Gerard M. Dierckman v. Sandra E. Dierckman

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 2023
Docket22A-DN-02801
StatusPublished

This text of Gerard M. Dierckman v. Sandra E. Dierckman (Gerard M. Dierckman v. Sandra E. Dierckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerard M. Dierckman v. Sandra E. Dierckman, (Ind. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Dec 19 2023, 8:47 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE Alexander N. Moseley Zachary J. Stock Matthew C. McConnell Carmel, Indiana Dixon & Moseley, P.C. Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Gerard M. Dierckman, December 19, 2023 Appellant-Respondent, Court of Appeals Case No. 22A-DN-2801 v. Appeal from the Decatur Circuit Court Sandra E. Dierckman, The Honorable James D. Appellee-Petitioner. Humphrey, Special Judge Trial Court Cause Nos. 15C01-2103-CB-13 16C01-1912-DN-758

Opinion by Judge Bailey Judges May and Felix concur.

Bailey, Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-DN-2801 | December 19, 2023 Page 1 of 25 Case Summary [1] The marriage of Gerard Dierckman (“Husband”) and Sandra Dierckman

(“Wife”) was dissolved by a Decree of Dissolution and Judgment dated

October 26, 2022. Husband appeals the final dissolution order as it relates to

the marital property.

[2] We affirm.

Issues [3] Husband raises five issues which we consolidate and restate as the following

four issues:

I. Whether the trial court’s findings are clearly erroneous.

II. Whether the trial court erred in the valuation dates it chose for the marital assets, i.e., real estate, farm income, farm inventory, and accounts receivable.

III. Whether the trial court erred in valuing the marital debt as of the date of the petition for dissolution.

IV. Whether the trial court erroneously reduced Wife’s equalization payment by the amount Wife paid Husband for his personal expenses incurred during the dissolution proceedings.

Facts and Procedural History

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-DN-2801 | December 19, 2023 Page 2 of 25 [4] Husband and Wife were married in 1987. They have four grown sons born of

the marriage. Over the course of the marriage, Husband and Wife acquired

farmland in Rush and Decatur Counties. Title to some of the land was

acquired through litigation with Husband’s family, and some of the land was

purchased. All the land was held jointly by Husband and Wife as a sole

proprietorship.

[5] Husband, Wife, their four sons, and, periodically, farm employees operated the

parties’ farm year-round. The parties’ sons worked on the farm throughout

their childhoods, and Wife was “the primary bookkeeper” who “pa[id] the bills,

… t[ook] care of the financing, … secure[d] the operating l[oans],” and

obtained contracts for crop sales and deliveries. Tr. v. II at 68. Wife also

hauled grain during harvest season, “ran the grain elevator,” Tr. v. II at 223,

and “ran the planter,” Tr. v. III at 113.

[6] When the sons grew into adults and stopped helping on the farm, Husband and

Wife began to experience difficulty running the farm. The sons became

estranged from Husband due to the “rude, mean, aggressive, sporadic, erratic,

crazy manner [with which] he handled himself with the boys, with grain buyers,

[and] with machinery dealers.” Tr. v. II at 222. Husband and Wife became

“more financially strapped” and had difficulty securing financing. Id. at 61. In

March 2018, the parties secured a two-year line of credit from Citizen’s Union

Bank just in time to buy that year’s farming inputs.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-DN-2801 | December 19, 2023 Page 3 of 25 [7] In October 2018, Husband was arrested and charged with strangulation and

domestic battery of Wife. Following a jury trial, Husband was found guilty of

strangulation, pled guilty to the domestic battery charge, and was sentenced to a

year in jail. At the time of Husband’s arrest, there were still crops in the fields,

and the parties’ sons helped Wife harvest the remaining crops. Following

Husband’s release from jail, he was initially excluded from the farm pursuant to

a no-contact order. That order was later modified to allow Husband to access

only the farm but not the residence located on the farm.

[8] The parties’ attempts to reconcile failed, and in December 2019, Wife filed her

Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. The parties’ sons, along with their wives,

continued to help Wife with operating the farm, and Wife also helped the sons

with their own farms. In retaliation for Wife’s refusal to “drop the divorce,”

Husband refused to provide his necessary participation to extend the Citizen’s

Union Bank operating line of credit for the farm for the year 2020. Tr. v. II at

73. Therefore, the line of credit was not extended, but farm mortgage payments

were still due.

[9] The trial court held a provisional hearing on February 27, 2020, at which both

parties testified. Wife testified that she had obtained an agreement with Agri

Business Finance (“ABF”) for a new operating loan, provided that she gave

them proof of a provisional order allowing her exclusive use and possession of

the farm operations pending a final dissolution order. Addam Carmony, a loan

officer with ABF, also testified and affirmed that ABF would provide an

operating loan to Wife if she obtained a provisional order giving her exclusive

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-DN-2801 | December 19, 2023 Page 4 of 25 use and possession of the farm. Carmony did not “want to work with

[Husband] at that time.” Tr. v. IV at 36. Husband testified that he agreed to

Wife having provisional exclusive rights to the farm so that the farm did not

“go broke or have to file bankruptcy.” Provisional Hearing Tr. at 34-35.1

[10] On March 4, 2020, the trial court entered a provisional order granting Wife

exclusive use, possession, and control of the “marital real estate”—which

included the farm and farming equipment—pending a final determination on

dissolution. App. v. II at 43. Wife was also ordered to “timely pay the

monthly mortgage, taxes[,] and insurance.” Id. The provisional order also

directed Wife to use any new operating loan “consistent with past practices

which includes the payment of personal expenses … for both Husband and

Wife.” Id. Each party was also restrained from “selling, removing,

encumbering, transferring, destroying, concealing, or otherwise interfering with

the parties’ assets” during pending proceedings. Id. However, the order stated

that it did “not preclude Wife from continuing to operate the farm as outlined

above.” Id.

[11] Since March 2020, Wife has been solely legally responsible for the operation of

the parties’ 1,500-acre farm, including making all decisions, managing the farm

finances, maintaining the ABF line of credit, and delivering grain. Wife has

1 The transcript of the provisional hearing is not included in the record on appeal, but we accessed it via the trial court records contained in the Odyssey court case management system under Cause Number 16C01- 1912-DN-758.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-DN-2801 | December 19, 2023 Page 5 of 25 also maintained good working relationships with her sons, who assist her with

the farm operations and anticipate continuing to do so. However, three of the

parties’ sons testified that the sons would not work with Husband if he were

awarded the farming operations because they “can’t get along” with him due to

his verbal abuse. Tr. v. IV at 79.

[12] While the dissolution proceedings were pending, Wife used proceeds from the

farming operation to pay down the parties’ marital debts. As of October 2021,

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