Chafin v. Chafin

791 S.E.2d 693, 250 N.C. App. 19, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1063
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 18, 2016
Docket15-1152
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 791 S.E.2d 693 (Chafin v. Chafin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chafin v. Chafin, 791 S.E.2d 693, 250 N.C. App. 19, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1063 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

ELMORE, Judge.

*21 After five years of litigation involving six different attorneys and abounding motions, the trial court ordered an equitable distribution of the parties' marital and divisible property. Defendant appeals, challenging the distribution of former company property and marital debt, his ability to pay a distributive award, and the trial court's order for sanctions. We affirm.

I. Background

Denise Chafin (plaintiff) and Stephen Chafin (defendant) were married on 20 December 1988 and separated on 12 June 2008. During the marriage, defendant started a used car dealership, I Rush Auto Sales, LLC (Rush Auto), which sold mid-to low-end used cars purchased through a wholesaler known as Manheim. The Articles of Organization were filed 12 February 2007, naming defendant and his business partner, Peter Ault, as organizers. Their venture was short-lived. Mr. Ault was later removed as a member and replaced by defendant's father, Robert Chafin.

*696 The company continued to operate through the date of separation until it was administratively dissolved on 8 August 2008.

On 14 May 2009, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking, inter alia , an equitable distribution of the marital and divisible property. Pursuant to a pretrial scheduling order, plaintiff served her initial equitable distribution inventory affidavit on 29 July 2010, followed by a second inventory affidavit attached and incorporated into her proposed pretrial order on 24 October 2011. In both affidavits, plaintiff listed the business interest in Rush Auto, valued at $10,000.00, and its associated bank accounts as marital property to be distributed to defendant. She filed an amended preliminary equitable distribution affidavit on 7 March 2012, this time including an itemized list of nine vehicles which plaintiff claimed were owned by Rush Auto on the date of separation.

Upon additional discovery, plaintiff submitted her final inventory affidavit on 10 April 2013, listing the following in "Schedule C Business or Professional Interests":

*22C1 I Rush Auto Sales, LLC ... [No Value] I Rush Auto Sales, LLC C1(a) Bank of America Checking Account ... $11,110.13 Account Number ending in -3001 I Rush Auto Sales, LLC C1(b) ... $50,825.00 Inventory (Vehicles) .... I Rush Auto Sales, LLC C1(d) ... $4,218.16 Cash on Hand I Rush Auto Sales, LLC C1(e) SunTrust Checking Account ... $1,782.56 Account Number ending in -8407 I Rush Auto Sales, LLC C1(f) SunTrust Checking Account ... TBD Account Number ending in -9050

Plaintiff alleged that each item was marital property, in possession of defendant, and should be distributed to defendant.

The trial court ordered defendant to serve his equitable distribution inventory affidavit and to fill in his contentions on the pretrial order, but he failed to do so. He did serve an "affidavit in response to the proposed pretrial order" on 30 May 2013, the day before the hearing on the pretrial order. As later described by the court, however, defendant's affidavit "utterly ignored the Guilford County Local Rules with regard to equitable distribution" and "[did] not comply with pretrial order form required by the Guilford County Local Rules."

At the hearing, the parties agreed to entry of the pretrial order with the understanding that plaintiff would amend the inventory schedules to reflect defendant's contentions.

*697 In his affidavit, defendant objected to plaintiff's classification of the business interests on the following grounds:

Schedule C: Business or Professional Interests
C1 Husband valued I Rush Auto Sales, LLC at -0- dollars.
C1(a) Although bank account for Rush Auto may indicate deposits totaling $11,110.13 the debt service would at least equal this amount.
C1(b) The inventory of vehicles amount [sic] does not take into account the value less any loans against the vehicles, that is, $50,825.00 does not represent the equity in the vehicles.
....
C1(d) The amount of "cash on hand" represents the amount of money for which, at the point calculated, debts of the business had not been paid or taken into account.
*23 C1(e) The amount of funds in the Rush Auto banking account 8407 of $1,782.56 was owned by Pete Ault and is not part of the funds of Husband.
C2(f) The amount of funds in the Rush Auto banking account 9050 which is "TBD" is not known nor recognized by Husband.

Defendant also agreed that "if anything new comes up at [plaintiff's] deposition," scheduled for June 2013, then "it will just be added onto whatever that file [sic] pretrial order may be."

After several continuances, the trial was peremptorily set for 9 and 10 January 2014. On 13 January 2014, after the trial had begun, defendant filed a series of motions, including a motion to amend the pretrial order, a motion to preserve the record with excluded evidence and testimony, a motion to continue the trial, and three months later, a motion to set aside the pretrial order. The trial court denied defendant's motions, but did eventually allow his motion to preserve the record in which defendant offered evidence to show that not all vehicles listed in the pretrial order were on the Rush Auto lot on the date of separation.

On 6 November 2014, the trial court entered its equitable distribution order, in which it made the following findings and conclusions relevant to defendant's appeal:

8. With regard to the items on Schedule C, the Court finds and orders the following:
a. Item Cl, I Rush Auto Sales, LLC, is a marital asset distributed to the Defendant, but due to insufficient evidence, the Court cannot make a determination as to value.
b. Item CI(a), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC Bank of America Checking Account, account number ending in -3001, is a marital asset distributed to the Defendant at a value of $11,110.13. Defendant failed to provide sufficient proof that the funds in the account were encumbered.
c. Item C1(b), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC Inventory (Vehicles), is a marital asset distributed to the Defendant at a value of $36,350.00. This amount reflects the price Defendant paid for the vehicles that were on the car lot on the date of separation. Plaintiff completed an inventory of the vehicles on the car lot on the date of separation. Defendant's Manheim registry, which is a list of the vehicles purchased *24 via the Manheim Finance Company, dated on or about the date of separation, is consistent with the models described by Plaintiff. However, there was insufficient evidence that Defendant was able to sell the vehicles for a profit.

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Bluebook (online)
791 S.E.2d 693, 250 N.C. App. 19, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 1063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chafin-v-chafin-ncctapp-2016.