Jacobs v. Jacobs

408 F. Supp. 846, 12 V.I. 539, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16431
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedFebruary 27, 1976
DocketCivil No. 1974-110
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 408 F. Supp. 846 (Jacobs v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Jacobs, 408 F. Supp. 846, 12 V.I. 539, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16431 (vid 1976).

Opinion

YOUNG, District Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECREE

The case before me for decision presents a classic illustration of the problems which can later arise when an attorney is less than diligent in examining a proposed di[540]*540vorce decree with respect to its potential future implications and ramifications. While the suggested provisions might seem inoffensive at the time they are propounded, this Memorandum Opinion must unfortunately stand as a vivid memorial to the damage which a client may be forced to suffer because of his or her attorney’s lack of critical foresight. The most innocent and innocuous terms, seemingly fair and noncontroversial at the time of the termination of the marital relationship, can return to plague an ex-spouse in an entirely different context. It is against just such a possibility that an attorney must remain ever vigilant — scrutinizing each and every provision of a proposed final divorce decree with a critical eye, focusing in upon the likely effects of changes in the existing set of circumstances, searching, examining, and questioning with the lawyerly skills he or she has honed tó a fine edge through years of training and experience. Failure to do so can lead to a mess such as the one which I must now attempt to untangle.

On February 17, 1971, Clina Jacobs obtained a final divorce decree from O’Neill Jacobs on the grounds of extreme mental and physical cruelty.1 At the divorce hearing, Clina was represented by an attorney other than her present counsel. O’Neill did not secure legal representation but instead chose to appear personally. After hearing the testimony of the parties, considering other evidence, and making its Findings of Fact, the Court granted plaintiff a [541]*541divorce absolute on the grounds of incompatibility of temperament.2 As part of the Final Decree, the Court ordered and adjudged that the real property previously held by them as Tenants by the Entirety would henceforth, by operation of law, be held as Tenants in Common, “each having an undivided one-half share in the property”. Thé decree also provided that Clina was to have the full and exclusive use, control and possession of the property,3 but she was to be “solely responsible for the discharge of all existing encumbrances or liens thereon, for all, taxes or assessments levied thereon, and for the maintenance and repair of the same . . . .” It must also be observed that the Court further decreed that Clina, having waived alimony¡, was “therefore forever barred therefrom”.

The now apparent inequity of this method of terminating the marital relationship between the parties might have continued unnoticed save for, O’Neill’s commencement of the instant partition action. Prudence should have dictated his sitting down and keeping quiet. But the age-old adage is that a greedy individual is never satisfied. And so it is to Mr. Jacob’s unbounded avarice that credit must be given for exposing this injustice to the light of judicial scrutiny.

The parties married on October 7, 1959. In December of 1964, having decided to purchase a home together for $15,400.00, they jointly took out a real estate loan from the Chase Manhattan Bank in the amount of $14,900.00, giving back a first mortgage as security therefor. Apparently, both parties jointly made the payments on said loan during the pre-divorce years and on the eve of the divorce decree, the outstanding principal balance had been reduced [542]*542to $12,822.94. Simple arithmetical operations lead me to the conclusion that immediately prior to the granting of the divorce decree, O’Neill Jacobs had acquired an equity in the property of $1,288.53. Clina Jacobs’ equity was the same. Yet, the divorce decree put the sole obligation upon her to pay off the outstanding indebtedness. Effectively, she was given a life estate in his half of the property in return for paying off his share of the mortgage, assuming his half of the various taxes and assessments, maintaining and repairing his fraction of the premises, and waiving her entitlement to alimony. In other words, assuming Clina Jacobs lived long enough to pay down the mortgage, O’Neill Jacobs would stand to receive upon his ex-wife’s death a property interest which conceivably could well exceed $40,000.004 — all in return for an investment on his part of $1,288.53.

* * *

Mr. O’Neill Jacobs filed the instant complaint on February 25, 1974. Therein, he alleged that by the terms of a divorce decree granted over three years earlier, the ownership of the once marital home in Tutu was converted from a Tenancy by the Entirety to a Tenancy in Common, with his ex-wife, Ms. Clina Jacobs, having the exclusive use, control, and possession of the same. Plaintiff O’Neill Jacobs prayed for a partition of the property or, in the alternative, for a judicial sale of the same.

Clina was duly served but failed to secure legal representation. O’Neill, apparently in no rush, acquiesced in not getting court action on his unanswered complaint until December 23, 1974, when he moved for and obtained the appointment of Gladstone Knight as a referee to determine [543]*543the feasibility of a physical partition and to submit an appraisal in the event that a sale would be ordered. Mr. Knight determined that a physical partition was not feasible and he appraised the market value of the property, as of April 7,1975, to be $89,560.00.

Clina finally answered on April 17, 1975 by admitting most of O’Neill’s allegations save for denying that O’Neill’s net equity interest in the property amounted to a one-half share. Additionally, she counterclaimed for an amount equal to O’Neill’s proportionate share “of all expenses incurred by her in obtaining, maintaining, preserving the property . . . .” She amended her answer two months later to include an affirmative defense that the final divorce decree granted her only a life estate in her ex-husband’s one-half interest which, as a matter of law, could not be affected by a judgment of partition. There matters stood until the hearing held on November 18,1975.

At the hearing, Clina testified that she not only continued the payments on the mortgage without receiving any assistance from O’Neill, but that she alone paid for the post-divorce additions to the house. She produced receipts for building materials and supplies totaling $345.30 and for labor expenses amounting to $2,137.00. In addition, she introduced into evidence $6,245.62 worth of mortgage payment receipts and $7,090.02 of loan repayment stubs. O’Neill testified that he had paid all of the labor and material bills but had foolishly instructed his payees to make out and give the receipts to his ex-wife. He also offered into evidence some invoices dating back to the pre-divorce years which I consider irrelevant to the determination of the issue herein. Additionally, O’Neill produced some payroll stubs indicating that some $1,223.82 was deducted from his earnings and paid over to a bank.

Both sides have challenged the veracity of the other not only as to who, in fact, made the payments but also as to [544]*544whether or not there was any post-divorce communication between the parties. Since their positions are mutually inconsistent, the question of credibility comes to the fore.

Chase Manhattan Bank disclosed that its records could not reveal which of the parties had made the payments on the real estate loan during the pre-divorce years.

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Inniss v. Inniss
65 V.I. 270 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2016)
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24 V.I. 28 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
408 F. Supp. 846, 12 V.I. 539, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-jacobs-vid-1976.