Bayard Bryon Campbell v. Laura Pendleton Campbell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 5, 2014
Docket2060131
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Bayard Bryon Campbell v. Laura Pendleton Campbell, (Va. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, Beales and Decker UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia

BAYARD BRYON CAMPBELL MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2060-13-1 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES AUGUST 5, 2014 LAURA PENDLETON CAMPBELL

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ISLE OF WIGHT COUNTY Rodham T. Delk, Jr., Judge

SuAnne Hardee Bryant (Davis Law Group, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

John H. Kitzmann (Davidson & Kitzmann, PLC, on brief), for appellee.

The circuit court granted Laura Pendleton Campbell (wife) a divorce from Bayard Bryon

Campbell (husband) on the ground of the parties living separately and apart for more than a year.

See Code § 20-109(A)(9)(a). Husband appeals several rulings from the circuit court’s September

27, 2013 final orders addressing spousal support1 and equitable distribution. For the following

reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the matter to the circuit court for further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to wife, the party prevailing

below, Chretien v. Chretien, 53 Va. App. 200, 202, 670 S.E.2d 45, 46 (2008), and we grant to wife

“all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom,” Anderson v. Anderson, 29 Va. App. 673,

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 As explained infra, the September 27, 2013 final spousal support order was entered nunc pro tunc to February 21, 2013. 678, 514 S.E.2d 369, 372 (1999). The parties married in December 1993, had two children during

the marriage, and separated in September 2010 when wife left the marital home with the parties’

children.2 Wife filed a complaint for divorce, and, in his answer to wife’s complaint, husband also

filed a cross-complaint for divorce. The circuit court entered a pendente lite order on February 8,

2011 that, among other rulings, awarded wife $4,318 per month in pendente lite spousal support and

prohibited the parties from disposing of, encumbering, or increasing the debt of any marital asset.

The parties’ divorce hearing occurred in the circuit court on August 13, 2012 and also on

December 7, 2012, when the circuit court heard additional testimony relevant to equitable

distribution and spousal support. The evidence below established that husband was a practicing

neurosurgeon when the parties married – but he was then left totally and permanently disabled for

employment purposes after contracting tropical spastic paraparesis, a rare disease that will

ultimately leave husband completely unable to use his legs. Thereafter, husband has received

$14,783 monthly from a private disability insurance policy as well as a $2,047 monthly disability

benefit from the Social Security Administration. Wife obtained her medical degree and specialized

in child psychiatry during the marriage, practicing medicine as a child psychiatrist in South Carolina

until her pregnancy with the parties’ first child. Wife then returned to work three years before the

parties’ separation when she started an interior design business – although, as the circuit court

found, the income generated by that business was “negligible, if any.”3

Confirming most of its rulings from a February 13, 2013 letter opinion, the circuit court

found in its September 27, 2013 final equitable distribution order that three life insurance policies

purchased from the Guardian Life Insurance Company during the marriage had accrued cash values

2 Child support is not at issue in this appeal. 3 It appears from the record that the business’s revenues were spent on entertainment and on facial plastic surgery for wife and her brother, who assisted wife with the interior design business. -2- and were marital assets for purposes of equitable distribution. One of those policies (the Guardian

*608 policy) that was titled in husband’s name, listed the parties’ two children as revocable

beneficiaries, and had accrued a substantial cash value of $799,513. In its September 27, 2013 final

order, the circuit court entered a monetary award directing husband to pay wife $399,756.50 –

representing half of the Guardian *608 policy’s accrued cash value. Furthermore, the circuit court

directed husband to pay an additional $54,642 to wife to satisfy the terms of a prior contempt order

– in which the circuit court had found that husband was in contempt of the February 8, 2011

pendente lite order by obtaining loans from the Guardian *608 policy’s cash value following the

parties’ separation.

In addition, the circuit court’s September 27, 2013 final spousal support order awarded wife

$3,000 in monthly spousal support until husband’s private disability insurance policy lapses, which

will occur when husband reaches age sixty-five.4 The circuit court entered this final spousal support

award – which was $1,318 less per month than the pendente lite spousal support award – nunc pro

tunc to February 21, 2013. However, the circuit court declined husband’s request for an

overpayment credit accounting for five months’ difference between husband’s pendente lite spousal

support obligation and husband’s final spousal support obligation. The circuit court also did not

impute any income to wife. The circuit court explained in its February 13, 2013 letter opinion that

wife’s “ability to return to her prior medical career is presently negligible.” However, neither the

circuit court’s letter opinion nor its final spousal support order directly addressed wife’s own

evidence, from her own vocational expert, Charles DeMark, that wife could earn $40,00 to $60,000

per year as a biology or chemistry teacher, as a pharmaceutical sales person, or as a community

college professor.

4 Husband was age fifty-two when the circuit court entered the final spousal support award to wife. -3- Moreover, the circuit court awarded wife $10,000 in attorneys’ fees and costs. The circuit

court did not premise this award on the conduct of either party – but instead “[i]n light of the

significant income disparity and resources” of the parties.

II. ANALYSIS

A. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Husband raises seven assignments of error (and several sub-parts), which he acknowledges

on brief are all reviewed on appeal for abuse of discretion by the circuit court. Under this

deferential standard of review, this Court must “show enough deference to a primary

decisionmaker’s judgment that the [appellate] court does not reverse merely because it would have

come to a different result in the first instance.” Lawlor v. Commonwealth, 285 Va. 187, 212, 738

S.E.2d 847, 861 (2013) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also, e.g., Robbins v.

Robbins, 48 Va. App. 466, 482, 632 S.E.2d 615, 623 (2006) (“When dealing with discretionary

decisions, only ‘when reasonable jurists could not differ can we say an abuse of discretion has

occurred.’” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).

“Accordingly, ‘when a decision is discretionary . . . . the court has a range of choice, and . . .

its decision will not be disturbed as long as it stays within that range and is not influenced by any

mistake of law.’” Lawlor, 285 Va. at 212-13, 738 S.E.2d at 861 (quoting Landrum v. Chippenham

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