In Re Marriage of Kunze

92 P.3d 100, 337 Or. 122, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 365
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2004
DocketCC DO99-1014; CA A112487; SC S49796
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 92 P.3d 100 (In Re Marriage of Kunze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court 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 Kunze, 92 P.3d 100, 337 Or. 122, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 365 (Or. 2004).

Opinion

*124 CARSON, C. J.

At issue in this marital dissolution action is whether a “just and proper” division of property under ORS 107.105(1)(f) (1997), set out post, requires the inclusion of assets that wife had acquired separately from husband because wife integrated those assets into the parties’ joint financial affairs through commingling. 1 The trial court excluded certain assets from the property division after determining that wife had proved that husband had not contributed to them. The Court of Appeals modified the property division as to two of the disputed assets, concluding that, although wife’s separate funds had purchased those assets, wife had failed to rebut the presumption of equal contribution by husband under ORS 107.105(1)(f) because wife had treated those assets as shared assets of the marital partnership. Kunze and Kunze, 181 Or App 606, 47 P3d 489 (2002). We allowed wife’s petition for review. For the reasons that follow, we modify the decision of the Court of Appeals in part and, as modified, affirm it.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In reviewing a decision of the Court of Appeals that is an appeal from a judgment in a case constituting a suit in equity under common law, ORS 19.415(3), this court may review de novo or may limit its review to questions of law. ORS 19.415(4); see also Massee and Massee, 328 Or 195,197, 970 P2d 1203 (1999) (stating same under former ORS 19.125(4) (1995), renumbered as ORS 19.415(4) (1997)). Because our resolution of this case is fact-dependent, and because we rely upon equitable considerations that the Court of Appeals did not discuss, we elect to review the record de novo. See State ex rel SOSCF v. Stillman, 333 Or 135, 138, *125 36 P3d 490 (2001) (stating same approach under analogous circumstances).

Husband and wife married in 1980. At the time of the marriage, wife was 29 years old and had a master’s degree in speech pathology. Husband was 22 years old and had attended some college, but did not have a college degree. Wife brought into the marriage two contiguous parcels of real property in Portland, 2 each of which included a residence (the “Germantown Road property” and the “Schoolhouse property’). Wife also brought into the marriage 400 acres of farm property in North Dakota. Husband had no assets of significant value when the parties married.

During the initial years of the marriage, both parties worked full time, although wife earned considerably more than husband did. The parties lived at the Germantown Road property and rented out the Schoolhouse property. Although wife did not place husband’s name on the titles to either of those properties, wife deposited the rental income from the Schoolhouse property into the parties’ joint bank account, and the parties paid expenses related to both properties from their joint account.

In 1983, wife’s aunt, Johnson, died. Johnson, a California resident, and wife had enjoyed a close relationship over the years. In her will, Johnson devised to wife, among other things, a duplex residence (the “California duplex”) and a commercial property (the “National City property’), both located in California. Johnson also named wife as a coper-sonal representative of her estate. Because Johnson’s estate was complex and largely illiquid, the parties moved to California in 1984 to allow wife to perform more easily her administrative duties related to the estate. During the year that the parties resided in California, wife received unemployment compensation for two months and then worked on a part-time basis, while she also carried out her responsibilities for the estate. Husband worked for some of that year, and the parties additionally relied upon wife’s savings and rental *126 income from both the Germantown Road property and the Schoolhouse property to pay family expenses.

In 1985, wife received the California duplex and the National City property in a partial distribution from Johnson’s estate. Wife sold the California duplex that year for $450,000. Wife used the buyer’s cash down payment of $125,000 to pay off an encumbrance against the property and to pay costs associated with its sale. Wife received the $325,000 balance of the sale price in a promissory note and trust deed that she held in her name alone. From 1985 to 1992, wife received monthly payments on that note, which she regularly deposited into the parties’joint bank account.

At the time of its distribution to wife in 1985, the National City property was subject to a triple-net lease to a commercial tenant that expired in December 1999. The lease provided automatic rent increases at five-year intervals, with the rent set at $1,300 per month in 1985 and at $2,551 per month by 1999. Because the lease placed responsibility for the property maintenance, insurance, and taxes with the tenant, the property required little attention from the parties. Although wife never deeded an interest in the National City property to husband, she regularly deposited the lease payments from that property into the parties’joint bank account.

In 1985, the parties moved from California to North Dakota to allow husband to pursue a bachelor’s degree in construction management. The parties used funds that wife had received from Johnson’s estate to purchase a residence in North Dakota jointly. Dturing the next five years, husband was a student and earned no employment income, but he made improvements on the family residence during weekends and school holidays. Wife worked full time and also performed all duties relating to the two Oregon rental properties. The parties paid family expenses and financed husband’s education with wife’s earnings, the note payments from sale of the California duplex, the lease payments from the National City property, and the rental income from the Oregon properties.

In August 1990, the parties’ daughter was born. Shortly thereafter, the parties moved back to Oregon to live. The parties planned that wife would remain at home with *127 their child and that husband would find work in the construction field. After returning to Oregon, husband completed his graduation requirements, and, in spring 1991, he obtained his bachelor’s degree. From 1991 to 1993, husband worked with his father and brother in a fence-building business, earning $11,865 in 1991, $5,215 in 1992, and $4,300 in 1993.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P.3d 100, 337 Or. 122, 2004 Ore. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-kunze-or-2004.