Keiter v. Keiter

2010 UT App 169, 235 P.3d 782, 659 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 2521734
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 24, 2010
DocketCase No. 20080766-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2010 UT App 169 (Keiter v. Keiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keiter v. Keiter, 2010 UT App 169, 235 P.3d 782, 659 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 2521734 (Utah Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

T 1 In their divorce proceeding, John Edward Keiter (Husband) and Dana Keiter (Wife) disputed whether fifty acres of land (the Property), located in Weber County near the Snowbasin Ski Resort, was marital property. The trial court determined that the Property was marital and ordered an equal distribution of its value. Husband challenges both the adequacy of the factual findings and the sufficiency of the evidence to support this ruling. We determine that the trial court's findings of fact adequately disclose the trial court's analytic steps and that there was sufficient evidence to support the finding that the Property took on a marital character due to commingling. We accordingly affirm the trial court's underlying ruling that the Property took on a marital character. Nonetheless, we remand for a determination of what portion of the Property's value should be considered separate, in light of both premarital and marital funds having been contributed to it, and for the trial court to then divide only the marital value of the Property between the parties, rather than the entire value.

BACKGROUND

T2 Husband and Wife were married in 1982. Husband was, at all relevant times, a plastic surgeon. During the marriage, Wife earned a bachelor's degree in theater arts and almost completed her master's degree. The trial court determined that the parties' living and working arrangements centered around a business run by Husband, with Wife staying home to raise the children.

Bank Accounts and Income

13 Husband and Wife did not have any joint bank accounts during their marriage. Husband had three bank accounts during the marriage: a business account for his medical practice 1 (the medical practice account 2 ), an *785 account for the retirement plan he administered (the defined benefit plan account), and a personal account. Wife also had a personal account. Husband deposited money he earned from his surgeries and other medical services into his various accounts. The trial court found that Husband often used funds from both his personal and medical practice accounts, irrespective of the business or personal nature of a particular disbursement.

14 Husband's tax returns from 1999 to 2004, at least those that were produced, 3 showed that Husband's approximate annual income ranged from $204,000 to $386,000. After the divorcee proceedings commenced, his tax return in 2005 showed income of $134,500 and in 2006 of $65,000. 4 Husband's medical practice's corporate returns showed gross income in the years of 2001 to 2006 in the approximate range of $665,000 to $962,000.

T5 Husband wrote Wife a check as an "officer" of his medical practice every two weeks, even though Wife was never an officer and apparently did no ongoing work for the medical practice. These checks totaled about $620 monthly. Wife also received child support from her first husband and social security benefits for the parties' youngest child, which funds were deposited into her separate account. An expert testified that the amounts Husband paid to Wife, along with the amount of personal expenses paid from the medical practice account, should have been included as Husband's income on his tax return. The trial court agreed that Husband produced more personal income than he declared and found "such practice deceptive and done for tax advantage[s]." Wife paid household expenses from her personal account. She also used credit cards that Husband provided. Husband admits that "[he] paid family expenses, such as credit card bills, out of the [medical practice account]."

T6 The trial court did not determine whether Husband's medical practice was marital property because the parties had entered into a stipulation regarding the distribution of its value upon Husband's impending retirement 5 The court approved the parties' stipulation that upon liquidating Husband's medical practice, all net proceeds would be divided equally between the parties. 6

Husband's Medical Practice, Husband's Retirement Funds, and the Property

¶7 At the time of the parties' marriage in 1982, Husband had been practicing medicine as a plastic surgeon for some eight years, with another doctor, in a medical practice named Plastic Surgery Associates (PSA). When Husband began practicing with PSA in 1974, he also began contributing to PSA's profit sharing plan (the Profit Sharing Plan) that had been started by the other doctor in 1972 and was administered by attorney Dean Larsen. The trial court found that because of problems that arose later with Larsen and his affiliated entities, "there are simply no existing documents that shed any light on the source or amount of contributions [by Husband] to the [Profit Sharing] Plan."

¶8 In 1980, the Profit Sharing Plan was converted to a defined benefit plan, entitled the "John E. Keiter M.D. PC Defined Benefit Pension Plan" 7 (the Defined Benefit Plan), and all of the Profit Sharing Plan's assets were transferred to the Defined Benefit Plan. Shortly thereafter, Larsen suggested that the Defined Benefit Plan purchase *786 eighty acres of land near Snowbasin, which included the Property. Husband, as trustee of the Defined Benefit Plan, did so jointly with a physician named Clark Summers, with whom Husband was not associated in practice. Summers purchased his interest in the land "through his entity Summers and Husband agreed that Husband would own the fifty acre parcel referred to herein as the Property and that Summers would own thirty acres, and each would be responsible for all related expenses in amounts corresponding to their respective ownership shares.

T9 The eighty acres cost a total of $480,000. After making an option payment, a down payment, and a payment within the first six months, the balance owing was $408,000, which Husband and Summers agreed to pay off over ten years with ten percent interest, in annual installments of $47,000. Based on the Defined Benefit Plan's ownership interest in fifty acres, Husband's annual payment was $29,375.

110 The Defined Benefit Plan was again changed in 1994, well after the parties' 1982 marriage, and at that time the plan contained $1,005,886 in assets in addition to the Property. Two additional participants of the plan "took an unknown distribution and what remained became the 1994 Plan for [Husband]," which "was a defined contribution plan." For various tax reasons, at the time the plan changed in 1994, the Property was distributed to Husband in his personal capacity. Wife's name was never listed on the Property's title, but she did sign a waiver, as a spousal beneficiary under ERISA, when the land was removed from the Defined Benefit Plan. Taxes on the Property were thereafter paid out of Husband's personal account.

T11 Summers completed his payments in 1991 and quitclaimed to Husband, as trustee of the Defined Benefit Plan, any interest Summers had in the Property. Summers took title to his thirty acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 UT App 169, 235 P.3d 782, 659 Utah Adv. Rep. 9, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 2521734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keiter-v-keiter-utahctapp-2010.