Jeffrey Jack Stroh v. Nancy Jane Zehr Stroh

221 So. 3d 399, 2017 WL 2794269, 2017 Miss. App. LEXIS 383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 27, 2017
DocketNO. 2015-CA-01719-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 221 So. 3d 399 (Jeffrey Jack Stroh v. Nancy Jane Zehr Stroh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey Jack Stroh v. Nancy Jane Zehr Stroh, 221 So. 3d 399, 2017 WL 2794269, 2017 Miss. App. LEXIS 383 (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WILSON, J.,

FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. Jeff and Nancy Stroh agreed to an irreconcilable differences divorce and agreed that the Rankin County Chancery Court would determine and distribute the marital estate and rule on Nancy’s claim for alimony. After a two-day trial, the chancellor entered an opinion and final judgment dividing the marital estate and awarding Nancy periodic alimony. On appeal, Jeff alleges that the chancellor erred (I) by not including Nancy’s residence in the equitable distribution of the marital estate despite finding that the home was marital property; (II) by equally dividing the value of a tract of land referred to as “the Hill”; (III) by valuing the Hill at $106,000; (IV) by not accounting for a $7,000 debt incurred in connection with the parties’ purchase of a sailboat; and (V) by awarding Nancy $750 per month in periodic alimony.

¶ 2. We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion as to issues (I) and (V). We find no error and affirm as to issues (II), (III), and (IV).

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 3. Jeff and Nancy married on July 27, 2007. This was the second marriage for both Jeff, who was fifty-two years old at 'the time of the marriage, and Nancy, who was then forty-five years old. Jeff had two children from his prior marriage, which ended in divorce after twenty-six years. Nancy had two children from her prior marriage, which ended in divorce after sixteen years.

*404 ¶4. Prior to and during the marriage, Jeff owned two businesses in Pearl: Eldorado Storage LLC and Outdoor Graphics. Eldorado Storage is a storage rental business with seven storage buildings, five of which were constructed and being rented prior to Jeffs marriage to Nancy. The other two buildings were finished during the marriage but were 90% finished before the marriage. Outdoor Graphics is a small mailbox and sign production company that Jeff has operated since college,

¶ 5. Nancy was found to be disabled prior to her marriage to Jeff and began receiving Social Security disability payments. She worked sporadically prior to the marriage but not enough to support herself. After her marriage to Jeff, Nancy did some bookkeeping and clerical work for Jeffs businesses, for which she was compensated. Nancy also managed the couple’s finances.

¶6. When they were married, Jeff moved into Nancy’s home. Jeff continued to own his prior residence in Pearl. During the marriage, Jeff performed maintenance and repair work at the marital residence. He cleared the back part of the three-acre lot of tree stumps and other growth, graded and landscaped the lot, maintained the swimming pool, and installed three pool pumps and a new pool liner. He also built and installed shutters, installed copper lanterns, and enclosed the back porch. Jeff and Nancy also substantially paid down the mortgage on the home during the course of the marriage. The evidence indicates that the parties made mortgage payments of approximately $70,000 during the course of the marriage. Nancy’s Rule 8.05 financial statement estimated the value of her home at $250,000, with a mortgage balance of $13,671. Jeff estimated that the parties spent approximately $13,000 on improvements to the home (not counting his own labor) during the course of the marriage.

¶7. The parties never lived in Jeffs prior residence during the marriage. Instead, it was used as a rental property.

¶ 8. Jeff owned the property on which he built Eldorado Storage prior to the marriage. Adjacent to that property is a 2.45-acre lot that the parties refer to as “the Hill.” When Jeff constructed and began operating Eldorado Storage, his mother, Joyce, owned the Hill. Joyce allowed Jeff to install sewer treatment lines on the Hill because sewer service was not available and there was no room to install lines on the Eldorado Storage property. Jeff testified that Joyce permitted him to install sewer lines on the Hill because she intended to give him the property one day. 1 Jeff described the system as consisting of sewer treatment lines and above-ground “spray heads” that spray out treated water in a thirty-foot radius.

¶ 9. In 2007, after Jeff married Nancy, he offered to buy the Hill from Joyce, and she agreed to sell him the land for $21,000. Jeff used funds from Eldorado Storage to make a $5,000 down payment and $300 monthly payments until the amount was paid in full in 2012. Jeffs mother then conveyed the land to Jeff and Nancy as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. Jeff and Nancy also successfully petitioned the City of Pearl to rezone the property as commercial property. No improvements have been made to the Hill since Jeffs installation of the sewage treatment system.

¶ 10. The Hill, the lots on which Eldorado Storage and Outdoor Graphics are located, Jeffs residence, Joyce’s former residence, a vacant lot, and an approximately one-acre lot referred to as “the Boneyard” *405 are all part of the same continuous tract of land along Eldorado Road and Summer Ridge Drive in Pearl. Jeff purchased the Boneyard and the vacant lot prior to his marriage to Nancy. This land has been in Jeffs family for a number of years.

¶ 11. From the beginning of the marriage until approximately January 2013, Nancy assisted Jeffs business as a part-time bookkeeper. At times, she also assisted him with accounts payable and in making various business decisions. Nancy testified that she also “did everything at home so Jeff could come and go to work,” i.e., “the laundry, the housekeeping, the cooking, the grocery shopping,” etc. She was also responsible for the couple’s personal banking and finances.

¶ 12. During the marriage, Jeff and Nancy purchased a Cape Dory Mark II sailboat for $14,000 in an online auction. Jeff and Nancy traveled to Maryland to get the boat and sailed for ten days before leaving it in North Carolina to be transported back to Mississippi. Testimony concerning the source of funds used to pay for the boat was unclear and conflicting. Nancy testified that she withdrew funds from her money market account to fund at least part of the purchase price, various upgrades, and/or the sailing trip. Jeff testified that he took out a home equity loan to pay for the boat and related expenses. On appeal, Jeff claims that he still owes $7,000 on that loan.

¶ 13. Jeff and Nancy separated on March 23, 2014. Jeff claimed that Nancy was the cause of the separation. He testified that Nancy constantly pressured him to put her name on separate assets that he had accumulated prior to the marriage, which he intended to leave to his sons. Jeff felt like Nancy was forcing him to choose between her and his sons, which Nancy denied. Nancy testified that she did not want to divorce Jeff and desired to reconcile long after he left her. Jeff left the marital home abruptly on March 23, 2014. He sent Nancy a text message to let her know that he wanted to separate and was leaving.

¶ 14. Nancy subsequently filed a complaint for separate maintenance, and Jeff answered and counterclaimed for divorce on the grounds of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment, or in the alternative, irreconcilable differences. On July 21,2015, Jeff and Nancy filed a joint motion consenting to an irreconcilable differences divorce and to trial on specified issues. The chancellor signed an order granting the motion.

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Bluebook (online)
221 So. 3d 399, 2017 WL 2794269, 2017 Miss. App. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-jack-stroh-v-nancy-jane-zehr-stroh-missctapp-2017.