Grey v. Grey

638 So. 2d 488, 1994 WL 246706
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1994
Docket92-CA-01062
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 638 So. 2d 488 (Grey v. Grey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grey v. Grey, 638 So. 2d 488, 1994 WL 246706 (Mich. 1994).

Opinion

638 So.2d 488 (1994)

Roberta Christine GREY
v.
Clifford Eugene GREY.

No. 92-CA-01062.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 9, 1994.

Jerry K. Baldwin, L.C. James & Associates, Jackson, Terri D. Regan, Jackson, William B. Pemberton, II, Jackson, for appellant.

J. Mack Varner, Varner Parker Sessums & Akin, Vicksburg, Kay S. Beene, Vicksburg, for appellee.

*489 Before PRATHER, P.J., and SULLIVAN and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr., JJ.

PRATHER, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

I. INTRODUCTION

The Appellant, Roberta Christine Grey, filed for divorce and sought various items of specific relief ranging from child support and alimony to property division. The chancellor granted her divorce and most of the specific relief requested, along with interests in some real and personal property which Roberta did not specifically request. Dissatisfied with the division of marital assets, Roberta has appealed to this Court, seeking review of the following issues:

A. Whether the chancellor erred in finding that Roberta Grey failed to meet the burden of proof required to establish the existence of a substantial asset and source of funds controlled by Clifford Grey;
B. Whether the chancellor erred in dividing the marital assets of the parties related to Grey Amusement Company;
C. Whether the chancellor erred in dividing the non-business marital assets of the parties;
D. Whether the chancellor erred in interpreting Miss. Code Ann. § 97-33-7(2) as a bar to ownership of video poker machines; and
E. Whether the chancellor erred in expanding, from "possession only" to "exclusive use and possession," the rights of Clifford Grey in and to the marital domicile located near Highway 61.

II. THE FACTS

Roberta and Clifford Grey were married from August 1964 until August 1991. During the first eighteen years of this twenty-seven year marriage, no assets were accumulated by the parties other than the couple's home at 159 Beverly Drive, Vicksburg. Roberta values the Beverly Drive home at between $45,000.00 and $55,000.00; Clifford values this home at $45,000.00. No savings account or substantial checking account was established because Clifford did not trust banks. The parties offered testimony regarding the assets they accumulated from 1982 forward: a home located at the Highway 61 Bypass for $75,000.00[1], to which $8,200.00 (according to Clifford) or $30,000.00 (according to Roberta) of improvements had been made, now valued at $100,000.00 by Clifford and at $150,000.00 by Roberta; real estate in Delhi, Louisiana, for $6,400.00, now valued at $3,000.00 by Clifford and $10,000.00 by Roberta; 122 acres of farm land in Yazoo County for $64,000.00, which Roberta now values at $75,000.00 and Clifford now values at $60,000.00[2]; 1983 GMC truck now valued at $2,200.00 by Roberta and Clifford; a lowboy for $5,200 or 5,500.00, now valued at $3,500.00 by Clifford; 1986 Volvo for $8,000.00 now valued at $3,000.00 by Roberta and at $6,000.00 by Clifford; a backhoe for $13,000.00, now valued by Clifford at $8,500.00[3]; 1972 Ford tractor and implements which Clifford claimed cost $6,200.00 but Roberta claimed cost over $8,000.00, valued at $15,000.00 by Roberta and at $5,500.00 by Clifford; 1991 Dodge pickup truck for $18,000.00 now with a Blue Book value of $15,000.00[4]; Honda lawn mower for $750.00; and a weedeater for $450.00. All real property is titled jointly.

In addition to these assets, Roberta claimed that she and Clifford buried $250,000.00 at their Highway 61 home. The parties' older daughter, Christy, corroborated Roberta's testimony regarding burial of money. Christy said she witnessed Clifford prepare the money for burial and stated that Clifford told her he buried money. Christy also testified that she and her father were estranged at the time of trial and had been for months. The parties' minor daughter *490 also provided corroborative testimony, claiming she witnessed Clifford pick the burial spots and stating that Clifford told her he had buried about $250,000.00. This minor daughter also said she saw Clifford take money from the safe in his shop, put it in coffee cans, and wrap it in newspapers in preparation for burial. Clifford responded only that he had previously joked about burying money, but had not actually done so.

In 1982, Clifford and Roberta began the business of Grey Amusement Company as a partnership, according to Roberta, although her name is not on the Company's 1989 or 1990 income tax returns as proprietor. However, Roberta's name is on the 1982 through 1986 tax returns as the proprietor of the business. The Company placed video amusement machines, jukeboxes, and pool tables in various locations and split the profits with the property owner, fifty-fifty. The income and expenses related to this partnership are reflected on their federal income tax returns. Income tax returns for eight of the first ten years of operation of Grey Amusement were offered (1982-86 and 1989-91), reflecting cash outlays for business equipment and property of $165,155.00. For the same eight year period, Grey Amusement's gross income is reflected as $277,585.00. Roberta estimated the value of Grey Amusement at $150,000.00 while Clifford estimated $10,000.00 — $25,000.00. Roberta handled the family finances and was responsible for bringing the business information to the accountant for tax preparation. Roberta was unaware of how many or which locations Clifford had at the time of the divorce or how many machines he owned. Clifford testified that he had five pool tables in storage, most in need of recovering, three usable juke boxes, also in storage, and nineteen video games, fourteen in use at various locations and 5 in storage. Clifford valued these machines as follows: $800.00 for each pool table, $800.00 to $1,200.00 per juke box, and $800.00 to $900.00 per video machine. The equipment in use was currently at six locations, other than the Onward location. At Onward, there was a jukebox and eight video machines.

Clifford said that many of the machines located in his shop or on the Yazoo County property in a dilapidated house were no good. Roberta admitted that she had not had much to do with the business for at least the year and a half before trial and perhaps for six or eight years before the trial. Clifford testified that Roberta handled the bookkeeping for Grey Amusement Company. However, when she moved out in November of 1991, she began collecting the money and taking care of the Onward location at Clifford's prompting. This location has five video game machines, one video poker machine, no pool table, and a juke box. Roberta estimated she had made $4,500.00 from November 1991 until May 1992. Clifford claimed this location generated a greater income than reported by Roberta. Clifford claimed his other six locations generated about $2,300.00 a month.

The parties' son, also named Clifford, had helped Roberta maintain and service the Grey Amusement Company's machines during 1984 and 1985 while his father was in Parchman. He testified that no books or records were kept in the ordinary course of business and the average monthly income from the Company's six or seven locations at that time was between $5,000.00 and $6,000.00.

Roberta reported her only source of income was $400.00 a month derived from her seamstress business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
638 So. 2d 488, 1994 WL 246706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grey-v-grey-miss-1994.