Cox v. Cox

775 P.2d 1315, 108 N.M. 598
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1989
Docket10049, 10052
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 775 P.2d 1315 (Cox v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Cox, 775 P.2d 1315, 108 N.M. 598 (N.M. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

BIVINS, Chief Judge.

Wife appeals the trial court’s valuation of the community interest in husband’s accounting practice, the court’s refusal to award fees for her expert witness, and the amount of attorney fees awarded her. Husband appeals the award of alimony,' the order that he assume all community debts, and the award of attorney fees to wife. This case raises issues in applying Hertz v. Hertz, 99 N.M. 320, 657 P.2d 1169 (1983). In that case, the supreme court states that, if a professional spouse’s stock in the corporation is subject to a restrictive agreement fixing the value of goodwill, such agreement controls in the absence of evidence that the stockholders have disregarded the same. The threshold question is whether there are any exceptions to the rule other than the one stated. We believe there are. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for a determination of the community interest in such goodwill. Because wife’s issues regarding expert witness fees and her attorney fees are directly related to the goodwill issue, we reverse on those issues as well. We affirm on the issues husband raises.

FACTS

Wife and husband were married in 1955. Husband is an accountant and a shareholder in the accounting firm of Cox-Keefer & Co. At the time of trial, he was fifty-nine years old and planned to retire in three years.

Husband and one of the other shareholders, Edwin Goff, worked for a number of years for an accounting firm named Fox & Co. In 1982, husband and Goff purchased the accounting practice from Fox. They paid $182,000 for the intangible assets, or goodwill, of the practice at the time they bought it. They raised the $182,000 by borrowing money from several sources and placing second mortgages on the Goff and Cox homes. It is undisputed that community assets constituted a portion of the collateral for the loans, and that community income, in the form of earnings of the accounting practice, was used to make payments on the loans. The accounting practice is currently paying off the remaining balance owed on the loans.

In 1984, Goff, husband, and Roy Keefer incorporated the practice and became shareholders in the corporation. Less than a year later, the shareholders began discussing a shareholders’ agreement containing all of the provisions that eventually became part of the agreement at issue in this case. That agreement is dated July 1, 1986, but was not signed by all of the shareholders until early 1987. The signing was simply a ratification of something that had been discussed and agreed to earlier. All of the shareholders testified that the shareholders’ agreement had nothing to do with husband’s divorce.

The shareholders’ agreement provides that upon the death, disability, bankruptcy, or retirement of any shareholder, or upon the cessation of employment of ány shareholder, the corporation shall purchase that shareholder’s shares in the corporation. The value of the shares shall be the book value of the shares as of the last day of the fiscal year preceding the occurrence of the sale contingency. The book value shall not include any amount for goodwill. All of the shareholders testified that they are bound by the agreement. Mr. Goff did testify that he felt some type of retirement would be paid to him, apparently in lieu of the goodwill, but Mr. Keefer testified that the retirement agreement never became a reality. Husband testified that when he retires in three years he will sell his shares at book value. He voiced no objection when the trial court asked if he would be willing to postpone division of the community interest in the practice until he retired, at which time the sale price of the shares could be determined exactly. The trial court ruled that under the evidence presented, the shareholders’ agreement was controlling on the valuation issue, because the court could look only at whether the shareholders are disregarding the agreement. The trial court made no award for the intangible assets of the accounting practice. Wife’s expert had valued the community’s share of those assets at between $109,200 and $171,096.

1. Wife’s Appeal

(a) Valuation of Goodwill: The trial court found: “16. Cox-Keefer & Company has a shareholder’s [sic] agreement which values goodwill at nothing and restricts the sale price of any shareholder’s interest to book value at the end of the preceding fiscal year.” Based on that finding, the trial court concluded that the value of husband’s share in Cox-Keefer & Company is fixed by the terms of the shareholders’ agreement. In so concluding, the trial court apparently read Hertz as holding that in all cases where there is a shareholders’ agreement valuing goodwill, the non-shareholder spouse is bound to the same terms of the agreement which affect the shareholder spouse. We do not read Hertz that narrowly.

In Hertz, the husband was a shareholder in a law firm of over fifty persons that had been in existence for thirteen years before he became employed and for seventeen years before the husband became a shareholder in the firm. In its shareholders’ agreement, the law firm specifically valued goodwill and other intangible assets at $1.00. Throughout the existence of the law firm, there had been over 150 purchases and sales of its stock upon a cash accrual basis with no amount paid or reduced for goodwill. In Hertz no community assets were used to purchase the law firm’s goodwill.

The supreme court in Hertz found that the district court erred in disregarding the stock restriction agreement, holding that “if the professional spouse’s stock in the corporation is subject to restrictive stock agreements and if the value of goodwill is fixed by those shareholder agreements, then absent evidence that the stockholders have disregarded this amount, the district court cannot determine a ‘goodwill’ value above that amount.” Id. at 326, 657 P.2d at 1175. The question we must decide is whether the Hertz rule applies to all situations in which there is a stock restriction agreement.

While we recognize that Hertz can be read, as the trial court in this case read it, to apply to all situations where there is a shareholders’ valuation agreement that restricts the value of goodwill, we believe the correct reading is not so restrictive. In its discussion, the Hertz court recognized that goodwill in a professional association may exist and represent an item of community property that should be divided at the time of dissolution of the marriage. See Hurley v. Hurley, 94 N.M. 641, 615 P.2d 256 (1980). The supreme court in Hertz distinguished Hurley because in that case there was no stock subscription agreement that valued goodwill. In Hertz there was. Nevertheless, the supreme court, in discussing the factors to be considered when determining professional goodwill, said that each case must be determined on its own particular facts and circumstances. 99 N.M. at 326, 657 P.2d at 1175.

When we examine the facts and circumstances of the case before us in light of Hertz, we find sufficient distinctions to make the Hertz rule inapplicable to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
775 P.2d 1315, 108 N.M. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-cox-nmctapp-1989.