In Re the Marriage of James Barnum Gregory v. Ellen Davies Gregory

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 2014
Docket49A05-1305-DR-205
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of James Barnum Gregory v. Ellen Davies Gregory (In Re the Marriage of James Barnum Gregory v. Ellen Davies Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals 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 James Barnum Gregory v. Ellen Davies Gregory, (Ind. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as precedent or cited before any court except for the purpose of Jan 10 2014, 9:21 am establishing the defense of res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

RICHARD RANUCCI THOMAS M. GREEN Indianapolis, Indiana Law Office of Thomas M. Green Carmel, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF ) JAMES BARNUM GREGORY, ) ) Appellant-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A05-1305-DR-205 ) ELLEN DAVIES GREGORY, ) ) Appellee-Petitioner. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Deborah J. Shook, Master Commissioner Cause No. 49D04-1103-DR-9645

January 10, 2014

MEMORANDUM DECISION – NOT FOR PUBLICATION

BRADFORD, Judge CASE SUMMARY

Appellant-Respondent James Barnum Gregory (“Husband”) and Appellee-

Petitioner Ellen Davies Gregory (“Wife”) were married in 1989 and had children in 1995

and 1999. Husband is an executive in marketing at Eli Lilly, and Wife is an attorney who

works part time due to health problems. When the parties married, Wife possessed a

substantial amount of family money that has been in an investment account ever since, an

account to which Husband never contributed or had access. As the years passed,

Husband came to make substantially more money than Wife, which was a result of career

choices that favored Husband’s career over Wife’s, Wife’s choice to spend significant

amounts of time raising the children, and her health problems. In recent years,

Husband’s income has been approximately three to four times Wife’s. The parties’

children attend Park Tudor, a private school in Indianapolis, and both parties desire that

they continue to do so. Over the years, the children have acquired several investment

accounts in each of their names, accounts which were, for the most part funded by gifts

from Wife’s mother and are now worth in excess of $400,000.

In March of 2011, Wife filed a dissolution petition. Once the dust settled, the trial

court ordered, inter alia, that the marital estate be divided 60%/40% in favor of Wife, that

Husband pay $291 per week in child support, that the accounts held by the children were

not part of the marital estate, and that Husband would be obligated to pay 78% of the cost

for the children to continue at Park Tudor. Husband contends on appeal that the trial

court abused its discretion in awarding sixty percent of the marital estate to Wife, abused

its discretion in calculating Husband’s child support obligations, erred in not including

2 certain investment accounts held by the couple’s children in the marital estate, and

improperly calculated the parties’ obligations for the children’s private education. While

we affirm the vast majority of the trial court’s challenged rulings, we remand for

recalculation of Husband’s child support obligation and education obligation. We affirm

in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Husband graduated from Harvard University with a B.A. in economics, while

Wife graduated with a B.A. from Princeton before earning her law degree from UCLA in

1989. Husband and Wife were married in August of 1989 and soon relocated to Chicago

so that Husband could pursue his MBA at the University of Chicago. While Husband

was in school, Wife worked full time as an attorney. After Husband graduated in 1992,

he began working for Eli Lilly in Chicago, and the couple relocated to Indianapolis in

1994 to advance Husband’s career. Husband still works at Eli Lilly as a Director of

Marketing. Husband and Wife have two children, C.G., born in 1995, and A.G., born in

1999 (collectively, “the Children”).

Wife

At the time of the marriage, Wife held family gifts totaling $303,464.53. In 2002,

Wife received a gift/bequest of $18,042.50 from her family. Wife used the funds

mentioned above to establish an investment account with the State Street Bank (“the

State Street Account”), an account to which Husband has never had access or made any

direct contributions. The trial court made the following findings regarding the State

Street Account:

3 221. The value of the State Street Account on November 11, 2011, was $1,093,912.25. 222. Husband has never had access to this account, or the ability to access this account, or the funds in the account under any name, or held with any prior financial institution. The account, and the funds in the account, have always been in Wife’s name. 223. The State Street Account was never treated as marital property. Husband did not contribute to the acquisition or accumulation of those funds. 224. The funds in the State Street Account can be traced directly to the $303,463.53 which Wife entered the marriage with, and the $18,042.50 which she received in 2002 as a gift/bequest from her family. 225. The $303,463.53 originated from an interest Wife had in an investment partnership established by her father when he was diagnosed with kidney disease. The partnership was call “TALE,” which stood for “Tom, Anne, Lynn and Ellen,” Wife and her siblings. When the partnership dissolved, [Wife’s] share of the money was distributed to [Wife]. The money from [Wife’s] distribution remains invested in a group of accounts held by Wife and her siblings, managed by Redwood Investments. 226. Husband never deposited any funds into the State Street Account. 227. Except for the instance regarding $15,000 being replaced into the State Street Account from the joint checking account directly before Wife filed the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage, funds in State Street have never been co-mingled with any other assets of the marital estate. 228. Husband never requested access to the State Street Account. 229. Wife was the only party responsible for preserving the value of the State Street Account during the marriage. 230. During the marriage, Wife made withdrawals from the State Street Account. Many of these withdrawals were to pay income taxes. “Periodically” Wife withdrew from the account when the parties were unable to pay bills. There was not a pattern to the withdrawals. Wife made larger withdrawals to purchase assets which remain as part of the marital estate. These include a transfer of $70,000 to pay the down payment and for furnishings for the parties’ first house in 2002; $40,000 for a new BMW for Husband in 2002; $30,000 for Wife’s Ford Escape; $50,000 for one of the condominiums in 2008; $50,798 for one of the condominiums in 2009; and $160,000 in 2010 to purchase the condominium that Wife moved into upon separation. 231. Wife’s withdrawals from the State Street Account during the marriage allowed the parties to use their employment income in other areas. For example, Husband contributed the maximum into his Eli Lilly 401(k) Account.

4 Appellant’s App. pp. 53-55.

Wife worked full time as an attorney in Chicago from 1989 until 1994, when the

couple relocated to Indianapolis. In 1993, Wife’s last year of full time employment, she

earned $88,644.00. Wife became pregnant with C.G. soon after relocating and ultimately

did not work from 1994 until 1997 so that she could care for C.G. In 1997, Wife took a

part time position with the Indianapolis law firm Ice Miller, employment she held until

2009 with the exception of an eighteen-month break following A.G.’s birth in 1999.

Wife currently works as a solo practitioner whose practice depends entirely on her only

client, the East Chicago Waterway Management District. Wife’s income from 1997 to

2009 is summarized below:

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