In Re the Marriage of Joshua Laurance Patterson v. Rebecca Marie Patterson, ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJune 15, 2026
Docketa251030
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Joshua Laurance Patterson v. Rebecca Marie Patterson, ... (In Re the Marriage of Joshua Laurance Patterson v. Rebecca Marie Patterson, ...) 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 Joshua Laurance Patterson v. Rebecca Marie Patterson, ..., (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A25-1030

In Re the Marriage of

Joshua Laurance Patterson, petitioner, Appellant,

vs.

Rebecca Marie Patterson, Respondent.

Filed June 15, 2026 Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. Smith, Tracy M., Judge

Anoka County District Court File No. 02-FA-22-1927

Kyle T. Wermerskirchen, Wermerskirchen & Blomquist, LLC, Wayzata, Minnesota (for appellant)

Beverly Dodge, Rachel L. Farhi, Barna, Guzy & Steffen, Ltd., Coon Rapids, Minnesota (for respondent)

Considered and decided by Wheelock, Presiding Judge; Connolly, Judge; and

Smith, Tracy M., Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

SMITH, TRACY M., Judge

In this marital-dissolution dispute, appellant husband Joshua Laurance Patterson

challenges the district court’s rulings regarding (1) the valuation of, and the division of the

parties’ marital interest in, a cabin property, (2) the award of spousal-maintenance to respondent wife Rebecca Marie Patterson and a requirement that husband escrow certain

funds to secure the obligation, (3) the division of the parties’ other assets and liabilities,

(4) the award of conduct-based pre- and post-decree attorney fees to wife, and (5) a firearm

prohibition on husband. We conclude that all of husband’s arguments fail except for his

challenge to the award of conduct-based pre-decree attorney fees. We affirm in part,

reverse in part, and remand to the district court to reconsider the award of conduct-based

pre-decree attorney fees.

FACTS

Husband and wife married in July 2006 and have two children, who were ages 15

and 17 at the time of trial in 2024. The parties began living apart in July 2022. Husband

commenced a dissolution action in December 2022. Wife takes care of the children, and

wife and the children were protected by harassment restraining orders (HROs) against

husband as of 2024. Husband owns a home-renovation company, JP Renovations, and wife

works as a bartender. Husband and wife owned several rental properties. In addition, wife

inherited a 50% interest in a cabin, and, during the marriage, the couple made $50,000 in

payments toward purchasing the other half of the property. More detailed information

about the facts is provided within our discussion of the particular issues below.

A temporary order was filed in July 2023, ordering husband to pay child support in

the amount of $832 per month, based upon husband’s representations that his income was

$4,500 per month. The temporary order reserved wife’s request for spousal maintenance,

medical support, and attorney fees.

2 A trial took place on October 31 and November 1, 2024. Both husband and wife

submitted proposed findings. The district court issued its dissolution order on January 16,

2025. The order divided the parties’ assets and liabilities, awarded spousal maintenance to

wife, addressed custody and parenting time, and directed an equalizer payment from

husband to wife. Wife made a motion to correct an error in the district court’s conclusions

of law that appeared to require that the equalizer payment be paid to wife from the proceeds

of the sale of the parties’ marital assets rather than from husband’s share.

Husband then made a motion for amended findings, challenging many of the district

court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Husband supported his motion with

attorney notes but did not provide a transcript of the trial. Wife then filed a responsive

motion, in which she requested additional attorney fees, and a hearing was held before the

district court. The district court filed an order amending the conclusion of law as requested

by wife, amending one finding of fact that the parties agreed was incorrect, and correcting

two clerical errors. It denied the rest of husband’s motion. The district court thereafter

granted a request by wife for conduct-based attorney fees.

Husband appeals.

DECISION

Husband argues that the district court (I) erred in its valuation and calculation of

marital value regarding the cabin property, (II) erred in its spousal-maintenance analysis

and abused its discretion by requiring that funds be held in escrow as a security for the

obligation; (III) abused its discretion by ordering an inequitable distribution of assets and

liabilities; (IV) abused its discretion by ordering husband to pay conduct-based attorney

3 fees; and (V) violated husband’s Second Amendment rights. We address each argument in

turn.

I. Cabin Property

Around 2013, wife inherited from her father a one-half interest in a cabin property

and wife’s sister inherited the other half. Husband acknowledges that a portion of the cabin

property is nonmarital. See Minn. Stat. § 518.003, subd. 3b(a) (2024) (defining nonmarital

property to include any real property acquired by one party but not the other by

inheritance). But he argues that the district court erred in valuing the property and in

calculating the marital portion of that value.

The circumstances regarding husband and wife’s acquisition of the second half of

the property are not entirely clear. Wife and her sister agreed that the value of the property

after their father’s death in 2013 was $136,000. They also agreed that, taking into account

other inherited assets, wife would pay her sister $53,255 in exchange for the sister’s interest

in the property. Wife started making monthly $500 payments to her sister in May 2016

from the rental proceeds from a property that husband and wife owned.

At trial, wife’s sister recalled signing a quit-claim deed to the cabin property in

March 2018. She stated that husband came over to her house at nine or ten in the evening

and asked her to sign the deed and that she felt intimidated and pressured to sign it. The

sister did not know whether her spouse ever signed it as well. The district court noted that,

in 2020, husband and wife appeared for the first time as the owners of the property. It also

noted that no one produced the deed and that it was unknown whether it was ever recorded.

4 When the parties separated in July 2022, husband began keeping the rent from the

rental property and wife had no funds to pay her sister. At the time of trial, $50,000 had

been paid from the parties’ marital funds and $3,255.06 remained due and owing.

The cabin burned down in March 2020, and husband and wife received an insurance

payout of $91,800. At trial, husband claimed that he put $25,000 of improvements into the

cabin before it burned down and that it cost $185,000 to rebuild it. Husband was unable to

produce any documentation of these expenditures. The district court found husband’s

claims of improvements to be “especially troublesome” because he testified to keeping a

folder for every property on which he worked but was unable to produce anything for the

cabin. The district court found that the insurance proceeds were used to replace the original

structure and that the value of the structure remained largely the same as before the fire.

At trial, husband presented an appraisal of the cabin property from his expert, Emily

Poulson (the Poulson appraisal), which valued the property at $394,000 as of June 2, 2023.

Of that amount, Poulson attributed $150,000 to the land and $40,000 to a pole barn that

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