Julie Ann Doyle v. Joseph D Doyle

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 2017
Docket332912
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Julie Ann Doyle v. Joseph D Doyle, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JULIE ANN DOYLE, UNPUBLISHED September 5, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 332912 Mecosta Circuit Court JOSEPH D. DOYLE, LC No. 14-022145-DM

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Following a four-day bench trial, the lower court issued a judgment of divorce that included a determination as to the division of marital property. Plaintiff appeals as of right, challenging that determination. We affirm in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS

The parties were married in 1990 and separated in 2014. Two children were born during the marriage who were minors at the time of the trial. Plaintiff worked as a schoolteacher during the marriage and at the time of the parties’ separation. Defendant purchased a business from his father in 2010, Doyle Forest Products, a lumbering and timbering company, where he worked at the time of trial. Prior to trial, the parties stipulated to the division of most of their personal and real property: defendant received his retirement accounts, his life insurance policy, the marital home, and most of the parties’ personal property, while plaintiff received her retirement accounts and her life insurance policy. The majority of the trial proceedings focused on the value of defendant’s business, and the valuation process and opinion of the certified public accountant jointly hired by the parties to determine the business’s value for purposes of the divorce. The parties’ expert, Paul Murray, valued defendant’s business at roughly $513,000, using the “income approach,” based on the financial data provided by the business. The income approach to business valuation, also known as the capitalization of income method, “is based on the premise that there is a relation between the income a property can earn and the value of that property.” Northwoods Apartments v Royal Oak, 98 Mich App 721, 725; 296 NW2d 639 (1980). Murray testified that he relied on the income approach because he was “mostly” confident in the validity of the business’s sales records, and was able to form his opinion of valuation based on these records and other information provided by the parties. However, Murray also testified that

-1- the records provided by Doyle Forest Products “were a disaster” and in “bad shape,” and that the business’s recordkeeping appeared to be “negligent” in some respects.

The trial court rejected Murray’s valuation, and determined that the value of the business was $69,364. While the court did not offer its own valuation analysis, it pointed out what it regarded to be four “flaws” in Murray’s valuation process that resulted in a higher value for the business than the court believed was accurate. Although the court did not indicate that it was guided by Murray’s analysis in any way, Murray testified during cross-examination that the total value of the business would fall to $69,364, if he subtracted the value of certain “excess” and “excess non-operating assets” from the total value of the company. Additionally, defendant had his own expert, accountant Jay Thiebaut, whom defendant failed to present despite repeatedly informing the court of his intention to call him.

II. BUSINESS VALUATION

Plaintiff argues that the trial court abused its discretion by rejecting Murray’s valuation of approximately $513,000, and instead concluding that Doyle Forest Products was worth $69,364. Because the court rejected Murray’s opinion of value based on its finding of four “flaws” in his valuation process, we will address each of these “flaws” in turn.

1. Unreported cash income to company. The trial court found that defendant was more credible than plaintiff with respect to the amount of annual unreported cash income to the company. This Court would tend to defer to the trial court’s credibility determination; but, with that said, we do not believe this issue has any practical import. The expert estimated that the company had approximately $2,000,000, in annual sales (while also assuming $27,500, in annual unreported cash income), so if the trial court is correct, then the annual sales should be approximately $1,987,500, ($2,000,000 minus the difference between $27,500 and $15,000), but if plaintiff is correct, then the annual sales should be approximately $2,012,500 ($2,000,000 plus the difference between $40,000 and $27,500). Even assuming that the expert’s net profit rate of 4.8% is reasonable, the difference of either approach from the expert’s approach would be approximately $600, in annual net profits. Based on annual sales around $2,000,000, with net profits around $96,000, adding or subtracting $600, in net profits, and then discounting over a number of years, would result in changing the valuation of the company by a marginal amount. The evaluation of this flaw really does make a difference to the valuation.

With that said, even though the trial court said that it accounted for this “flaw” by crediting defendant’s testimony of $15,000, annual unreported cash income versus the expert’s ($27,500) or plaintiff’s ($40,000), the trial court did not actually take this change into account, as the valuation the trial court came up with was the precise valuation calculated at trial by the expert with two adjustments that had nothing to do with unreported cash income, as indicated below (in flaw #4).

Therefore, the trial court did not err in crediting defendant’s testimony, however the trial court did clearly err by either (i) failing to account for the difference somewhere in its calculation, or (ii) failing to state in its opinion that the matter had no practical impact on valuation, so any dispute over the cash could be ignored for purposes of valuation. On remand, the trial court must make this determination.

-2- 2. Profit rate. The trial court again sided with defendant on the net profit rate, agreeing that a net profit rate of -4.45% should be used, rather than the expert’s industry average net profit rate of +4.8%. However, under the income-approach of valuing a company, one cannot use an overall negative net profit rate for all years and come up with a positive valuation of a company without something else occurring. Basically, if a company has net losses of money year after year after year after year (i.e., has an overall negative net profit rate for all years), then there is no mathematical way to add up negative numbers and come up with a positive number. At oral argument, defendant’s counsel was correct in noting that companies like Amazon and Google had losses in their early years, but, crucially, at some point a company needs to start making a net profit (or at least be expected to start making a net profit) for the company to have a positive valuation under the income approach. Here, it may be correct that a negative profit rate existed in 2015 or 2016, and maybe defendant expects to continue to lose money, but at some point the company must be expected to start making an overall positive net profit for the company to have any positive value under the income approach.

It seems incongruous for the trial court to adopt the -4.45% net profit rate, use the income approach, and still come up with a positive value for the company. The only way this could make sense is if there is something else going on, e.g., a positive profit rate is assumed in 3-4 years, some assets appreciate and are sold off with the net proceeds treated as income, etc. The trial court did not explain how it used a negative net profit rate and still arrived at a positive value for the company under the income approach, and this was error.

3. Non-operating assets.

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Julie Ann Doyle v. Joseph D Doyle, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julie-ann-doyle-v-joseph-d-doyle-michctapp-2017.