Barbara Matthews Law v. Halbert Grant Law, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 26, 2022
DocketE2021-00206-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Barbara Matthews Law v. Halbert Grant Law, Jr. (Barbara Matthews Law v. Halbert Grant Law, Jr.) 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
Barbara Matthews Law v. Halbert Grant Law, Jr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

04/26/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE December 1, 2021 Session

BARBARA MATTHEWS LAW v. HALBERT GRANT LAW, JR.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 17-0883 Jeffrey M. Atherton, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. E2021-00206-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

On May 1, 1992, Barbara Matthews Law (“Wife”) and Halbert Grant Law, Jr. (“Husband”), executed a prenuptial agreement. They married the following day. Wife filed for divorce in the Chancery Court for Hamilton County in December of 2017. The parties disputed, inter alia, the enforceability of the prenuptial agreement, as well as the classification and division of several assets. Trial was held over multiple days in 2019 and 2020, and the trial court entered its final decree divorcing the parties on July 31, 2020. The trial court held that the prenuptial agreement was valid and enforceable, classified the parties’ assets, and divided the marital estate. Wife was awarded the parties’ family home and $4,500.00 per month in alimony in futuro. Husband appeals, challenging the classification of the parties’ home as marital property, as well as the classification of one bank account. Wife cross-appeals, challenging the enforceability of the prenuptial agreement and the classification of several assets. Wife also requests increased alimony. We affirm the trial court’s finding that the parties’ prenuptial agreement is valid and enforceable. We reverse the trial court’s classification of three assets – the parties’ home, a checking account, and an investment account. We vacate the trial court’s decision as to those three assets and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. In light of the changes in classification of several major assets, we also vacate and remand the trial court’s award of alimony for reconsideration.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Vacated in Part, and Remanded for Further Proceedings

KRISTI M. DAVIS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., joined.

Phillip C. Lawrence, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellant, Halbert Grant Law, Jr.

John P. Konvalinka & Lawson Konvalinka, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Barbara Matthews Law. OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

Husband and Wife were married on May 2, 1992, when Wife was forty years old and Husband was forty-five. Wife had one son from a previous marriage, and the parties have one son, now an adult, together. Husband graduated from business school in the early 1970’s and went to work for his family’s successful automobile sales company, Newton Chevrolet, Inc. (“Newton Chevrolet”). In 1988, Husband purchased a home in Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, on West Fleetwood Avenue (the “Fleetwood house”). Husband did substantial renovations on the home before the marriage. Husband testified at trial that the house was used as collateral for a loan “briefly,” and the record contains an amendment to a deed of trust securing a promissory note for $200,000.00, the security for which was the Fleetwood house. The amendment was executed on May 29, 1992, and refers to a note dated May 14, 1991.

By the time the parties married, Husband also owned one-hundred percent of Newton Chevrolet. The dealership was located in downtown Chattanooga on a tract of land comprised of approximately eleven acres (the “Downtown property”). The Downtown property was acquired by Newton Chevrolet many years before the parties’ marriage. In 1991, Husband also acquired a Mitsubishi franchise (“Newton Imports”) through a bankruptcy sale. Around the same time, Husband was also working on acquiring another franchise called Newton-Oldsmobile-GMC Truck, Inc. (“Newton GMC”). The land housing Newton Imports and Newton GMC (the “Chapman Road property”) was comprised of several acres of land located in a different portion of Chattanooga. These parcels were acquired by Newton GMC in a series of acquisitions beginning in September 1992; Husband admitted at trial that the Chapman Road property was not acquired until after the parties had married and could not recall the exact details of the financing for that purchase.

While Husband brought significant separate property into the marriage, Wife had very little. Wife has a bachelor’s degree in political science and completed some graduate level work prior to the marriage. She worked for a political action committee in Washington, D.C. in the 1970’s. After moving to Chattanooga, Wife worked for several different attorneys keeping books, doing collections, and helping with title work. When the parties met in December of 1991, Wife was working as the office manager of a law firm and earning $35,000.00 per year. Husband and Wife started dating either in late 1991 or early 1992. Wife soon became pregnant, and the parties decided to marry. According to Husband, Wife wanted to marry quickly because of the pregnancy, and Husband did not object.

The parties planned to marry in North Carolina on May 2, 1992. Approximately two weeks before the wedding, Husband asked Wife to enter into a prenuptial agreement

-2- (hereinafter, the “Agreement”). Wife agreed and, at some point, retained her own attorney. Husband’s attorney prepared the Agreement. Wife met with her attorney at his office on April 30, 1992 to discuss the Agreement; however, Wife’s attorney had not been furnished a copy at that point. Husband, on the other hand, spent two or three hours going over the Agreement with his attorney prior to the signing.

On May 1, 1992, the day before the wedding, Husband picked Wife up from her office, and they went together to Husband’s attorney’s office. Wife’s attorney met them there, and Wife went with her attorney into a separate conference room. Husband’s attorney brought the Agreement into Wife’s conference room, and Wife maintains that the attorney informed her there would be no wedding if she refused to sign the Agreement. She also testified, however, that Husband never told her this, and Husband maintains that he never instructed his attorney to give Wife an ultimatum. Husband also testified that he would have married Wife regardless. Wife could not recall whether she asked for any changes to the Agreement. Attached to the Agreement was Husband’s list of separate assets, which included the Fleetwood house and its furnishings, all three car dealerships, a Fidelity USA investment account, and a Fidelity IRA account. Husband’s asset disclosure provided that the Fidelity IRA account contained $60,000.00 and the Fidelity investment account contained $178,000.00.

Wife testified at trial that the parties were at the office for approximately forty-five minutes, and Husband testified that they were not at the office for more than two hours. While the parties were executing the Agreement, twenty-five to thirty of Wife’s relatives were en route to the parties’ wedding. After executing the Agreement, the parties went straight to the airport to catch their flight to North Carolina, where they were married the following day. Ten days later, on May 12, 1992, the corporate charter for Newton GMC was issued.

The Fleetwood house was the parties’ family home for the duration of the marriage. Wife was the primary caretaker for the parties’ children, and Husband worked long hours and managed the parties’ finances and community involvement. Around 2006, Husband decided to retire because the car dealerships were not doing well. Neither Newton GMC nor Newton Imports had ever turned a profit and were kept afloat with profits from Newton Chevrolet. In July of 2007, Newton Chevrolet was sold, resulting in a profit of $1,593,942.90.

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