Broida v. Broida

388 S.W.2d 617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 26, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 388 S.W.2d 617 (Broida v. Broida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broida v. Broida, 388 S.W.2d 617 (Ky. 1965).

Opinion

*619 PALMORE, Judge.

Max and Miriam Broida were married in 1941. She brought this divorce suit against him in 1960. By counterclaim he also sought a divorce. In November of 1961 Chancellor Blakey Helm entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and a judgment granting Miriam a divorce, custody of and $100 per month each for the support of their two infant children (one of whom, a son, has now attained the age of 21), and $300,000 alimony payable one-third in 30 days and the balance in six months. Miriam’s attorneys were allowed a $20,000 fee and expenses in the sum of $3,640. Max moved at once to amend the judgment, and the matter came on before Judge Helm’s successor in office, Hon. Lyndon Schmid. After a deliberate and careful review of the proceedings Judge Schmid entered further findings and conclusions and an amended judgment reducing the alimony to $279,078 and making it payable $100,000 in 60 days, $79,078 one year later, $50,000 in two years, and the remaining $50,000 in three years. The amended judgment cut the $20,000 fee to $18,600 but allowed an additional $1,860 for services rendered after the first judgment. The $3,640 allowance for expenses was left intact.

Both parties appeal. Max claims the alimony is excessive and is payable over too short a time. He contends also that both the fee and expenses allowed her attorneys are unreasonable. The attorneys are made parties on his appeal. Miriam complains that the alimony award is not enough.

At this time Max is about 66 and Miriam is in her fifties. A highly successful business man, he had a substantial net worth when they were married in 1941 and has accumulated a great deal more since then. She had no property at the time of the marriage, has not earned any income, and has no estate of her own.

The value of Max’s estate was calculated as of June 1, 1961. Judge Helm concluded that the amount of alimony should be approximately one-third of the estate accumulated by Max during the marriage. Excluding properties owned in 1941 and still owned, and after making a further deduction of $52,000 for other assets then owned hut since disposed of, Judge Helm found his net worth in 1961 to be $919,136. The only difference in this respect between the first judgment and the amended judgment is that Judge Schmid determined that certain stock given by Max during the pendency of this action to his son by a former marriage should not be counted as part of his estate. 1

Both parties have submitted lengthy briefs contesting every spike in the railroad. In their zeal not to miss a twig in the forest they overlook the simple truth that the valuation of complex business interests is largely speculative at best, and that the fixing of alimony, especially when it reaches six figures, must be a broad-brush affair anyway. After the perspiration shed on this record by two able and conscientious chancellors we decline the stultification of picking at every hair on the brush.

Most of the smoke and din of battle swirls around the evaluation of Max’s 70% interest 2 in a corporation holding a “sandwich” leasehold of miscellaneous real estate in Honolulu, Hawaii. This leasehold, purchased in 1954 at a price of $210,000, runs until 1991. Until November 15, 1960, the rent payable by the corporation to the owners of the property was $2,500 per month, and the rents received from subtenants in the month immediately preceding that date totalled $5,085. By virtue of escalation clauses in the master lease and most of the *620 subleases (which extend over the same term as the master lease), as of November IS, 1960, the rent payable to the owners under the master lease was increased to $9,~ 375 per month and the rents receivable by the corporation from the subtenants also were increased. In May of 1961 the gross rent collected from the subtenants was $15,*-050. All improvements on the property were constructed by the subtenants, and there is no maintenance expense to the sub-lessor corporation.

As may be seen from the foregoing figures, in November of 1960 the asset for which $210,000 was paid in 1954 was earning $31,020 per annum before administrative expenses and taxes. In 1961 this figure had increased to $68,100. The trial court placed a value of $641,000 on the leasehold, calculated through capitalizing the net income at 91/3%. It is not clear just how the court arrived at the net income figure of $59,805 which was necessary to produce this result, but apparently it represented an adjustment from a figure of $56,-305 given by the company’s accountant. At any rate, both parties make vociferous outcry at the result. Max contends the net income should have been capitalized at something between 12% and 18%, and Miriam claims the rate should have been about 6%. Max argues also that the information obtained from the accountant (by deposition) was privileged 3 and should have been suppressed on his subsequent motion. Miriam, on the other hand, points out (correctly, we believe) that the expenses deducted by the accountant in arriving at the net profit figure include several items that should not have been considered for valuation purposes. T© all of these arguments, both ways, we could add some of our own, but the spirit of the season bids us to refrain from inflicting on the readers of this opinion any more of what the writer has endured already under the dead weight alone of this record and these briefs.

There is, in our opinion, plenty of evidence to support a conclusion that the net income of the Honolulu corporation is at least $50,000 to $60,000 per annum. The allegedly privileged information elicited from the accountant is more helpful than harmful to Max’s case because, if it were excluded, it would be necessary to calculate entirely on the basis of the gross difference between rental figures payable and receivable. 4 Conceding that this income may fluctuate upward and downward by reason of the escalation clauses and other vicissitudes incident to the type of property and tenants involved, it is reasonable to anticipate that it will not fall materially below the present level, and there are several rules of thumb that should have probative weight in determining the value of the master lease. For example, the present value, at 6%, of $1.00 per year payable at the end of each year for 30 years is approximately $13,765. That is, an investor lending his money at 6% interest would have to pay $688,250 for a guaranteed payment of $50,-000 per annum for 30 years. 5 We know, of course, that $50,000 per annum from the Honolulu property is not guaranteed, and we know also that what the corporation nets is not necessarily income to the shareholders, but quite aside from other testi *621 mony we have not specifically mentioned, this comparison suggests that a $641,000 valuation of the stock representing corporate ownership of the Honolulu leasehold is not excessive. As we have said, what a willing buyer would pay a willing seller for such an asset involves a great deal of guesswork anyway.

The values of assets other than the stock in the Honolulu company were stipulated.

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Bluebook (online)
388 S.W.2d 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broida-v-broida-kyctapphigh-1965.