In Re Marriage of Asbury

144 Cal. App. 3d 918, 193 Cal. Rptr. 562, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1884
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 1983
DocketCiv. 6579
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 Cal. App. 3d 918 (In Re Marriage of Asbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Asbury, 144 Cal. App. 3d 918, 193 Cal. Rptr. 562, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1884 (Cal. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

*920 Opinion

BROWN (G. A.), P. J.

The husband, William Joseph Asbury, appeals from a judgment of dissolution of his marriage to Elizabeth Gay Asbury (now McNabb; hereinafter wife) insofar as the judgment determines the value of the wife’s interest in their joint orthodontic practice; more particularly, the value of her interest in the intangibles of the practice.

Both the husband and the wife are licensed dentists, specializing in orthodontics. They were married on September 13, 1975, and separated on March 6, 1978. The wife continued to work at their joint office until May 5, 1978, when she left the joint practice. She took with her, pursuant to mutual agreement, certain patients, their records, and a small quantity of orthodontic supplies. She thereafter practiced on her own at a new location.

The valuation testimony was presented by two experts. Dillan J. Gnagy, a certified public accountant, testified as a witness for the husband. T. Thomas Mott, a certified public accountant, testified for the wife.

In order to. isolate, understand and properly analyze the narrow issue before us, it is essential that the valuation methodology be generally summarized.

Gnagy used a gross income theory to value the entire business—both tangible and intangible—and the value of the business the wife took with her. Mott valued the tangible and intangible assets separately, using the gross income theory to value the intangible assets only. Mott accepted the basic income data developed by Gnagy.

More precisely, Gnagy calculated the value of the husband’s practice at the time of marriage as follows: fees collected for the six months preceding the date of marriage were $46,134, translating into an annualized volume of $92,228.68; 70 percent of this figure, or $64,506, 1 was the market value of the entire practice at the date of marriage. $27,705 was still owing by husband on the original purchase price of the practice, so Gnagy subtracted this amount owing from the market value to reach a net value for the orthodontic practice at the time of marriage of $36,855. He calculated the value of the joint orthodontic practice as of the date the practice was divided by the parties—May 1978—in a similar manner: fees for the six months preceding May 1, 1978, were $87,948.40, an annualized volume of $175,896.80; 70 percent of that figure gave a market value of $123,128. $10,609 was still owing on the original purchase price of the practice, leav *921 ing a net value for the joint orthodontic practice at the time it was divided, by the parties of $112,519. Gnagy calculated that a 10 percent rate of return on husband’s original separate property practice, valued at $36,855 just prior to marriage, increased the separate property value as of May 1978 by $9,214, for a total separate value of $48,069, leaving a net community equity in the joint orthodontic practice as of May 1978 of $66,450. Gnagy then calculated the value of the practice taken by wife in May 1978: the fees she received for the two months ending June 30, 1978, were $13,713.96, an annualized volume of $82,283.76, having a 70 percent market value of $57,599. Since wife was entitled to one-half of the community equity in the joint practice, or $33,225, Gnagy concluded that wife had; taken in excess of $24,374 worth of community equity (the difference between $57,599 and $33,225) in the mutual division of the joint practice in May 1978. Attached as exhibit 1 is a summary of Gnagy’s calculations.

Wife’s expert witness testified that the gross income theory used by Gnagy to value the orthodontic practice was an acceptable method, but that he (Mott) used a different valuation system. Unlike Gnagy, who valued the practice as an indivisible unit, Mott valued the tangible assets—cash, accounts receivable, and equipment—separately from the intangible assets— goodwill or going business value. Mott compared the value of the tangible assets of the orthodontic practice at the time of marriage with the value for those same assets as of May 1978, including decreases in the debts of the practice over the relevant period, and calculated that the practice’s tangible assets increased by $71,009 during the marriage. This figure was later reduced by $4,000.

Mott calculated the increase in value of the intangible assets of the orthodontic practice during the marriage, using the annualized gross income figures prepared by Gnagy, as follows: the annualized gross income before marriage was $92,228 and in May 1978 was $175,896; the difference, $83,668, represented the increase in value of intangible assets attributable to the period of coverture. Half of that increase, or $41,834, was wife’s community property share of the intangible assets of the practice as of May 1978. Thus, rather than 70 percent of the increase in value, Mott used 100 percent of the increase in value.

As to the value of the practice the wife took with her, Mott testified on rebuttal that the fees collected by wife in the two months after the practice was divided included payments for patients from an unrelated practice, reducing collections attributable to the community practice to $10,290 for two months, or an annualized volume of $61,740 times 70 percent, or $43,218. Thus, Mott used a 70 percent figure to calculate the value of the practice *922 the wife took with her. Attached as exhibit 2 is a summary of Mott’s calculations.

The trial court’s analysis of the valuation of the orthodontic practice is revealed by the notice of intended decision filed on December 15, 1980: 2

“Award to Petitioner:
“$ 41,834.00—one-half of intangibles
$ 25,159.00—one-half of tangibles[ 3 ]
“$ 66,993.00
“less $ 43,218.00—(amount already received by Petitioner, 70% of $10,290.00 annualized)
$ 23,775.00
($ 9,214.00) [Interest on husband’s separate property investment]
Respondent’s separate property interest:
$ 23,775.00
"less $ 9,214.00 [Later corrected to a deduction of one-half of this figure]
14,561.00
"plus $ 1,300.00 (Dr. Mott’s charges)
$ 146.00 (costs)
$ 16,007.00 (net figure)”

In his objections to proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, husband argued that the trial court had used Mott’s “100 percent” valuation method in determining the amount by which the orthodontic practice had grown between the date of marriage and May 1978, but then had assigned Gnagy’s “70 percent” valuation method in determining the value of the portion of the joint practice taken by wife in May 1978.

The trial court rejected husband’s argument that either the 100 percent method or the 70 percent method should have consistently been used

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Related

In Re Marriage of Slivka
183 Cal. App. 3d 159 (California Court of Appeal, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
144 Cal. App. 3d 918, 193 Cal. Rptr. 562, 1983 Cal. App. LEXIS 1884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-asbury-calctapp-1983.