Goggin v. Goggin

2013 UT 16
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2013
DocketNo. 20110356
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 UT 16 (Goggin v. Goggin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goggin v. Goggin, 2013 UT 16 (Utah 2013).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter

2013 UT 16 299 P.3d 1079

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH DENNIS MICHAEL GOGGIN, Petitioner and Appellant, v. TAMMY RAE GOGGIN, Respondent and Appellee. ____________ No. 20110356 Filed March 15, 2013 ____________ Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable Tyrone E. Medley No. 054900409 ____________ Attorneys: Rodney R. Parker, Frederick Mark Gedicks, Salt Lake City, for appellant Frederick N. Green, Sandy, for appellee ____________ CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, JUSTICE DURHAM, JUSTICE PARRISH, and JUSTICE LEE joined. ____________ CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court: INTRODUCTION ¶1 This case arises out of prolonged and complicated divorce proceedings. Dennis Goggin (Dennis) and Tamara Goggin (Tammy) separated in 2005, ending a marriage that had lasted approximately ten years. The couple has spent nearly the same number of years litigating their divorce. Throughout the process, Dennis has engaged in a variety of contemptuous and obstructionist acts and has repeatedly violated the court’s discovery orders. With this behavior, he successfully undermined the divorce court’s ability to obtain a complete and accurate assessment of the marital assets. ¶2 Ultimately, the divorce court awarded Tammy all of her fees and costs related to appointing a receiver and hiring expert GOGGIN v. GOGGIN Opinion of the Court

forensic accountants. The court also awarded all of her attorney fees and out-of-pocket expenses. Further, the court awarded Tammy a disproportionate amount of the marital assets. Specifically, the court (A) credited to Tammy the full amount of the assets Dennis dissi- pated; (B) declined to award Dennis a credit or setoff for the value of separate property he contributed to the purchase and develop- ment of the marital residential property; and (C) declined to award him a credit or setoff for the value of managerial efforts he contrib- uted to his businesses while the divorce was pending. Dennis appealed. ¶3 We conclude that the divorce court did not abuse its discretion1 in awarding Tammy all of the fees and costs she incurred related to the receiver and the forensic accountants. But we conclude that the court exceeded its discretion to the extent that it awarded Tammy attorney fees and out-of-pocket costs in excess of the amount Dennis actually caused her to incur. Similarly, we conclude that the court exceeded its discretion to the extent that any portion of its award was based upon its finding that Dennis had entered into, and breached, an oral contract with Tammy regarding the business they started. ¶4 With respect to the divorce court’s distribution of the marital property, we conclude that the court exceeded its discretion in awarding Tammy the full amount of dissipated assets without first estimating the maximum amount of assets that Dennis may have dissipated. Further, we conclude that the court erred in declining to consider whether Dennis was entitled to a credit or setoff for the separate property he contributed to the purchase and development of the marital residential property. Indeed, we conclude that the divorce court may have misunderstood the effect of the district court’s prior ruling in this case. But because it properly applied the doctrine of unclean hands, we conclude that the court

1 Appellate courts reviewing a district court’s use of its discretion- ary authority commonly use the phrase “abuse of discretion” to describe acts that exceeded that authority. But we note that this phrase may sometimes suggest a more pejorative connotation than is intended. Accordingly, in this opinion, we employ a variety of similar phrases in our analysis, such as considering whether the court “overstepped the bounds of its discretion,” “exceeded its discretion,” or whether the act was “an appropriate exercise of its discretionary authority.” For precedential purposes, however, we note that these phrases are synonymous with “abuse of discretion.”

2 Cite as: 2013 UT 16 Opinion of the Court

properly exercised its discretionary authority when it declined to award Dennis a setoff or credit for his managerial contributions to his businesses. BACKGROUND ¶5 Tammy and Dennis met in 1995 and married that year.2 Both of them brought significant premarital assets into the relation- ship. Specifically, Tammy contributed a home she owned, and Dennis contributed corporate assets from Construction Industrial and Construct Tech, which were corporate entities he had created. At the time they married, Dennis also owned property in Sandy, Utah (Sundowner Property). ¶6 Shortly after they married, the couple began searching for property on which they could build a home and begin an equestrian business. They eventually purchased property in Riverton, Utah (Riverbend Property). Tammy served as the real estate broker, and the property was titled in the name of one of Dennis’s corporate entities. The home was completed in 1999, and Tammy began operating their Riverbend Ranch equestrian business in 2002. ¶7 In 2005, Dennis filed for divorce. The divorce court entered a bifurcated decree of divorce, granting the divorce but reserving all other claims for trial. But as the case progressed, Dennis refused to cooperate with discovery and other court orders and “changed his testimony on numerous occasions” regarding ownership of the Riverbend and Sundowner Properties. Accordingly, before the divorce court was able to make equitable property distributions, Tammy was forced to bring a separate action (Collateral Action) in the district court (Collateral Court) to assert several claims regarding the Riverbend Property and the Sundowner Property.3 Among other things, Tammy claimed that she and Dennis had entered into an oral contract to use and maintain the Riverbend Property for their joint

2 We discussed the underlying facts of this case in greater detail in Goggin v. Goggin (Goggin I), 2011 UT 76, ¶¶ 3–10, 267 P.3d 885. 3 Specifically, the divorce court found that Dennis had delayed the divorce proceedings, and that “[b]ut for [Dennis’s] representations, changing testimony, attempt to amend pleadings and his failure to be forthcoming as to the actual events as determined by [the Collateral Court] regarding the Riverbend Ranch Property this case should have and could have been resolved as originally planned in a trial that would have occurred sometime in 2006.”

3 GOGGIN v. GOGGIN Opinion of the Court

use and benefit, and that title to the Riverbend Property should be reformed. A. The Collateral Court’s Order and Our Goggin I Opinion ¶8 After a four-day trial, the Collateral Court issued an order (Collateral Order) in which it found that “Tammy and Dennis reached an express oral agreement to purchase, hold, and develop the [Riverbend P]roperty, and the equestrian business therein, for their mutual enjoyment and benefit,” and that Dennis’s breach of that agreement had caused Tammy to suffer damages.

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