Dawn M. Petit v. Terrance A. Petit

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedApril 21, 2020
Docket2018AP002107
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Dawn M. Petit v. Terrance A. Petit, (Wis. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. April 21, 2020 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2018AP2107 Cir. Ct. No. 2016FA16

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT III

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF:

DAWN M. PETIT,

PETITIONER-APPELLANT,

V.

TERRANCE A. PETIT,

RESPONDENT-RESPONDENT.

APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Sawyer County: JOHN M. YACKEL, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Stark, P.J., Hruz and Seidl, JJ.

¶1 HRUZ, J. Dawn Petit appeals a divorce judgment dividing the marital estate, establishing monthly child support payments from her former No. 2018AP2107

husband, Terrance Petit, and ordering monthly maintenance to Dawn. 1 Dawn argues the circuit court erred when calculating the amounts of child support and monthly maintenance by using what it found to be Terrance’s earning capacity rather than crediting evidence regarding Terrance’s income in prior years, before a market downturn in his industry. She also argues the court erroneously exercised its discretion when it determined which items comprised the marital estate and the value of certain items, and when it ordered an unequal division of the marital estate that slightly favored Terrance. We reject these arguments and affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 The parties were married in 2008 and have one minor child. Dawn and Terrance had each been married and divorced before; Dawn had a daughter from her previous marriage and Terrance had two children from his. The divorce petition was filed on March 9, 2016, but the parties had been separated since October 13, 2015, when Dawn moved out of the marital residence.

¶3 The case proceeded to a contested divorce hearing, which was held on June 19, 2017. The parties agreed to be divorced as of the date of the final hearing, but to continue the existing temporary order pending the filing of additional briefs to summarize the parties’ respective positions on the contested issues. The contested issues included child support, maintenance and property division.

1 For ease of reading, we refer to the parties by their given names for the remainder of this opinion.

2 No. 2018AP2107

¶4 Dawn testified that she had a high school education and that she had been employed in various administrative and secretarial jobs during her life. Terrance founded and was the sole member of TP Timber, LLC, which was a logging business. Dawn cared for the children and, for a time during the marriage, worked for TP Timber as an office manager. At the time of the final hearing, Dawn was unemployed, apparently due to various medical conditions.

¶5 Terrance testified that his income had substantially decreased starting in February 2016 due to a downturn in the logging industry. As a result, Terrance testified he intended to liquidate his business assets and pursue work as a supervisor or machine operator for one of the larger logging operators.2 Terrance submitted a financial disclosure form indicating his current monthly income from his employment with TP Timber was $4,000. Given his plans to liquidate, Terrance proposed that his income be set at the annual average earnings for an experienced first-line logging supervisor ($58,150) or for a logging equipment operator ($40,690).

¶6 Dawn challenged this proposal based on the parties’ tax returns from 2013 through 2015, asserting that the amount of Terrance’s income should be based on TP Timber’s adjusted 2015 cash flow. That figure demonstrated the total cash available to the parties and was calculated by adding the corporate taxable income, the wages drawn by the parties, and some depreciation and interest income. Using this calculation, Dawn asserted Terrance’s income for purposes of child support and maintenance was $235,455 per year, or $19,621.25 per month. The parties’ 2016 tax return had not been completed at the time of the trial in

2 Wage surveys for these jobs were received into evidence.

3 No. 2018AP2107

June 2017.3 In October 2017, Terrance filed a motion to supplement the record with the 2016 tax returns; Dawn opposed this motion, and the circuit court ultimately denied it.

¶7 The parties also disagreed about the value of key pieces of the parties’ personal property. Dawn asserted the net value of the marital estate was approximately $932,026, while Terrance proposed a net value of $460,700. The parties disagreed about the divisibility and value of certain assets identified in a personal property appraisal, the completeness of that appraisal, the value of bank accounts owned by TP Timber, and the value of the parties’ real property holdings. Dawn proposed an equal division based upon her valuation of the property, but Terrance, taking into account his valuation, proposed a slight deviation in his favor (52.5% to 47.5%).

¶8 The circuit court held a decision hearing on March 23, 2018. The court rejected Terrance’s assertion that Dawn’s earning capacity should be set at a paralegal’s wage (approximately $55,000), finding that type of work was not immediately available to her due to her medical conditions, but she might eventually be able to achieve such employment. The court set Dawn’s earning capacity at the minimum wage, calculated based upon a thirty-two-hour work week.4 As for Terrance, the court credited his testimony that his once-lucrative business had experienced a downturn that threatened its existence. Accordingly, the court set Terrance’s earning capacity at $58,000, that of a first-line logging

3 Terrance testified he typically filed for an extension each year and the business taxes were completed in October. 4 Dawn’s brief had suggested she could reasonably work twenty-five hours per week at the minimum wage.

4 No. 2018AP2107

supervisor in northwestern Wisconsin. The court instructed the parties to calculate child support based upon those earning capacities.5

¶9 The circuit court then moved on to property division. It noted the presumption of equal division and the statutory factors to consider when dividing the property, but it observed the parties had not reached an agreement on what should be included in the marital estate. The court specifically found Terrance credible and accepted his testimony regarding certain items that had been gifted to him, and it agreed with Terrance’s edits to the personal property appraisal.

¶10 After determining what property was subject to division, the circuit court noted the parties had “substantially more assets than the typical Northwoods divorcing couples but they have immensely more debt.” Under either proposal, Terrance would be assuming the parties’ $687,453 debt. The court concluded that Terrance’s proposal was “an appropriate distribution or division of the property.” Under that proposal, Terrance would make a $180,000 equalization payment to Dawn, and she would keep the parties’ Lincoln Navigator, which was worth approximately $26,000. The court found the slight deviation from an equal division warranted “because of the fact that he’s undertaking a substantial amount of debt and it’s still not that far off from a 50/50 division.” The court also took into account the tax consequences that would arise in relation to the sale of the business assets.

5 The circuit court subsequently entered an order setting the amount of child support Terrance would pay at $493 per month.

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Bluebook (online)
Dawn M. Petit v. Terrance A. Petit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-m-petit-v-terrance-a-petit-wisctapp-2020.