Finck v. Finck

452 P.2d 709, 9 Ariz. App. 382, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedApril 8, 1969
Docket2 CA-CIV 609
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 452 P.2d 709 (Finck v. Finck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finck v. Finck, 452 P.2d 709, 9 Ariz. App. 382, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 444 (Ark. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

MOLLOY, Chief Judge.

This appeal questions the righteousness of a division of community property made in a divorce action. The only contention made on appeal by the husband is that he should have been awarded one half of the stock owned by this community in a closely held corporation controlled by the wife’s family.

The parties were married in January of 1949 and divorced in June of 1968. Custody of three minor children, of the ages of 14, 9 and 8 years, respectively, was awarded to the wife subject to visitation rights in the husband. The husband was ordered to pay $400 per month as alimony to the wife and support for the children and the additional sum of $95 per month mortgage payments on the home until the outstanding mortgage in the approximate sum of $2,600 is fully paid. The husband does not complain of these portions of the decree.

In its division of the community property, the wife was awarded the home with an estimated value of $30,000, the household furnishings therein of an estimated value of $6,000, an automobile with the value of $1,650, and 125 shares of stock in Marcus Mercantile Corporation, a family corporation, controlled by the wife’s relatives. The value of this stock presented the principal factual contention during the trial.

*384 As opposed to what the wife received, the •husband was awarded miscellaneous stock having a value of $8,696.35, bank deposits totaling $8,621.05, and life insurance policies having a cash surrender value of $7,-■450. Of the bank deposits, $3,716.26 were on deposit as the husband’s separate property in two of these bank accounts at the time of the marriage.

Without taking the 125 shares of stock in Marcus Mercantile into account, the wife received total assets of $37,650 and the husband received assets of $25,767.40, including his premarital contribution to the bank accounts.

Both in the trial court and here it has been assumed that the 125 shares of stock which are in dispute are-community property of the parties. This stock was given to the husband and wife by the wife’s father during the marriage. We believe there is an unresolved question in this jurisdiction as to whether property .acquired by the husband and wife during marriage by gift is, or can be, community property. . See A.R.S. § 25-211, subsec. A and § 25-213, .subsec. A. 1 However, for the purposes of this action we accept the mutual position of the parties — that is, the stock will be regarded as community property. DeMarce v. DeMarce, 101 Ariz. 369, 419 P.2d 726 (1966).

• There has been a motion to dismiss the •husband’s appeal on the ground that he had •accepted the benefits of the divorce decree. The affidavit of the wife, attached to the motion, and a transcript of a ■ contempt hearing held in the trial court, 2 establish that the husband had taken into his possession the miscellaneous stock certificates, the passbooks for the bank accounts and the life insurance policies, all of which had been deposited with the clerk of the court during the litigation, and had expended some of the funds from the bank accounts and had borrowed money on the life insurance policies. The affidavit of the husband, in response to the motion, is to the effect that all of the moneys expended from the bank accounts and borrowed on the life insurance policies ($3,000) had been expended to pay attorneys’ fees and costs of the wife in the total sum of $2,261, 3 to pay community obligations, incurred by the wife during the pendency of the divorce action and to pay the balance of the mortgage on ■the home in the approximate sum of $2,600. There is no controverting affidavit as to the purposes for the expenditure of these funds. In his affidavit, the husband stated that he continued to hold all of the stock .certificates in the same-registered ownership as at the time of the divorce decree, that some of said certificates were registered in the wife’s name alone, and that he held the passbooks with the same balances as at the time of the decree, with the exception of the expenditures previously described. The husband has posted a supersedeas bond in the sum of $5,000, which has as its condition that the husband will *385 perform any judgment or decree rendered on appeal.

The record is clear that the husband had been discharged from his employment with the family corporations and that, at the time of trial, he was unemployed. There seems no question but what the husband’s treatment of the assets awarded to him by the divorce decree was necessary in order to meet the obligations placed upon him by his marital contract and the decree terminating this contract.

Generally, the party accepting some benefit under a judgment cannot appeal from that judgment. 5 C.J.S. Appeal & Error § 1354(6) b, at pp. 426-428; 4 Am. Jur.2d'Appeal and Error § 250, at 745-746; Annot., 169 A.L.R. 985 et seq., and see Reed v. Reed, 82 Ariz. 168, 309 P.2d 790 (1957). It has been said that the only exception to this general rule is that presented in a case in which there are several independent issues, a review is sought on appeal as to one of these issues while the acceptance of benefits is as to a separate issue, and there is no question but that the appellant had at least as much coming to him as was accepted. In re Black’s Estate, 32 Mont. 51, 79 P. 554 (1905). The editor of the above-cited A.L.R, annotation suggests that there are a greater variety of exceptions than laid down by this early Montana authority and that these exceptions may all be recognized if the rule of waiver is stated thus:

“A party who accepts an award or legal advantage under an order, judgment, or decree, waives his right to any such review of the adjudication as may again put in issue his right to the benefit which he has accepted.” (Emphasis added) 169 A.L.R. at 988.

While the husband’s appeal singles out the division of the family corporation stock for attack, we cannot say that this appeal “may” not put in issue again the entire division made. The appeal notice is as to all portions of the judgment dividing the property. While an appellate court has jurisdiction in this state to reapportion without new trial, see Spector v. Spector, 94 Ariz. 175, 382 P.2d 659 (1963), Kennedy v. Kennedy, 93 Ariz. 252, 379 P.2d 966 (1963), the appellate court may also direct a new trial on this issue. See Collier v. Collier, 73 Ariz. 405, 242 P.2d 537 (1952), and Ackel v. Ackel, 57 Ariz. 14, 110 P.2d 238, 133 A.L.R. 549 (1941).

In Reed, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
452 P.2d 709, 9 Ariz. App. 382, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finck-v-finck-arizctapp-1969.