Chauncey v. Chauncey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 4, 2021
Docket1 CA-CV 19-0696-FC
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chauncey v. Chauncey (Chauncey v. Chauncey) 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
Chauncey v. Chauncey, (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

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 UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.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

KATHY CHAUNCEY, Petitioner/Appellant,

v.

THOMAS W. CHAUNCEY, II, Respondent/Appellee. __________________________________

JAMES BLOMO, Intervenor.

No. 1 CA-CV 19-0696 FC FILED 3-4-2021

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. FN2017-002676 The Honorable Justin Beresky, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Jeffrey G. Pollitt, P.C., Phoenix By Jeffrey G. Pollitt Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant

Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix By Robert L. Schwartz, Leonce A. Richard III, Bradley A. Burns Counsel for Respondent/Appellee CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Maria Elena Cruz delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge James B. Morse Jr. and Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined.

C R U Z, Judge:

¶1 Kathy Chauncey (“Wife”) appeals from the family court’s judgment in this high-net-worth dissolution matter. She asserts the family court committed legal error in assigning Thomas W. Chauncey, II (“Husband”) certain assets as his separate property. After a thorough review of the sealed record, we find no abuse of discretion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 Husband and Wife met when Wife was training horses on her parents’ Arabian horse farm. The parties married in 1972. They had no children, and no pre- or post-marital agreements were sought or completed. The parties maintained separate bank accounts after the first year of marriage. Although Husband had numerous financial accounts, Wife was a signatory on only two: a donation account and an account for construction-related expenses on one of their ranches.

¶3 Husband, at the beginning of the marriage, worked in various capacities for radio and TV stations. After graduating from law school and for much of their marriage, Husband practiced law in Phoenix. By 1973 or 1974 Wife did not work.

¶4 Husband is a person of significant personal wealth. Between 1982 and 1996, Husband’s father (“Tom Sr.”) gave him several substantial gifts. After Tom Sr. died in 1996, Husband and two of his sisters each received one-third of Tom Sr.’s estate. Each sibling took their share as their separate property and continued to manage it that way.

¶5 The majority of Tom Sr.’s estate was held in a family limited partnership (“Partnership”). Through the development and appreciation of assets, the Partnership’s value tripled. Before it was closed in 2014, the Partnership made very significant distributions to each sibling.

¶6 Husband used his separate funds to acquire “dozens” of other assets, either with or without his sisters’ involvement. Those assets had

2 CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY Decision of the Court

bank accounts solely in Husband’s name. Meanwhile, Husband also sold assets and used those funds to acquire new assets. While the four residential properties Husband purchased were gifted to the community, Wife was not associated with any other asset except one cattle entity.

¶7 In 2017, after more than 40 years of marriage, Wife filed for dissolution. Wife, at the time of trial, was 70 years old and disabled due to a chronic lung condition. Husband was 71 and still working as an attorney.

¶8 As Husband began to prepare for trial and, more specifically, for the tracing of his separate property, he realized that much of his recordkeeping over the years had been destroyed. Husband rigorously searched for documents from other sources including attorneys, accountants, various business partners, his employer, his siblings, and governmental records.

¶9 Husband hired Certified Fraud Examiner and Master Analyst in Financial Forensics Chris Gorman to trace the flow of his assets from acquisition to present. Wife hired Certified Public Accountant Josephine Giordano, of Kotzin Valuation Partners, to review and critique Gorman’s analysis. Expert reports were exchanged and updated as additional documents became available.

¶10 By the time of trial, Gorman had reviewed over 26,000 pages of documents and interviewed numerous witnesses. Gorman testified that while this case presented the most complex tracing of his career, he was “extremely” confident in his analysis and believed he had all the evidence needed to complete the tracing analysis. Gorman’s analysis purported to trace “the current assets held by [Husband] back to the point at which [Husband] received the separate property via inheritance.”

¶11 In their joint pretrial statement and at the evidentiary hearing, the parties reported reaching some property agreements. Husband agreed that certain pieces of real property, personal property, and certain financial accounts were community property. He further agreed certain jewelry, art, vehicles, and silverware were community property. Wife agreed certain property, including artwork, was Husband’s separate property. After these agreements, there remained a large amount of disputed property in various forms.

¶12 A bifurcated trial was held. The first four days consisted primarily of evidence aimed at characterizing the remaining disputed property as community or separate. Wife testified that Husband excluded her from most financial decision-making. She vacillated as to what and 3 CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY Decision of the Court

when she knew about the gifts and inheritance but remembered the sale of some significant Partnership assets held by Husband and his sisters. Wife also knew Tom Sr. had not left her an inheritance.

¶13 Husband and Gorman each testified.1 Gorman testified at length. He traced Husband’s finances entity by entity and account by account and examined twenty-nine entities and over thirty financial accounts.

¶14 Husband had three “clearing accounts” in which he always deposited his community earnings.2 The majority of the funds in that account, however, were his separate property. Gorman looked at the detailed day-to-day input and output of the community monies and opined that commingling could not have happened because “at all times” the community earnings were insufficient to cover community expenses and had no time to build up. Wife testified she knew Husband’s earnings were not enough to pay their living expenses. After consideration of both Husband’s earnings and the community expenses, Gorman concluded that the community’s expenses dwarfed Husband’s community earnings and the “only possible source of this influx of funds was Husband’s separate property.”

¶15 In response, Giordano testified to alleged factual and legal problems in Gorman’s report. More specifically, Giordano asserted Gorman lacked a sufficient factual basis to “directly trace” Husband’s separate property. Giordano stated that

The Gorman Report fails to properly acknowledge that missing bank activity, lack of adequate and reliable source documentation, reliance on Husband’s representations when source documentation [was] not available, and a “reasonable tie” to a funding source, impacts the reliability and

1 Several other factual witnesses also testified for Husband. Those included attorneys and accountants who had been involved in assisting Husband, sisters, or Tom Sr. over the years.

2 The clearing account operated much like a common checking account, meant to cover the day to day expenses of the community. Over time, there were three clearing accounts; with changes often caused by bank restructuring. Generally, only one clearing account was in use at a time. For ease of reference we refer to the clearing accounts collectively as “clearing account.” 4 CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY Decision of the Court

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Bluebook (online)
Chauncey v. Chauncey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chauncey-v-chauncey-arizctapp-2021.