Brasslett v. Brasslett (In Re Brasslett)

233 B.R. 177, 41 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1170, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 280, 1999 WL 166248
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedMarch 18, 1999
Docket14-10058
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 233 B.R. 177 (Brasslett v. Brasslett (In Re Brasslett)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brasslett v. Brasslett (In Re Brasslett), 233 B.R. 177, 41 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1170, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 280, 1999 WL 166248 (Me. 1999).

Opinion

Memorandum of Decision

JAMES B. HAINES, Jr., Chief Judge.

Before me is Patricia Brasslett’s complaint to determine the dischargeability of divorce-related obligations (a property division award and an award of professional fees) owed her by Chapter 7 debtor Ronald Brasslett. Also pending is Ronald’s § 522(f)(1) motion to avoid the judicial lien securing the property division debt.

After a consolidated trial and post-trial briefing, I conclude that the property division debt is excepted from discharge under § 523(a)(15) and that the professional fees award is nondischargeable pursuant to § 523(a)(5). I conclude that Patricia’s judicial lien is unavoidable because the divorce judgment passed personal property to Ronald subject to a charge securing Patricia’s right to payment of the property division award. 1

Background

1. The Divorce Decree

Until their 1995 divorce, Patricia and Ronald had been married for over thirty years. The state court awarded the marital home, the site of Ronald’s then ongoing business, to Ronald with Patricia’s acquiescence. The bulk of the couple’s personal property was associated with Ronald’s business and, so, was set aside to him. Aiming for a fair split, the court concluded that under Maine’s property division statute, see Me.Rev.Stat.Ann. tit. 19-A, § 953 (West 1998), 2 a “ ‘just’ ” division was achieved by ordering Ronald to pay Patricia $90,000.00. 3

Addressing the property division and Ronald’s resulting obligation to Patricia, the decree provided:

[Ronald] shall satisfy this obligation within 120 days of the date this decree becomes final. Interest at the statutory post-judgment rate shall accrue as of that payment deadline but not before. [Patricia] shall have the right to file a lien against the real property and the personal property in order to secure her rights under this decree.

The decree also required Ronald to pay Patricia $1250.00 per month in alimony and to pay fees of several professionals she employed in the course of divorce proceedings. In arriving at its alimony award, the court found that at the time of the divorce Ronald had substantial capacity to earn income from his wood trucking and brokerage business. It found that he had reported annual income of $46,000.00 in 1992, $44,000.00 in 1993, but only $5000.00 in 1994 (an happenstance the court termed “aberrationally low”). It noted that Ronald under-reported his 1993 income and that, in reality, his net income for that year approximated $100,000.00. The judge opined that Ronald’s reported income for other years might well have been less than *181 what he actually realized from his business activities. In the divorce court’s view, Patricia, who had been treated for anxiety and depression in the months preceding the divorce, had “no vocational skills.” 4

2. Post-Divorce Developments and Status in Quo

a. Patricia’s Circumstances

Patricia is now an unemployed, fifty-five year old single woman. Her health is only fair. She suffers from diabetes and chronic back pain. She cannot engage in taxing physical work, particularly work that requires bending, lifting, or standing for extended periods. During the last year, Patricia has had her gall bladder removed and has undergone hernia repair surgery. She considers herself “on the mend,” and plans to commence searching for work in the near future.

Patricia has a high school education. She has never worked full-time, and was last employed as a housekeeper for a rural hospital, earning $5.68 per hour. She envisions the possibility of finding work that pays between $6.00 and $8.00 per hour, but doubts that she would be physically capable of working a forty-hour week.

Patricia subsists on the $400.00 per month alimony she receives from Ronald. 5 Patricia is without a home or apartment of her own. Her car, a 1987 Chevrolet Celebrity, does not run. An acquaintance, Glen MacDougal, provides Patricia a room in his home for $400.00 per month, including utilities. MacDougal loans her living expenses when she is short of funds (nearly every month). She pays him back when she can.

b. Ronald’s Circumstances

Ostensibly, Ronald no longer operates his own business, but is an employee of Irish Trucking (IT), a business owned, tit-ularly, by his new wife, Marie Irish. Marie contributed the initial capital for the business and took out loans to purchase equipment. IT rose from the still-warm ashes of Ronald’s former enterprise, Ron Brasslett Trucking (RBT), which ceased doing business prior to Ronald’s bankruptcy. Ronald’s business activities are basically unchanged, though smaller in scope, from what he did before he “went to work” for IT. He trucks pulpwood and brokers wood.

Ronald filed exhibits indicating he earns only $576.00 per month working for Marie, but he testified that since June 1998 he has been paid almost twice that for hauling wood. On top of that, he earns unquantified brokerage commissions, most of which are earned while he is at work for IT. 6 Ronald treats the commissions as his personal earnings, not as IT revenues.

Determining where Ronald Brasslett leaves off and IT begins is not an easy task. Although the truck he drives “for Irish” is not one of the old RBT rigs, 7 *182 Ronald uses most of his own tools in IT’s business, and IT has access to much of the same equipment and the same office space as RBT formerly used.

The IT/Ronald Brasslett revenue picture is similarly hazy. Who (or what) generates funds and obtains their benefit is unclear. But it is clear that Ronald Brasslett maintains a reputation and relationships in the industry that would enable him to earn substantially more than he now earns. Ronald could make more money than he does either within IT by brokering wood and hauling it as an IT employee (with or without other bona fide IT employees) or outside of IT’s operation using contract haulers. In the course of a February 1998 contempt hearing in the divorce court, Ronald testified that he could “market as much wood as [he] could take to the mill[s].” At trial in the bankruptcy court, John Prescott testified that Ronald has potential to develop more business than he now has and that he (Prescott) is ready and willing to co-broker wood with Ronald by providing financial backing.

c. Obligations Reconfigured

After state court hearings in February 1998, at which Ronald was ordered to pay alimony arrearages exceeding $20,000.00, Patricia received $10,270.00 from' him. 8 She used that money for living expenses and to pay MacDougal back what she then owed him.

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Bluebook (online)
233 B.R. 177, 41 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1170, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 280, 1999 WL 166248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brasslett-v-brasslett-in-re-brasslett-meb-1999.