Fricke v. Fricke

491 A.2d 990, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 493
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 26, 1985
Docket82-383-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 491 A.2d 990 (Fricke v. Fricke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fricke v. Fricke, 491 A.2d 990, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 493 (R.I. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This case comes before us on appeal by Walter H. Fricke (husband) from an interlocutory judgment entered in the Family Court granting a divorce to each party on the ground of irreconcilable differences. As part of the decision, the husband was ordered to convey or cause to be recon-veyed his interest in the marital domicile to Loretta L. Fricke (wife), to pay the sum of $300 per week to the wife as alimony, and to pay a counsel fee to the wife’s attorney. The husband was further enjoined and restrained from dealing with the funds in his Keogh Plan and the value or the negotiability of his seat on the Cotton Exchange until such time as he complied with the court’s ruling requiring him to execute a DR-20 support-wage assignment form. It is from these orders that the husband appeals. We affirm but remand for further proceedings.

The travel of this case has been inordinately long, encompassing ancillary complaints and appeals in the United States District Court and several lengthy hearings in the Family Court, beginning in 1980 and culminating in the rendering of the trial justice’s decision on July 14, 1982, pending entry of final judgment. The parties were married in 1950, and for several years prior to their separation their relationship was less than harmonious. Both parties alleged mental and physical abuse that on occasion necessitated local police intervention. Two children, who have since become emancipated, were born of the marriage. The husband is employed as a marine pilot, *993 earning $79,000 annually. He is also involved in a commodities business. The wife assisted the husband throughout most of the marriage in providing transportation to and from the various places of the husband’s employment as a bay pilot. She also monitored the activities of the New York Stock Exchange on a daily basis and reported the results to her husband to assist him in his commodities business. Assets standing in the husband’s name alone included a seat on the Cotton Exchange and benefits under a Keogh Plan. The parties jointly owned the marital domicile located in Cumberland along with undeveloped acreage in Foster, Rhode Island.

The wife’s petition for divorce, filed in 1980, included prayers for conveyance of the husband’s interest in the marital domicile, alimony, medical coverage, and counsel fees. The question regarding the marital domicile forms the principal basis of this appeal.

I

Fraudulent Conveyance

Late in the course of several hearings on the merits in Family Court, the husband was discovered to have conveyed his one-half interest in the marital domicile to Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank to satisfy a judgment obtained by the bank against him individually. That judgment was in the amount of $27,000. This transfer was accomplished without the knowledge of the wife, her attorney, or the attorney for the husband. With regard to this transfer, the trial justice entered the following order:

“One of the prayers of the petition was that the respondent be ordered to convey his interest in the marital domicile to the petitioner. It is quite clear that Captain Fricke, in the last several months, has conveyed his interest to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank. What his motives were the court can only infer that it was an attempt to avoid the assigning of it to his wife if the court so decided. The Court finds that the wife should have the fee simple of the marital domicile and will order Captain Fricke to convey or to cause the reconveyance by paying the Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank or by making arrangements with them, or extending his credit so that they in turn will convey the property to Loretta Fricke, and that order must be complied with on or before September 7, 1982.” (Emphasis added.)

On appeal, the husband argues that absent a specific pleading, any inference of fraud was unwarranted and illegal. He further challenges the trial justice’s authority to order a reconveyance of his interest in the marital domicile. In addition, he contends that the bank was an indispensable party and that in order for the court to act, the bank was required to be joined.

The wife argues that the transfer of the real-property interest occurred during the course of trial, after the husband had testified several times about the ownership of the marital domicile and after the court had indicated that the assignment of the real estate in question was an issue in the petition for divorce. From these facts, she contends, one can draw a clear inference that the transfer was fraudulent in regard to her marital rights. Having stated the parties’ positions, we turn to the record to determine what actually occurred before and during the trial.

No one disputes that Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank obtained a judgment on December 17,1981, against Walter H. Fricke individually in the amount of $23,514.74 plus interest, costs, and reasonable attorneys’ fees. An execution levy was recorded on January 22, 1982, at 12:10 p.m. on all the right, title, and interest of Walter H. Fricke in and to the real estate in question. A sheriff’s sale was scheduled for June 4, 1982, at 10 a.m. The basis of this judgment was a defaulted promissory-note obligation in the amount of $20,000 executed by the husband on or about December 31, 1980. The hearings on the petition for divorce were held on March 30 and *994 March 31, 1982. On the third day of hearings, April 5, 1982, the parties submitted their respective appraisals of the marital domicile — the wife’s for $60,000 and the husband’s for $68,000. On April 15, 1982, the fourth day of trial, the husband was asked on direct examination on two occasions if there were any liens or encumbrances on the real estate, to which line of inquiry he replied, “[A]t the moment, not to my knowledge.” On the same day the husband testified that it was his desire that the property in Cumberland be sold and the proceeds divided equally. The matter was heard again in part on April 19, 1982, and was continued to May 25,1982. On May 25 the husband again manifested his interest in equal distribution of the sale proceeds from the real estate. Moments later, still on direct examination, he informed the court that as of May 17, 1982, he had quit-claimed his one-half interest in the marital domicile to Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank in satisfaction of a preexisting debt.

It is our opinion that the record fully supports the inference drawn by the trial justice that the transfer in question was a fraudulent attempt by the husband to put the property out of the reach of his wife and of the court. Ordinarily, fraud must be specifically pleaded. However, “a trier of the facts may draw reasonable inferences from evidentiary facts in order to establish legal proof.” Menard v. Menard, 106 R.I. 709, 712, 263 A.2d 98, 100 (1970); Labbe v. Hill Brothers, Inc., 97 R.I. 269, 197 A.2d 305 (1964). Moreover, circumstantial evidence may be considered on the question of fraud, and reasonable inferences may be drawn therefrom as long as they are not based on mere suspicion or conjecture. 37 C.J.S. Fraud § 115 at 436 (1943).

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Bluebook (online)
491 A.2d 990, 1985 R.I. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fricke-v-fricke-ri-1985.