In re Marriage of Lucas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMarch 19, 2021
Docket122204
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Marriage of Lucas (In re Marriage of Lucas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas 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 Lucas, (kanctapp 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 122,204

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

IN THE MATTER OF THE MARRIAGE OF PAMELA LUCAS, Appellee,

and

JAMES LUCAS, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; PAUL C. GURNEY, judge. Opinion filed March 19, 2021. Affirmed.

James Lucas, appellant pro se.

Ellen S. Goldman, of Overland Park, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., GARDNER, J., and BURGESS, S.J.

PER CURIAM: In this divorce case, the district court denied James Lucas' motion to set aside the settlement agreement he had reached with Pamela Lucas. Without the assistance of counsel, James appeals. He suggests that the court made up facts, omitted crucial facts, and abused its discretion in several ways and asks us to overturn the court's ruling. We are hampered in our evaluation of his arguments by James failing to cite points in the record to support his arguments and by not submitting transcripts of pertinent hearings. Given these deficiencies, we hold that James has failed to meet his

1 burden of persuasion and is not entitled to relief on any of his claims. Having shown us no abuse of discretion, we affirm.

Background

Pamela and James married in 1971. James earned a PhD and founded two companies: Luman Consultants International, a consulting firm for healthcare and other organizations, and Epic Medical Concepts & Innovations, a medical device company. The two lived in their home in Prairie Village. We will call that property the Rosewood home. In 2006, he became Chairman of the Board and CEO of Dadson Manufacturing Corporation. Some time later, James began a romantic relationship with Maryl Janson. In 2011, James bought a home in Olathe that is known as the Sagebrush home. It is solely in James' name. He also started to deposit his earnings into a checking account with Janson.

In January 2017, Pamela filed for divorce. Right after she filed, a business dispute arose. James sued Pamela along with Nancy Peterson, the Nancy F. Peterson Trust, and Dadson for breach of contract and other claims. At that point James was President and CEO of Dadson until he was fired in January 2017. The Trust owned Dadson and Pamela served as one of the trustees. At the parties' request, the court delayed the divorce case pending the completion of the Dadson litigation. This is pertinent because of a later ruling made in the divorce case about the legal fees paid by Pamela during this breach of contract action.

Ultimately, the business litigation ended when the court dismissed all of the claims against Pamela in the Dadson case. The jury returned a verdict for James against Dadson for some deferred compensation, but found for Dadson on its counterclaims against James for conversion of funds and breach of fiduciary duty. The jury also assessed punitive damages against James.

2 Following the Dadson verdict, the divorce case came back to life when James asked for maintenance and Pamela asked the court to set a valuation date for valuing all of the marital property. At the hearing on those motions, the court denied James' motion for maintenance and set the valuation date at January 3, 2017—the date the petition for divorce was filed.

In March 2019, the parties agreed to settle the divorce case. They described it as a "walk-away" settlement. At the hearing, the agreement was summarized on the record as:

"The divorce is resolved with each party keeping their own houses and being responsible for their own debts. Each party will keep all assets in their individual possessions, and each party will accept the debts that they have incurred and holding the other party harmless in the event that debt is not paid."

Later, James moved to set aside the settlement agreement. At the hearing on this motion, the court found the parties had entered into an enforceable settlement agreement and scheduled an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the settlement was fair and equitable. The court ordered the parties to create a simple spreadsheet of their property with values, based on evidence they would present at the hearing.

In early June 2019, the court heard testimony on the agreement. It also received a large exhibit book from Pamela. In August 2019, the court filed a journal entry where it made findings of fact about the value of each piece of property. In summary, the court ruled the settlement agreement was just and equitable. It granted the parties a decree of divorce and divided their property according to the settlement agreement, which it incorporated into the decree.

3 Later, James moved for sanctions against Pamela and her attorney for perjury. The court held a hearing and decided there had been no perjury by Pamela or her attorney, and instead sanctioned James $1,755.

James has included no hearing transcripts in the appellate record for this court to review.

We must decide whether this appeal is timely.

The district court filed its final judgment on August 16, 2019, granting a decree of divorce and dividing the marital property. James did not file his notice of appeal until October 29, 2019, which was beyond the 30-day limit set in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 60- 2103(a). Our motions panel ordered the parties to show cause why the appeal should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

James argued for our retention of the appeal and Pamela argued for its dismissal. The motions panel chose to retain the appeal without ruling on the question of jurisdiction. That is left for us to decide.

We find that we have jurisdiction of this appeal as a matter of fundamental fairness. James argued in his response to the show cause order that he received an email from the district court's administrative assistant apologizing for not sending him the journal entry. That email is not in the record. But Pamela attached a copy of the email to her response to the show cause order. While its attachment does not make the email part of the record on appeal, we view it as an admission by Pamela about the content of that email, so we will consider it.

After James emailed the administrative assistant on October 24, 2019, she responded on October 28, 2019.

4 "I must apologize that I did not send Mr. Lucas a filed stamped copy of the Court's Journal Entry, Doc. 50. I just assumed that since documents filed by Mr. Lucas contained his e-mail address, that he received e-filing notifications so I do apologize for not mailing a copy of this to Mr. Lucas. However, the proper procedure is that Mr. Lucas should have filed an Entry of Appearance indicating he is pro se. The clerk's office at that point would have added on his e-mail address."

Given the admission by the court's administrative assistant that she did not send the journal entry to James and the fact that the district court was unwilling to deny James' motion for sanctions as untimely based on James' contention that he did not learn of the court's judgment until mid-October, a remand for further fact-finding is unnecessary in this case. We hold that James' notice of appeal was timely because the district court did not serve him notice of the judgment until sometime in October. We will proceed with the appeal.

We begin with the district court's findings of fact.

James contends the district court "created" facts "contrary to the evidence" or found facts based on "no evidence whatsoever." But he has failed to include a transcript of the evidentiary hearing in the record on appeal. This is significant.

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In Re the Marriage of Traster
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