Deatherage v. Wallace (In Re Deatherage)

55 B.R. 268, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 4905
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedNovember 25, 1985
DocketBankruptcy No. 3-84-01809, Adv. Nos. 3-85-0141, 3-85-0603
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 B.R. 268 (Deatherage v. Wallace (In Re Deatherage)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deatherage v. Wallace (In Re Deatherage), 55 B.R. 268, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 4905 (Tenn. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

CLIVE W. BARE, Bankruptcy Judge.

At issue is whether the debtor’s obligation pursuant to an irreconcilable differences divorce decree to pay his former wife $96,000.00 in 121 consecutive monthly installments comes within the Bankruptcy *269 Code’s § 523(a)(5) 1 exception to discharge for alimony, maintenance, or support.

I

After twenty-two years of marriage the defendant wife 2 and debtor husband separated in March 1982 and subsequently obtained an irreconcilable differences divorce on December 14, 1982. The parties had two children, a son who had reached the age of majority at the time of the divorce and a daughter who was fifteen years old at the time of the divorce. Defendant retained custody of the minor daughter after the parties’ separation and divorce. Defendant worked during the marriage. At the time of the divorce she was employed as a secretary at a local department store. According to her 1982 tax return she earned $10,914.00 in 1982. She is currently employed at the same job.

At the time of the divorce the debtor had a bachelor’s degree in mining engineering and a master’s degree in engineering mechanics. During the marriage he worked as a structural engineer, a senior structural engineer, and a project manager, eventually earning approximately $24,000.00 a year. At the time of the divorce he had become the president and a 30% shareholder in V.L. Nicholson Company, a company that has since filed bankruptcy. He owned stock in an entity known as Taurus Construction, Inc. and in an architectural consulting firm, J.H. Deatherage Company. He also held an interest in a partnership owning apartments in Oneida, Tennessee. In a financial statement prepared March 1, 1982, (Ex. 4) the debtor valued his non-marketable securities in V.L. Nicholson Company and Taurus Construction, Inc. at $102,849.00 and $26,000.00 respectively. He valued his equity interest in the real estate at $35,-640.00. He valued the parties’ residence at $80,000.00, subject to a $24,300.00 first mortgage. The statement indicated various liabilities amounting to $99,208.00.

The evidence regarding the debtor’s 1982 income is unclear. Two conflicting tax returns were submitted as exhibits. Exhibit 6 showed an adjusted gross income of $72,-286.00. Exhibit 3 showed an adjusted gross income of $49,534.00 (essentially as a result of the removal of certain capital gains and rent and partnership income items appearing on Ex. 6). However, the debtor testified that he was “quite positive” that the lower return was the one actually submitted to the I.R.S.

The parties’ final judgment of divorce incorporated an agreement entitled “Alimony, Custody, Support, And Property Settlement Agreement.” This agreement provided that defendant would receive the following: (1) $2,000.00 in cash within 90 days of the agreement, (2) $96,000.00 “alimony in solido” payable in 121 monthly installments of $800.00 for 108 months and then $584.62 for the remaining 13 months, (3) the parties’ residence (subject to the $24,300.00 first mortgage), (4) the household furniture, fixtures and contents, (5) a 1978 Oldsmobile, (6) “periodic alimony” of $1.00 per year (or alternatively, at the debtor’s option, a disability insurance policy insuring defendant). Further, the debtor was to hold defendant harmless from all pre-sepa-ration debts and from any debts related to the debtor’s business, whenever incurred.

*270 Under paragraph 6 of the agreement the debtor was to pay the minor daughter’s high school tuition and school-related expenses “which sum ... shall be deemed as child support.” The debtor was also to maintain hospitalization insurance for the daughter and to be responsible for her “major medical expenses.” Ex. 2, 1112. Paragraph 11 provided that the defendant would, “if the alimony in solido award ... is paid to her, be obligated to pay for all other child support obligations of the minor daughter of the parties, excepting major medical expense and the high school educational cost provided for above.”

With regard specifically to the $96,000.00 “alimony in solido” award, the debtor was to reimburse defendant for the amount of income tax she incurred as a result of the inclusion of the monthly installments in her taxable income. Paragraph 2. B. provided further:

The above provisions relating to alimony in solido (including Federal Income Taxes to Wife by reason thereof) have been negotiated and contractually agreed upon in consideration of and with knowledge by both parties that valuable business and property interest [sic] have been surrendered to Husband by this agreement. Accordingly, it is agreed that the alimony in solido award shall not be subject to adjustment or modification due to any change of circumstances. Said alimony in solido award and judgment shall survive remarriage of Wife, should same occur. The parties agree that the only event that shall satisfy the alimony in solido (including Federal Income Taxes as herein provided) and judgment shall be payment in full thereof by Husband directly or on his behalf.

The agreement required the debtor to maintain as security for the alimony in solido award a $100,000.00 life insurance policy on his life with defendant as primary beneficiary.

Not surprisingly, the parties characterize the negotiations leading up to the agreement quite differently. Defendant testified that she discussed her living expenses with the debtor. She submitted into evidence (Ex. 8) an expense summary purporting to be a reconstruction similar to a budget she prepared at the time she and the debtor were negotiating the agreement. According to defendant, she concluded she needed approximately $1,000.00 per month in addition to her income as a secretary. She indicated she discussed this figure with the debtor and told the debtor she would be willing to accept a lump sum figure. She also said she discussed a need for child support and that the parties, after consulting attorneys, decided to designate the payments as alimony for tax reasons. She maintained essentially that her understanding was that she would get the house and a car and $800.00 a month to live on and that he would get “everything else.” As defendant put it, “I didn’t know what all he had — I knew what I needed to live on.”

The debtor, on the other hand, described the negotiations as an effort to “split up” the parties’ net worth — the defendant to receive the house, the car and roughly $100,000.00, he to keep the business interests. The debtor testified that defendant’s initial demand was for $100,000.00 in a lump sum and that the monthly installments were agreed upon because he could not obtain such an amount of cash without liquidating his business interests. The debtor testified that there was little discussion (“almost none”) regarding child support and that it was the parties’ understanding that he would provide insurance, schooling, and medical expenses while defendant would provide food, shelter, and clothing. The debtor denied any intent that the payments were intended as support or anything other than a division of property.

However, in response to a Petition for Contempt and Modification (Ex. 10) filed by defendant in state court, the debtor answered as follows:

Defendant [i.e.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 B.R. 268, 1985 Bankr. LEXIS 4905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deatherage-v-wallace-in-re-deatherage-tneb-1985.