Birch v. Birch

55 So. 3d 796, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1521, 2010 WL 4336098
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 2010
Docket45,702-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 So. 3d 796 (Birch v. Birch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch v. Birch, 55 So. 3d 796, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1521, 2010 WL 4336098 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

|! Gilford Raymond Birch (“Gil”) appeals a judgment that rejected his claim for the return of separate funds given to or taken by his former wife, Kim Colvin Birch (“Kim”), during their marriage and under a matrimonial agreement that established a separate property regime. Kim answers the appeal, contesting the portion of the judgment that denied her exceptions of prescription and no right of action. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

The Matrimonial Agreement

Gil and Kim got married on October 26, 1991. Gil was a pharmacist who owned The Corner Drug Store in Ruston, and Kim was an employee there. One day before the wedding, they executed a Matrimonial Agreement Before Marriage (“the agreement”) which rejected the community property regime established a separate property regime. In pertinent part, the agreement stated:

1.
All property now owned by either of said appearers shall remain the separate property of that one of the appearers to whom such property belongs, and all revenues, fruits and increases arising from such respective properties shall also be considered, and remain, the separate property of the respective appear-er[.] * * *
2.
The provisions of the preceding paragraph shall apply regardless of which of the appearers shall administer or manage the revenues, fruits, increases, property or proceeds in question; that is to say, the question as to which appearer administered or managed * * ⅜ the revenues, fruits, increases, property or proceeds of any property, shall in no way affect or modify the provisions of the *798 preceding paragraph, and in no way create a community interest there; the fact that either appearer may assist the other in the administration or management of the | ¡.property of the other shall not create the presumption of a claim for remuneration in favor of that appearer assisting the other, but all such services shall be considered and held as gratuitously rendered to each other.
3.
More particularly but not by way of limitation, all accretions or increases in the value of separate property during the marriage, however same shall occur, shall be the separate property of the appearer to whom the separate property that has increased belongs and no claim for remuneration or reimbursement should exist in favor of the appearer to whom the property does not belong.
4.
Any increases or improvement of the separate property of either appearer, as separate property is set forth in this agreement, arising or made during the marriage of the appearers through the result of the common labor, expense, or industry of the appearers, shall not create any right to a reward in favor of that appearer * * * to whom the property which has been increased or improved does not belong. * * *
6.
All property acquired or wages earned by either appearer following their marriage, shall be considered separate property.

Procedural Background

The parties separated in late December 2002. In February 2003, Kim filed for an Art. 102 divorce; Gil reconvened for an Art. 103 divorce. Final judgment of divorce was rendered in February 2004.

Gil filed a reconventional demand in February 2004, seeking to settle claims arising from the separate property regime. This was not immediately addressed, however, as the parties litigated custody and support issues that are not before the court on appeal. 1 It transpired that because of his own [¡¡drug abuse and irregularities in the handling of controlled dangerous substances at The Corner Drug Store, Gil’s pharmacy license was suspended indefinitely in 2008 and the store’s pharmacy permit placed on five years’ probation.

Gil filed a second supplemental recon-ventional demand in March 2009, demanding “recovery of Gil’s separate funds used by Kim, and * * ⅜ the recovery of the fruits of Gil’s separate funds.” He alleged that during the marriage, he ran the drugstore and made plenty of money, all of which went into the couple’s joint checking account, which Kim balanced and managed. Kim earned a small amount of money from running a gift shop called “Kim’s Corner” in, or connected with, the drugstore, but always placed her wages in one of her separate accounts. Kim also bought three pieces of real estate in her own name: (1) in 1995, she bought the office adjacent to the drugstore (“the South Trenton Street property”), for $65,000, and rented this to the drugstore for $800 a month; (2) in September 1995, she bought a house (“the Hilly property”) for $242,000, renovated it for $30,000, and this became the couple’s home; (3) in August 1999, she bought a store on North Bonner Street *799 (“the Townsend House”) for $93,500, renovated it for $28,000, and this became her free-standing gift shop. Gil alleged that the vast majority of money to buy and maintain these properties came from the parties’ joint checking account, which contained only his wages and was thus his separate property. He itemized these funds and demanded a total of $778,692.05.

14Kim’s answer consisted of general denials, but she also raised several exceptions. By an exception of no right of action, she argued that “many or most” of the claims involved money paid not by Gil but by his corporation, Cupp Drug Store Inc. d/b/a The Corner Drug Store, and hence only the corporation could assert them. By an exception of prescription, she argued that Gil’s claims were essentially for conversion and hence subject to the one-year limitation for torts.

Overview of Trial Testimony

At trial in August 2009, three witnesses testified. Gil confirmed the facts outlined above, identifying one-by-one many of the checks drawn on the couple’s joint account and signed by Kim, to pay for the mortgages, renovations, property tax, inventory for her gift shop, and other expenses arising from her separate property. He also testified that when they got married, Kim had a net worth of about $100,000; during the marriage, working at the drugstore or running the gift shop, she never made more than $3,000 a month; now her net worth is about $900,000. He felt that this simply could not have occurred without the infusion of enormous amounts of his separate property, which he now wanted returned.

Gil’s CPA, James D. Johnson, testified that he had handled the drugstore’s taxes since 1989. He confirmed that several of the checks drawn on the couple’s joint account, and signed by Kim, covered payroll, property taxes and renovations to her separate property.

On cross-examination, Kim conceded much of Gil’s testimony, including that Gil always put his wages in the couple’s joint checking | .^account, which she used to pay the mortgages on her separate property. However, she would not agree that the drugstore was Gil’s separate property and was unable to recall whether her wages ever exceeded $3,000 a month. When asked if she “did not always deposit” her own salary checks into the joint account, she replied, “Not always.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 So. 3d 796, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1521, 2010 WL 4336098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-v-birch-lactapp-2010.