Baker v. Baker
This text of 807 So. 2d 476 (Baker v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Clarice Woolbright BAKER, Appellant,
v.
Norman Kenneth BAKER, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Mississippi.
*477 William R. Wright, Jackson, W. Benton Gregg, Jackson, Stacey P. Stracener, Jackson, Attorneys for Appellant.
John W. Chapman, Brandon, Attorney for Appellee.
Before McMILLIN, C.J., THOMAS, and CHANDLER, JJ.
McMILLIN, C.J., For The Court.
¶ 1. Clarice and Norman Baker dissolved their marriage of some thirty years by mutually agreeing that irreconcilable differences had arisen between them. The agreement to end the marriage marked the limit of their ability to agree. As a result, the parties submitted all matters pertaining to the financial aspects of the marriage dissolution to the chancellor for determination. The parties' children were emancipated, so there were no issues of child custody or support.
¶ 2. The chancellor, after hearing evidence relevant to the parties' finances, fashioned a division of marital assets that, according to the chancellor's calculations, represented an essentially equal division of the property. He denied Mrs. Baker's claim for periodic alimony. Mrs. Baker, dissatisfied with the chancellor's decision, has appealed to this Court. In her appeal, Mrs. Baker asserts what she contends to be five separate errors committed by the chancellor which warrant reversing the judgment in its present form. Our analysis of the issues presented leaves us convinced that there are, in fact, only three relevant issues for consideration on appeal. The first is that the chancellor abused his discretion in the division of marital assets in that he failed to properly determine a value for certain assets, which Mrs. Baker contends to be a necessary prerequisite to a fair division. Secondly, Mrs. Baker contends that the chancellor was unduly generous to Mr. Baker in dividing assets. The third issue is that the chancellor erred in declining to award Mrs. Baker periodic alimony, taking into account the relevant factors.
¶ 3. Mrs. Baker seeks to raise an additional issue in which she expresses her exasperation at the effort required by her to obtain an accurate transcription of the hearing for consideration on appeal. While any such difficulties are regrettable, there is no contention that the record now before this Court is inadequate or inaccurate. Therefore, we do not consider such difficulties, as unfortunate and frustrating as they may be, as constituting grounds to reverse the present judgment.
I.
Facts
¶ 4. This couple was married for a total time of some thirty years, during which *478 time two children were born. The marriage was not always smooth. Rather, it was marked by several periods of separation that would extend for several months at a time. Mr. Baker testified that these separations were principally financially motivated in that he would relocate to another city to seek employment. Mrs. Baker contends that the separations were the result of difficulties in the marriage that caused Mr. Baker to voluntarily absent himself from the marital residence and abandon any effort to provide support to her during his extended absences.
¶ 5. Mr. Baker worked a number of years early in his career for IBM, leaving in 1993 under an offer in the nature of an early retirement program. As a result of that, he received a lump sum separation payment and began drawing periodic retirement benefits of $1,759 a month commencing in February 1998. Mr. Baker held a number of other jobs in the ensuing years and was, at the time of the hearing, employed at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in a position involved in computer operations. His monthly salary at the center was approximately $3,562. He was fifty six years of age at the time of the divorce hearing and had been employed at the Medical Center for approximately one year.
¶ 6. Mrs. Baker had devoted many of the early years of the marriage to the duties associated with being a homemaker and principal care provider for the minor children of the marriage. However, she had worked for a number of years prior to the divorce hearing as a school teacher in the public school system. She reported her monthly salary from that employment at the time of the divorce to be $2,478, and there was evidence that she had fifteen years in the state retirement system, which was enough time in service for her to have a vested right to retirement benefits.
¶ 7. The principal assets dealt with by the chancellor were (a) the marital domicile, to which he assigned a net value of $63,689 after taking into account an existing mortgage and (b) a residential lot owned by the parties in Point Clear. That lot was unencumbered by any mortgage debt and the chancellor valued it at $137,500. The chancellor awarded the marital home to Mrs. Baker and the Point Clear lot to Mr. Baker. He additionally awarded Mrs. Baker the entire balance in her state retirement account of $23,000 along with $1,881.25 in various tax refunds and medical insurance reimbursements that were on hand at the time of the divorce. Mr. Baker, besides getting the Point Clear lot, was awarded an automobile valued at $4,000, and accrued retirement benefits in his name totaling $10,479.
¶ 8. The parties were jointly indebted on a loan having a balance of approximately $12,000, which was secured by a second mortgage on the marital domicile. The chancellor ordered Mr. Baker to assume sole responsibility for this debt. In calculating the equitable distribution of marital assets, the chancellor calculated the impact of this decision by adding $6,000 to Mrs. Baker's distribution and subtracting $6,000 from Mr. Baker's share of the divided assets. After making this adjustment, the chancellor determined that Mrs. Baker was receiving assets having a total value of $94,570.25 and that Mr. Baker's share came to $145, 979. Upon calculating the difference between these two sums to be $51,409.25, the chancellor ordered that Mr. Baker pay to his former wife this sum, payable without interest over a forty-eight month period in monthly installments of $1,081 each.
¶ 9. As we have already noted, in addition to Mr. Baker's vested retirement benefits *479 itemized above, he was receiving a retirement benefit from IBM in the amount of $1,759 per month. Though Mrs. Baker had asserted a claim to one-half of this benefit, the chancellor's decision made no such award. Additionally, Mrs. Baker had sought some provision for periodic alimony in addition to the equitable division of marital assets. The chancellor declined to order payment of any such periodic alimony. In explaining his ruling, the chancellor appeared to lump these two requests into one when he stated as follows: "The Court is not unmindful of the husband's retirement system but my notes do not reflect any of the gross figures which is one of the reasons I did not assess alimony."
II.
Valuations
¶ 10. Mrs. Baker alleges that the chancellor could not possibly have made a fair division of the marital assets because he did not, as a prerequisite to beginning that division, make a finding of fact as to the value of the assets as required in Ferguson v. Ferguson, 639 So.2d 921, 929 (Miss.1994). Other than complaining regarding the conflict in the evidence concerning the market value of the marital dwelling, Mrs. Baker does not point to any asset of any particular consequence that was not the subject of a valuation in the chancellor's ruling.
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807 So. 2d 476, 2001 WL 1573084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baker-missctapp-2001.