of these properties to be separate property, some to be both separate and

marital property, and some to be marital property. Accordingly, the issue thus

become s whethe r the proper ty owned b efore ma rriage beca me marital p roperty due to

transmutation, commingling, or increase in value due to substantial contribution by the

spouse.

Two of the husband’s several parcels consist of land in Turtletown,

Tenness ee. The T rial Court aw arded part o f this prope rty to the husban d as separa te

property, and the rest to the husband as marital property. At trial, the wife did not

dispute that all of the Turtletown property was separate prop erty, and the Trial Court

was in error in dividing a portion of this property as part of the marital estate. Thus,

the award as marital property to the husband of 11.92 acres in Turtletown, valued at

$30,000.00, must be excluded from the marital estate and awarded to the husband as

sepa rate p rope rty.

The Ca mpbell pro perty consists of 2.2 acres of unimpro ved prop erty

which the husb and purchased f or $45,000.00 bef ore the marriage. The T rial Court

assigned a value to this property at the time of trial of $265,000.00, and awarded one-

fifth of the property to the husband as separate property, and four-fifths of the

3 property to the husband as marital property. The evidence at trial revealed that the

parties had d one nothin g to this prop erty, but it had incre ased in valu e due to its

location and extension of public utilities. Accordingly, there is no basis to classify

this as marital property, since the wife made no contribution to the properties’ increase

in value. The increase in value was not due to any contributions by either the husband

or wife, but was due to the location and the economy. This is similar to the situation

in Harrison v. Harrison, 912 S.W .2d 124 (T enn. 1995 ), where the husband ’s separate

property increa sed substan tially in value due to the constru ction of an interstate

high way.

The Trial Court valued the Cherokee Hills house at $120,000.00, and

awarded half of it to the husband as separate property, and half of it to the husband as

marital property. The husband states in his brief that this was pre-owned property, but

does not set forth any reason why the property was wrongly classified as partial

marital property. The evidence d oes not preponde rate against the Trial Court’s

finding that fifty percent of the value of this property is marital, because the parties

did live in this house for a period of time, and wife made contributions to its increase

in value as a homemaker, and as a partner in the business. This is both direct and

indirect substantial contributions to the properties’ increase in value. The evidence

does n ot prep ondera te again st the Tr ial Cou rt’s deter minatio n. T.R.A .P. Rule 13(d).

Husband was operating all of his car washes before marriage, being 68

Car Wa sh, Tri-State C ar Wash , and Ap palachian C ar Wash . It appears tha t he only

owned half of the 68 Car W ash at the tim e of the m arriage, and he purch ased his

partner’s interest after the marriage. The Trial Court treated these businesses as

marital p rope rty.

In these pre-owned properties, the proceeds and debts have been

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Related

Suttles v. Suttles
748 S.W.2d 427 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1988)
Herrera v. Herrera
944 S.W.2d 379 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1996)

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