Brandal v. Shangin

36 P.3d 1188, 2001 WL 1598162
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
DocketS-9695
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 36 P.3d 1188 (Brandal v. Shangin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandal v. Shangin, 36 P.3d 1188, 2001 WL 1598162 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal concerns property division and child support disputes arising from Henry Brandal and Lorraine Shangin's divorce. We hold that the trial court did not err in classifying Henry's right to use his grandmother's Chignik Lagoon land as a marital asset, or in valuing the original cost of this asset. But because we conclude that it was error to use compound rather than simple interest to calculate the present value of that asset, we remand for further calculations. We affirm the trial court's fifty/fifty distribution of the EXXON VALDEZ settlement proceeds. We remand for application of a recapture analysis to the $6,800 Alyeska permit payout Henry claims he used for post-separation living expenses. We remand for determination whether it is in the children's best interests to delay payment of Lorraine's past-due child support, and hold that the trial court did not err by requiring Henry, should he sell his limited entry permit, to use the sale proceeds to satisfy his property division debts to Lorraine.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Henry Brandal and Lorraine Shangin married in January 1979 and have four children. The eldest was born in August 1979; the youngest are twins born in September 1988.

Henry received an interim limited entry salmon seine permit for the Chignik Lagoon area in 1978. A late application prevented Henry from receiving a full permit and the interim permit is nontransferable and must be renewed annually. The parties stipulated *1191 that the interim permit was Henry's separate property.

In 1979 the couple purchased a $5,800 mobile home for Henry's grandmother. In exchange for the mobile home, Henry's grandmother allowed the couple to use some of her land in Chignik Lagoon. Lorraine testified that the intent behind this exchange was that the couple would transfer the Chig-nik Lagoon property to their name, but that they failed to follow through on the title transfer. She testified that "it was a verbal agreement that that was our land, it belonged to us. It was given to us." Henry testified that "the tentative agreement was that if anything ever happened in the marriage that it would go back in the family since it was my grandfather's land.... No matter whatl,] it would go back into the family if anything should happen to me or our marriage."

Henry and one of his crew members built a house on the Chignik Lagoon land in the fall of 1979. The family lived in the house during the summer fishing months, and lived elsewhere for the winter months. The trial court found that the failure to transfer title to the couple occurred while the parties were still together, and that therefore "Ms. Shan-gin is stuck with the failure to follow through," and the "real estate ... is not part of the marital estate." Nonetheless the trial court held that the parties purchased the right to live on the property with marital money, and that the right to live on the property was part of the marital estate.

The EXXON VALDEZ oil spill severely depressed commercial fishing in the Chignik area for several years. The couple was forced to file for bankruptcy in 1991. Henry is part of a class action law suit, and anticipates collecting in excess of one million dollars under the EXXON VALDEZ settlement. The settlement will potentially include three classes of damages-permit devaluation, vessel devaluation, and seasonal losses for 1989-91. The trial court found that the recovery is marital property, with "the exception of the portion of the recovery related to devaluation of his permit, which is not marital property, because the permit was not marital property...." The court divided the marital portion of the EXXON VALDEZ recovery fifty/fifty. In 1994 Henry received a payment of $6,800 for what he called the "Alyes-ka permit payout"-Alyeska's share of the EXXON VALDEZ oil spill claim. The court charged this settlement payout against Henry's side of the ledger.

The parties separated in October 1998. Lorraine moved out of the family's Anchorage home, leaving the four boys with Henry. Lorraine did not pay child support during this time, although she bought the children clothing and sent food to Henry and the children. The trial court ordered Lorraine to pay support arrearages, and required her to submit salary documents so the arrearag-es could be calculated. The trial court held that neither party had to pay the other until Henry received the money from the EXXON VALDEZ claims,. The court ordered that "[iln the event Ms. Shangin is owed money by Mr. Brandal, she may also have a lien against his interim use permit, or if that ripens into an actual permit, to the extent that's allowed by law, although I suspect-I question whether that's allowed. But she can't enforce it and require sale of the permit." The court also ruled that "Hlf it turns out that money is paid on the EXXON VALDEZ litigation, then the parties-whoever has the judgment may try to execute against other assets at that time, but not before."

III. DISCUSSION

[1] Property division consists of three steps: (1) assessing the nature of the property (marital or nonmarital); (2) valuing the property; and (8) equitably allocating the property." 1

A. Standard of Review

[2-4] We review the trial court's conclusions regarding the marital nature of property for abuse of discretion. 2 Property value determinations are factual decisions that we will overturn only if they are clearly erroneous. *1192 3 We review the trial court's equitable allocation of property for abuse of discretion and will reverse only if the allocation is clearly unjust. 4 Any legal determinations made during this process are reviewed de novo. 5

B. The Trial Court Did Not Err in Finding that the Right to Use the Chignik Lagoon Land Was a Marital Asset.

Henry argues that the court erred in finding that the right to use the Chignik Lagoon land was a marital asset. He contends that Lorraine already received compensation for her share of the $5,800 purchase price in the form of the right to use the land during the marriage. Henry argues that allowing Lorraine to collect the amount of the original investment affords her a double recovery. We disagree.

Although determining whether property is a marital asset is a legal question, 6 that determination turns here on a factual finding. The trial court found that the there was an "agreement whereby that land might ultimately be conveyed to them." The trial court found that although Henry and Lorraine failed to secure the transfer of the land, they did use marital money to purchase the trailer, and that the trailer purchase "was related to their right to live in and use" the Chignik Lagoon property.

We hold that the record supports these findings and that these findings support the trial court's legal conclusion that the right to use the Chignik Lagoon land is a marital asset.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.3d 1188, 2001 WL 1598162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandal-v-shangin-alaska-2002.