Gourash v. Gourash, Unpublished Decision (9-2-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 2, 1999
DocketNos. 71882 and 73971.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gourash v. Gourash, Unpublished Decision (9-2-1999) (Gourash v. Gourash, Unpublished Decision (9-2-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gourash v. Gourash, Unpublished Decision (9-2-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a divorce decree granted to plaintiff-husband Daniel Gourash and defendant-wife Suzanne Collart. The main issue at trial centered on the disposition of an inheritance the wife received during the course of the marriage. Neither party is happy with the court's decree — both raise issues concerning the division of property, spousal support and attorney fees.

The parties were married in 1985 and used a savings account and a checking account. Husband established the savings account prior to marriage but, after marriage, he converted that account into an asset management account that paid higher interest than a checking account but still permitted the account holder to draw checks from the account. Husband placed wife's name with his on the savings account. The parties used the checking account for day-to-day finances. They funded the checking account with husband's paycheck and bonuses. Wife also worked, but she did not deposit any funds into the checking account.

At the time of marriage, the parties lived in a small rental property. They soon had two children and decided to move to a larger house in the city of Lakewood. In October 1987, wife's father made this possible by loaning the parties $25,000 for the downpayment on a $109,000 house. The parties repaid $5,125 of the loan, but the father twice forgave small amounts of the loan as a Christmas present to the parties. The remainder was forgiven by the father's company shortly after wife's father died in August 1989.

In September 1989, wife's father's estate forwarded to her $118,000 in life insurance proceeds which the parties deposited into the savings account. In September 1990, the father's estate closed, and wife received an additional $165,450. Those funds were also placed in the savings account with the intent that the parties would live on their respective salaries and use the savings account as a cushion in life." Once the parties made the decision to deposit the inheritance monies into the savings account, they stopped making further payments into that account.

That same month, September 1990, the parties placed an offer on a house on Avalon Drive in the city of Rocky River. The seller accepted an offer of $245,000 for the house, with a $145,000 down payment, but the parties made the purchase agreement contingent upon the sale of their house in Lakewood. The parties intended to use the proceeds from the Lakewood house as a downpayment on the Avalon Drive house; however, the Lakewood house did not close in time. As a result, the parties withdrew $150,000 from the savings account for the downpayment, plus $5,000 for closing costs. When the Lakewood house closed ten days later, the parties received net proceeds of $36,692. Wife held title to the Avalon Drive house.

Several months after moving into the Avalon Drive property, a psychiatrist confirmed that wife had bipolar disorder (manic-depressive). The parties began receiving counseling, but their marriage faltered and, after several years, wife left husband in October 1993. Husband remained in the house and became primary caretaker for the children. At the time, husband earned $160,000 yearly as a junior partner in a large Cleveland law firm; wife earned $32,000 yearly as director of communications for a youth organization.

The court awarded the parties a divorce on grounds of incompatibility. The court named husband primary residential parent of the two children and granted him the house, with directions to the wife to execute a deed to him. The court ordered husband to pay wife $171,600 as part of the division of property. The court further ordered husband to pay spousal support of $1,500 per month for three years, and alimony pendentelite in the amount of $22,500. The court also ordered husband to pay $15,000 to wife for her attorney fees, and court costs totaling $5,300.

Husband then filed a Civ.R. 60 (B) motion for relief from judgment concerning the award of alimony pendente lite and the court's decision to include prejudgment interest on the property division. A magistrate heard the matter and issued a decision denying the motion. The court adopted the magistrate's decision and this appeal followed. Additional facts will be brought forth in the opinion.

I
Before considering wife's assigned errors, we must consider husband's motion to dismiss a number of wife's substantive assignments of error. The divorce decree ordered husband to pay wife $171,600 as part of her division of marital property. Husband claims wife accepted a bank check for the full amount of the property division, and also accepted two promissory notes and one personal check to cover accrued interest on that amount; therefore, under authority of Blodgett v. Blodgett (1990),49 Ohio St.3d 243, this satisfaction of judgment renders any appeal on issues relating to the division of property moot. Wife maintains she did not execute a "satisfaction of judgment" and claims she only accepted the payment so that husband could avoid having liens placed on the Avalon Drive property.

In Blodgett, the court cited to the "well-established principle of law that a satisfaction of judgment renders an appeal from that judgment moot." 49 Ohio St.3d at 245. Contrary to wife's arguments, a party accepting full payment of a judgment is not expressly required to execute a formal "satisfaction of judgment." Blodgett cited to Rauch v. Noble (1959),169 Ohio St. 314, 316, for the proposition that when a "judgment is voluntarily paid and satisfied, such payment puts an end to the controversy, and takes away from the defendant the right to appeal or prosecute error or even to move for vacation of judgment." Id.

There is one reported case that rejects the plain language of Blodgett and holds that an appellee's payment of judgment without more is not sufficient to automatically dismiss an appeal as moot. See Federal Land Bank of Louisville v. Wilcox (1991),74 Ohio App.3d 474. That case has been criticized as being a liberal interpretation of the rule and "may contradict the Supreme Court of Ohio's view on the matter." See Poppa Builders, Inc. v.Campbell (1997), 118 Ohio App.3d 251, 254; Hagood v. Gail (1995), 105 Ohio App.3d 780, 788.

We agree with those cases that criticize Federal Land Bank ofLouisville. All appeals require concrete issues for resolution. Once a party accepts payment of a judgment prior to appeal those issues are deemed resolved, and no issues remain for resolution on appeal.

Husband submitted proof that he tendered a check for the full amount of wife's award of marital property, as well as promissory notes and a personal check covering interest. Wife does not dispute that she accepted these instruments in full payment or that the court ordered her to transfer the deed, but claims she did so for husband's benefit as a means of avoiding judgment liens and foreclosures against the house.

This argument is somewhat disingenuous as it appears wife might have dragged her feet on transferring the deed to the Avalon Drive house in an attempt to force husband into paying off her share of the marital estate. The record shows wife's attorney sent husband's attorney a letter that first alluded to failed settlement discussions in this court.

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Bluebook (online)
Gourash v. Gourash, Unpublished Decision (9-2-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gourash-v-gourash-unpublished-decision-9-2-1999-ohioctapp-1999.