Fortson v. Fortson

131 P.3d 451, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 23, 2006 WL 361931
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 2006
DocketS-11332, S-11341
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 131 P.3d 451 (Fortson v. Fortson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fortson v. Fortson, 131 P.3d 451, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 23, 2006 WL 361931 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Blanton and Jayne Fortson divorced after eighteen years of marriage. In this property division case, both parties appeal the superi- or court’s decision to award sixty percent of the marital estate to Jayne and forty percent to Blanton. Because the court did not abuse its discretion in dividing the marital estate, we affirm the sixty-forty division. The parties raise an additional seven issues on appeal. For the reasons set out below, we affirm the court’s requirement of a cash payment to Blanton, its treatment of capital gains taxes and selling costs for marital land in Hawaii, its treatment of loans from Jayne’s parents, its valuation of the parties’ boat, and its treatment of a capital loss carry forward. We reverse the court’s determination that excess profits earned by Jayne’s medical clinic during the parties’ separation are her separate property. Finally, we decline to consider whether the superior court erred in its treatment of alleged gifts from Blanton to Jayne because Jayne has failed to show that, if there was error, it was prejudicial.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Blanton and Jayne Fortson married. in 1985 and separated in October 2001 after sixteen years of marriage; Blanton filed a complaint for divorce that month. The couple attempted to reconcile following the separation, and the initial complaint for divorce was withdrawn, but in July 2002 Jayne filed for divorce, and the case eventually went to trial on property issues. Throughout the marriage, the Fortsons enjoyed an affluent lifestyle. The Fortsons have three children, but custody and support of the children is not at issue in this appeal.

Jayne is a dermatologist with a successful clinic in Anchorage. She is also a paraplegic and uses a wheelchair due to a 1975 accident. Over the years she has experienced various medical problems related to her condition, *454 including a 1996 hip accident that left her with significant pain and fatigue. Because of her health, she works less than five days a week. She will have significant medical expenses in the future and is at high risk of suffering an accident that would end her ability to work. Because of her medical condition, her remaining work life is likely less than the sixteen to seventeen years generally predicted for an educated forty-seven year old woman.

Blanton has a nursing degree and over the course of the marriage worked as a nurse, a commercial fisherman, and a part-time supervisor in Jayne’s office. Blanton stopped working as a nurse in 1989 and his nursing-license has now lapsed. He last worked as a fisherman in 1999. He also worked at the clinic; from October 2001 until May 2002, Blanton was on its payroll and was paid an annual salary of $65,000. He is deaf in one ear and has a weakened back that limits him to light lifting.

Trial took place before Superior Court Judge Sharon Gleason during a six-day period in May-June 2003. The parties disputed several issues. These issues, and the facts relevant to them, are set out briefly here.

(1) Division of the marital estate. The court distributed the couple’s marital property on a 60/40 basis, awarding the larger share to Jayne. Judge Gleason focused on the parties’ long-term health prospects, commenting that:

[W]hen I am called here as a judge to apply the Merrill factors it’s to ... discern what the future holds for each party. The statistical odds for Mr. Fortson of major complications in his health precluding him from functioning in a society from working are very low, and ... those statistical probabilities for Dr. Fortson are extremely high. She faces major health complications in her future because of her paraplegia, and it is this factor to which I’ve given greatest weight in arriving at a division of the parties’ estate, and ... the related need for additional funds to meet the health related needs of ... Dr. Fortson.

At trial one of Jayne’s witnesses, a vocational counselor, stated that Blanton was qualified for various nursing or health management positions with salaries ranging from $30,600 to $79,000. Blanton offered the testimony of another counselor, Marjorie Linder, who suggested a three-year program where Blanton would return to school to become a vocational rehabilitation counselor. The court, however, rejected Linder’s testimony because she did not consider his current earning capacity and only engaged in general career planning. The court held that Blan-ton had an earning capacity of $50,000, and concluded that neither rehabilitation spousal support nor reorientation alimony were necessary in this ease.

The court acknowledged that Jayne’s earning capacity was ten times Blanton’s, but observed that “her health is very fragile and her earning capacity could be reduced to zero at any moment if she falls from her wheelchair.” Judge Gleason continued that Jayne’s health problems “are going to severely impact [her] long-term earning capacity,” and thus concluded that “I recognize the disparity in the parties’ earning capacities, but the issues surrounding Jayne’s health outweigh the disparity.”

Both parties attack different aspects of this property division. Blanton, relying primarily on Jayne’s significantly larger income earning capacity, argues that the superior court abused its discretion in not awarding him a greater portion of the marital estate. Jayne, pointing to large loans from her parents that she alone repaid or remains responsible for repaying, argues that she should have received greater consideration from the court in its property division.

(2) Cash payments from Jayne to equalize the property division. The court ordered Jayne to make cash payments totaling $388,200 to Blanton to complete the division of property. Jayne was ordered to make monthly payments of $3,500 to Blanton for eighteen months, followed by a final lump sum payment for the remaining balance. On reconsideration, the court ordered that the principal should earn 3.75% interest during this interim period. Jayne challenges the order, specifically arguing that the superior court did not take into account the hardship *455 that she would face in financing the lump sum payment to Blanton.

(3) Excess profits from Jayne’s dermatology clinic. The parties disputed whether the clinic had any marketable goodwill and whether it earned any income from activities other than Jayne’s work as a physician. In addition to dermatology services, Jayne’s clinic also offers non-medical therapies and sells cosmetic and skin care products. In the five years preceding the divorce, Jayne’s yearly take-home income averaged $550,000. Blanton’s expert, Donovan Rulien, opined that a physician of Jayne’s experience would earn a salary of $375,000 and thus concluded that Jayne earned “excess profit over wages” totaling $272,800 during the period of separation. Jayne’s expert, Frederick Strand, disagreed. He testified that an appropriate salary for someone of Jayne’s experience would be forty percent of the clinic’s billings, or $508,000, and that given an average yearly cashflow of $455,000, there were no excess profits. He also criticized Rulien’s analysis, and maintained that even assuming a $375,000 salary, no excess profits were present.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 P.3d 451, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 23, 2006 WL 361931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortson-v-fortson-alaska-2006.