Colley v. Colley

460 S.W.2d 821, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 594
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 27, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 460 S.W.2d 821 (Colley v. Colley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colley v. Colley, 460 S.W.2d 821, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 594 (Ky. 1970).

Opinion

REED, Judge.

This is an action involving divorce and alimony. Theodore Thelmer Colley, appellant, sued his wife, Helen Barrs Colley, for a judgment of absolute divorce. She counterclaimed for an absolute divorce from him, for custody of their infant child and for alimony. The trial judge awarded the wife an absolute divorce; awarded her custody of the infant as the husband had agreed; awarded the wife an undivided one-half interest in the residence of the parties, the record title to which was in the joint names of the husband and wife, the wife and infant daughter had the right to occupy it until the child attained her majority, completed college, or was emancipated; adjudged that the husband pay $150 a month for support of the child and pay his wife $48,960 lump-sum alimony in periodic payments or in a gross sum as the husband might elect. The husband appeals on the ground that the total allowance to the wife is excessive. We have concluded that the determination of the husband’s net worth made by the trial judge is unauthorized by the evidence; hence, under existing law, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for a redetermination on this issue. We have also concluded that the time has arrived to correct, clarify, and restate the law in this jurisdiction applicable to the principal problems presented in the instant case.

The husband and wife are both 43 years old. They were married about 22 years. Two children were born as a result of the marriage. The older child, a boy, had reached his majority at the time of the divorce; he is a sophomore in college and lives with his father. The younger child is a nine-year-old girl who lives with her mother and attends elementary school.

The husband is the elected Tax Commissioner of Pike County. He had been active in several business ventures prior to his election and has retained his interests in them. These business ventures are mainly in the form of small closely held corporations in some of which he owns a majority stock interest, while in others he holds a minority stock ownership. He receives monthly income from salaries paid by reason of his public office, and his service as officer of a concrete block concern in which he is majority stockholder; he also receives fees for advising other governmental taxing units. His monthly gross earnings amount to $1300.

The wife is a schoolteacher and has been so employed for 18 years of the 22 years of marriage. She now earns take-home pay in the amount of $461.20 per month. The parties agree that her earnings during the marriage amounted to about $38,991.78, all of which had been contributed to the household. Neither the husband nor the wife had any net worth at the time of marriage.

The parties agree that the real property on which their residence is located is worth $40,000. The husband’s mother loaned them $27,000 which was used in construction of the residence. She cancelled $12,000 of this debt as a gift to both of them. The husband frankly said that he expected his mother to cancel the remaining debt of $15,000 as an additional gift to him. The wife concedes that none of her separate earnings are directly traceable to purchase of the residence property. Although the husband wants his wife to have the residence for her use, he insists that title *824 to the property must be restored to him so that he is deemed the owner in fee simple of the property.

Without objection, the husband introduced evidence in the form of income tax returns, balance sheets, and financial statements prepared by certified public accountants to establish the fair market value of his stock interests in the eight business ventures in which he was interested. These exhibits as supplemented by his testimony demonstrate that his net worth, if his interest in the residence property is one-half only, is approximately $75,000. If he is deemed owner of the home in fee simple, the evidence demonstrates his net worth at about $95,000. Although the wife sought by cross-examination to question the accuracy of the exhibits, she neither suggested different valuation amounts by that cross-examination nor did she introduce any evidence that contradicted the valuation evidence the husband introduced; the record simply does not contain any valuation evidence except that introduced by the husband.

The trial judge, after assigning $20,000 as the value of the husband’s one-half interest in the residence property, determined that the husband’s net worth was $148,800. The only justification for that determination is this statement in the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“The court takes judicial knowledge of all of the property owned by the corporations and is familiar with the location and value of those properties to the extent that it is the opinion of the court that the financial statements and the values fixed in the tax returns are not adequately shown.”

The doctrine of judicial notice is confined to matters of common knowledge. It is restricted to what a judge may properly know in his judicial capacity; a judge is not authorized to make his individual knowledge of a fact not generally known the basis of his action. 31 C.J.S. Evidence § 11, p. 832.

Although judicial notice will be taken of matters of common knowledge relating to the value of property, and despite common knowledge that book values assigned to corporate assets may not be reliable, courts cannot assume to know the actual value of specific property; the trial judge was not authorized to fix the market value of the husband’s corporate interests by means of the judge’s private knowledge. 31A C.J.S. Evidence § 101, p. 151. The determination must be made on the basis of the evidence.

No argument is made that the divorce was not properly granted to the wife. Therefore, the remand is confined to a redetermination of the proper resolution of the financial rights and obligations of the parties to- each other based upon the proposition that the wife properly procured a divorce from the husband. We have concluded that we should reconsider the contradictory, confusing, and unrealistic state of our case law in this field as it has painfully developed. We propose to redefine the guidelines for the trial bench and the practicing bar to follow.

A complete survey of our case law in this troublesome area would extend this opinion beyond all tolerable limits and achieve nothing more in pointing up' the inconsistent, fiction-ridden, and unsatisfactory character of the various pronouncements when the whole panorama can be as accurately viewed by a consideration of the discussions in the several opinions rendered in four of our relatively recent cases: Heustis v. Heustis, Ky., 346 S.W.2d 778 (1961); Goldstein v. Goldstein, Ky., 377 S.W.2d 52 (1964); Cooke v. Cooke, Ky., 449 S.W.2d 216 (1969); and Reed v. Reed, Ky., 457 S.W.2d 4 (1969).

When the varying views expressed in those opinions are analyzed as in part statutory construction and in part development of common law principles, the cle.ar conclusion is readily evident that legal *825

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
460 S.W.2d 821, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-colley-kyctapphigh-1970.