James v. James

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 2026
Docket25CA1232
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
James v. James, (Ohio Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

[Cite as James v. James, 2026-Ohio-1698.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ADAMS COUNTY

Ronald Gene James, : Case No. 25CA1232

Plaintiff-Appellee, : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY v. :

Yvonne A. James, : RELEASED 5/5/2026

Defendant-Appellant. :

______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Marie Hoover, Hoover Law Group, LLC, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellant.

Tyler E. Cantrell, West Union, Ohio, for appellee. ______________________________________________________________________ Hess, J.

{¶1} Yvonne A. James appeals from a judgment of the Adams County Court of

Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, in a divorce proceeding. She presents

three assignments of error asserting that (1) the trial court abused its discretion in its

distribution of marital assets and debt; (2) the trial court abused its discretion in its spousal

support order; and (3) the trial court erred by issuing three different decisions which all

conflict with one another. For the reasons which follow, we sustain the first and second

assignments of error, reverse the trial court’s judgment, and remand for further

proceedings consistent with this decision. This decision renders moot the third

assignment of error. Adams App. No. 25CA1232 2

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

{¶2} On July 21, 1998, the parties married. They have no children together. On

July 21, 2022, Mr. James filed a complaint for divorce. Ms. James filed a counterclaim

for divorce and later moved for temporary spousal support. The court set temporary

spousal support at $6,500 a month, to commence upon journalization of its order, which

occurred December 21, 2023. In February 2024, Ms. James filed a motion for contempt

asserting that Mr. James failed to comply with the temporary support order.

Subsequently, the court issued an agreed judgment entry stating the parties agreed that

Ms. James would withdraw her contempt motion upon Mr. James bringing his temporary

support arrears current and that Mr. James shall make the temporary support payments

“on or before the 21st day of each month.” In March 2024, Ms. James withdrew the

contempt motion.

A. Evidence

{¶3} On July 2, 2024, the matter proceeded to a bench trial at which the parties

testified and exhibits were admitted, including affidavits of the parties listing their

individual and joint property and debts and affidavits of the parties listing their income and

expenses. Mr. James executed his affidavits on July 15, 2022, and Ms. James executed

her affidavits on June 15, 2023.

{¶4} With respect to financial accounts, Mr. James averred that there were four

financial accounts titled to him—checking and saving accounts at Fifth Third Bank and

Bank of America. He testified about the approximate balance of those accounts at the

time of trial: Fifth Third checking account $32,000; Fifth Third savings account $108,000;

Bank of America checking account $1,700; and Bank of America savings account $2,700. Adams App. No. 25CA1232 3

Ms. James averred that there were five financial accounts—checking and savings

accounts at Fifth Third Bank and Bank of America titled to both parties, and a checking

account at Bank of America titled to her. She did not testify about these at trial.

{¶5} Mr. James had $2,800 in U.S. savings bonds, and there was evidence the

parties had real property in multiple states. The marital home was on Tulip Road in Lynx,

Ohio. As of June 7, 2024, an appraiser valued the property at $485,000, and there was

evidence regarding the mortgage balance. Evidence indicated the parties also had two

parcels in California at 2205 Acapulco Ave. and 2207 Acapulco Ave., though there is

conflicting evidence regarding whether they are in Salton City or Thermal, California. Mr.

James testified that there was a vacant home at 2205 Acapulco Ave. Later, he testified

that it was a “double wide mobile home” on a “typical city lot” and that he “purchased a

lot next to it to make it a bigger lot.” He testified that in 2000, he paid around $60,000 for

the home and $2,500 for the extra lot. As of April 16, 2024, an appraiser valued 2205

Acapulco Ave at $192,500.1 In addition, there was evidence that Ms. James bought a

home in Mesa, Arizona prior to the marriage. Mr. James testified that it was not paid off

prior to the marriage and that he helped pay it off but did not recall how much was still

owed on it when the parties married.

{¶6} There was evidence the parties owned various vehicles. Relevant to this

appeal, Mr. James averred the value of the 2017 Polaris 580 was $4,500. When asked

if he still agreed with the values in his property affidavit for that Polaris and another one,

he testified, “Not at the present time, no. It’s been two and a half years. The Polaris six

wheeler, uh, it’s completely blown. So, at the time, same as the, uh, 2017 Polaris, so I

1 This value is based on the sales comparison approach. The appraiser also found a value of $194,121

under the cost approach but gave the sales comparison approach the most weight. Adams App. No. 25CA1232 4

don’t even, I have the one, the other one’s completely junk.” He did not have any

appraisals showing a different value. In her property affidavit, Ms. James estimated the

value of the 2017 Polaris 580 was $7,999.

{¶7} Mr. James testified that after Ms. James moved out, he took her some items

she wanted, like her computer and cell phone. He testified that there were additional

assets in the home. In his property affidavit, under the category of “Furniture & Household

Goods, Furnishings, and Appliances,” Mr. James estimated the value of “Full Complete

Home Furnishing” was $35,000. Mr. James testified that was “just a guess.” When asked

if “that 35,000 is true, accurate, and complete,” he testified, “Close enough? Yes.” In his

property affidavit, under the category of “All Other Assets Not Listed Above (including

jewelry, art, tools, firearms, and other collectibles),” he estimated the value of “Misc.

Tools, Guns, Jewelry” was $40,000. When asked if he agreed with his “own assessment

there,” he testified, “I’m not an appraiser, but that’s what I’ve, that’s what I stated. I’ll back

that up.” When asked if as an owner of the property, he felt he could “give fair value,” he

testified, “Uh, I don’t know, uh, if I could or not, but I agree with what I put on here. I’m

good with that.” Ms. James testified she wanted certain items in the house—the “George

Washington” painting, the “Always the Gentleman” painting, her sewing machines, her

quilting material, “all my personal belongings,” “my clothes,” a Pac Man machine, and a

“craft machine.” She wanted her jewelry and testified that “there’s necklaces, bracelets,

uh, earrings. There are different, uh, rocks. Some are diamond quartz. Uh, topaz.” She

also wanted her saddle and bridle.

{¶8} Mr. James testified that he is 64 years old and would be 65 in 20 days. He

is employed as a field superintendent in Michigan. He testified that his salary is $185,000 Adams App. No. 25CA1232 5

a year, that he gets subsistence pay of around $100,000 due to the location of the job,

and that he rents an apartment in Michigan. His 2023 federal income tax return states

that the total amount from box 1 on his W-2 form(s) is $294,394. He initially indicated

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James v. James, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-james-ohioctapp-2026.