In the Matter of Marriage of Padgett-Bellegante and Padgett

7 P.3d 773, 169 Or. App. 272, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1264
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 2, 2000
Docket96-1978; CA A105649
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 P.3d 773 (In the Matter of Marriage of Padgett-Bellegante and Padgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Marriage of Padgett-Bellegante and Padgett, 7 P.3d 773, 169 Or. App. 272, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1264 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*274 BREWER, J.

Husband appeals from the division of property in the judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage. Of the four assignments of error he makes, we focus primarily on his contention that the trial court erred in dividing only the appreciation in the value of the marital residence that occurred after the marriage. Husband argues that the trial court should have considered the entire equity in the residence, including the premarital portion that accrued while wife was its sole owner, in calculating the amount of the equalizing money judgment that he was ordered to pay. We review de novo, ORS 19.415(3), and modify the judgment to provide for an equal division of the marital assets.

The parties were married in 1993 and separated in 1997. At the time of trial in 1998, husband was 51 and wife was 44. When the parties were married, husband’s assets totaled approximately $316,000. Of that amount, $143,000 consisted of cash and promissory notes derived from the sale of husband’s interest in an employee leasing business that he co-owned before the marriage. The balance consisted of husband’s share of the assets from the dissolution of his prior marriage. Included among those assets were a number of promissory notes owed to husband from various business activities. Husband also owned a residence located near Bend, in which he had no equity. Wife had considerably fewer assets, chiefly consisting of the Albany residence in which she lived and a small business, Video Memories, that she owned. At the time of the marriage, the Albany residence was valued at $115,000 but was encumbered by a mortgage in the amount of $64,000 and, thus, had a gross equity of $51,000. Wife was required to pay half of that equity to her former husband and, therefore, her net equity in the property was $25,500.

During the marriage, the parties lived in the Albany residence. Soon after they were married, wife added husband’s name to the title. Husband then co-signed a loan and second mortgage against the residence in order to repay a loan from wife’s father that had satisfied her ex-husband’s interest in the property and to pay consumer debt owed by *275 the parties. During 1993 and 1994, husband paid the mortgages, property taxes, and insurance on the residence from his premarital funds. During the remaining years of the marriage, the parties paid those expenses from joint funds. In 1995 and 1996, the parties paid for substantial improvements to the residence, including a new deck, doors, carpeting, wallpaper, painting, flooring, and a dishwasher. Husband performed some of the physical labor to make those improvements.

In 1994, the parties began a new business, Employee Business Solutions (EBS), with start-up capital from husband’s premarital assets. EBS, like husband’s former business, was an employee leasing business. The parties co-owned and managed EBS. Each of them expended considerable efforts in its growth and development and, as a result, the business became successful. Husband alone operated EBS after the parties separated. At the time of dissolution, husband’s monthly income from EBS was approximately $7,000. Wife’s income was approximately $2,500 per month from Video Memories and employment with a competitor of EBS for whom she worked after the separation.

The primary issue at trial, as on appeal, was the division of property. The trial court excluded from the property division an investment account and two small parcels of real property that husband had brought into the marriage and that were never commingled in the parties’ joint finances. The trial court treated EBS as a marital asset, valued it as of the date of trial at $210,000, and awarded it to husband. Husband also received additional marital assets, consisting of vehicles with a net value after loans of $19,200, savings of $1,500, and $5,550 in miscellaneous personal property, including $1,000 in furnishings. In addition, husband was awarded the $5,000 equity in the Bend residence that he owned before the marriage which, as far as appears from the record, consisted entirely of appreciated value during the marriage. Husband was also ordered to pay $17,595 in unsecured marital debts. Thus, husband received net marital assets in the property division in the sum of $223,655.

Wife received her video business, which was treated as a marital asset because wife upgraded its value with joint *276 funds, at an agreed value of $15,000. Wife also received other marital property consisting of a vehicle with a net value of $10,000, $17,225 in cash and savings, and miscellaneous personal property — excluding furnishings — worth $3,575. The trial court also awarded the Albany residence to wife. At the time of trial, that property had a market value of $163,000; the first mortgage balance was $56,000, and the second mortgage balance was $28,000. The court valued the Albany residence at $48,000, representing only the appreciation that accrued during the marriage. The court treated the second mortgage — but not the first mortgage — as a marital debt and charged that debt to wife. Thus, wife received the Albany residence at a net value of $20,000. Wife also was ordered to pay $750 in unsecured marital debt, leaving her with net property valued at $65,050.

In sum, husband received marital assets valued at $158,605 ($223,655 minus $65,050) in excess of those awarded to wife. Therefore, in order to equalize the division of marital assets, the trial court ordered husband to pay an equalizing judgment to wife in the amount of $79,302. 1 Wife did not seek or receive spousal support.

On appeal, husband makes four assignments of error, each of which challenges the amount or existence of the equalizing judgment. He argues that the trial court erred (1) in valuing EBS at $210,000; (2) in its treatment of the Albany residence; (3) in failing to assign a value to marital furnishings that wife received; and (4) in fashioning an overall property division that was not equitable in light of the significantly more valuable assets that husband brought to the marriage.

We disagree with husband’s first and fourth assignments of error. After carefully reviewing the record, we conclude that the trial court properly valued EBS. An extended discussion of the parties’ arguments concerning that issue would serve no useful purpose. As to the fourth assignment, although this was a marriage of relatively short duration, the parties thoroughly commingled their financial affairs with *277 the exception of the premarital assets that the trial court properly excluded from the property division. Husband did not successfully rebut the statutory presumption that wife contributed equally to the value of the marital property. See OES 107.105(l)(f). Therefore, an equal division of the marital property was appropriate.

The issue that gives us pause is the trial court’s treatment of the Albany residence. As noted, the court included only the appreciation in the value of that property during the marriage in the asset division. We agree with husband that the court’s decision to do so, especially in light of the overall division of property, was erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
7 P.3d 773, 169 Or. App. 272, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-marriage-of-padgett-bellegante-and-padgett-orctapp-2000.