Ball v. Ball

2025 UT App 200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 26, 2025
DocketCase No. 20240286-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 200 (Ball v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Ball, 2025 UT App 200 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 200

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

NATALIE BALL, Appellee, v. TIMOTHY ALEXANDER BALL, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20240286-CA Filed December 26, 2025

Fourth District Court, Provo Department The Honorable Christine S. Johnson No. 214400001

Trevor Casperson, Attorney for Appellant Emily Adams and Mikayla Irvin, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN M. HARRIS and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER, Judge:

¶1 Timothy Alexander Ball appeals the district court’s award of certain marital property to Natalie Ball in the parties’ divorce decree. He also contests the court’s denial of his request for attorney fees pursuant to rule 68 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. We agree that the court exceeded its discretion by miscalculating the appropriate amount of the offset it awarded to Natalie 1 for the marital funds dissipated by Timothy, and we therefore reverse and remand this case on that narrow issue. As

1. Because the parties share a surname, we refer to them by their given names, with no disrespect intended by the apparent informality. Ball v. Ball

to the request for attorney fees, however, the court did not exceed its discretion in denying Timothy’s request for fees, and we therefore affirm this ruling.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Timothy and Natalie were married in February 1999. During their marriage, they had four children together. Also during their marriage, Timothy engaged in “admitted[ly] inappropriate relationships [with other women through] what he terms . . . ‘pen pal’ websites,” spent “over $50,000 in marital funds” on these websites, and “actively concealed this activity from [Natalie] for at least three years.” Eventually, one of these relationships was discovered and “serv[ed] as the catalyst for [Natalie] to file for divorce.”

¶3 The parties separated in October 2020, and Natalie filed her petition for divorce in December 2020. In her petition, Natalie sought “sole legal and physical custody of the minor children,” “$2,068 per month in child support,” $2,000 per month in alimony “for a period of the length of the marriage,” “possession of the marital home,” and all the equity in the marital home.

¶4 Timothy eventually filed a settlement offer under rule 68 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, offering Natalie joint legal and physical custody of the children, $674 per month in child support, $1,200 per month in alimony for ten years, and 10% of the equity in the marital home (Timothy asserted that the home was the property of his father and that the couple was “entitled to 20% of the total equity”). Natalie did not accept the settlement offer.

¶5 The case proceeded to trial, and the court thereafter entered written findings and conclusions and a divorce decree. In the divorce decree, Timothy was granted sole legal custody of the children as well as primary physical custody, while Natalie was awarded parent-time. Natalie was ordered to pay $512 per month in child support.

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¶6 As to alimony, the district court found that Natalie had monthly expenses that exceeded her monthly income, leaving her with “an unmet need of $1,188.73 per month.” The court then found that Timothy had monthly income that exceeded his monthly expenses by $418 per month. Based on those findings, the court awarded Natalie alimony of $400 per month.

¶7 Concerning the marital home, the court found that Timothy’s father did not own the property as had been argued by Timothy. The court also found “unpersuasive” Timothy’s assertion that his father was “meant to be repaid” funds given to the couple for the home. Thus, the court ordered that the home be sold and the equity in the home be split equally between Timothy and Natalie. However, the court made some “reallocation” of Timothy’s portion of the equity to satisfy certain amounts that Natalie was awarded in the division of the parties’ personal property and assets.

¶8 The largest of these offsets, by far, concerned the money Timothy had spent on dating websites while married to Natalie. The court found that Timothy “admitted to spending $54,003.42 in marital funds on Dating Sites” and “admitted to actively concealing these charges from [Natalie].” The court determined that this was “a dissipation of marital assets,” that Natalie “should not have suffered the consequences” of these actions, and that, accordingly, Natalie “should be awarded $54,003.42 from [Timothy’s share] of the equity in the home for his dissipation of the marital assets.”

¶9 Timothy thereafter filed a motion pursuant to rule 59 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure requesting that the district court amend the divorce decree to, among other things, award Natalie an offset of only half of the $54,003.42 of dissipated funds. He argued that “pursuant to the presumption in divorce cases,” Natalie would be entitled to only half of the total funds, reasoning that “if that money had been saved in an account instead, [Natalie] would have only be[en] entitled to 50% of it.” He asserted that the court made no explanation as to “why this is an

20240286-CA 3 2025 UT App 200 Ball v. Ball

exceptional circumstance” that would allow a departure from the general presumption that marital property be split equally, and he additionally argued that if the court intended to award Natalie the full percentage as “a punishment,” “such a reasoning [was] not a valid basis to rebut the presumption of equal distribution.”

¶10 The district court denied Timothy’s motion to amend the divorce decree on this point, reasoning as follows:

The Court had awarded one hundred percent of those funds to [Natalie] and this was based on the testimony of [Timothy] during trial indicating that he did not believe that [Natalie] should be responsible for those funds. That is what this ruling was in essence based on. This was not an intent to punish or take any punitive measures against [Timothy], rather this was based on what he represented.

What has now been suggested by [Timothy] is that perhaps that’s not what he meant, but that he meant for it to be divided in whole, the entire amount divided 50/50 between the two parties. So that he would be responsible for his part of the loss and [Natalie] would be responsible for the other half of the loss.

The Court declines to do that for the reasons that were stated. [Timothy] indicated that he believed that it was proper that he did not intend for [Natalie] to be responsible for the money that he lost by his own failures. It was his acknowledgement that he had squandered that money.

For that reason the Court had found that it was justified for [Timothy] to be responsible for the . . . funds that were taken out of the account for his

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online dating relationships. That is still supported based on [Timothy’s] own testimony.

¶11 Timothy also filed a motion requesting “that attorney fees be awarded on the basis that the Rule 68 [settlement] offer clearly represented a greater value than what was ordered in the Decree” to Natalie. The district court denied Timothy’s motion. While the court stated that rule 68 “allows fees if permitted by law,” the court also observed that “fees as permitted by law for establishing an order are limited” and are “based on need, ability to pay, and reasonableness.” The court then reasoned that because Natalie had been “found to be financially in need” and did not “have the ability to pay the amount of fees that [Timothy was] asking for under Rule 68,” an award of fees was not warranted under that rule.

¶12 Timothy thereafter timely appealed these determinations.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

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2025 UT App 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-ball-utahctapp-2025.