In Re The Marriage Of: Richard L. Young v. Donna D. Young

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 30, 2018
Docket49874-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Richard L. Young v. Donna D. Young (In Re The Marriage Of: Richard L. Young v. Donna D. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington 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: Richard L. Young v. Donna D. Young, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 30, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In re the Marriage of No. 49874-0-II

RICHARD L. YOUNG,

Respondent,

and

DONNA D. YOUNG, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

JOHANSON, P.J. — Donna Young appeals the trial court’s orders from the dissolution of

her marriage to Richard Young. She argues that substantial evidence does not support the trial

court’s values for some of their assets and that the trial court abused its discretion when it did not

award her permanent maintenance. We affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In 2014, after 41 years of marriage, Richard1 filed for divorce from Donna. At the time,

Richard was age 62 and Donna was age 61. They owned two businesses—Cedarlake Company, a

commercial general contracting business, and CC Land Development LLC (CC Land), a holding

1 For clarity, the parties will be referred to by their first names. No. 49874-0-II

company. They also owned five real properties—a 40 percent interest in The Timbers at Van Mall

(The Timbers interest), the family home (the Ridgefield home), a condominium (the Bend

condominium), and land in Vancouver (Padden Parkway) and Bend, Oregon (the Pronghorn lot).

II. TRIAL

A. RICHARD’S ARGUMENT AND EVIDENCE

In June 2016, at the trial, Richard requested that the trial court award Donna only the Bend

condominium out of all the parties’ real properties, an offsetting lump sum payment of $471,790,

and $3,500 in monthly maintenance until he had paid the lump sum in full. Richard based his

request on his proposed values for community property assets, resulting in a total value of about

$1.2 million and a 55/45 split of community property assets in his favor.

1. RICHARD’S FINANCIAL POSITION

Richard, who was age 64 at the time of trial, testified that he had been a commercial

developer for 20 years and had experience buying and selling real estate for over 40 years. At

least once, he had “[gone] broke” and rebuilt his business. 1 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 26.

When he filed for divorce, Richard’s businesses were doing poorly; business continued to be

stagnant at the time of trial. His personal income was about $3,000 per month. Richard testified

that he no longer wanted to be under so much stress from his businesses because he was at

retirement age. He sought to sell his properties, invest the cash in “some apartments and passive

investment” he could manage, and perhaps consult for another construction company. 2 RP at

288.

2 No. 49874-0-II

2. CEDARLAKE

The parties stipulated2 that Cedarlake, the parties’ contracting business, had an appraised

value of $114,000 in 2015. The appraisal took into account the value of Cedarlake’s pending

lawsuit against another company and other projected cash flows, as well as Cedarlake’s $235,000

line of credit balance.

Without Donna’s objection that Richard was bound by the stipulated value, Richard

testified that since the 2015 appraisal, circumstances had decreased Cedarlake’s value. Cedarlake

had no current projects and had operated at a loss in the two years leading up to trial. Further, the

appraisal did not take into account that a counterclaim had since been brought against Cedarlake

in its lawsuit, for approximately $225,000. As a consequence, Cedarlake was unable to obtain

bonding from Washington State, and Richard was unable to raise enough cash to reinstate the

bonds.

Regarding the line of credit balance owed by Cedarlake during the 2015 appraisal, Richard

testified that he had since repaid that balance. The funds to repay the line of credit came from a

loan that Richard had taken out on Padden Parkway: the Precision Capital loan. Based on his

testimony, in closing, Richard argued that Cedarlake was worth $0.

2 On the first morning of trial, the parties stipulated to certain facts related to their properties’ values and provided the trial court with their stipulations. They stipulated to the properties’ gross values as well as the amounts of reductions from most of those values, such as commissions, closing costs, and mortgage balances for various properties. Throughout the trial, the parties repeatedly referred to these stipulations, which they did not treat as barring them from disputing whether various reductions should actually be included to arrive at net property values. For instance, during opening arguments, Donna argued that Cedarlake was worth more than its stipulated $114,000 value, without Richard objecting.

3 No. 49874-0-II

3. RIDGEFIELD HOME

For the Ridgefield home, the parties agreed to a sales value of $1,166,680 and the amounts

of various reductions, including a $238,392 line of credit balance, closing costs, and commission.

They did not agree to a net value.

At trial, Richard testified that the line of credit balance should be subtracted from the

home’s stipulated value and that the associated funds were not used for Cedarlake. 3 Although

mortgage interest was not included in the stipulations, Richard also requested, without Donna’s

objection, that the trial court further reduce the home’s value by about $40,000 for mortgage

interest. Richard wanted to sell the Ridgefield home in order to avoid it going into foreclosure and

to raise enough cash to rent another residence. He testified that he would be left with “[m]aybe

[$]50,000” after selling the Ridgefield home. 1 RP at 108. Based on his testimony, in closing,

Richard argued that the trial court should value the Ridgefield home at $128,062.

4. THE TIMBERS INTEREST AND 26 U.S.C. § 1031 EXCHANGES

Regarding The Timbers interest, the parties’ share of a business that owned an office

building at Van Mall, the parties stipulated that the interest’s sale proceeds would be $2,520,000.

Although they did not stipulate to the net sales proceeds from The Timbers interest, the parties

agreed to the amounts of commission and closing costs, excise tax, a mortgage and associated

prepayment penalty, and a loan balance.

3 On this point, Donna presented conflicting evidence: the Youngs’ daughter testified for Donna that the funds from this line of credit went into Cedarlake.

4 No. 49874-0-II

The Timbers interest was listed for sale at the time of trial. Before trial, Richard received

an offer proposing a 26 U.S.C. § 1031 exchange for The Timbers interest,4 but the offer fell

through. The Timbers interest was eligible to be sold in a 26 U.S.C. § 1031 exchange, so that

whichever party was awarded The Timbers interest could potentially invest the proceeds from its

sale into other properties and avoid capital gains taxes.

Without Donna’s objection, Richard testified to additional reductions from the property’s

value—“Health Care Act”5 taxes of 3.8 percent, capital gains taxes of 28 percent, and potential

outstanding property taxes—that were not included in the parties’ pretrial stipulations. Based upon

his testimony, in closing, Richard argued that The Timbers interest’s net value was $410,891.

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