In re Marriage of Dhillon

2014 IL App (3d) 130653, 20 N.E.3d 1272
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 7, 2014
Docket3-13-0653
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2014 IL App (3d) 130653 (In re Marriage of Dhillon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois 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 Dhillon, 2014 IL App (3d) 130653, 20 N.E.3d 1272 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

2014 IL App (3d) 130653

Opinion filed November 7, 2014 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

A.D., 2014

In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court INDERBIR S. DHILLON, ) of the 10th Judicial Circuit, ) Peoria County, Illinois. Petitioner-Appellee and Cross- ) Appellant, ) ) Appeal No. 3-13-0653 and ) Circuit No. 07-D-519 ) NAVNEET K. DHILLON, n/k/a Navneet ) Kaur, ) ) The Honorable Respondent-Appellant and Cross- ) Michael Risinger, Appellee. ) Judge, presiding. _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE CARTER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices McDade and Wright concurred in the judgment and opinion. _____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 After a bench trial in a marital dissolution proceeding, the trial court entered an order

dividing the parties' property. Both parties appeal from that order, asserting that the trial court

erred in various aspects of its ruling. We agree with the parties that some of the trial court's

ruling was erroneous. We, therefore, affirm the trial court's property-division order in part,

reverse in part, and remand with directions.

¶2 I. FACTS ¶3 Husband, Inderbir S. Dhillon, and wife, Navneet K. Dhillon, now known as Navneet

Kaur, were married in 2002, had no children, and were separated in May 2007. Husband filed

for divorce in August 2007, and a bifurcated judgment of dissolution of marriage was entered in

July 2009.

¶4 A bench trial was held on property division in October 2012. The evidence presented at

the trial, which consisted of the testimony of husband and wife and numerous financial

documents that were admitted into evidence, can be summarized as follows. Prior to the

marriage, starting in about 2000, husband lived in an apartment in Michigan and worked as an

engineer for a company named Mahle. An account statement that was admitted into evidence

showed that husband had about $60,000 in one of his individual accounts at about the time of the

marriage. While husband was working at Mahle prior to the marriage, he contributed to a 401(k)

account. An account statement that was admitted into evidence showed that about six months

prior to the marriage, husband had $3,170.97 in his Mahle 401(k) account.

¶5 After the parties were married, wife moved into husband's apartment in Michigan.

Husband managed all of the parties' finances. Husband continued to work full time at Mahle,

and wife worked part-time as a cashier at Rite Aid, while she pursued a master's degree in

business administration (MBA). Husband's yearly income at that time was about $50,000.

Husband continued to contribute to his 401(k) during the marriage until he left his position at

Mahle in July or August 2005 to take a position with Caterpillar. When husband left his position

at Mahle, he was making about $54,000 per year and had about $19,000 in his 401(k) account.

¶6 In August 2005, husband began working for Caterpillar in Peoria and the parties moved

to that location. Husband’s starting salary with Caterpillar was about $62,000 or $63,000 per

year. For about the first five months that the parties lived in Peoria, wife did not work because

2 she was preparing for the certified public accountant (CPA) exam. In about January 2006, wife

began working part-time for an accounting firm as an intern and eventually, in summer 2006,

transitioned into a full-time job as a CPA with that same firm after she passed the CPA exam.

She was paid about $35,000 per year. The incomes of husband and wife increased over time. In

the last full year of the marriage, husband's gross income was about $82,000 and wife's was

about $49,000.

¶7 During the entire marriage, the parties lived very frugally. They owned no real estate,

lived in an apartment, and, for the most part, spent money only on necessities. Indeed, for the

last several months or year that the parties were together, they were able to live on wife’s income

alone and were able to save husband’s entire net income of over $4,000 per month. In addition,

for several months prior to that time, husband and wife were able to save $2,000 to $3,000 per

month.

¶8 Prior to the parties' move, husband set up several bank accounts for them to use while

they lived in Peoria. One of the accounts was established jointly in husband and wife’s name,

another account was established jointly in the names of husband and his father, and two more

accounts were established in husband's name alone. One of the accounts set up in husband's

name alone, savings account 4863, is of special relevance to this appeal.

¶9 Account 4863 was opened in July 2005. Shortly after the account was opened or within

the first month thereafter, several large deposits were made to the account in the approximate

amounts of $80,000, $49,000, and $53,000, for a total of approximately $182,000. Because wife

was not involved in the parties’ finances, she was not aware of account 4863 or of the amount of

money it contained. Additional deposits were made to that account during the course of the

marriage, including husband’s paycheck and bonuses and other lump-sum amounts, and despite

3 occasional withdrawals, the balance in the account continued to grow. According to the bank

statements that were admitted at trial, over the course of about two years, by March 2007, the

account had grown in value to a high of $301,606.80, a substantial portion of which appeared to

be from husband's earnings during the marriage.

¶ 10 During the course of the litigation in this case, husband changed attorneys several times,

represented himself pro se at times, and was not forthcoming with discovery as to his financial

information. Most of the financial information in this case was obtained by wife’s attorney

through subpoena. One of the financial documents that wife received from husband was a copy

of the parties’ joint tax return for 2006. When wife obtained a certified copy of that same

document from the IRS, however, it showed that $10,000 of interest income that husband had

received was not listed on the tax return that husband had provided to wife in discovery but was

listed on the tax return that husband had actually filed with the IRS. Husband testified at trial

that two versions of the return were prepared, one where he claimed the interest and the other

where his father claimed the interest, so that they could determine which approach was the more

tax advantageous. Husband indicated that he must have tendered the wrong return to wife in

discovery.

¶ 11 After wife subpoenaed the bank information, she learned of savings account 4863 and of

the substantial amount of money that it had contained prior to the parties' separation. The bank

records showed that husband had essentially depleted the account in a few large transfers over a

short period in March 2007. Most of the funds were eventually transferred to an account held in

husband’s father’s name alone. Husband testified that the funds always belonged to his father,

that they were placed into account 4863 so that husband could make transfers of money on his

father’s behalf and so that his father would have money available to him at various times when

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2014 IL App (3d) 130653, 20 N.E.3d 1272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-dhillon-illappct-2014.