Cynthia Johnson Dean v. Jeffrey Scott Dean;

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 22, 2020
DocketNO. 2019-CA-00152-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Cynthia Johnson Dean v. Jeffrey Scott Dean; (Cynthia Johnson Dean v. Jeffrey Scott Dean;) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cynthia Johnson Dean v. Jeffrey Scott Dean;, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CA-00152-COA

CYNTHIA JOHNSON DEAN APPELLANT

v.

JEFFREY SCOTT DEAN APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/19/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. EDWARD C. FENWICK COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: ATTALA COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DAVID BRIDGES BRIDGET R. TODD ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: LUTHER PUTNAM CRULL JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 09/22/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., McDONALD AND McCARTY, JJ.

BARNES, C.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Cynthia Dean appeals from the judgment of the Attala County Chancery Court, which

granted the parties a divorce, determined child custody and visitation, and distributed the

marital property. Cynthia only challenges the property distribution. She claims error

regarding the chancery court’s using a four-year-old buy/sell agreement to value Jeffrey’s

business; finding one-half of the business to be separate property; not explicitly

characterizing a $151,000 parcel of property as marital or separate property; finding thirty-

seven of forty homestead acres to be separate property; and dividing the marital estate on a

sixty-five percent/thirty-five percent basis in favor of Jeffrey. We find no error with these

determinations and affirm the chancery court’s judgment. STATEMENT OF FACTS

¶2. Cynthia and Jeffrey married in March 1999 in Attala County, Mississippi. Two

children were born of the marriage—a son and a daughter, who at the time of trial were

nineteen and fourteen years old, respectively. The parties separated in May 2017. Jeffrey

filed for a divorce in June 2017. The parties agreed to a divorce based on irreconcilable

differences and to Jeffrey’s having physical custody of the children. Issues submitted to the

chancery court were legal custody of the children, visitation, and property distribution. This

appeal concerns only property distribution.

Employment

¶3. When the couple married, Cynthia worked as a registered nurse. After the birth of

her son, Cynthia went back to school and became a nurse practitioner in 2001 while working

part-time at a medical clinic. She received a full scholarship for her education. From 2006

until 2011, Cynthia operated a profitable healthcare business for under-served children in

rural areas, partnering with local schools. Jeffrey contributed $15,000 to start this business,

which became successful. In 2011, Cynthia also decided to pursue a doctorate degree in

nursing, which she completed in one year. At the same time, she worked part-time at the

clinic earning $2,000–$2,500 per month as well as managing her healthcare business.

Jeffrey contributed $20,000 for her doctorate degree. When Cynthia was in school

furthering her career, Jeffrey paid all of the household and children’s expenses. Jeffrey

testified Cynthia held numerous jobs in nursing during their marriage, including

“moonlighting” at an emergency room on the weekends.

2 ¶4. Around 1987, Jeffrey began working in the heating and cooling business with his

uncle Jerry McCrory. They incorporated Century Heating and Cooling (Century) in 1989

and shared equal ownership. In 2014, Jeffrey purchased McCrory’s interest in the business

and became the sole owner.

Marital Problems and Cynthia’s Addiction

¶5. Cynthia testified that within three months of the wedding, her marriage was

“crumbling.” Returning to nursing school was a distraction from her unhappy marriage.

Jeffrey did not support her working, and Cynthia accused Jeffrey of controlling the finances

and denying her funds if she “disobeyed him.” Additionally, Cynthia claimed Jeffrey was

physically and emotionally abusive to her for years, which he denied. Jeffrey did agree that

the marriage was volatile.

¶6. Cynthia testified that around 2011 or 2012, in order to cope with her increasingly

hostile relationship with Jeffrey, she began abusing the sleep medication Ambien. For

approximately five years, Cynthia had an “active addiction,” which the chancery court found

negatively affected her relationship with Jeffrey and the children. In 2016, Cynthia pleaded

guilty to two felony charges in Rankin County, Mississippi, for taking medicine from a

medical facility and for calling in a false prescription. She was fined and placed in a pretrial

diversion program. In another incident, Cynthia was arrested and charged with driving

under the influence of Ambien, but the charge was dismissed. From 2015 through 2017, she

attended one in-patient and at least two out-patient drug treatment centers, and her nursing

license was suspended. At the time of trial in September 2018, Cynthia claimed she was

3 sober. Her nursing license was no longer suspended.

¶7. Jeffrey also entered evidence at trial showing Cynthia had wrecked three vehicles

over the course of their marriage. The first accident occurred in 2014 when Cynthia ran into

a tree. The second accident occurred in 2015 when Cynthia hit another vehicle head on.

She attributed the accident to “sleep driving” on Ambien. The third accident occurred in

May 2018 at a large interchange in Madison, Mississippi. It also involved other vehicles and

left Cynthia severely injured. She attributed the accident to heavy rain. At trial, she was in

a wheelchair, unable to work, and had undergone six surgeries due to this third accident.

¶8. At trial, Jeffrey sought to prove Cynthia had had at least two extra-marital affairs.

He entered into evidence romantic social-media messages from August 2016 between

Cynthia and a former high-school boyfriend. Then in 2017, Jeffrey hired a private

investigator to surveil Cynthia. The investigator testified that in early November 2017,

Cynthia was observed visiting a man for a few hours at his home in Corinth, Mississippi.

Cynthia testified she had met the man, who was an insurance agent, on social media, and

they had become friends. She testified she was in Corinth to sign paperwork for insurance

he had sold her. The two were also observed meeting again at a hotel in Tupelo,

Mississippi, over Thanksgiving weekend. Cynthia denied she was having an affair with him

or anyone else.

¶9. Cynthia entered photographic evidence at trial to show Jeffrey physically abused her.

She testified he beat her “many times” and gave her six black eyes, two broken ribs, and a

broken finger. Jeffrey denied causing these injuries.

4 Century Heating and Cooling Inc.

¶10. In 1987 or 1988, before Jeffrey married Cynthia, Jeffrey began working with his

uncle in a heating and cooling business. In 1989, Jeffrey and McCrory incorporated

Century. In 1993, Jeffrey’s grandparents conveyed the land and old garage where the

business is located to Jeffrey and his uncle. When Jeffrey and Cynthia married in March

1999, Jeffrey owned fifty-percent of the business. On September 9, 2014, Jeffrey became

the sole owner of Century when he bought out his uncle’s ownership interest. The buy/sell

agreement (Agreement) states Jeffrey paid McCrory $312,000 in cash for his interest in the

business’s building and land. For the sale, a third-party was not hired to appraise the

business, but Jeffrey’s testimony showed the amount was based on how much McCrory

needed for expenses until he received Social Security income in three years.

The Marital Home

¶11.

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