Forcier v. Forcier

2019 Ohio 5052
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 2019
Docket2019-G-0192
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2019 Ohio 5052 (Forcier v. Forcier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forcier v. Forcier, 2019 Ohio 5052 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as Forcier v. Forcier, 2019-Ohio-5052.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

GEAUGA COUNTY, OHIO

BEVERLY FORCIER, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellant, : CASE NO. 2019-G-0192 - vs - :

PAUL GERARD FORCIER, et al., :

Defendant-Appellee. :

Appeal from the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2015 D 000574.

Judgment: Modified and affirmed as modified.

Amy M. Keating, Christopher R. Reynolds and Kyleigh A. Weinfurtner, Zashin & Rich Co., LPA, 950 Main Avenue, Fourth Floor, Cleveland, OH 44113 (For Plaintiff- Appellant).

Dominic M. Antonelli and Kristen A. Crane, Kvale Antonelli & RAJ, 1406 West Sixth Street, Second Floor, Cleveland, OH 44113 (For Defendant-Appellee).

CYNTHIA WESTCOTT RICE, J.

{¶1} Appellant, Dr. Beverly Forcier, appeals from the final judgment granting a

divorce to appellee, Dr. Paul Gerard Forcier. The issues on appeal are threefold.

Appellant challenges: (1) the trial court’s modification of the magistrate’s decision

regarding whether appellant is entitled to interest on her separate property; (2) the trial

court’s adoption of the magistrate’s decision that appellee did not engage in financial

misconduct; and (3) the trial court’s adoption of the magistrate’s decision that certain real property, gifted to appellee by appellant’s parents, is his separate property. We

modify the judgment and affirm as modified.

{¶2} The parties, each medical doctors, were married in December 1979. Four

children, all emancipated, were born of the marriage. Early in the marriage, appellant

worked full time as an ophthalmologist, but as the parties’ children were born, she

reduced her hours, eventually retiring in 1997. Appellee, an orthopedic surgeon, has

been the parties’ primary wage earner. Throughout their marriage, the parties invested

in real estate and had multiple investment accounts, some were held jointly and others

individually. Appellee managed the parties’ finances and controlled the various

accounts. Although the parties had a relatively high income due to appellee’s salary and

their investments, they lived frugally. Ultimately, between their incomes, savings, funds

received as gifts, and investments, the marital estate grew in excess of $15 million. The

parties separated in 2015 and appellant subsequently filed for divorce. During litigation,

multiple stipulations were filed. After many of the issues were settled, four matters

remained for the trial court to decide: (1) the disposition of marital property in Haywood

County, Tennessee; (2) the disposition of property in Carroll County, Ohio; (3) the

disposition of appellee’s separate property; and (4) whether appellee committed

financial misconduct and violated his duty to support appellant.

{¶3} At the final hearing, evidence demonstrated the parties owned some

561.01 acres of real property located in Haywood County, Tennessee. Between 1998

and 2003, the parties paid approximately $660,000 for the property. Both parties sought

to retain the property free and clear of any claim by the other. Appellant argued she

should be entitled to retrain the property due to its personal value and the ancestral

2 connections to her family; appellee asserted he should be entitled to the property due to

its past, present, and future investment value.

{¶4} Appellant, who was interested in genealogy, traced her family’s ownership

of land in Haywood County from the 1820s. She had fond childhood memories of trips

to Haywood County to visit relatives. In 2004, the parties learned of a potential large

industrial “megasite” that the Tennessee Valley Authority was developing on property

adjoining the Haywood County property. At the time of trial, however, there was no

indication that any development of the “megasite” had or would commence. Still,

appellee testified the parties investigated other properties, one in Iowa, prior to

purchasing the Tennessee land and selected the Haywood County property due to the

greater rate of return on potential rental income. He further asserted the proximity to

the potential “megasite” would cause the property to significantly increase the land’s

value.

{¶5} Appellant enlisted John Powell Jenkins, a certified appraiser in the state of

Tennessee, to assign a value to the Haywood County property. After visiting the

property, taking photos, and reviewing comparable sales, Mr. Jenkins concluded the

property had a market value, at the time of the final hearing, of $1,856,943. Mr. Jenkins

noted he was aware of the potential “megasite,” and inquired locally about its

development. When he visited the property, Mr. Jenkins did not observe any indication

that the adjacent land was being developed.

{¶6} In lieu of completely divesting one of the party’s entire possessory interest

in the property, appellee proposed dividing Haywood County property. Mr. Jenkins,

however, testified partitioning the property, such that each party would receive equal

3 value, would be difficult. The property includes agricultural fields, wooded areas, and,

due to its size, aspects of the land do not have enough road frontage to effectively

divide the land. In light of these points, not every acre or region of the land is of equal

or similar value. He opined the property’s best and most lucrative use was farming and

nothing would indicate this would change in the future.

{¶7} Appellant’s parents owned substantial real estate and assets and, during

the parties’ marriage, her parents transferred interest in numerous properties to

appellant, appellee, and their children. In 1991, appellee received an undivided one-

sixth interest in the property in Carroll County, Ohio. The other deeded owners were

appellant’s niece, her two nephews, and the parties’ two sons. Since obtaining an

ownership interest in the property, appellee has received one-sixth of the rents and

other income associated with the same.

{¶8} Appellant sought to impose a constructive trust upon appellee’s interest in

the Carroll County Property for the benefit of the parties’ two daughters and nephew

and designate appellant as the trustee. According to appellant, when the one-sixth

interest was transferred to appellee, her parents intended him to be merely a

placeholder. Specifically, she asserted her parents, in transferring the interest, were

maximizing their annual exclusion for purposes of estate and gift taxes; their ultimate

goal was to have appellee transfer the one-sixth interest to their living grandchildren and

not give appellee an indefinite ownership interest. Appellee maintained he was not

aware he was a mere placeholder until the divorce was filed.

{¶9} Appellant testified she and appellee discussed transferring his interest in

the Carroll County property in 2011, pursuant to the alleged intention of her parents.

4 Appellee, however, was unwilling to transfer, but, according to appellant, he did not

dispute the plan to eventually transfer the interest. Moreover, appellant’s sister stated

she recalled hearing appellee and her father discussing the “pass through,” for the

benefit of the grandchildren.

{¶10} Appellant hired Brent Tyler Kuwatch, a licensed real estate appraiser in

the state of Ohio. Mr. Kuwatch appraised the Carroll County Property with a market

value of $705,000.

{¶11} With respect to appellant’s separate property, appellant’s parents gifted

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2019 Ohio 5052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forcier-v-forcier-ohioctapp-2019.