Dawn Calabrese v. Kelly Dwyer

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 2021
DocketED108057
StatusPublished

This text of Dawn Calabrese v. Kelly Dwyer (Dawn Calabrese v. Kelly Dwyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawn Calabrese v. Kelly Dwyer, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FOUR

DAWN CALABRESE, ) No. ED108057 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of St. Charles County vs. ) ) Hon. Rebeca M. Navarro-McKelvey KELLY DWYER, ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: January 5, 2021

Kelly Dwyer appeals the trial court’s Judgment of Partition, Child Custody and Child

Support. This case arises out of a dispute between Dwyer and her former partner, Dawn Calabrese.

Dwyer contends the trial court erred in (1) partitioning the proceeds of real estate by awarding

each party an equal share, (2) ordering Dwyer to reimburse Calabrese for certain expenses relating

to the real estate, (3) requiring Dwyer to pay all of the partition-related attorney fees, (4) not

awarding Dwyer any non-partition-related attorney fees, and (5) ordering Dwyer to pay all of the

guardian ad litem (“GAL”) fees. The judgment is affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.

Factual and Procedural Background

Dwyer and Calabrese began their relationship in 1998 and shortly thereafter began living

together in Dwyer’s home (the “Diamond Pointe property”), which she had purchased earlier that

year. They soon consolidated their finances by opening joint checking and joint savings accounts.

Calabrese testified that she deposited all of her paychecks, bonuses, tax refunds, and other funds into a joint account. Dwyer likewise put all of her wages into the joint checking account with the

exception of “$200.00 per paycheck per month” that she deposited into their joint savings account.

Dwyer frequently transferred money between the joint accounts. The parties used the funds in the

joint checking account to pay the mortgage, car payments, school loans, and other living expenses.

The parties had a commitment ceremony in 2008 and, three years later, Calabrese gave

birth to two children whom Dwyer adopted. In 2011, Dwyer added Calabrese to the deed of the

Diamond Pointe property, although Calabrese had been contributing to the mortgage since shortly

after she had moved into the house.

Dwyer deposited stock disbursements into the joint savings account. According to Dwyer,

the total amount she deposited was approximately $200,000 and she withdrew $50,000 to repay

loans she used to make a reinvestment requirement with her employer. Calabrese testified she

deposited money from school cost-of-living loans in the amount of approximately $110,000 into

one of the joint accounts from 2002 through 2004.

The parties sold the Diamond Pointe property in 2013 and deposited the $36,000 in net

proceeds into one of the joint accounts. Dwyer and Calabrese jointly purchased their new home

(the “Prairie Lake property”) in June 2013 and both parties were liable on the mortgage. The down

payment and earnest money used for the purchase came from one of the joint accounts. They

refinanced the Prairie Lake property in 2016 in order to obtain an interest-only loan, which required

them to pay an additional $31,718.55 toward the property. Calabrese wrote the check for that

amount out of the joint savings account. Dwyer testified that $70,777 was paid out of the joint

accounts for various improvements to the Prairie Lake property, including widening the driveway

and adding fencing, a deck and a treehouse.

2 The parties’ relationship ended in October 2017, but they both lived in the house until the

following summer. On February 1, 2018, Calabrese filed her Petition to Determine Child Custody

and Support in which she requested joint legal and joint physical custody of the children. Dwyer

filed a counter-petition seeking the same. Calabrese also filed a separate Petition for Partition of

Real and Personal Property, and the trial court consolidated the actions. The trial court appointed

a GAL at Dwyer’s request and ordered her to make an initial payment of $500 to the GAL. The

trial court later ordered each party to pay an additional $750 in GAL fees, subject to reallocation

at trial.

On July 16, 2018, the trial court entered a consent order in which the parties agreed to sell

the Prairie Lake property and stipulated that Calabrese would pay the mortgage beginning August

1, 2018. Dwyer moved out of the Prairie Lake property on July 31, 2018, while Calabrese

remained living there. The parties sold the Prairie Lake property in February 2019 and agreed to

place the proceeds of $79,569.01 into escrow for the trial court to partition.

At trial, both parties asked for joint legal and joint physical custody of the children. There

was testimony about behavioral issues with one of the children, but neither party ever alleged abuse

or neglect. In its judgment, the trial court ordered Dwyer to be responsible for all of the GAL fees,

which required her to repay $750 to Calabrese and to pay an additional $2,210 to the GAL.

With regard to the partition of the $79,569.01 in proceeds from the sale of the Prairie Lake

property, Calabrese asked the trial court for an equal division while Dwyer requested the full

amount. Dwyer showed the trial court a spreadsheet “tracing” her deposits of funds into the joint

accounts and purportedly showing the use of those funds to pay specific expenses. She claimed

that although the funds paid as part of the refinancing and the money spent on improvements came

from the joint accounts, the sources of those expenditures were her stock disbursements and her

3 deposits of “$200.00 per paycheck per month.” Dwyer also asserted the down payment and earnest

money used for the purchase of the Prairie Lake property came from her regular deposits out of

her paycheck and “her portion” of the proceeds from the sale of the Diamond Pointe property.

Additionally, Dwyer argued she should be credited for expenses that Calabrese failed to pay

relating to the property, which reduced the equity to be divided between the parties.

The trial court awarded each party an equal share of the proceeds of the Prairie Lake

property, noting that Dwyer failed to present business records affidavits to support her supposed

tracing. The trial court found that “in recent years, [Calabrese’s] contribution to the joint accounts

by way of income has greatly exceeded [Dwyer’s].” The trial court also noted that “[n]either party

presented any evidence that different expenses were designated to come from one party’s funds or

the other.”

Calabrese testified and presented documentation regarding expenses she had incurred in

preparing the house to be sold, and the trial court ordered Dwyer to reimburse Calabrese $107.66

for half of those expenses.

The trial court also considered the parties’ dispute as to the payment of property taxes for

the Prairie Lake property. Calabrese paid half of the 2017 taxes out of her separate funds after the

parties separated. Dwyer claimed that she too had paid her share out of her own separate funds,

but also admitted that between April and October 2017 she had withdrawn a total of $22,400 from

one of the parties’ joint accounts without notifying Calabrese, who continued to deposit her

paychecks into the account during that period. The trial court found that Dwyer had deposited

that money into a separate account, which she used to pay her half of the 2017 property taxes. In

light of these withdrawals, the trial court ordered Dwyer to pay Calabrese $3,112.69 representing

half of the 2017 real estate taxes.

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Dawn Calabrese v. Kelly Dwyer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-calabrese-v-kelly-dwyer-moctapp-2021.