In Re Marriage of Benge

726 P.2d 1088, 151 Ariz. 219, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedApril 23, 1986
Docket2 CA-CIV 5672
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 726 P.2d 1088 (In Re Marriage of Benge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona 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 Benge, 726 P.2d 1088, 151 Ariz. 219, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 588 (Ark. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

BIRDSALL, Judge.

The marriage of the parties was dissolved in Maricopa County by a decree entered in September 1982. The court divided the community property and awarded the appellee the sum of $480,000 payable at the rate of $2,000 monthly until paid in full. The decree contained no provision for interest and required the payments to continue irrespective of death or remarriage. No spousal maintenance was allowed.

This appeal arises out of a judgment entered June 10, 1985, following an evidentiary hearing on an order requiring appellant to appear and to show cause why the payments had not been made. The trial court made extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law. These findings are essential to a thorough understanding of this case and our disposition of the issues presented on appeal, and we set forth many of them in their entirety. We also refer to these findings by original number in our discussion of the issues.

The trial court reviewed the history of the case from entry of the decree finding:

2. From October of 1982 to May of 1984, Respondent made most of the property division payments required pursuant to the 1982 Decree save for certain “deductions” which he deemed appropriate, but which this Court later determined to be unauthorized pursuant to the terms of the Decree. Despite the fact that the monthly payments required to be paid by Respondent were clearly delineated as a division of community property in the 1982 Decree, Respondent claimed these payments as “spousal maintenance” for income tax purposes in the years 1982, 1983 and 1984, and Respondent deducted these payments as same. Respondent caused a 1099 form to be mailed to the Internal Revenue Service, with a copy to Petitioner designating these payments as spousal maintenance.
3. On June 6, 1984, and again on November 21, 1984, respectively, Petitioner above-named recovered Judgments in the above-captioned and numbered cause *221 against Respondent in the amounts of $6,926.75 and $10,000.00 respectively, which sums represented past due installments on the division of community property payments called for by the Decree, plus attorney’s fees in the respective sums of $1,287.00 and $770.00 and costs of $85.00, together with interest thereon.

The court also found that the appellant refused to make any payments after the entry of the judgment for arrearages, costs, and fees in June 1984 and that:

5. On December 4, 1984, the Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, returned a request for an execution on any and all property owned by Respondent in Maricopa County, as wholly unsatisfied because no property was found upon which to execute.

The court found that it became necessary for the appellee to initiate an investigation to discover what the appellant had done with his properties. The evidence resulting from that investigation amply supported the trial court’s finding that the appellant, in fraud of his creditors, had transferred all of his Arizona property, real and personal, to several corporations, all of which were subject to his control and each of which was his alter ego.

One of the corporations, Mohawk Credit Corporation (MCC), paid the appellant’s personal obligations, including the expense of this litigation and alimony of $2,000 monthly to his first wife, Barbara. Although he served as its president, the appellant drew no salary from MCC. He was its sole stockholder and, at one point, he transferred all the MCC stock to the Nelson Collamer Foundation, Inc., an “eleemosynary trust.” Despite this descriptive charitable classification, the trial court found that the Foundation was an alter ego of the appellant.

The trial court also made certain findings pertaining to the Employee’s Profit Sharing and Retirement Trust of MCC (the Trust). It found that at the time of the 1982 decree the appellant’s vested interest therein was $1,387,758. The decree ordered the appellant to pay the $480,000 awarded to the appellee directly from the Trust “to the extent possible.” This order contained the caveat that the obligation was nevertheless the appellant’s “personal obligation.” More recently the appellant’s vested interest in the Trust was found to be over $1,500,000. The appellant controls the Trust even though his first wife, two sons, and a daughter serve on its administrative committee. In finding 20 the court characterized the situation as follows:

20. Respondent’s exercise of control over the operations of Mohawk Credit Corporation and The Trust is almost absolute. Respondent has the ability, authority and power to direct the Trustee of The Trust to pay any and all sums now due and owing, past due or to become due in the future to Petitioner, and his refusal to pay as provided for by the terms of the Decree and the Judgments subsequently entered against him was done for willful and malicious reasons and to show Petitioner that no Court Order could be effective against him and that Respondent would pay Petitioner that sum of money he felt appropriate, and that he would pay her when he deemed it convenient regardless of Court Orders to the contrary.

With regard to the appellant’s Arizona real property, the court stated:

22. On or about November 2, 1982, Respondent transferred the real property described as 5925 East. Thomas Road, Phoenix, Arizona, to Mohawk Credit Corporation. At the time of transfer this property was Respondent’s sole and separate property pursuant to the terms of the 1982 Decree of Dissolution, and the only real property held by Respondent in his individual capacity.
23. The conveyance of the aforedescribed real property to Mohawk Credit Corporation was made without fair or adequate consideration and with the intent of Respondent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors including Petitioner from collecting her Judgments in order to preserve the property for Respondent’s personal benefit.
*222 24. Respondent does not now have, and did not have at the time of conveyance, sufficient other property in his own name to pay all of his existing debts, including, but not limited to the $2,000.00 per month obligation to Petitioner.

And, with reference to what was apparently the appellant’s most valuable asset aside from the Trust, the MCC stock, the court found:

25. On or about May 11, 1983, Respondent caused 300 shares of Mohawk Credit Corporation common stock owned by Respondent to be transferred back to Mohawk Credit Corporation for the total sum of $1,500.00, when the book value of these shares actually exceeded $17,-000.00.
26. At the time of this transfer these 300 shares of Mohawk Credit Corporation stock were in Respondent’s sole and separate name, held by Respondent in his individual capacity.
27. The conveyance to Mohawk Credit Corporation was made without fair or adequate consideration with the intent of Respondent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors including Petitioner from collecting her Judgments in order to preserve the property for Respondent’s personal benefit. It was part of a plan, scheme and artifice to make Respondent appear to be without assets and to preclude Petitioner from collecting her

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
726 P.2d 1088, 151 Ariz. 219, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-benge-arizctapp-1986.