Cathleen Jackson v. Roger L. Kash

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 22, 2013
DocketM2012-01338-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Cathleen Jackson v. Roger L. Kash, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 11, 2013 Session

CATHLEEN JACKSON V. ROGER L. KASH

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 36885 James G. Martin, III, Judge

No. M2012-01338-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 22, 2013

The issues on appeal in this financially catastrophic divorce proceeding include who is liable for the debt of $240,000 that Wife incurred after the complaint for divorce was filed. The trial court held Wife liable for the entire sum and Husband jointly and severally liable for $75,889.59 of that amount upon the finding that $75,889.59 was used to preserve the parties’ principal marital asset, the residence, pending its sale. Husband contends this was error for he expressly refused to be liable for this debt. The court also awarded a judgment against Husband in favor of Wife for $101,714 of expenses she incurred to maintain the marital residence. Wife was awarded one half of Husband’s pension and $75,000 of her attorney’s fees as alimony in solido, and sixty months of rehabilitative alimony, at $1,250 per month. Husband contends that all of these awards were error. Husband, however, provided no transcript of the evidence or statement of the evidence; therefore, there is no evidence before this court upon which to find that the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s findings. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s findings of fact in all respects. Further, we find no error with the trial court’s legal conclusions or judgments by classifying the award as alimony in futuro. All other rulings by the trial court are affirmed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., and A NDY D. B ENNETT, J., joined.

J. Todd Faulkner, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Roger L. Kash.

Fred C. Dance, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Cathleen Jackson. OPINION

Roger L. Kash (“Husband”) and Cathleen Jackson (“Wife”) met in 1997 when Husband visited a casino in Metropolis, Illinois where Wife was working as a blackjack dealer.1 Following an automobile accident in June of 1998, she ended her employment in Metropolis. They married on August 15, 1998, and Wife moved to Williamson County to live with Husband.

At the time of the marriage, Husband, who has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Electrical Engineering, was employed by Saturn Corporation in Spring Hill, Tennessee, where he had worked since August 1996. In June of 2003, the parties acquired a marital residence, which consisted of two tracts of land and a residence located on Clovercroft Road in Williamson County. The plan was to reside in the residence while they remodeled and developed the property as a venue for weddings and other events; unfortunately, that plan never came to fruition.

Husband continued working for Saturn Corporation until April 2005, when he began working for General Motors, which required that he move to Detroit, Michigan. Wife followed Husband to Detroit for three months after which she returned to Tennessee while Husband continued to work in Detroit. Husband ended his employment with General Motors in 2007, at which time he moved back to reside with Wife in Williamson County but he did not return to work for Saturn.

Husband worked for Saturn Corporation or General Motors (collectively “GM”) for 270 months, 109 of which was during the marriage to Wife. During the last few years of his employment with GM, his income and resulting pension benefits increased and his gross income for the last full year of employment, 2007, was $144,482. Husband received a severance package at the time of his retirement and he began receiving a monthly pension payment of $1,399.04 from GM in 2007.

Husband obtained a Tennessee contractor’s license in April of 2007 and began working as a general contractor. There was no evidence of Husband’s income in 2008; however, Husband stated that he lost $19,000 that year. As for the next three years, Husband stated his net income for 2009 was approximately $14,000, in 2010 it was $16,000, and in 2011 it was $12,000.

1 There is no transcript or statement of the evidence in the record; thus, the facts for this case are gleaned entirely from the trial court’s detailed and lengthy factual findings in its Memorandum and Order.

-2- Wife, who has a high school education and one and a half years of community college education, seldom worked outside of the home during the marriage and her income was minimal. She was unemployed in 1999, she briefly worked for the United States Postal Service in 2000, earning $3,281 for the year. She had no reported income from 2001-2007, though she occasionally worked cleaning houses. In 2008, Wife earned $17,028 as a nanny; she continued working as a nanny until June 2009, earning $7,625 for that year. Thereafter, Wife drew unemployment benefits and she repeatedly applied for work but was unsuccessful.

Wife filed a complaint for divorce on October 19, 2009. At the time, the parties were both residing at the marital residence on Clovercroft Road in Williamson County and they continued to reside together but not without conflict.

As noted above, the plan was to develop the marital residence on Clovercroft Road as a venue for weddings and other events but that never came to fruition. Nevertheless, in order to preserve the property, which was the parties’ principal marital asset, the trial court approved an Agreed Order on May 19, 2010, that authorized Wife to borrow funds to pay the mortgage and insurance and to make repairs to preserve the marital residence. The order, which Husband agreed to, further provided that Husband was responsible for doing some of the labor on the marital residence; the order also provided that any dispute regarding the work to be done would be resolved by the court.

Upon subsequent motion by Wife, the trial court found that Husband failed to make the necessary repairs he had agreed to make and authorized Wife to hire others to make the repairs; the court also stated in the order that it would make an equitable adjustment to compensate Wife at a later date.

On September 20, 2010, the court authorized Wife to borrow additional funds to continue paying the mortgage to keep the house out of foreclosure. In the same order, the trial court noted that, at the final hearing, Wife would receive a credit out of the marital estate for the amount expended to preserve the marital residence.

The divorce trial began on April 13, 2011; it was tried over ten days, over a period of several months. Until May of 2011, both spouses continued to reside at the marital residence on Clovercroft Road; however, following a hearing on May 24, 2011, the court ordered Husband not to return to the marital residence, which decision was based on repeated conflicts between the spouses. Following a hearing on July 19, 2011, the court authorized Wife to lease the residence on a month to month basis.

-3- After the fifth day of trial, which was on September 22, 2011, the trial was scheduled to resume on December 14, 2011,2 with additional days set for March of 2012. In the interim, James Tucker, who had loaned substantial sums to Wife and provided personal services for the benefit of the parties’ marital residence, filed a motion to intervene in which he alleged he was owed over $240,000. He also requested a lien on the marital residence that would be subordinate to the preexisting mortgages. The court granted permission to intervene for that limited purpose.

On the last day of trial, February 28, 2012, the trial court ordered the parties to develop a plan for the immediate sale of the residence.

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Cathleen Jackson v. Roger L. Kash, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cathleen-jackson-v-roger-l-kash-tennctapp-2013.