Frank Ray Baggett v. Anne Marie Baggett

422 S.W.3d 537, 2013 WL 4606383, 2013 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 26, 2013
DocketE2012-02013-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 422 S.W.3d 537 (Frank Ray Baggett v. Anne Marie Baggett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Ray Baggett v. Anne Marie Baggett, 422 S.W.3d 537, 2013 WL 4606383, 2013 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., P.J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which JOHN W. McCLARTY and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

This is the divorce case of Frank Ray Baggett (“Husband”) and Anne Marie Baggett (“Wife”). After eight years of marriage, Wife sued Husband for divorce. The following year, Husband sued Wife for wrongfully excluding him from A & F Computers, a computer sales and repair business. Husband sought his alleged share of the profits from the business, damages, and dissolution of the claimed partnership. By agreement, the two cases were consolidated for trial. The parties stipulated that grounds for divorce exist and the trial court decreed a divorce. Fol *539 lowing the hearing, the court classified, valued, and divided the parties’ property. The court determined that A & F was a sole proprietorship and awarded it to Wife. On appeal, Husband challenges the determination and disposition of A & F and the overall property division. He argues that the court’s division is not equitable. We affirm.

I.

This appeal focuses on the trial court’s division of the parties’ property. In reaching its decision, the trial court was necessarily required to determine the classification and value of A & F and other assets including the parties’ real property. Trial was held over two days in July and August of 2012. We summarize the relevant proof.

Husband and Wife met in 2000. They were then married to others. Husband, who was then recently retired from TVA, owned Intech, a computer sales and repair business. Wife, a high school graduate, owned a retail store. She met Husband when she purchased a computer from In-tech for her store. Two years later, the parties met again. By then, Wife’s marriage, her second, had ended, and she had closed her store. Husband was going through a divorce from his first wife, Connie. The parties began seeing each other and Wife spent much time with Husband at Intech learning about computers. In April 2002, Husband’s divorce was finalized; in the settlement, his wife Connie was awarded Intech, but she did not continue the business. Husband and Wife decided to start a new computer sales and repair business. They opened A & F, utilizing the first initial in each of their first names for the company’s name. The new business was in the location of the former home of Intech. As Wife explained, Husband “took the [Intech] name down and gave [Connie] the name, and A & F opened up.” At trial, the parties agreed that it was Husband’s idea to start A & F and to obtain the business license in Wife’s name alone — Husband wanted to ensure that it was shielded from his ex-wife. He also sought to avoid any potential effect on his social security benefits.

A year later, in April 2003, Husband, then 61, and Wife, then 43, were married. Throughout the marriage, both parties worked full-time as computer technicians at A & F. In addition to those duties, Wife was the one who was primarily responsible for A & F’s finances. The A & F income was reported under Wife’s social security number. Most of A & F’s business came from computer repairs that on average were billed at $100 or less. In addition, the parties took trade-ins and purchased used computers from various sources, such as government auctions, to acquire parts for refurbishing computers. Husband focused on hardware issues and built refurbished computers, while Wife focused on software, formatting and reprogramming. Wife testified that “[w]e both did pretty much everything.” Throughout the marriage, the parties shared the income they earned from A & F as well as approximately $2,200 a month that Husband received from his TVA retirement and social security.

In November 2004, Husband and Wife purchased property in Soddy Daisy for their marital home. Husband renovated a detached garage on the property as the new location for A & F. At the time of the marriage, Husband owned a motor home. During the marriage, it caught on fire and was destroyed. In 2006, the parties purchased a replacement motor home, a Coachman, for $46,000. They applied the insurance proceeds from the fire toward the Coachman purchase. This left a balance due on the purchase of some $20,000, which was eventually incorporated into a home equity line of credit. In addition to *540 the burned-out motor home, Husband brought a truck, and $42,000 in a 401 (k) into the marriage. He testified that shortly after the marriage, he loaned $15,000 to Wife’s sister, paid for a lengthy vacation for the parties, and invested the rest in A & F. Wife acknowledged that she owned no separate assets of any value at the time of the marriage.

The proof shows that the parties shared both the income from A & F as well as Husband’s retirement income. During the marriage, Husband’s income was set up for automatic drafts for the mortgage and utilities. The expenses for operating A & F— the “shop” and its associated utilities— were paid for as a part of home mortgage and utility bills for the marital home. Income from A & F was either deposited into a jointly owned business account or kept in cash in the parties’ safe. The parties used the money to pay for purchases for themselves and the business. Husband took no direct salary from A & F, but acknowledged that he and Wife paid for food, clothing, and several lengthy vacations from income derived from A & F.

The parties’ testimony regarding the receipts and profits of A & F varied widely. Wife testified to monthly receipts of $l,700-$3,200, for an average income of approximately $2,200 a month. Husband testified to gross receipts, which he “conservatively” estimated at $200,000 a year. Husband estimated average daily gross receipts of $700, six days a week. Husband testified that “98%” of A & F’s business was cash payments for computer repairs. He said that Wife placed the cash in the couple’s safe, while the checks were deposited into their business account. Husband explained that he arrived at his estimated gross receipts of $200,000 based on his awareness of the payments, mainly in cash, that A & F took in. For her part, Wife disputed that A & F was almost exclusively a “cash-only” business, but agreed that she and Husband had always placed some of the cash they received directly into a safe to buy anything they wanted or needed. Husband said that at their separation, there was $9,000 in the safe. Wife testified there was $6,000, and that she gave half of it to Husband. On questioning by the court, Husband conceded that the parties had never filed a joint tax return reflecting $200,000 in gross receipts from A & F; he took the position that they had understated their income. Bank statements reflect that in the months before the parties’ separation, the A & F account carried a balance of approximately $1,800 a month. Up until the time of trial, the new A & F account Wife opened showed monthly balances ranging from several hundred dollars to, at most, $29,000.

In February 2011, the marriage “hit the rocks.” By Wife’s account, the parties argued one day and Husband, for at least the “fifteenth time,” said he wanted a divorce. Wife suggested he go to the beach and decide if that was what he really wanted. Husband could not recall any dispute that precipitated their separation. He denied that he had ever before asked for a divorce.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

William Woodall v. Robert D. Cooper
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2026
Dylan Whitmore v. Melyssa Atkinson
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2026
NONA G. ROGERS v. MICHAEL L. ROGERS
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2025
Rosalynn Addis v. Ryan Keith Addis
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2025
Kisha Dean Trezevant v. Stanley H. Trezevant, III
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2024
Amanda N. Burnett v. Aaron L. Burnett
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2022
Claude Ellis v. Melisa Jane Godfrey Ellis
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2022
Bruce Anne Steadman v. Charles Daniel Farmer
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2022
Brent Landon Carter v. Shannon Dale Carter
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Elizabeth Anne Sykes v. Chad Steven Sykes
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Roger Dale Grice v. Dawn Marie Grice
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Kacy Collums Davis v. Richard E. Davis, Jr.
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Julie C. W. v. Frank Mitchell W. Jr.
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Angela Michelle Cela v. Sokol Cela
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Teresa Lynn Brown v. Charles Furman Phillips, Jr.
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Tara Janay Swick v. Donovan Robert Swick
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Tracy Marie Haltom v. Gregory Wayne Haltom
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2021
Samuel Jace England v. Amber Leigh Lowry
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
Thomas Robert Blakemore v. Lynn Ann Blakemore
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
422 S.W.3d 537, 2013 WL 4606383, 2013 Tenn. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-ray-baggett-v-anne-marie-baggett-tennctapp-2013.