James Andrew Beets v. Kira Elizabeth Beets

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 29, 2023
Docket2022 CA 000337
StatusUnknown

This text of James Andrew Beets v. Kira Elizabeth Beets (James Andrew Beets v. Kira Elizabeth Beets) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Andrew Beets v. Kira Elizabeth Beets, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 1, 2023; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2022-CA-0337-MR

JAMES ANDREW BEETS APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE ANGELA JOHNSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 18-CI-500014

KIRA ELIZABETH BEETS APPELLEE

AND

NO. 2022-CA-0344-MR

KIRA ELIZABETH BEETS CROSS-APPELLANT

CROSS-APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE ANGELA JOHNSON, JUDGE ACTION NO. 18-CI-500014

JAMES ANDREW BEETS CROSS-APPELLEE OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: DIXON,1 GOODWINE, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.

GOODWINE, JUDGE: James Andrew Beets (“Andie”) appeals orders of the

Jefferson Circuit Court, Family Division entered on November 15, 2019, February

24, 2022, November 2, 2020, January 12, 2021, and August 30, 2021, and March

11, 2022. Kira Elizabeth Beets (“Kira”) cross-appeals the August 30, 2021 and

March 11, 2022 orders. After careful review, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

The parties were married on January 20, 2007. They are parents to

two minor children. Andie petitioned for the dissolution of the marriage on

January 3, 2018. Throughout the marriage, Andie was the higher-earning spouse

and is employed full-time as a lead heating, ventilation, and air conditioning

installer for Kentuckiana Comfort Center. Although Kira did not work when the

parties’ children were younger, she is now employed full-time as the preschool

director at Saint Andrews Academy.

Kira moved for temporary child support. Based on the Kentucky

child support guidelines, the family court set Andie’s temporary child support

1 Judge Donna Dixon concurred in the Opinion prior to her retirement effective November 20, 2023. Release of this Opinion was delayed by administrative handling.

-2- obligation at $755.56 per month. The court also entered a status quo order which

required the parties to each pay one-half of the mortgage payment on the marital

home and the electric, water, and trash bills associated with the property.

Kira later requested temporary maintenance and attorney fees. After a

hearing, the court awarded Kira $850 per month in temporary maintenance. The

court found, based on the parties’ recent tax return, that Andie earned $66,505.50

and Kira earned $31,380.50. In considering the requirements of KRS2 403.200, the

court found

[Kira] lacks the sufficient resources to provide for her reasonable needs. [Kira] is employed and working fulltime but makes less than half of [Andie’s] income. [Kira] has had to take on new debt, and [Andie] has deprived [Kira] of assets, such as failing to provide her a portion of the sales from various vehicles the parties’ owned. Though [Andie] did use $5,000 of those proceeds to purchase the defective BMW, the [c]ourt believes the proceeds of the sale for the items exceeded $5,000 and [Kira] has not received any share of those funds. [Kira] is also maintaining old debt that the parties[] incurred, such as the credit cards that [Andie] removed from his name. Since [Andie] has removed [Kira] from dental and vision insurance, she is unable to afford the cost for herself and is currently without that insurance. For these reasons, the [c]ourt does not believe [Kira] can meet her reasonable needs. [Kira] is currently employed and though she is not employed in a lucrative field, there has been no evidence presented to doubt that the income [Kira] is earning through her employment is reasonable given [her]

2 Kentucky Revised Statutes.

-3- education, training, and the field. [Kira’s] income is insufficient to provide for her reasonable needs. It is apparent that she is not attempting to live beyond the standard of living the parties enjoyed during the marriage. [Kira] has been attempting to maintain the standard of living for her and the parties’ children, though [Andie] has attempted to eschew financial responsibility at every turn.

[Andie] is employed and earns about $66,505 per year and also collects money from a rental property. [Andie] has deprived [Kira] of items the [parties] possessed during the marriage and failed to even discuss with her the proceeds of the sale. [Andie] has slighted [Kira] by providing her with an unreliable vehicle, in which she was to transport herself and their children. [Andie] has even removed his name from joint debts, leaving [Kira] financially responsible.

[Andie] claims to be in $12,000 of debt to his brother but is earning approximately $5,542 per month with $1,300 in monthly bills, $755.56 monthly child support obligation, $413 per month for mortgage payments, should be able to comfortably support himself and meet any monthly obligations. The [c]ourt does not believe that with the facts presented at the hearing that [Andie] is nearly as destitute as he is making himself out to be. [Kira’s] request of $850 per month appears to be reasonable to this [c]ourt given her financial resources, her reasonable needs, [Andie’s] financial resources, and his ability to meet tat monthly obligation.

Record (“R.”) at 266-68.

The family court also awarded Kira $5,000 of the $10,000 in attorney

fees she requested. The court considered both parties’ financial resources in

making this award. The court characterized this case as “highly litigious” with

-4- many issues relating to Andie’s failure to pay his ordered obligations and Kira’s

inability to meet her own financial obligations. Id. at 269.

A final hearing was held on June 24, 2021. In its August 30, 2021

order, as amended by its March 11, 2022 order on the parties’ post-judgment

motions, the family court finally resolved all remaining issues between the parties.3

In relevant part, the court awarded Kira permanent maintenance of $400 per month

for two years or until either party died, Kira married, or she cohabitated with a

paramour. The court also incorporated Andie’s child support and maintenance

arrearages, totaling $10,642.03, into the final order.

The court awarded Kira $6,000 of the more than $44,000 she

requested in attorney fees. After “tediously review[ing]” the fees she requested,

the court disagreed with Kira’s contention that she would have expended only

$2,000 on this litigation but for Andie’s conduct. R. at 879-80. The court noted

that Kira would have “a significant amount of financial resources” once its orders

on the division of marital property went into effect. It also found Andie had

already been ordered to pay the costs of the children’s guardian ad litem (“GAL”),

mediation, and his share to maintain the status quo of the marriage. Id. at 880.

3 The family court entered a decree dissolving the marriage but reserving any remaining issues on December 8, 2021.

-5- However, the court also noted that Andie’s refusal to pay his monetary obligations

during the pendency of the divorce had required additional litigation.

When dividing the parties’ debts, the court found the following credit

card balances marital in nature: (1) $2,527 on a Bank of America card in Andie’s

name; (2) $4,360 on a Citibank card in Andie’s name; (3) $4,223 on a Bank of

America card in Kira’s name; and (4) $6,222 on a Discover card in Kira’s name.

The court assigned Andie the balances on the accounts in his name and equally

divided the balances on the accounts in Kira’s name. The court also assigned the

$2,749 balance on a Capital One account in Kira’s name to her because she

incurred the debt after the parties separated.

The court also divided the real property owned by the parties.

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