Donnelly v. Donnelly

449 P.2d 350, 167 Colo. 229, 1968 Colo. LEXIS 615
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 18, 1968
Docket22146
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 449 P.2d 350 (Donnelly v. Donnelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donnelly v. Donnelly, 449 P.2d 350, 167 Colo. 229, 1968 Colo. LEXIS 615 (Colo. 1968).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Groves

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There is involved here solely the matter of division of property in a divorce action. The parties appear here in the same order as in the district court. The plaintiff will be referred to as the doctor and the defendant as Mrs. Donnelly.

The complaint was filed on November 15, 1962 and on November 17, 1964 a divorce was granted to both parties. A hearing on division of property was held in May 1965, Mrs. Donnelly having waived alimony. Later the trial court made findings of fact, announced its conclusions of law and entered judgment. The judgment: (a) awarded Mrs. Donnelly specified furniture, furnishings, personal effects and other miscellaneous articles of personal property; (b) awarded to Mrs. Donnelly insurance policies in which she was the insured; (c) ordered Dr. Donnelly to pay all loans secured by some or all of these insurance policies; (d) further awarded to Mrs. Donnelly the “sum of $33,000 as and for her interest in and to the real and personal marital property acquired by the parties hereto.”; (e) ordered Dr. Don *232 nelly to save Mrs. Donnelly harmless from all of his indebtedness, some of which was represented by promissory notes signed by Mrs. Donnelly, and from any deficiencies under joint tax returns theretofore filed by the parties; (f) awarded to Dr. Donnelly the residence of the parties and all furniture except the articles specifically designated to Mrs. Donnelly; (g) awarded all other property to Dr. Donnelly. We find no reversible error in the judgment with the possible exception of the further award of $33,000.

The parties were married in February 1940, at which time the doctor was a physician and surgeon practicing at Trinidad, Colorado and Mrs. Donnelly was a registered nurse. Except during the doctor’s service with the armed forces during World War II, he practiced there as a physician until at least the time of the May 1965 hearing. It appeared that at all times he made a comfortable income from his professional practice. During the early years of their married life Mrs. Donnelly was employed as a registered nurse, either in the doctor’s office or elsewhere, devoting most of the compensation she received to family and the doctor’s professional outlays. She assisted with the doctor’s bookkeeping and billing throughout the marriage until their separation in November 1962.

In 1959 the doctor entered the cattle ranching business on a fairly substantial scale. He acquired two ranches having an aggregate of about 33,000 acres and ran about 1,300 head of cattle. Apparently he became heavily indebted at the inception of the ranching business and he sustained steady losses as time went on. On December 31, 1962 his indebtedness amounted to $911,766.70 and on October 27, 1964 it was $969,545.54.

The parties signed an agreement under date of November 13, 1962, under the provisions of which: Mrs. Donnelly acknowledged receipt of $2,000 from the doctor; it was agreed that each party should retain property solely in his or her name; and Mrs. Donnelly *233 waived all rights to alimony, joint tenancy property, all other property of the doctor and custody of their fifteen year old son. She contended at trial that she was coerced into signing it and the trial court so found. Apparently the only matters of substance which Mrs. Donnelly would have received under the agreement was the sum of $2,000 and a comparatively small equity in insurance policies on her life. The title to their residence may have been in joint tenancy, but all other property stood solely in the doctor’s name. In the doctor’s brief, major emphasis was placed upon the alleged error of the court in setting aside this property settlement agreement. Mr. Saunders entered the case after the briefs were filed and he made the oral argument. At that time he virtually abandoned this alleged error and made a statement to the effect that he could not in good conscience argue that the agreement should be upheld. We affirm the trial court in its ruling that the agreement was invalid but, in the light of the presentation to us on oral argument, we see no need to detail the circumstances surrounding the signing of the agreement.

There was no abuse of discretion in the award of the specific items of furniture, furnishings, personal effects, etc., to Mrs. Donnelly. No error was assigned to the portion of the judgment ordering the doctor to save Mrs. Donnelly harmless from the payment of indebtedness and in the motion for new trial no error was assigned to the court’s order that he save her harmless from any deficiencies on joint income tax returns; and, therefore, the portion of the judgment with respect to these matters will not be disturbed.

The doctor contends that the award to Mrs. Donnelly was excessive and objects to the portion of the judgment which required the doctor to pay the loan made against Mrs. Donnelly’s insurance policies. The proceeds of the insurance loans were applied upon the doctor’s debts or invested in the doctor’s livestock business. We cannot determine from the record the ag *234 gregate amount of loans made on Mrs. Donnelly’s policies. There were admitted in evidence documents showing that New Life Insurance Company loaned $7,412 on three of such policies. On oral argument it was stated that about $8,000 was borrowed upon the policies. At one point during the hearing on May 27 and 28, 1965 the doctor’s attorney stated:

“* * * I should like to state in open court that all outstanding obligations in her name we will hold her harmless from the payment of those, she can have the three policies, and limit the thing to the condition as existed November 13, 1962. We will hold her harmless of the obligations she’s on jointly.”

This would indicate that the doctor stipulated that he would pay the policy loans. In any event, there was no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in ordering him to do so.

This leaves for consideration only the matter of the award to Mrs. Donnelly of the further sum of $33,000 “as and for her interest in and to the real and personal marital property acquired by the parties hereto.” Since with some exceptions the effect of the judgment is to give all property to the doctor and an award of money to Mrs. Donnelly, the amount of the award must necessarily be an equitable portion of the doctor’s net worth. Throughout the hearing, in the findings and conclusions and in the briefs, repeated reference was made to two balance sheets of the doctor’s assets and liabilities prepared by the doctor’s accountant, one as of December 31, 1962 and the other as of October 27, 1964. Neither of these balance sheets is among the exhibits certified to this court and our reading of the record fails to disclose that they were admitted in evidence or even identified as exhibits. Their absence has impeded our review and made our study of the record far more time consuming. There were appraisements of the parties’ residence and of the assets of the livestock business. These were as of November 1962 and November 1964, but the appraised *235 values of the land and residence were the same during each of the two years. In the balance sheets the doctor’s accountant used the figures of the appraisers for the respective years and, as to items not appraised, figures submitted by the doctor.

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Bluebook (online)
449 P.2d 350, 167 Colo. 229, 1968 Colo. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-donnelly-colo-1968.