Epp v. Epp

905 P.2d 54, 80 Haw. 79, 1995 Haw. App. LEXIS 41
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1995
Docket15732
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 905 P.2d 54 (Epp v. Epp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epp v. Epp, 905 P.2d 54, 80 Haw. 79, 1995 Haw. App. LEXIS 41 (hawapp 1995).

Opinions

[83]*83BURNS, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Orlando Epp (Husband) appeals the family court’s August 30, 1991 Decree Granting Divorce and Awarding Child Custody (August 30, 1991 Divorce Decree) and October 9,1991 “Order Following Hearing on Plaintiffs Motion for Reconsideration Filed July 23, 1991” and “Defendant’s Motion for Reconsideration and/or Clarification Filed July 23, 1991” (October 9, 1991 Order). Defendant Doris Epp (Wife) cross-appeals the August 30, 1991 Divorce Decree. We (1) vacate (a) the property division and distribution part of the August 30, 1991 Divorce Decree and (b) the October 9, 1991 Order and (2) remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

BASIC FACTS

Husband was bom in 1920. Wife was born in 1934. Their date of marriage (DOM) was January 19,1978. There were no children of the marriage.

After thirty-two years of service in the United States Army, Husband retired as a brigadier general in 1974 and, since that time, has been receiving monthly military disability payments based on a forty percent disability and military retirement monthly payments and benefits. Husband testified that, although the disability payments are offset against his retirement payments, the disability payments are nontaxable. In 1979, Husband’s military disability/retirement gross cash benefit was $2,900 per month or $34,800 per annum. In 1982, it was $3,789.08 per month or $45,469 per annum.

In the early years of the marriage Wife’s taxable income was as follows:

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Eleven days prior to the DOM, Wife gave her 99-252 Tini Way, ‘Aiea Heights, property to her daughter Marcelle. When the parties married, Wife owned the following real property:

92-608 Palailai Street, Makakilo
4363 Olaloa Street, Foster Village
98-069 Puahau Place, Pearl Ridge
99-442 Kekoa Place, Hálawa Heights
one-half of 2211 Ala Wai Boulevard, Apartment No. 2103, Waikiki1
99-1161 ‘Aiea Heights Drive, ‘Aiea Heights

When the parties married, Husband owned 1805 Kumakani Place, Wai'alae Iki.

When the parties married, Wife moved from her ‘Aiea Heights residence into Husband’s Wai'alae Iki residence. The parties lived there with Wife’s two daughters and Husband’s two sons. In 1980, Wife gave her ‘Aiea Heights Drive property to her daughter Malia. In the latter part of 1978, the parties purchased the 19 Kai Nani Place, Kailua beachfront leasehold property for $287,328 by way of Agreement of Sale (A/S). The A/S did not require any monthly payments. Interest accrued at the rate of nine percent per annum. From the sale of their Category 1 properties (Wife’s Palailai Street, Olaloa Street, and Puahau Place, and Husband’s Kümakani Place), each of the parties paid the following amounts toward the purchase of the Kai Nani Place property: Wife paid $51,000 on the Kai Nani Place A/S in 1978; Wife paid $82,162 on the Kai Nani Place A/S in 1979; and Husband paid $75,000 on the Kai Nani Place A/S in 1980. The parties purchased the fee of the Kai Nani Place property in 1981 for $106,174 with borrowed money. Toward that debt, Wife paid $22,000 in 1981 and $65,000 in 1982.

Specifically with respect to the Kai Nani Place property, Wife’s Exhibit F shows that the parties borrowed $17,000 from the Bank of Hawaii in 1979, refinanced the A/S debt with a City Bank loan of $90,000 in 1980, [84]*84refinanced the Bank of Hawaii debt with a Fort Shatter Credit Union loan of $20,500 in 1980, refinanced with a Honolulu Mortgage loan of $127,000 in 1985, refinanced with a Honolulu Mortgage loan of $123,850 in 1987, and borrowed $15,000 from the Hickam Federal Credit Union in 1987. On the day of the conclusion of the evidentiary part of the trial (DOCOEPOT), the Kai Nani Place mortgage debt was $120,000.

In 1983, Wife started her Pacific-Hawaii Bed and Breakfast business. This business involved (a) a referral service to client landlords seeking bed and breakfast tenants, (b) bookkeeping services for client landlords, and (c) renting two of the Kai Nani Place bedrooms to bed and breakfast tenants.

Wife testified that, since prior to 1987, she and Husband each purchased their own food and prepared their own meals and, since approximately 1987, they lived in separate bedrooms in the Kai Nani Place residence.

Wife purchased a fifty percent interest in Apartment 404-A, 1030 Aoloa Place, Kailua, in December 1987.

Husband filed his Complaint for Divorce on December 4,1989. The DOCOEPOT was June 13, 1991. On the DOCOEPOT, Wife’s bed and breakfast business was generating a gross monthly income of $1,837. The $3,805 which she received in monthly rental income for her investment properties (Kekoa Place, Ala Wai Boulevard and Aoloa Place) was offset by her monthly mortgage, insurance, repair, maintenance and utility expenses to-talling $3,898 plus applicable gross income and hotel taxes. On the DOCOEPOT, Husband’s gross disability/retirement and social security cash benefits exceeded $5,600 per month.

DISCUSSION

I.

The parties’ cash, personal effects, furniture and furnishings, vehicles, credit union and bank accounts, life insurance, and debts were distributed as specified by the August 30,1991 Divorce Decree. The distribution of these items is not an issue in this appeal.

The first issue pertains to the division and distribution of the net market values (NMVs) of the real properties owned by one or both parties on the DOM and/or on the DOCOE-POT.

With respect to marriages, three relevant agreements between the marital partners are possible: (1) premarital or antenup-tial agreements in contemplation of marriage (premarital agreements); (2) during-the-marriage agreements not in contemplation of divorce (marital agreements); and (3) during-the-marriage agreements in contemplation of divorce (divorce agreements).

Prior to the enactment of Hawai’i Revised Statutes (HRS) ch. 572D in 1987 (Hawaii's Uniform Premarital Agreement Act) and the 1987 amendment to HRS § 572-22, marital partners could not, by a valid premarital agreement, marital agreement or divorce agreement, inhibit the family court’s jurisdictional power/authority, pursuant to HRS § 580-47(a) (1993), to “make such further orders as shall appear just and equitable ... (3) finally dividing and distributing the estate of the parties, real, personal, or mixed, whether community, joint, or separate!.]” Thus, in Lewis v. Lewis, 7 Haw.App. 155, 159, 747 P.2d 698, 701 (1986), aff'd in part and vacated in part, 69 Haw. 497, 748 P.2d 1362 (1988), we concluded that Hawaii’s “public policy as stated in HRS § 580-47 takes precedence over the parties’ right to enforce their antenuptial agreements.” Now, however, the reverse is true. Lewis, 69 Haw. at 500-01, 748 P.2d at 1365-66.

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Bluebook (online)
905 P.2d 54, 80 Haw. 79, 1995 Haw. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epp-v-epp-hawapp-1995.