Dennison v. Hammond (In Re Hammond)

236 B.R. 751, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1876
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah
DecidedDecember 17, 1998
Docket19-20455
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 236 B.R. 751 (Dennison v. Hammond (In Re Hammond)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennison v. Hammond (In Re Hammond), 236 B.R. 751, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1876 (Utah 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

JUDITH A. BOULDEN, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding seeks a determination of whether a debt incurred by the debtor incident to a divorce proceeding is nondischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(5) or 523(a)(15). 1 The Court has carefully weighed the evidence presented during two days of trial, judged the credibility of the witnesses, considered the briefs and arguments of counsel, and has made an independent review of applicable statutes and case law. Based thereon, the Court determines that the debt owed by the debtor to the plaintiff is dischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5), but non-dischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(15). The Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are set forth herein pursuant to Fed.P.Bankr.P. 7052(a).

FACTS

Don L. Hammond, the Debtor herein (Debtor), and Berdene D. Dennison (Den-nison) were married on September 3, 1965, and have children born during the marriage. The parties acquired two major assets during their marriage: a seven bedroom marital home with an equity of approximately $20,000, and a contract receivable referred to as the HHEICO Contract. The HHEICO Contract resulted from the sale of an apartment building from which the parties were to be paid $274,993. The sale provided a stream of payments to the parties of $2,577 per month, subject to debt service of $1,800, leaving a positive cash flow of $777 per month. The division of this stream of payments between the parties was pivotal in the divorce negotiations, and its characterization is the basis of the dispute in this proceeding.

In 1989, approximately twenty-four (24) years after their marriage, Dennison filed a complaint for divorce. Although the terms of the divorce were contested and negotiated for over a year, the decree divorcing the parties was the product of settlement negotiations between the parties that occurred on the day the divorce proceeding was scheduled for trial. The parties did not participate directly in the settlement negotiations, but instead reviewed the suggestions and proposals advanced by their attorneys. The Decree of Divorce, which incorporated the parties’ stipulation, was entered by the divorce court on May 21, 1991 (Decree).

1. The Decree

The Decree contains twenty (20) numbered paragraphs that are not separated into categories, and are not delineated by sub-headings such as “Property Settlement” or “Maintenance or Support.” The Decree awarded custody of the parties’ *755 two (2) minor children to Dennison, and ordered the Debtor to pay $163.52 per month per child as support, for a total of $327.04 per month. The Decree also ordered that the marital home was to be sold (in part because the parties could not afford to maintain the debt service post-divorce) and the equity divided equally between the parties. Until the marital home was sold, Dennison had the right to reside in the home, and each party was ordered to pay one-half (/&) of the total monthly mortgage payments of $987.00, or $493.50. Although the Decree ordered the Debtor to pay one-half flé) of Dennison’s attorney fees as well as his own, there was no provision for an award of fees should either of the parties find it necessary to enforce the Decree.

The two paragraphs 2 in the Decree that are at issue in this adversary proceeding are paragraph six (6) in which Dennison waived her right to alimony, and paragraph seven (7) which provided that the $777 per month net payment the Debtor received from the HHEICO Contract would be divided with the Debtor forwarding sixty-five percent (65%) or $505.05 per month to Dennison (the HHEICO Payments), and the Debtor retaining the remaining thirty-five percent (35%) or $271.95. 3 Although the Decree is silent as to the duration of the HHEICO Contract, Dennison understood that the HHEICO Payments would continue for approximately twenty (20) years. There is no language in the Decree that the HHEICO Payments cease upon Dennison’s death, remarriage or cohabitation. The Decree does not indicate the origination of the HHEICO Contract, or whether the HHEICO Payments are a property settlement or support award.

A written settlement offer made by the Debtor’s attorney to Dennison’s attorney prior to the Decree on October 11, 1990 (Settlement Offer) provides some explanation of the bargaining process and, tangentially, the intent of the parties relative to the HHEICO Payments. In the Settlement Offer, the Debtor offered Dennison a total monthly child support payment of $606, 4 an alimony payment of $235 per month, and thirty percent (30%) of the net HHEICO Contract proceeds based on the Debtor’s belief that this was Dennison’s *756 equity interest therein. 5 The alimony payment was to be reduced as soon as the marital home was sold, with the provision that Dennison would be required to reinvest all of her one-half Qk) of the proceeds in a smaller residence with a purchase price of not more than $65,000. The Debt- or’s alimony payment would then be reduced to a sum equal to sixty percent (60%) of the difference between the monthly mortgage payments on the marital home ($987) and the monthly mortgage payments on the replacement home. Depending upon the amount of the one-half ( /é) equity received by Dennison after the sale of the marital home and the resulting new mortgage payment, the effect could have been to eliminate the alimony payment altogether. 6

After the date of the Settlement Offer, the Debtor lost his employment because, he testified, of his poor work performance resulting from the stress of the divorce. Apparently as a result of his decrease in income and the parties subsequent negotiations, the Decree differed substantially from the Settlement Offer. Child support for two minor children still living at home was reduced from $606 to $327, alimony *757 was eliminated, Dennison could do as she wished with her one-half Qh) of the equity in the marital home, and instead of the Debtor receiving seventy percent (70%) of the HHEICO Contract income or $543, he was ordered to pay sixty-five percent (65%) or $505 to Dennison and he would receive only thirty-five percent (35%) or $271.

2. The HHEICO Payments

The Debtor generally made the HHEI-CO Payments to Dennison from approximately May of 1991 to November or December of 1992. On November 2, 1992, shortly after Dennison remarried in October of 1992, the Debtor assigned the HHEICO Contract to a third party in exchange for a loan of $25,000 he wished to use for a gold mine investment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 B.R. 751, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 1876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennison-v-hammond-in-re-hammond-utb-1998.