In re the Marriage of Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean Eakens ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS v. BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, Respondent-Respondent

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 2022
DocketSD37063
StatusPublished

This text of In re the Marriage of Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean Eakens ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS v. BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, Respondent-Respondent (In re the Marriage of Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean Eakens ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS v. BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, Respondent-Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri 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 Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean Eakens ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS v. BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, Respondent-Respondent, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In re the Marriage of: ) Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean ) Eakens ) ) ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS, ) ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) vs. ) No. SD37063 ) BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, ) Filed: July 5, 2022 ) Respondent-Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF NEW MADRID COUNTY

The Honorable William Edward Reeves, Judge

AFFIRMED

Robert Shawn Eakens (“Husband”) appeals from a judgment entered January 27,

2021, dissolving his marriage to Billie Jean Eakens (“Wife”) and dividing marital

property and debts between them. In three points relied on, Husband claims: (1) the trial

court “erroneously applied the law” in classifying a Sterling Bank account that ended in

8395 as marital property because the account contained funds received by Husband and

Husband’s brother as beneficiaries of a life insurance policy on their father; (2) the trial

1 court’s valuation of the marital home at $175,000 and award of the home and related debt

to Husband “creat[ed] an inequitable distribution of assets so heavy in favor of [Wife] as

to amount to an abuse of discretion”; and (3) the trial court’s judgment classifying the

Sterling Bank account ending in 8395 as marital property, and valuing and awarding to

Husband the marital home and related debt “was so heavily in favor of [Wife] as to

amount to an abuse of discretion.” We disagree, deny each point, and affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

Facts and Procedural Background

Trial occurred on September 3, 2020. Viewed in accordance with our standard of

review, the evidence at trial showed the following. Husband and Wife were married in

October 1992. Husband subsequently filed a petition for dissolution of marriage on May

7, 2019, and Wife filed a counter-petition for dissolution of marriage in June 2019.

At the time of trial, Wife was 47 years old, was a high-school graduate, worked at

Cornerstone Pharmacy as a pharmacy technician, and “earn[ed] approximately $37,000 a

year.” Wife did “not have any retirement” benefit through her current or past

employment. The “majority of the years” Husband and Wife were married, Husband’s

“income was less than $50,000 a year,” but had increased more recently and was over

$70,000 in 2018. Husband’s income increased to approximately $80,000 a year by the

time of trial. After high school, Husband “did auto collision repair work,” and continued

doing that work when he began college in 2006. Before Husband began college, Wife

“stayed at home with [the couple’s] children,” and then started working when Husband

began college. On obtaining a degree in accounting, Husband began working for the

federal government in 2010. Husband also has a “CPA license.”

2 Wife has the “inherited cancer gene” “BRCA 1,” and has had multiple surgeries

beginning in 2015, and will have at least one additional surgery in the near future. Wife’s

current health insurance was through Husband’s employment, but she could obtain health

insurance through her employment at the cost of “around” $200 a month with a

significantly higher deductible ($2,000 versus zero with Husband’s insurance).

Wife had “moved out of the marital home” in January 2020 and was residing with

her sister at the time of trial. Husband continued to reside in the marital home. A 2014

appraisal of the marital home for the purpose of refinancing the original mortgage was

offered by Wife and admitted into evidence without objection, and opined the home had a

value equal to $175,000. At the time of trial, the amount owed on the home “was a little

over [$]73,000.” Wife believed the marital home was “worth” $175,000 based on the

appraisal, and requested that Husband “remain in the home and that [she] . . . receive half

the equity.”1

Husband opened two accounts at Sterling Bank on April 20, 2018, and claimed

that the account ending in 8395 was his nonmarital property. Wife was “not aware” of

1 Husband testified he did not agree with Wife’s valuation, and that the “last Zillow estimate” produced “around [a $]144,000 sale price” and a “net proceeds value” of “around” $95,000. Husband believed the roofs on the home and shop were leaking in places, and the “leaks . . . have damaged wood and stuff.” Husband had not obtained an estimate of the cost to repair the home and shop at the time of trial. Because the parties were “so far apart” on the marital home’s value, Husband believed “really the only way” to divide the home was for the trial court to order that the home “be sold and . . . the net proceeds be divided equally between” the parties. Husband acknowledged that it was “convenient” for him to stay at the marital home because the shop “takes care” of his hobby “working with automobiles.” In an answer to an interrogatory, Husband said the marital home “was appraised on 11-17 for a value of 175[,000].”

3 the two accounts at Sterling Bank “until [Husband] filed for divorce” and answered an

interrogatory. Wife had no first-hand knowledge about those two accounts, but Husband

“told” her one of the accounts at Sterling Bank “was used to house his father’s life

insurance when his father died.” Wife “knew [Husband] had the life insurance money,

but . . . didn’t know where he had put it.” Wife’s attorney also “went over some” of the

records for Sterling Bank with Wife. Wife requested that the accounts at Sterling Bank

be divided equally between Husband and her. On cross-examination, Wife

acknowledged that “$36,000” of the amount in the Sterling Bank account ending in 8395

“was life insurance” because she “received a copy of the life insurance check made

payable” to Husband “in discovery,” and that she “knew that [Husband] inherited money

from his father through a life insurance account.” Wife declined to agree she knew a

similar deposit was Husband’s brother’s life insurance check stating, “I don’t know that

as fact. I didn’t see, I haven’t seen that.”2 No life insurance check or other documentary

evidence of life insurance was offered as evidence at trial, and the only witnesses at trial

were Husband and Wife.

2 Husband testified the purpose of the Sterling Bank account ending in 8395 “was to hold some life insurance proceeds that I received from my father.” Husband testified he opened the account with $60 cash, and then deposited his “father’s life insurance check that was made payable to” Husband in an amount “somewhere along” $37,000, and “a second life insurance check” “made payable to” Husband’s brother because the brother “was taking [their] father’s death real hard and not acting rationally.” Husband testified his father died in March 2018, and Husband received the life insurance proceeds reasonably soon after the father’s death. Husband further testified he told his wife about “the existence of” the account, and that she was “aware” Husband “received [the] insurance proceeds from [his] father’s death” and “knew” his brother’s insurance proceeds also were in the account.

4 Based on bank records admitted into evidence at trial, Husband opened the

Sterling Bank account ending in 8395 on April 20, 2018, with a deposit of $60 and a

bank promotional deposit of $10; followed by a deposit of $37,650 on April 23, 2018;

and followed by a deposit of $37,650 on May 7, 2018. Then, almost one year later and

less than one month before Husband filed his petition for dissolution, Husband wrote a

check on the account payable to his brother in the amount of $37,650. Husband testified

that, at the time of trial, the account had a balance of “[$]600 or less” because Husband

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In re the Marriage of Robert Shawn Eakens and Billie Jean Eakens ROBERT SHAWN EAKENS v. BILLIE JEAN EAKENS, Respondent-Respondent, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-robert-shawn-eakens-and-billie-jean-eakens-robert-moctapp-2022.