Kelly v. Kelly

468 P.2d 359, 86 Nev. 301, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 510
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1970
Docket5900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 468 P.2d 359 (Kelly v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Kelly, 468 P.2d 359, 86 Nev. 301, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 510 (Neb. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Collins, C. J.:

This is an appeal in a divorce action between Dorothy Bake-well Kelly (plaintiff below) and William Cody Kelly (defendant below). The single issue requiring our review is the lower court’s determination there was no community property of the parties to be divided. We affirm that judgment.

*303 Dorothy and William, each of whom was married before, were wed in Sewickley, Pa., January 25, 1964. Dorothy had no children of her first marriage; William had four. The parties resided in Cincinnati, Ohio, from then until April, 1965, when they moved to Washington, D.C. In April, 1966, they moved to Glenbrook, Nevada. On June 2, 1967, Dorothy commenced this divorce action. Because there were complex issues to be resolved, the parties stipulated, and the court ordered reference of the cause to a Master, Gordon W. Rice, Esq., to try all issues and recommend findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment of the court. On February 12, 1969, the Master filed a Memorandum Decision on the merits of the cause and recommended findings and conclusions to the court, in which Dorothy was to be granted the divorce as the party least at fault. She was to be conditionally awarded alimony of $1,500 per month for a period of two years, and she was awarded a statue valued at approximately $12,000, found by the Master to have been a gift to her by William. The Master found there were no children born of the marriage and that the parties owned no community property.

Those findings and conclusions were adopted in toto by the lower court, which entered final judgment in accordance therewith. It is from the finding that the parties owned no community property that Dorothy takes this appeal.

In 1962, William, a wealthy man and a lawyer, placed the bulk of his assets in a revocable inter vivos Ohio trust, naming himself as the lifetime income beneficiary, his children as ultimate beneficiaries, and himself and his law associate, Kyle Brooks, as trustees. At the time of his marriage to Dorothy, the assets of the trust were valued at $6,222,000, and he had other assets, outside the trust, valued at approximately $867,-000, most of which he later conveyed to the trust. At the time of the trial in December, 1968, the trust property was valued at approximately $8,000,000 and William owned the following assets in addition to those belonging to the trust:

1. Ten percent interest in Fincastle Land Co. valued at $11,300 and acquired in September, 1967.

2. Twenty-five percent interest in Green Spring, Inc., valued at $25,000 and acquired in March, 1967.

3. Six acres of Florida real estate valued at $12,000, acquired in 1966 as take-down acreage from a purchase made in 1960 which had been foreclosed upon.

4. A $300 investment in Carson-Tahoe Travel, Inc., acquired in February, 1967, and August, 1968.

5. A 15 percent interest in Carson Broadcasting Corp., *304 whose value had not been ascertained but which would probably be at least $22,500, acquired in July, 1968. It appears as though none of this had been paid pending the determination of how much 15 percent of the corporation was worth.

6. A $5,000 note dated August, 1956.

7. A boat acquired in May, 1967, and a car acquired in July, 1968, valued at $14,000 total.

8. Furniture, furnishings, and works of art valued at $25,000, acquired between 1940 and 1968.

9. A $3,000 interest in a Caribbean dry-cleaning company, acquired in the summer of 1964 by signing as surety for a loan obtained by the company.

The residence of the parties at Glenbrook was purchased by the trust in September, 1966, the sale being confirmed by a court order out of the First Judicial District. It was never owned by the parties jointly or by William as an individual.

Dorothy contends the finding of the Master, as approved by the court, that there was no community property was in error, and urges this court to reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the lower court to:

“1. Determine the reasonable value of the services rendered by the husband to his various separate properties during the period the parties resided as husband and wife in the State of Nevada and reimburse the community for these services.

“2. Determine the following property interests, which were acquired while the parties resided in Nevada, to be community property:

“A) The 10% interest in the outstanding stock in the Fin-castle Land Company.

“B) The 25% interest in the outstanding stock in Green Spring, Inc.

“C) The interest in Carson-Tahoe Travel, Inc.

“D) The 15% interest in Carson Broadcasting, Inc.

“E) The boat purchased in 1967.

“F) The residence at Glenbrook, Nevada.

“G) The furniture and furnishings at the Glenbrook residence.

“3. Determine the amount of enhancement to the husband’s separate property that resulted from his skill and efforts during the period of marriage in the State of Nevada and apportion to the community the value of the enhancement resulting from the husband’s skill and effort.”

The Master, in rendering his Memorandum of Decision on the issue of the accumulation of community property by the *305 parties during the marriage, said, “THOUGH there has been an accretion of two to three million dollars in MR. KELLY’S separate fortune — While MRS. KELLY’S wealth has not fluctuated from about a quarter million dollars — since the marriage, the parties have accumulated no community property.” The record shows that evidence taken by the Master on the accumulation of community property question is in substantial conflict.

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Bluebook (online)
468 P.2d 359, 86 Nev. 301, 1970 Nev. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-kelly-nev-1970.