Dutcher v. Dutcher

2025 UT App 21, 566 P.3d 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 21, 2025
DocketCase No. 20230332-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 UT App 21 (Dutcher v. Dutcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dutcher v. Dutcher, 2025 UT App 21, 566 P.3d 48 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 21

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DAVID THOMAS DUTCHER, Appellant, v. AUDREY PARK DUTCHER, Appellee.

Opinion No. 20230332-CA Filed February 21, 2025

Third District Court, West Jordan Department The Honorable Chelsea Koch No. 204904573

Troy L. Booher, Taylor P. Webb, and Dean Andreasen, Attorneys for Appellant Harry Caston, Attorney for Appellee

JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

ORME, Judge:

¶1 David Thomas Dutcher appeals the district court’s decree of divorce awarding his former wife, Audrey Park Dutcher, a portion of a brokerage account while also including line items for retirement and investment contributions in its alimony calculation. He also challenges the court’s refusal to set aside the parties’ stipulation regarding the value of the marital home. While we affirm the court’s valuation of the marital home, we reverse the court’s alimony award and remand that matter for recalculation. Dutcher v. Dutcher

BACKGROUND

¶2 David and Audrey 1 were married for 24 years, during which time they amassed “a substantial amount of wealth,” including a brokerage account worth around $2 million at the time of their divorce and the marital home. David and Audrey have four children, three of whom were minors when David petitioned for divorce in August 2020. Custody of the children was hotly contested, and the parties eventually stipulated to the appointment of a parent-time evaluator (Evaluator).

¶3 When Evaluator submitted her report, her recommendation for overnight stays for David fell short of the statutory minimum. Apparently, as a matter of trial strategy, David decided to cross-examine Evaluator about this error rather than present a rebuttal expert witness. But five days before trial, realizing her mistake, Evaluator emailed the parties an amended report that increased David’s overnights.

¶4 The issues certified for trial included custody, alimony, and the valuation of the marital home. Audrey and David had each obtained appraisals of the home, but in Audrey’s pre-trial memorandum, she noted, “Pursuant to the appraisal conducted by [David’s appraiser], the home has a present value of $1.7 million.” David also submitted proposed findings of fact stating, “The parties stipulate that the marital home has a value of $1.7M.”

¶5 A bench trial began in December 2021. David testified about the parties’ brokerage account and reiterated the $1.7 million appraisal value of the marital home. He testified that the parties deposited and withdrew from the brokerage account but that they had not made significant contributions to the account until 2014, making substantial deposits in 2016, 2017, and 2018 when his “compensation was abnormal.” At the time of trial, the

1. Per our usual practice, because the parties share a surname, we refer to them by their first names, with no disrespect intended.

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brokerage account balance was $1,940,285. He also testified about his proposed division of the parties’ assets, wherein one of them would receive the marital home and a portion of the brokerage account while the other would receive the balance of the account to purchase a new home and retain what was left of his or her account share. He proposed that under either arrangement, he should be left with $100,000 from the brokerage account and Audrey should receive $452,374. And he urged that he should receive the marital home. He also calculated Audrey’s monthly expenses at $5,645 per month, including a $500 monthly contribution to her retirement. But with her imputed income, investment income, and child support, David calculated that Audrey would receive $9,449 per month—more than enough to cover her expenses without alimony.

¶6 An accountant (Accountant) David hired to summarize the parties’ standard of living and to opine on the distribution of assets also testified about David’s proposed division. Accountant testified that he had calculated the average return on the brokerage account to be 16.99% over the last five years. He testified that the rate had “been higher than that, but in prior years, it was lower.” And he noted that the parties had used the account to both deposit and withdraw money. He testified that under either of David’s proposed divisions of assets, with David receiving $100,000 from the account, he would likely receive $1,019 per month in investment returns. He also testified that with Audrey receiving $452,374 from the brokerage account, she would likely receive $4,611 per month in returns. But Accountant acknowledged that there was “no guarantee” on these returns.

¶7 Before the second day of trial, David filed a motion seeking to designate and call an expert witness to rebut Evaluator’s amended report and trial testimony. Once trial began that day, David alerted the court to the motion, noting it was “highly atypical” but asserting there were “atypical facts” warranting it. David’s counsel argued that because Evaluator’s original

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recommendation did not meet the statutory parameters for joint physical custody, he initially planned to file a motion with the court explaining the error with an eye to disqualifying the report rather than calling a rebuttal expert. But, David argued, now that Evaluator had amended her report, he needed to change his strategy and call a rebuttal expert to testify about custody. Counsel indicated that the expert witness he sought to call was not available to testify that day but “would make herself available as needs be.” The court granted the motion and continued the trial to allow David to procure the rebuttal expert’s testimony.

¶8 Due to scheduling conflicts, the trial did not resume until May 2022, some five months later. David informed the court that “both parties ha[d] updated a number of exhibits,” including an “updated appraisal” of the marital home that valued it at $1.975 million, as opposed to the December 2021 valuation of $1.7 million. David sought to admit the updated appraisal with no objection from Audrey. David testified that he was asking the court to value the home based on this new appraisal. But he did not ask the court to set aside the prior stipulation. During her testimony, Audrey acknowledged that the home had been reappraised at a higher value, but she also opined that David’s appraiser’s “numbers have always been artificially high.”

¶9 After trial, the court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court declined to impute the returns on the brokerage account as income for either party, reasoning that “income earned on investments is unpredictable and would require” the court “to speculate with regard to earnings for every future month or year.” Further, the court noted that dividing the account would “impact the income earned from the account” and that each party would receive a different percentage and would have “a different ability to invest going forward.” And the court stated that because “the parties have traditionally used the investment account as a savings account and pulled from it only for limited purposes,” it would be inequitable to treat the returns as income. The court also

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Bluebook (online)
2025 UT App 21, 566 P.3d 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutcher-v-dutcher-utahctapp-2025.