Donna Lohrke, f/k/a Donna Sorrels v. Christopher H. Sorrels

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2026
DocketS19024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Donna Lohrke, f/k/a Donna Sorrels v. Christopher H. Sorrels (Donna Lohrke, f/k/a Donna Sorrels v. Christopher H. Sorrels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donna Lohrke, f/k/a Donna Sorrels v. Christopher H. Sorrels, (Ala. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

DONNA LOHRKE, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-19024 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3KN-22-00202 CI v. ) ) MEMORANDUM OPINION CHRISTOPHER SORRELS, ) AND JUDGMENT* ) Appellee. ) No. 2128 – January 14, 2026 )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Kenai, Jason M. Gist, Judge.

Appearances: Carl Bauman, Law Offices of Carl Bauman, Soldotna, for Appellant. Shana Theiler, Walton, Theiler & Winegarden, LLC, Kenai, for Appellee.

Before: Carney, Chief Justice, and Borghesan, Henderson, Pate, and Oravec, Justices.

INTRODUCTION This appeal concerns division of property after divorce. The former wife challenges numerous rulings related to the classification, valuation, and division of property, as well as the court’s decision to award her some but not all of her claimed attorney’s fees. Seeing no error or abuse of discretion in the superior court’s rulings, we affirm its judgment.

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Donna Lohrke and Christopher Sorrels met in July 2012. They dated on and off until they married in July 2018. At the time of marriage, both Lohrke and Sorrels were 52 years old. When they met in 2012, Lohrke worked at a feed store and Sorrels at an oil company. Since then, Lohrke has held a number of jobs, including working at a grocery store and a veterinary clinic. Sorrels continued to work at the oil company until he retired in 2020. He received a severance package upon retirement. He then returned to work as an instrument technician for a different company in 2022. Lohrke and Sorrels each owned a separate residence prior to marriage. Shortly after their marriage, Lohrke and Sorrels purchased their first joint property. The couple split time between this home and Lohrke’s premarital home. They opened a business account to manage income from renting the premarital properties. Lohrke and Sorrels separated in November 2021. Lohrke filed for divorce a few months later. B. Proceedings A trial was held in 2023 over the division of marital assets. Lohrke and Sorrels testified regarding various items of property and the duration and nature of their relationship. In its property division order, the court generally treated all property acquired prior to marriage as the separate property of the person that acquired it. It found that neither party had expected to acquire an ownership interest in the other’s premarital property. The court found that the parties did not significantly commingle funds prior to marriage. It did, however, find that Lohrke’s premarital home had been transmuted into marital property.

-2- 2128 The court then considered how to divide the marital property. It explained that rescission1 would be inappropriate. Although the court characterized the parties’ marriage as very short, it reasoned that the property acquired during the marriage should be treated as marital and equitably divided. The court accordingly looked to the parties’ financial situations at the time of marriage: Sorrels earned significantly more money than Lohrke but had entered the marriage with much of his wealth. The court found that because Sorrels was “very well established in his career by July of 2018,” “[t]his was not a long marriage where one party significantly enhanced their earning capacity over the course of, and through the efforts of, the marriage.” The court found that Lohrke’s earning capacities before and after marriage were “nearly identical,” based on the jobs she held and her lack of a college degree. The court also noted that Sorrels had used his separate money to pay Lohrke’s premarital debts, that rent generated from Sorrels’s premarital residence went directly to pay off the mortgage on Lohrke’s premarital residence, and that Lohrke had removed $18,000 from one of Sorrels’s bank accounts just before the parties separated. Balancing these facts against Sorrels’s significantly greater earning potential, the court divided the marital estate (which it valued at roughly $293,000) 60/40 in favor of Lohrke. Lohrke moved for an award of attorney’s fees totaling $9,072. The superior court found that Sorrels was “in a far superior economic position” and therefore should be required to pay Lohrke’s attorney’s fees. But it also found that Lohrke “spent an inordinate amount of time litigating property items that [Sorrels] owned before marriage,” even though it was clear that such property was his separate property to

1 The goal under a rescission theory of property division is to “plac[e] the parties in, as closely as possible, the financial position they would have occupied had no marriage taken place.” Rose v. Rose, 755 P.2d 1121, 1125 (Alaska 1988). Rescission is appropriate when parties have not been married for a long duration and assets have not been commingled. Dunn v. Dunn, 952 P.2d 268, 273 (Alaska 1998).

-3- 2128 which she had no valid claim. The court explained that Lohrke’s “extensive litigation on these issues prolonged the litigation unnecessarily.” Accordingly, it awarded Lohrke only $5,000 of the $9,072 she had requested. Lohrke appeals. DISCUSSION A. Lohrke Fails To Show Factual Or Legal Errors In The Superior Court’s Property Division. “There are three basic steps in the equitable division of marital assets: (1) deciding what specific property is available for distribution, (2) finding the value of the property, and (3) dividing the property equitably.”2 We analyze the three steps for the equitable division of marital property below. 1. Lohrke’s property classification arguments are inadequately briefed and therefore waived. The first step in marital property division requires the superior court to characterize the parties’ property as marital or separate.3 Generally speaking, only marital property is subject to division.4 Property that a person acquires before marriage is generally treated as that person’s separate property and is not subject to division.5 Lohrke argues for a share of proceeds from the sale of Sorrels’s premarital home and a share of a cabin he acquired prior to marriage. However, these arguments are contrary to her trial testimony, where she disclaimed any interest in the sale proceeds from Sorrels’s premarital residence and asserted that she chose not to have her name placed on the title to the cabin because she and Sorrels were not married. And her

2 Stanhope v. Stanhope, 306 P.3d 1282, 1286 (Alaska 2013) (quoting Beals v. Beals, 303 P.3d 453, 458-59 (Alaska 2013)). 3 Id. 4 Schmitz v. Schmitz, 88 P.3d 1116, 1124 (Alaska 2004). 5 Id. There are exceptions, such as when separate property is transmuted into marital property, or when the value of separate property increases due to active marital contributions (the doctrine of “active appreciation”). Id. at 1125.

-4- 2128 appellate brief does not apply the rules of transmutation or active appreciation — the doctrines by which separate property may become marital — to any particular properties. Consequently, these arguments are waived due to inadequate briefing.6 2. The superior court did not clearly err in assigning values to items of marital property.

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Bluebook (online)
Donna Lohrke, f/k/a Donna Sorrels v. Christopher H. Sorrels, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-lohrke-fka-donna-sorrels-v-christopher-h-sorrels-alaska-2026.