In re Marriage of Fisher

2021 IL App (4th) 200316-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 14, 2021
Docket4-20-0316
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2021 IL App (4th) 200316-U (In re Marriage of Fisher) 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 Fisher, 2021 IL App (4th) 200316-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE 2021 IL App (4th) 200316-U This Order was filed under Supreme FILED NO. 4-20-0316 May 14, 2021 Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances Carla Bender allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT 4th District Appellate Court, IL OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the CHARLES S. FISHER, ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellant, ) McLean County and ) No. 16D376 PENNY S. FISHER, ) Respondent-Appellee. ) Honorable ) Sarah R. Duffy, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE CAVANAGH delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Knecht and Justice Harris concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: (1) The circuit court did not abuse its discretion by requiring petitioner to make respondent a beneficiary of the survivor benefit of his pension plan.

(2) By finding that petitioner failed to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that he did not intend a gift by contributing $200,000 toward the purchase of a house conveyed to the parties in joint tenancy, the circuit court did not make a finding that was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶2 The circuit court of McLean County dissolved the marriage of petitioner, Charles

S. Fisher, to respondent, Penny S. Fisher. Petitioner appeals, challenging two features of the court’s

judgment.

¶3 First, petitioner challenges the requirement that he name respondent as a

beneficiary of the survivor benefit of his pension plan. We find no abuse of discretion in that

requirement. There was a marital portion of the survivor benefit, just as there was a marital portion

of inter vivos pension payments. ¶4 Second, petitioner challenges the refusal of the court to reimburse him for his

contribution of $200,000 in nonmarital funds toward the purchase of a house at 2906 Hubbard

Drive, Bloomington, Illinois (the Hubbard property). The court found that petitioner had failed to

prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that the contribution was not a gift. That finding, we

conclude, is not against the manifest weight of the evidence. The down payment was folded into

the Hubbard property, which, in accordance with petitioner’s intent, was conveyed to himself and

respondent in joint tenancy. Presumably, this deed in joint tenancy speaks the whole truth. And,

arguably, there was no clear and convincing rebuttal of that presumption.

¶5 Therefore, we affirm the judgment, with a slight adjustment: because the Hubbard

property was conveyed to the parties in joint tenancy before the marriage, we modify the judgment

so as to categorize the Hubbard property as nonmarital property instead of marital property. This

is a modification purely in the interest of accuracy; it has no practical consequence. The court was

correct to order the equal division of the net proceeds from the sale of the Hubbard property.

¶6 I. BACKGROUND

¶7 On August 15, 2016, petitioner, who was 61 years old and a manager at State Farm,

filed a petition to dissolve his marriage to respondent, who was 54 years old and a guidance

assistant at a junior high school. They had been married since July 15, 2005.

¶8 On May 24, 2018, in a document titled “Final Pre-Trial Recommendation,”

respondent listed the issues that she believed needed to be decided in the upcoming trial. One such

issue, according to her, was whether petitioner should purchase life insurance to secure the

maintenance that respondent was seeking.

¶9 The trial began on May 24, 2018. Petitioner testified that, when he and respondent

got married, they decided to build a house together. They had been living in the houses that they

-2- had occupied with their former spouses. Petitioner and respondent agreed that they would use the

proceeds from selling those houses to make a down payment of $200,000 on a new home, the

Hubbard property. They agreed to split the down payment of $200,000 down the middle by paying

$100,000 apiece. On the day of the closing on the Hubbard property, petitioner was “extremely

disorganized,” and he showed up without bringing his $100,000. He had to telephone his credit

union and request that the funds be wired. “I wasn’t thinking,” he testified, “[and] I asked them to

wire the whole amount. So that’s—and [respondent] didn’t object to it. So that’s how I ended up

putting the $200,000 down.” The credit union account, from which he withdrew the $200,000, was

made up entirely of funds that he acquired before his marriage to respondent. Most of the money

in the credit union account was the inheritance that he had received from his mother, who passed

away about a year before he married respondent.

¶ 10 Petitioner’s attorney asked him,

“Q. So you’re wanting $200,000 back?

A. Correct.”

¶ 11 Petitioner’s payment of all $200,000 of the down payment must have confused the

bank, or so he testified, because the bank put the Hubbard property in his name alone—although

the bank had both him and respondent sign the mortgage on the Hubbard property. This ownership

mishap was soon corrected when petitioner quitclaimed his interest in the Hubbard property to

himself and respondent as joint tenants.

¶ 12 Petitioner’s attorney asked him why he had added respondent as a title owner.

Petitioner explained:

“A. You know, it was a couple of things. One is that [respondent] got very

upset when she found out it was only in my name. I didn’t know it was only in

-3- my name. We both missed it. And for the sake of the marriage, I wanted to put it in

both of [our] names because that was our intent from the beginning.

Q. Did you intend to make a gift of the $200,000 to her?

A. No. It was just a mistake.”

¶ 13 Respondent testified, on the other hand, that the extra $100,000 from petitioner was

explicitly a gift, as petitioner had made clear to her. Her attorney asked her:

“Q. Has [petitioner] ever indicated to you that he anticipated or expected

that you would make any reimbursement or payment to him in cash or otherwise

for the property on Hubbard?

A. Not at all. In fact, when we were going to close, we were going to divide

that[,] and at the last minute he said[,] [‘L]et me do this for us. I want to make the

whole deposit myself.[’]

It kind of almost turned into an argument because I didn’t want that to

happen that way, and he wanted to make sure that I accepted this as a gift for us,

even though I had sold my home and had $140,000 at the time to put 100 down

towards the house. But there was definitely a joint ownership[,] and he knew that

going in.”

¶ 14 On the next day of the trial, August 27, 2018, respondent testified that it was when

she and petitioner were riding together to the bank for the closing on the Hubbard property that

petitioner broached the idea of making the entire down payment himself:

“A. [Petitioner] said that he wanted to put the whole deposit down on the

home, which is not what we agreed upon. We almost had an argument over it. He

ended up saying that he wanted to help us by doing that. That is his only response

-4- to my asking why he would make a change at the last second.

Q. Now, when you say the whole deposit, are you referring to the down

payment on the home?

A. Yes.
Q. Prior to being in route to the closing, did you and [petitioner] make

efforts to each bring a check to the closing?

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Bluebook (online)
2021 IL App (4th) 200316-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-fisher-illappct-2021.