Burt v. Burt

799 P.2d 1166, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 158, 1990 WL 156858
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 12, 1990
Docket890190-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 799 P.2d 1166 (Burt v. Burt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burt v. Burt, 799 P.2d 1166, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 158, 1990 WL 156858 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BENCH, GARFF, and ORME, JJ.

ORME, Judge:

Defendant Betty Mae Burt appeals from the trial court’s entry of a divorce decree, assigning error to the division of the parties’ marital property and the award to her of $300 per month as alimony. Defendant also seeks attorney fees and costs on appeal. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

Plaintiff David Burt and defendant were married in 1947. Two children were born of the marriage, both of whom reached majority before the commencement of this action. At the time this action was filed, plaintiff had been retired from government employment since 1976 and was receiving regular retirement payments of $1,350 per month. Plaintiff also received an additional $616 per month primarily from rental income and from a small watch repair business which produced nominal income. Defendant received monthly income of $415 from Social Security, $185 from an Individual Retirement Account, and $515 in interest and dividends from her investments. The net disparity in monthly incomes of plaintiff and defendant amounts to $851 in favor of plaintiff.

While the disparity in income is in favor of plaintiff, an even more dramatic difference in property exists in favor of defendant. Between 1969 and 1972, defendant received a total of $71,600 by inheritance. Over the years she made various investments and substantially increased her holdings, which amounted to at least $174,600 by the time of trial, and even more according to plaintiff’s evidence. She purchased a home valued at $65,000, using investment income, in which she was living at the time of divorce. Early in the marriage, the parties jointly purchased a marital home, the loan for which had been fully satisfied by 1973. Plaintiff was awarded this home free of any claim by defendant.

The plaintiff was also awarded his full fifty percent interest in an inherited home 1 which generated the rental income referred to above. Plaintiff was allowed to retain his full retirement income and was additionally awarded savings accounts totalling $28,509. Plaintiff was, however, ordered to pay defendant $300 monthly in alimony.

On appeal, defendant primarily challenges the trial court’s failure to compensate her for her joint interest in the marital home, suggesting the court erred in regarding the parties’ home — a marital asset awarded solely to plaintiff — as a kind of offset against defendant’s home, which had been purchased solely with her separate funds. The defendant also challenges the court’s failure to award her a portion of the plaintiff’s government retirement, a benefit acquired during the marriage, and the survivor annuity benefits incident thereto. *1169 She claims the alimony awarded her in an effort to narrow the parties’ income differential was not an adequate substitute for the retirement benefits to which she was entitled as a matter of property distribution.

MARITAL HOME

The trial court allowed plaintiff to retain the marital home without any claim against it by defendant. Defendant suggests the court erred in simplistically giving each party a home of equivalent value without regard to ownership — her house was really her house while “his” house was “theirs.” However, the court’s intended analysis was apparently that plaintiff was entitled to an equitable offset against the amounts which the defendant had been able to amass through investment of her inherited funds which, if not for the plaintiff’s all but exclusive payment of the mortgage and household expenses, even during the substantial period when both worked, would have been partially diverted, of necessity, towards those joint expenses. In making such an award the court, in effect, awarded a substantial portion of defendant’s inherited funds to plaintiff.

Inherited or donated property, as well as its appreciated value, is generally regarded as separate from the marital estate and hence is left with the receiving spouse in a property division incident to divorce. Mortensen v. Mortensen, 760 P.2d 304, 308 (Utah 1988). However, such property may appropriately be considered part of the marital estate, subject to division, when the other spouse has by his or her efforts augmented, maintained, or protected the inherited or donated property, id,.; Dubois v. Dubois, 29 Utah 2d 75, 504 P.2d 1380, 1381 (1973); where the parties have inextricably commingled the property with marital property so that it has lost its separate character, Mortensen, 760 P.2d at 308; or where the recipient spouse has contributed all or part of the property to the marital estate. Id.

Even though defendant’s inheritance is readily traceable and has not been commingled, plaintiff argues that defendant’s inherited funds have substantially changed in form — they were received as cash but have become stocks, bonds and real estate — and therefore they should be considered part of the marital estate. Plaintiff relies on Mortensen, wherein the Court stated that property which had lost its “identity through commingling or exchanges” could properly be considered part of the marital estate. 760 P.2d at 308. We disagree with plaintiff’s reading of Morten-sen. The thrust of Mortensen is not whether the mere form of property has changed, but whether it has lost its “identity” as separate property. Id. The separate character of the defendant’s inheritance has been maintained in segregated accounts and portfolios and the home she purchased. Conversion from one investment medium to another does not, by itself, destroy the integrity of segregation. To accept plaintiff’s view of Mortensen would unreasonably discourage the prudent investment of inherited funds. In order to preserve the property’s separate character, the donee or heir would be required to maintain the property in the same physical form in which it was received, be it securities, real estate, or cash. The law does not require such economic absurdity.

Having so concluded, we nonetheless recognize that this precept does not place defendant’s separate property totally beyond the court’s reach in an equitable property division. The court may award an interest in the inherited property to the non-heir spouse in lieu of alimony, Weaver v. Weaver, 21 Utah 2d 166, 442 P.2d 928, 929 (1968), or in “other extraordinary situations where equity so demands.” 2 Mortensen, 760 P.2d at 308; see also, Naranjo v. Naranjo, 751 P.2d 1144, 1147 (Utah Ct.App.1988); Bailey v. Bailey, 745 P.2d 830, *1170 833 (Utah Ct.App.1987).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 P.2d 1166, 145 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 158, 1990 WL 156858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burt-v-burt-utahctapp-1990.