Butler v. Butler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 30, 2018
Docket1 CA-CV 16-0442-FC
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Butler v. Butler, (Ark. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

In re the Marriage of:

MICHELE BUTLER, Petitioner/Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

v.

THOMAS BUTLER, Respondent/Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Nos. 1 CA-CV 16-0442 FC 1 CA-CV 17-0479 FC (Consolidated) FILED 10-30-2018

Appeal from the Superior Court in Mohave County No. L8015DO201107266 The Honorable Doug R. Camacho, Judge Pro Tempore

AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED IN PART; REMANDED

COUNSEL

Mandel Young PLC, Phoenix By Taylor C. Young Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant/Cross-Appellee

Law Offices of Heather C. Wellborn, P.C., Lake Havasu City By Heather C. Wellborn Counsel for Respondent/Appellee/Cross-Appellant BUTLER v. BUTLER Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Jennifer M. Perkins and Chief Judge Samuel A. Thumma joined.

W I N T H R O P, Judge:

¶1 Michele Butler (“Wife”) appeals the family court’s June 2016 dissolution decree, arguing the court abused its discretion in (1) awarding spousal maintenance to Thomas Butler (“Husband”), (2) finding that Arizona Emergency Medical Specialists (“AEMS”) and M.P. Butler, D.O., P.L.L.C. (“MP Butler”) were separate businesses for valuation purposes, and (3) failing to credit Wife for expenses paid on the home awarded her (“the Remuda home”). Husband cross-appeals, arguing the court erred in (1) not considering the possibility Wife might short sell the Remuda home, and (2) failing to address the community interest in excess distributions above reasonable compensation regarding AEMS and MP Butler. For the following reasons, we vacate the award of spousal maintenance and remand for reconsideration of that issue, but otherwise affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 In 1994, the parties married in Colorado. By that time, each had a college degree and was employed. While married, they had two children—a son born in February 1998, and a daughter born in February 2004. Between 1995 and 1999, the family lived in Iowa, where Wife attended medical school. After she graduated, the family moved to Michigan, where Wife completed her residency in emergency medicine. In 2003, they moved to Lake Havasu, Arizona, where Wife began working as an emergency room physician.

¶3 While Wife was in medical school, she took out loans and worked part-time, and Husband worked various jobs. When Wife began her residency, Husband decided to stay at home to care for their son, while working part-time from home selling mortgages, which he continued to do after the family moved to Arizona.

¶4 The family moved to Phoenix in 2005, and then back to Lake Havasu in 2006 after Wife received the opportunity to join AEMS,

2 BUTLER v. BUTLER Decision of the Court

eventually as a partner/shareholder. Wife was to be paid as an independent contractor, and she formed MP Butler as a tax strategy. Wife also became part-owner of Large Bore Investment Group, L.L.C. (“Large Bore”), an entity formed in 2007 that held real property and depreciating fixed assets but had little or no ordinary income. Meanwhile, Husband briefly became a partner in a Taekwondo studio.

¶5 In 2009, after the real estate market crashed, the family purchased two homes in Lake Havasu (“the Lakeland home” and “the Holly home”) as investment properties free and clear: the purchase price for the Lakeland home was $56,900, and the purchase price for the Holly home was $35,000. The parties’ plan was for Husband to renovate the properties and either sell them or maintain them as rental properties, although at the time of the decree, the properties continued to be held and were not occupied.

¶6 In August 2011, Wife petitioned for dissolution of the parties’ marriage. At around the same time, the parties evenly divided the money in their bank accounts, with each receiving approximately $60,000. Wife moved out of the family’s primary residence (“the Oakwood home”) in September 2011, taking very little with her, while Husband continued to live in the Oakwood home. Temporary orders awarded the parties joint legal and physical custody of the two minor children, and they exercised substantially equal parenting time.

¶7 Over the next year, Wife voluntarily paid Husband $50,000 in spousal support and paid all community expenses, including the mortgage and expenses for the Oakwood home. Based on evidence provided, in August 2012, the family court (Judge Richard Weiss) entered temporary orders requiring Wife to pay Husband $6,000 per month in spousal maintenance and $1,000 per month in child support, and to continue paying all community expenses, except those related to the Oakwood home. Wife made those court-ordered payments. Thus, for the nearly five years that elapsed between the time Husband was served with the petition for dissolution (on August 4, 2011) and the decree was entered (on June 14, 2016), Wife paid Husband a total of $314,000 in spousal maintenance.

¶8 Meanwhile, between August 2011 and October 2014, Husband did not seek or obtain gainful employment and used spousal maintenance to cover his expenses. Between August 2012 and January 2014, Husband was enrolled in school, earning a Master’s in Business Administration (“MBA”). Ten months later—in October 2014—he obtained

3 BUTLER v. BUTLER Decision of the Court

a job working at a bank, where, at the time of trial, he was earning $11.54 per hour, or approximately $24,000 per year.

¶9 Trial, which began in November 2015, included seven days of testimony and argument, ending in April 2016.

¶10 On June 14, 2016, the court entered a fifty-five-page dissolution decree. By that time, the parties’ son had reached the age of eighteen, leaving only the daughter as a minor child. The decree awarded the parties joint legal decision-making authority and ordered that Wife pay Husband $580 per month for child support. The decree also ordered Wife to pay Husband $8,000 per month in spousal maintenance until May 31, 2022.

¶11 In dividing the parties’ assets, the decree concluded that almost everything owned by the parties, except a $165 fish finder, was a community asset. Husband received the Lakeland, Holly, and Oakwood homes, which valued at $115,000, $50,000, and $38,541.74 ($265,000 less a mortgage balance of $226,458.26), respectively. Husband also received community vehicles and boats valued at $64,515, bank accounts worth $291,477.81, and personal property valued at $13,618. The total value of community assets and property awarded Husband, after subtraction of the Oakwood home’s mortgage, was $573,152.55. This amount was in addition to the $60,000 in cash he received upon the parties’ separation and the $314,000 Wife had paid in voluntary and court-ordered spousal maintenance pending the divorce.

¶12 Wife received the parties’ home in Peoria (the Remuda home), which had negative equity of -$251,486.56 (a $260,000 valuation less two outstanding mortgages totaling $511,486.56). Wife also received a community vehicle and two wave runners valued at $11,880, bank accounts worth $38,442.78, and personal property valued at $350.

¶13 The family court agreed with Husband’s business valuation expert, Lynton Kotzin, that AEMS, MP Butler, and Large Bore should be valued as separate community businesses and valued the community interest in each at $545,000, $468,162, and $100,691 respectively, all as of December 31, 2011.1 Ostensibly because Husband had received most of the

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Butler v. Butler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-butler-arizctapp-2018.