Judith Galilea Abner v. Steven Dale Abner

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 18, 2020
DocketE2019-01177-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Judith Galilea Abner v. Steven Dale Abner (Judith Galilea Abner v. Steven Dale Abner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Judith Galilea Abner v. Steven Dale Abner, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

09/18/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE June 10, 2020 Session

JUDITH GALILEA ABNER v. STEVEN DALE ABNER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Anderson County No. 17CH9034 M. Nichole Cantrell, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. E2019-01177-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal arises from a divorce action between Judith Galilea Abner (“Wife”) and Steven Dale Abner (“Husband”). As part of the divorce, the Trial Court entered an order classifying certain property inherited by Husband during the divorce as his separate property after finding that this property had not been comingled or transmuted into marital property. Husband also was awarded as his separate property the value of a log cabin at the time of marriage. The parties had resided in the log cabin throughout the marriage and made substantial improvements to the log cabin during the marriage to which Wife had substantially contributed. The Trial Court, therefore, classified the appreciation of value of the log cabin as marital property, and Wife was awarded one-half of the increase in value of the property. The Trial Court classified as marital property an account in Wife’s sole name, upon its finding that the money in the account had been comingled such that the money could no longer be traced back to the original deposit. Additionally, the Trial Court granted an award of attorney’s fees to Husband for four of the five days of trial due to Wife changing her testimony and the “immense amount of time spent on these issues.” Wife timely appealed to this Court. We affirm the Trial Court’s findings concerning the classification of the parties’ property. However, we reverse the Trial Court’s award of attorney’s fees to Husband.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

Thomas M. Leveille, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Judith Galilea Abner.

David L. Valone and Cecilia S. Petersen, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Steven Dale Abner. OPINION

Background

Wife and Husband met in 1995. At the time, Wife was a citizen of Mexico and was in Knoxville, Tennessee to visit her sister. While in Mexico, Wife owned and operated a convenience store. In 1997, Wife sold her business for $32,000 or $34,000 and moved to Tennessee to marry Husband. Wife later became a citizen of the United States. The proceeds from the sale of Wife’s business were placed initially in a bank in Mexico in Wife’s sole name.

Several years prior to the marriage, Husband’s grandparents had conveyed him a parcel of land, on which he built a log cabin (“Residence”). Husband lived in the Residence alone for thirteen years before marrying Wife. Wife and Husband married in July 1997. The parties lived in the Residence for the entire duration of their marriage. Husband and Wife separated in November 2016. Wife filed a complaint for divorce in the Anderson County Chancery Court (“Trial Court”) in June 2017. At the time of trial, Wife worked as a Sales Manager for BHS Corrugated, which makes and sells machinery in Latin American countries. During the marriage, Husband worked as a deputy with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Department.

After the parties were married, they opened a joint bank account at ORNL Federal Credit Union. Both parties deposited their respective incomes into this account during the marriage. The parties spent money from this account to make significant improvements to the Residence, increasing the value of the property during the marriage by approximately $65,900. Wife testified that the parties had finished the basement of the Residence, added a screened-in porch on the back of the home, built a detached two-car garage, replaced the roof twice, put in new flooring, and made repairs to the Residence. The deed for the Residence remained in Husband’s sole name. Wife presented copies of checks written from the parties’ joint checking account to pay property taxes on the Residence for 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014. Wife testified that she did not pay rent to live in the Residence and that they did not have a house payment during the marriage. The monthly utility payments and insurance premium payments on the Residence were paid from the parties’ joint checking account.

In addition to the parties’ joint bank account, Wife also opened a separate account at ORNL in 2005. Wife initially testified that she transferred the funds in March 2009 into a subaccount of the parties’ joint bank account. Wife further testified that no other money was placed into or taken out of the account after the deposit. On a subsequent day of trial, Wife testified that she had been mistaken about which account the money had been deposited when it was transferred from Mexico. According to Wife, the money was actually transferred into the separate bank account in her sole name in March 2009. On

-2- cross-examination, Wife acknowledged that she had testified in a deposition that the money was transferred from Mexico between 2002 and 2005. Following Wife’s deposition, she filed as a late-filed exhibit to her deposition a bank statement from the parties’ joint bank account in response to a question concerning the balance of the account at the time of the marriage. Wife testified that in 2011 and 2012, she withdrew the money from the account where it was located and deposited it into the Genworth (formerly Nuveen) account. Wife did not have the statements from when the account was with Nuveen, but presented the Genworth statements as an exhibit at trial.

The Trial Court found Wife’s testimony to not be credible and ultimately found that in 2004, Wife placed the proceeds from the sale of her business in Mexico into the money market subaccount of the parties’ joint bank account, relying on the bank statement Wife had submitted as a late-filed exhibit to her deposition. Following trial, the Trial Court found that after the deposit, additional money was placed in and taken out of that subaccount throughout the years.

Husband’s grandmother passed away, which was followed by Husband’s grandfather’s decline in health and subsequent passing in 2011. Following litigation concerning the grandfather’s will, Husband inherited the majority of his grandfather’s estate, including the farm, a trailer park, and the “Stone House,” where the grandparents had resided prior to their passing (collectively, “Inherited Property”). The litigation expenses for the will contest and conservatorship action amounted to approximately $80,000, which had been paid from the parties’ joint bank account. According to Husband, he reimbursed the joint bank account for the litigation expenses from income generated from the Inherited Property. Following the will contest litigation, Husband wrote a check from the parties’ joint checking account for his mother’s portion of the inheritance in the will, which amounted to approximately $16,000.

Husband made some improvements and repairs to the Stone House, which he paid for from the parties’ joint bank account. He subsequently began renting out the Stone House. The rent Husband received from the trailer park and from the Stone House was placed either in the parties’ joint bank account, a bowl containing petty cash located in the kitchen of the home, his pocket, or an envelope he kept in his “cruiser” for property taxes. One deed covers the real property where the farm, trailer park, and the Stone House are located. Husband testified that he paid the property taxes for the real property from either the envelope in his cruiser or the parties’ joint bank account. Wife testified that the property taxes were paid by check from their joint checking account.

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Bluebook (online)
Judith Galilea Abner v. Steven Dale Abner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judith-galilea-abner-v-steven-dale-abner-tenncrimapp-2020.