Hockema v. Hockema

403 P.3d 1080
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 2017
Docket7191 S-16096
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 403 P.3d 1080 (Hockema v. Hockema) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockema v. Hockema, 403 P.3d 1080 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

CARNEY, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 2012 John “Scott” Hockema filed for divorce from his wife, Janet Hockema. The superior court divided the marital estate equally and awarded Janet, who had been a homemaker throughout most of the marriage, spousal support for six years. Scott appeals the superior court’s award of spousal support, its valuation of several pieces of marital property and a retirement account, the denial of an offset for certain mortgage payments made on the marital home, the denial of an offset for interim spousal support paid, and the calculation of tax payments made on certain marital property. We affirm the superior court’s valuation of the marital property and its decision not to offset the interim spousal support payments, but we conclude that the value of the retirement account and the amount of property taxes paid were calculated incorrectly. We also *1085 condude that the court did not make sufficient findings regarding its award of spousal support, and we remand for further consideration of the necessity, amount, and duration of spousal support.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Scott and Janet Hockema married in 1987 and separated in November 2012. Scott filed for divorce the same month. In September 2013 the superior court ordered Scott to pay Janet $5,000 per month in interim spousal support, effective the. preceding April, pending completion of the divorce proceedings. Because Janet was living in the marital home, the court granted Scott credit for the associated mortgage payments, which he was making. He was therefore required to pay Janet only the difference between the $5,000 spousal support obligation and the mortgage amount. When Janet moved out of the residence in September 2014, Scott continued to make mortgage payments on the home; he moved into the home the following month but continued to make reduced interim spousal support payments to Janet.

The divorce proceedings took place between May and December 2014, Both Janet and Scott offered extensive testimony about their respective incomes and the value of the marital assets. They both presented appraisals of their marital home in Kodiak. Janet’s real estate agent appraised the home at $295,000, while Scott’s real estate agent appraised it at $283,000. The home’s septic system needed repair, and a local excavation company estimated the repairs would cost $19,500. The court had ordered Scott to repair it in January 2014; Scott failed to comply with the court order. The court therefore adopted the lower appraisal of $283,000 but declined to offset the value of the home by an additional $19,500 due to Scott’s failure to obey its order.

• Scott and Janet had also placed a down payment on a plot of land adjacent to the marital home. During the divorce proceedings and without prior approval from the court, Janet relinquished the option to purchase the land and received a refund of the $10,000 down payment. The court counted the $10,000 refund against Janet’s balance of marital assets.

In addition to their Kodiak property, Scott and Janet owned a six-plex apartment building in Goos Bay, Oregon, and six acres of land in Seven Devils, Oregon. The court found that Janet had constructive possession of the six-plex for a time but relinquished it to Scott in September 2014 because she was unable to keep up with the maintenance expenses. Janet admitted to collecting $3,580 in rent from the building’s tenants without paying the building’s mortgage or maintenance costs; the court allocated that amount of the marital assets to her.

Scott and Janet agreed at trial that the Seven Devils property was worth $60,000 and should go to Janet. But in August 2015 Janet disclosed that she had sold the property in June for $35,000, in violation of the court’s order not to dispose of marital assets. The court assigned the property to her at its full value of $60,000 in the property distribution.

Two witnesses testified about Janet and Scott’s excavation equipment. Michael Tope, a certified equipment appraiser with 30 years of experience in the construction equipment industry, evaluated the equipment twice' based on photographs, information provided at different times by Scott and Janet, and visual inspection of the equipment. Tope did not start or operate the equipment or observe it in use. He determined that the equipment was in “fair” condition and valued it accordingly. He explained that “fair” meant the equipment “may require overhaul soon [and] may be old or [have] suffered hard use.” His first appraisal was based on information provided by Scott. He valued the parties’ dump truck at $10,000, their excavator at $20,000, and their backhoe at $14,000. After receiving more information from Janet and 'conducting an inspection, he increased the respective valuations to $15,000, $25,000, and $17,500, largely based on the presence of “valuable accessories” that Scott had not informed him were present on the equipment.

Around the time of Tope’s second evaluation, Scott also hired. Patrick. Anderson, a certified diesel and auto mechanic with extensive experience working on and operating heavy machinery, to repair the equipment and estimate the cost of further necessary repairs. Anderson performed $2,298.33 in- repairs to the dump truck and estimated that it *1086 needed another $4,459.46 in repairs. He testified that it could not be- moved from the property because it did not meet Department of ■ Transportation (DOT) standards. Anderson performed repairs worth $194.90 on the excavator. He testified that it was not safe for use and would require $37,761.23 in further repairs to be safely operational. He also performed $323.29 in repairs on the backhoe and estimated it would require an additional $5,429 in repairs.

The court adopted Tope’s revised valuations of the equipment at $15,000, $25,000, and $17,600, but it credited Scott- for Anderson’s repair work, which the court found had contributed to the increase in the equipment’s value,

Scott and Janet agreed in court that Scott had one retirement account (IRA) with a value of $6,350. However, in reviewing the evidence, the court discovered two conflicting exhibits about the IRA: Scott’s Exhibit 33 showed an account at U.S. Bank with a balance of $6,600 on January 8, 2014, while Janet’s Exhibit P showed an account at Wells Fargo bank with a balance of $6,350 on March 81, 2014. The court concluded that, because the parties had failed to explain this discrepancy, it had “little choice but to find there are two IRA’s in Scott’s name, totaling $12,950.” (Emphasis omitted.)

After valuing the uiarital property, the court addressed credits due to Scott since the parties’ separation. In addition to other credits not at issue oh appeal, the court granted Scott a credit of $5,274 for plumbing and heating repairs to the marital home, $3,880 for repairs to the home’s flooring, $570 for electrical maintenance on the home, and $1,537 "for painting the home’s interior. It found that Scott had paid $3,400 in property taxes on their Oregon property and determined that he was entitled to an offset for that amount.

Scott requested an offset of $69,715.20 for interim spousal support payments he had made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
403 P.3d 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockema-v-hockema-alaska-2017.