In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser v. Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, (A14-0417), and Greg Wickenhauser v. Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991, (A14-0428).

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedApril 20, 2015
DocketA14-417
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser v. Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, (A14-0417), and Greg Wickenhauser v. Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991, (A14-0428). (In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser v. Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, (A14-0417), and Greg Wickenhauser v. Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991, (A14-0428).) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser v. Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, (A14-0417), and Greg Wickenhauser v. Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991, (A14-0428)., (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-0417 A14-0428

In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser, petitioner, Appellant,

vs.

Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, Respondent (A14-0417),

and

Greg Wickenhauser, Appellant,

Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991; et al., Respondents (A14-0428)

Filed April 20, 2015 Affirmed Peterson, Judge

Sibley County District Court File Nos. 72-FA-11-61, 72-CV-12-85

Kenneth R. White, Law Office of Kenneth R. White, P.C., Mankato, Minnesota; and

Raymond Walz, Walz Law Office, Redwood Falls, Minnesota (for appellant Gregory Ross Wickenhauser)

Tami L. Peterson, Eskens Peterson Law Firm, Chtd., Mankato, Minnesota (for respondent Denise Esther Wickenhauser) Wade S. Davis, Stinson Leonard, Street LLP, Mankato, Minnesota (for respondents Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust, et al.)

Considered and decided by Peterson, Presiding Judge; Worke, Judge; and

Connolly, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

PETERSON, Judge

In these consolidated appeals from judgments in a marital-dissolution action and a

trust action, appellant-husband argues that the district court (1) erred in finding that

respondent-wife has a nonmarital interest in a 136.61-acre parcel of farmland purchased

by the parties from trusts created by wife’s family and in failing to apply the Schmitz

formula to the farmland; (2) erred in denying husband’s claim of a nonmarital interest in

a grain-and-energy account; (3) undervalued an option to purchase property; and (4) erred

in finding that husband failed to show damages as a result of the trusts precluding him

from farming certain land in 2013. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant-husband Gregory Ross Wickenhauser and respondent-wife Denise

Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, were married in 1996. In 2010,

husband began a marital-dissolution action. The parties stipulated to child-support and

some property-division issues.

In December 2011, a trial was conducted on some disputed issues, including the

value of a 136.61-acre parcel of farmland (136-acre parcel) purchased by the parties from

trusts created by wife’s family after the death of wife’s father and the value of an option

2 to purchase additional land from the trusts.1 During the marriage, the parties bought and

sold a 200-acre parcel of farmland, referred to as the Carlson farm. Husband testified

that before selling the Carlson farm, he, wife, and wife’s mother had agreed that he and

wife would buy the 136-acre parcel and a 12.2-acre building site from the trusts.

In an amended order filed June 15, 2012, the district court made findings

regarding the parties’ sale of the Carlson farm and purchase of the property from the

trusts. The parties bought the building site during the same month that they sold the

Carlson farm, and they bought the 136-acre parcel about seven months later. The

appraised value of the 136-acre parcel was $2,200 per acre, and the parties paid $1,500

per acre for a total purchase price of $204,915. The parties paid the purchase price with a

down payment of $17,115 from the proceeds of the sale of the Carlson farm and a

secured loan of $187,800. The titles to the two properties were conveyed by warranty

deeds to husband and wife as joint tenants.

The district court also made findings regarding an option agreement executed by

husband and wife in 2005. The option agreement granted husband and wife an option to

purchase an additional 414 acres from the trusts. The option agreement expires in 2025

or on the death of wife’s mother, whichever comes later. The option agreement provided

for a purchase price of $1,500 through 2014 and for recalculation of the purchase price in

2015 and every five years thereafter at a rate of 68% of the average price for bare-land

sales in the surrounding area. The option agreement states that it runs to the benefit of

husband and wife but that “[i]f the marriage of [husband and wife] is dissolved, any

1 The land owned by wife’s family (the Peterson farm) was held in two trusts.

3 rights [husband] may have under this agreement shall cease, and as to lands [husband and

wife] have acquired, [wife] shall have the right to acquire the interest of [husband] as

determined by the court handling the dissolution.” The option agreement granted wife’s

siblings a right of first refusal permitting them to purchase the 136-acre parcel, the

building site, and the 414 acres for $1,500 per acre through 2014 and as recalculated in

2015 and every five years thereafter.

The district court found:

17. In exchange for the right to purchase the remainder of the Peterson Farm at a discounted rate, the parties gave up the right to sell, at fair market value, the property they already owned and any they would acquire from the Trust, without first giving wife’s siblings a chance to purchase the property at the discounted rate.

....

19. Wife understood that purchasing the land for 68% of the appraised value and by receiving the right to purchase the entirety of the farm at the reduced rate, she was giving up any right to any inheritance from the proceeds of the life insurance policy on her mother.

20. The land subject to the Option to Purchase has not been put up for sale. The Court finds it likely that wife’s siblings will exercise their right of first refusal if the land is put up for sale.

While the dissolution action was pending, husband brought an action against

respondent trusts and trustees seeking specific performance of his right to purchase real

estate under the option agreement and his right to farm the 414 acres under a lease

agreement. The dissolution and trust actions were tried jointly to the court. The district

court then held two additional days of trial in the dissolution action to address issues of

4 marital and nonmarital property designations, the parties’ farming rights, and property

valuation and distribution.

Witnesses testified that the main purpose of the trusts was to keep the farm in

wife’s family. Wife’s brother, respondent Darren Peterson, testified that the Peterson

farm had been in the family since 1913 and that after his father died, the family began

having discussions about how to keep the farm in the family. He testified that the first

goal of the trust and option-to-purchase agreements was keeping the farm in the family

and making sure that the opportunity to purchase was available to all family members.

Respondent-brother Daryl Peterson testified that the number one goal of the trusts was to

keep the farm in the family. Certified Public Accountant Charles Morken, whom the

Peterson family consulted about setting up the trusts and option to purchase, testified:

I think the intent of the family was that it was to stay in the Peterson family. That’s kind of the core of the whole agreement, that it was really important to the family that it be kept in the Peterson family and they tried to do everything legally that they could to assure that end.

Husband agreed that a purpose of the trusts was to keep the farm in the Peterson family

and that he understood that if he and wife got divorced, the Peterson family would be

able to get the land back.

There was also evidence that the conveyance, option, and lease agreements were

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In re the Marriage of: Gregory Ross Wickenhauser v. Denise Esther Wickenhauser, n/k/a Denise Esther Peterson, (A14-0417), and Greg Wickenhauser v. Trust B of the Delmar C. Peterson Living Trust dated October 4, 1991, (A14-0428)., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-gregory-ross-wickenhauser-v-denise-esther-minnctapp-2015.