Birgit Declerck v. Pierre Desmet

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 2025
Docket368730
StatusUnpublished

This text of Birgit Declerck v. Pierre Desmet (Birgit Declerck v. Pierre Desmet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birgit Declerck v. Pierre Desmet, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BIRGIT DECLERCK, UNPUBLISHED April 21, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellant, 11:03 AM

V No. 368730 Oakland Circuit Court PIERRE DESMET, LC No. 2019-871667-DO

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and RIORDAN and PATEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals by right the trial court’s order confirming an arbitration award entered in postjudgment divorce proceedings. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The parties were married for over 30 years. During their marriage, the parties jointly operated a business, Dynalog, Inc., which defendant owned and plaintiff managed. The parties briefly separated in 2019. An argument between the parties resulted in a misdemeanor domestic- violence charge, MCL 750.81(2), against defendant. Defendant ultimately entered a no-contest plea to disturbing the peace, MCL 750.170. Plaintiff commenced this divorce action immediately after the incident that led to the criminal charge against defendant.

Following extensive mediation in which both parties were represented by counsel, the parties executed a divorce settlement agreement (DSA) in November 2019. The DSA requires defendant to pay plaintiff monthly spousal support until January 1, 2030. Defendant was to pay plaintiff nonmodifiable spousal support of $7,000 per month between January 1, 2020, and June 1, 2021. Thereafter, defendant’s monthly spousal-support obligation is subject to an annual calculation based on his prior-year income. By June 1st of each year, the parties are required to provide proof of their prior-year income. In addition, defendant must allow plaintiff quarterly access to his Quickbooks datafile documenting Dynalog’s expenses. The DSA requires the parties to resolve any disputes regarding any aspect of the spousal-support provisions by arbitration. The DSA further provides that plaintiff had “the right to request the arbitrator to exclude” any objectionable business expenses included in calculating defendant’s income.

-1- Under the parties’ property settlement, plaintiff received the marital home and defendant was awarded his ownership interest in Dynalog. The property settlement contemplated deferred payments and credits between the parties, and is also subject to adjustments over time based on fluctuations in defendant’s net business income. Beginning on June 30, 2020, and continuing each year for eight years, 15% of defendant’s net business income is to be deducted from plaintiff’s obligation to pay defendant for his equity in the home. If the parties do not agree upon any aspect of defendant’s business interests, the DSA directs that those disputes are to be resolved through arbitration.

The DSA contains an arbitration clause wherein the parties acknowledged their agreement to arbitrate disputed issues pursuant to MCL 600.5070 et seq. The DSA also includes the disclosures stated in MCL 600.5072, including:

1) Arbitration is voluntary.

2) Arbitration is binding and the right of appeal is limited.

3) Arbitration is not recommended for cases involving domestic violence.

4) Arbitration may not be appropriate in all cases. . . .

Each party signed the DSA attesting that they had executed it “in full and final settlement of the pending divorce case, freely and voluntarily, without duress, and as their own free act and deed.”

In December 2019, the parties participated in a pro confesso hearing where plaintiff acknowledged that she signed the DSA and understood its terms. In January 2020, the trial court entered a consent judgment of divorce (JOD), which both parties signed. The DSA was incorporated and merged into the JOD by reference. The JOD included an acknowledgment by each party that it was entered “with advice of legal counsel” and on “his or her own volition.”

One day before the JOD was entered, the parties executed a domestic-relations arbitration agreement (2020 arbitration agreement), which authorized the arbitrator to decide some outstanding issues.1 The 2020 arbitration agreement included a domestic-violence acknowledgment and waiver, stating that each party read the disclosures included within the agreement, and agreed that, although there had been previous allegations of domestic abuse,2 each party was in a separate room for the arbitration proceedings, and that neither felt threated by the other and was able to present evidence and make decisions without threat or intimidation. Like the DSA, the 2020 agreement included the disclosures set forth in MCL 600.5072, including that arbitration was voluntary and was not recommended for cases involving domestic violence. The

1 The remaining issues were Dynalog payments, security for support obligations, status-quo expenses and violations, account divisions, safes and safe deposit boxes, impending expenses and taxes, household furnishings, and execution of documents. 2 Defendant has never admitted that any domestic violence occurred and continues to contest plaintiff’s characterization of events that took place in 2019 before plaintiff filed her complaint for divorce.

-2- parties participated in the 2020 arbitration with each party represented by counsel. The record reflects that the 2020 proceedings were held in a caucus format in which each party met with the arbitrator on separate dates.

Two years later, plaintiff contacted the arbitrator to dispute the recalculation of 2022 spousal support and defendant’s net business income. In November 2022, the arbitrator held a prehearing conference under MCL 600.5076, by videoconferencing technology with both parties in the same virtual meeting room, and then proceeded with the formal arbitration on the same day. Plaintiff was not represented by counsel during the proceedings. The parties tell conflicting stories about the format in which the arbitration took place. Defendant maintains that the arbitrator placed the parties in breakout rooms throughout the proceedings, just as he had during the 2020 proceedings. Plaintiff asserts that the parties were not placed in separate rooms. Both parties and defendant’s accountant testified during the proceedings, and the parties presented written submissions addressing the disputed issues.

On November 17, 2022, the arbitrator issued an opinion and order awarding plaintiff $7,964 in monthly spousal support. The arbitrator addressed several issues regarding the calculation of defendant’s personal income and his net business income, but this appeal challenges only two of those issues: (1) the treatment of a vehicle purchased by Dynalog in calculating defendant’s 2021 income and his net business income, and (2) the effective tax rate applied to defendant’s net income in calculating the offset from plaintiff’s obligation to pay defendant for his equity in the home. Because Dynalog bought, rather than leased, the subject vehicle, the arbitrator excluded the vehicle in calculating defendant’s 2021 income and his net business income. The arbitrator further concluded that all investment income and taxes on it should be excluded when calculating defendant’s effective tax rate.

Both parties presented errors and omissions submissions to the arbitrator regarding the 2022 calculations. In January 2023, the arbitrator issued an opinion addressing those submissions. Relevant to this appeal, the arbitrator rejected plaintiff’s arguments regarding the value of defendant’s effective tax rate and the value of his car expenditures. However, the arbitrator adjusted the calculation of monthly spousal support based on the formula in the DSA, which resulted in a monthly spousal-support obligation of $8,322.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Birgit Declerck v. Pierre Desmet, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birgit-declerck-v-pierre-desmet-michctapp-2025.