In Re The Marriage Of: Suresh Philip And Jaya P. Philip

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 20, 2014
Docket32041-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Marriage Of: Suresh Philip And Jaya P. Philip (In Re The Marriage Of: Suresh Philip And Jaya P. Philip) 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: Suresh Philip And Jaya P. Philip, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

November 20, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

In re the Marriage of: ) ) No. 32041-3-111 SURESH PHILIP, ) ) Appellant, ) ) and ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION JAYAP. PHILIP, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. Dr. Suresh Philip appeals the trial court's division of his and

his ex-wife's assets at the conclusion of their marital dissolution trial. He challenges the

trial court's adjustments to the parties' distributions to account for $251,000 of

community assets that Dr. Philip used to repay his parents for two long-outstanding

separate property loans, a few months before he filed for divorce.

Dr. Philip characterizes the court's adjustment as a right of reimbursement and

argues that it was improperly imposed on the merits and in its amount. The

characterization of the adjustment as a right of reimbursement is challenged by Ms.

Philip. We conclude that however characterized, the adjustment was correctly calculated i 1 t ~ li No. 3204l-3-III f In re Marriage ofPhilip

I I, J to accomplish the trial court's stated objective and that Dr. Philip fails to demonstrate an

i 1 abuse of the trial court's discretion. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1! ii Dr. Suresh Philip and Jaya Philip married in 1990. Dr. Philip came into the

I marriage with a $92,000 debt to his parents-money he borrowed to help finance his \ medical education in Nigeria. The loan required repayment at a four percent interest rate,

compounded annually. J ~ '1 i After getting married, Dr. Philip and Ms. Philip moved to North America. Dr. \ J Philip spent a year in Canada preparing to take the several medical examinations required j

Ii to practice medicine in the United States or Canada. Ms. Philip lived with her parents in

Connecticut during that time frame, traveled to visit him, and provided financial support i ! 1 I toward his expenses. Dr. Philip allegedly borrowed another $28,000 from his parents ! f while living in Canada. Ms. Philip claims to have known nothing about either loan

I I i before Dr. Philip filed for divorce. Dr. Philip agreed at trial that both loans were his

separate property. i I In September 2010, Dr. Philip repaid the loans to his parents in their entirety: with

I 1 interest, he paid them a total of $251 ,000. He used community funds from the couples'

Vanguard investment account. The payment was made without Ms. Philip's knowledge

1j or consent. Two months later, Dr. Philip filed for divorce. The existence of the loans ~

/ \ No. 32041-3-111 i In re Marriage ofPhilip 1 1

l ~, and the fact that he had liquidated a quarter million dollars of community investments to

repay them came to light during a divorce mediation.

The dissolution case proceeded to a three-day trial, at the conclusion of which Dr.

Philip proposed a fifty-fifty split of the parties' property. While a written summary of the

proposed division that Dr. Philip's lawyer handed to the court during closing argument is .

not in our record, I the lawyer argued that following a fifty-fifty split, Dr. Philip should be

treated as having received a prior distribution of $115,000 in order to account for his use

of community funds to repay the separate loan. Rounded, $115,000 was one-half of the

$251,000, less a $10,000 "benefit" to Ms. Philip from his largely parent-financed medical

education. 2 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 165-66.

For her part, Ms. Philip questioned whether the $251,000 obligation to Dr. Philip's

parents was even bona fide, characterizing it as a "golden parachute" for Dr. Philip, and

part of his "divorce planning." 2 RP at 182-83. In addition to seeking an adjustment for

the withdrawal from the Vanguard account, she sought a judgment for some $120,000 in

arrears on mortgage and child support payments that Dr. Philip had been court-ordered

(but failed) to pay, and asked the court to award her continuing spousal maintenance, find

I Dr. Philip did not designate as clerk's papers any of the trial exhibits or any other documents reflecting individual values of the parties' assets. While most of the values were recapped by the trial court when it announced its oral decision, notably lacking is a definitive figure on the exact value of the Vanguard account at the time of trial.

No. 32041-3-111 In re Marriage ofPhilip

that the doctor was voluntarily underemployed, and impute $330,000 a year in income to

him for purposes of calculating child support.

In announcing its oral decision the day after closing arguments, the court divided

most of the parties' assets fairly evenly, but awarded Ms. Philip the entire remaining

value of the parties' Vanguard account. Because the parties dispute what the trial court

had in mind in its handling of the Vanguard account, we quote all that it had to say on the

subject.

[THE COURT:] Okay, I have to deal with the two-hundred-and­ fifty-one-thousand dollar debt, or dollars that were paid to Mr. Philip[']s parents. That debt and I looked at the promissory note, uh, that was a separate property debt he brought into the marriage .... The two-hundred­ and-fifty-one-thousand dollars is a separate debt for Mr. Philip[]. In addition there was a total of approximately a hundred-and-twenty-thousand dollars of unpaid child support, spousal support and mortgages. Those are from the temporary orders. The May, has to you know pay what he can, that I didn't accept that argument. That was an order, he was obligated to pay that. She's entitled to reimbursement for that.

2 RP at 214. Ms. Philip's lawyer at that point asked whether the trial court would enter.a

$120,000 judgment for the arrears in court ordered payments. The following colloquy

and further ruling followed:

MR. TEL QUIST [Dr. Philip's lawyer]: No. THE COURT: No. MR. TINDELL [Ms. Philip's lawyer]: It goes onto something else[?] THE COURT: No, I'm still going. I'm going, what I'm going to do and that by the way is through this May, what I'm going to do is award the Vanguard account to her then she gets no judgment against him and she is

4 No. 32041 ~3-III In re Marriage ofPhilip

compensated for the two~hundred~and-fifty~thousand that was paid of community assets that was paid to his parents. MR. TELQUIST: Your Honor, did you, isn't one-half of that community, the two-hundred-and-fifty~thousand dollars, I did argue that one-half, it is Doctor Suresh's by community property law. So you're giving her the entire two~ fifty? THE COURT: It's all his separate debt. MR. TELQUIST: I understand but he used community funds of which he owns one half. I just want to make sure I'm clear. THE COURT: Okay, yet he took community funds and paid his separate debt and uh, it wasn't, you know the community funds he took and he took em all, they were community funds, they were applied to a separate property debt. So he doesn't get credit for half of it even. He just, and I can understand why he did it. I don't have any problem with him doing it. But uh, but it's a community debt. Okay there's the issue of spousal maintenance. Uh, I'm going to order spousal maintenance of fifteen­ hundred dollars through the rest of this year. Okay, that means that she will have had fifteen-hundred spousal maintenance for three years. By that time it will give her an opportunity to sell the house ...

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