Dorothy West Harmon v. Harvey Carl Harmon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 2, 2000
DocketW1998-00841-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dorothy West Harmon v. Harvey Carl Harmon (Dorothy West Harmon v. Harvey Carl Harmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorothy West Harmon v. Harvey Carl Harmon, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON

DOROTHY WEST HARMON, ) FILED ) March 2, 2000 Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Madison Chancery No. 51506 ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. v. ) Appellate Court Clerk ) HARVEY CARL HARMON, ) Appeal No. W1998-00841-COA-R3-CV ) Defendant/Appellee. )

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF MADISON COUNTY AT JACKSON, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE JOE C. MORRIS, CHANCELLOR

For the Plaintiff/Appellant: For the Defendant/Appellee:

Joy Tanner Bomar Maclin P. Davis, Jr. Memphis, Tennessee K. Suzanne Crenshaw Nashville, Tennessee

AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED

HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J.

CONCURS:

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J. OPINION

This is a divorce case. The husband is a physician employed by a professional association.

The trial court granted the wife the divorce and awarded the wife, inter alia, 50% of the value of

the husband’s interest in his medical practice and 45% of the husband’s retirement and profit sharing

plans. The wife was awarded alimony in futuro of $6000 per month for 13 years. The husband was

ordered to assume responsibility for the parties’ marital debt. The wife’s request for attorney’s fees

was denied. The wife appeals the trial court’s valuation of the husband’s interest in the medical

practice, the amount of alimony awarded, the division of the retirement and profit sharing plans, and

the denial of attorney’s fees. The husband appeals the trial court’s order that he pay the marital debt.

We reverse the trial court’s valuation of the husband’s interest in his medical practice, holding that

the values set forth in buy-sell agreements executed by the husband are relevant but not binding on

the wife in the divorce. The remainder of the trial court’s decision is affirmed.

Harvey Carl Harmon, M.D. (“Husband”) and Dorothy West Harmon (“Wife”) married in

1977. It was the second marriage for both. Wife had one child, a seven-year-old son, from her

previous marriage. At the time the parties married, Husband had already completed medical school

and residency, and was a surgeon on the teaching staff of the University of Tennessee Medical

School in Memphis. He also had private patients. Wife was a registered nurse at Baptist Hospital

in Memphis.

Wife continued to work full-time for about a year after the parties married, but quit work at

the birth of their daughter in June 1978. Wife worked full-time for a short while after the parties

moved to Blytheville, Arkansas in 1981, and then again became a full-time homemaker. For about

six years prior to the parties’ separation, Wife worked part-time.

In 1984, the family moved to Jackson, Tennessee. In August 1985, Husband joined the

practice of the Jackson Clinic (“Clinic”) as a general surgeon. The Jackson Clinic, P.A. is a

professional multispecialty medical association. In 1996, it employed approximately 108 physicians

and 525 non-physician employees at 18 locations throughout West Tennessee. Husband’s August

1, 1995 employment contract with the Clinic contained a non-compete clause. The non-compete

clause stated that, should Husband leave the Clinic before age 60, he must either refrain from

practicing medicine in Madison County for one year, or pay the Clinic $50,000. At the time of trial

Husband was still employed as a general surgeon at the Clinic. He also owned 10 shares of Clinic

stock, which constituted 1.17% of the Clinic’s outstanding shares. In 1986, Husband also invested in the Jackson Clinic Building, Limited, (“Building, L.P.”or “Building”), a limited partnership of

which the Clinic is the general partner. The Building, L.P. was formed, “to engage in the business

of owning, managing, improving, leasing and selling real property including, but not necessarily

limited to, the ownership, management and leasing of Clinic buildings.” Husband was one of 92

limited partners and owned approximately 1.09% of the units of ownership of the Building, L.P.

The bylaws of the Clinic and of the Building, L.P. each contain “buy-sell”clauses that state

that the value of each share of stock is to be set annually by the Clinic’s directors, and that should

a physician member wish to sell his or her shares, he or she is bound to that price. The Clinic’s

bylaws read:

For the purpose of valuing the shares of stock in the Association upon redemption or cancellation, the fair value of a share of stock in the Association shall be determined by the Board of Directors with the assistance of the Association’s accountant, and a certificate of value shall be filed in the minute book of the Association at least annually. The most recent such certificate shall be used to determine the fair value of a share of stock whenever transfer, issue, redemption, or cancellation is to be accomplished. . . . In determining book value, the Association’s accountant shall observe the following: (i) No allowance or assignment of value shall be made for goodwill, the Association’s name, or any similar intangible asset. (ii) All accounts payable shall be taken at face amount less any applicable or available discounts. (iii) No allowance or assignment of value shall be made for accounts receivable (except upon dissolution of the Association). . . . (iv) All machinery, fixtures and equipment shall be taken as the valuation appearing on the books of the Association. (v) No allowance or assignment of value shall be made for supplies. (vi) All unpaid and accrued taxes shall be deducted as liabilities.

Section 2.13 of the Building’s bylaws states:

Determining Current Value of Units. The fair market value of the net assets of the Limited Partnership shall constitute the aggregate value of the units of ownership of the Limited Partnership for the purposes of this Agreement. A determination of the fair market value of the net assets of the Limited Partnership shall be made from time to time by the General Partner and submitted in writing to the Limited Partners as soon as practicable thereafter.

The Building L.P.’s bylaws further state:

If the remaining or surviving Limited Partners or the General Partner elect to purchase such interest as herein above prescribed, the purchase price for such limited partner’s interest shall be equal to the value of his units of ownership of the Limited Partnership as determined pursuant to Section 2.13 herein above [quoted above].

The parties separated at least twice before their final separation on December 29, 1995. Wife

filed for divorce on February 13, 1996. Wife’s divorce complaint included a request for an order

enjoining Husband from “disposing of, encumbering, transferring, compromising or in any way

2 depleting any of the marital assets,” and requiring that the parties’ financial status quo be maintained.

Husband was ordered:

to absolutely desist and refrain and be enjoined from unilaterally disposing of, encumbering, transferring, compromising or in any way depleting any of the marital assets and/or financial benefits from employment and/or personal property of any kind or description wherever situated and in whatever form except for reasonable and necessary living and litigation expenses; further that both Plaintiff and Defendant maintain the financial status quo until further order of this Court to enable this Court to make a determination relative to the assets and liabilities of the parties available for classification and distribution pursuant to T.C.A. §36-4-121.

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