Kent D.M. Burstein v. Anne M. Morriss

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 14, 2007
Docket1995064
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kent D.M. Burstein v. Anne M. Morriss (Kent D.M. Burstein v. Anne M. Morriss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent D.M. Burstein v. Anne M. Morriss, (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, Haley and Petty Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

KENT D.M. BURSTEIN MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1995-06-4 JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR. AUGUST 14, 2007 ANNE M. MORRISS

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Arthur B. Vieregg, Judge

Demian J. McGarry (Gwendolyn Jo M. Carlberg; The Carlberg Law Firm, on brief), for appellant.

Donne L. Colton (Delaney, McCarthy & Colton, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

Kent D.M. Burstein (husband) maintains the trial court erred: (1) by denying him an interest

in proceeds from the sale of real property purchased before the marriage by Anne M. Morriss (wife)

and her father; (2) in not diminishing his statutory burden of proof to establish that interest, because

of wife’s misrepresentations and violation of discovery orders; and (3) in not granting him credit for

mortgage principal paydown associated with that real property.

By cross-assignment, wife maintains the trial court erred in awarding husband $5,000 in

attorney’s fees as a sanction for her misrepresentations and discovery violations.

We affirm.

FACTS

In 1989, wife and her father purchased a nineteenth century Victorian house and land,

located at 109 Hale Street, Fayetteville, North Carolina (Hale Street property). The Hale Street

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. property was titled in, and remained titled in, their names alone until sold in 1998. At the time of

their purchase, the structure located on the land at 109 Hale Street had been condemned as not

habitable. Wife and her father made renovations and improvements to that structure between 1989

and 1996, rendering it habitable.

Husband and wife were married on December 18, 1996, and lived together at the Hale Street

property until it was sold on June 19, 1998. Husband and wife made mortgage payments on the

Hale Street property from their joint checking account from December 1996, to June 1998. In

addition, during that time frame they obtained a $50,000 equity line of credit to make further

improvements to the structure. At trial, husband presented bills for some of the labor and materials

associated with these improvements during their occupancy (though no records from marital bank

accounts) and testified as to his personal efforts towards the same. Husband further presented

evidence suggesting that marital funds were applied to reduce the 1989 loan principal in the amount

of $2,467. He also offered evidence to show that the original loan balance of $93,699 on March 23,

1989, the date of the original purchase by wife and her father, had been reduced to $80,617.55 by

September 29, 1997. Wife did not appear or otherwise offer her testimony at trial.

On June 19, 1998, the Hale Street property was sold. Husband joined wife and her father in

executing the deed and signing the HUD-1 closing statement. That statement shows a sale price of

$300,000 and, after deductions including a pay-off of both the original mortgage and credit line

loan, net proceeds of $149,273.10. Of that sum, wife received $100,000 and her father the balance.

It is this $100,000 in which husband claims an interest.

Husband’s claim arose in the following unusual manner.

Husband and wife were divorced by final decree of the Circuit Court of Fairfax County on

June 2, 2000. The divorce order incorporated a Property Settlement Agreement (PSA) signed by

the parties on March 28, 2000. The PSA included a “Full Disclosure” clause, stating that the PSA

-2- “shall become null and void” as to any non-disclosed asset and that “any court having competent

jurisdiction . . . shall retain full jurisdiction to divide such additional [non-disclosed] asset(s).” The

PSA also included exhibits listing all of the assets and liabilities held by the parties on the date the

PSA was signed. Those exhibits did not include wife’s proceeds from the sale of the Hale Street

property because, as wife’s counsel stated in a letter dated September 9, 1999, “she does not have

such funds.” Relying on that statement, husband signed the PSA.

On June 21, 2005, during a deposition for litigation on other matters related to the divorce,

wife disclosed that, in fact, she was in possession of $100,000 from the sale of the Hale Street

property. Wife also admitted that she placed the $100,000 in a USAA account, and later transferred

$40,000 of those funds to a separate account at Lehman Brothers. A hearing was held before Judge

Marcus D. Williams on August 17, 2005, in the Circuit Court of Fairfax County. During the

hearing, wife explained why she failed to disclose those assets in the PSA:

A: I don’t consider it mine. It’s my children’s [sic]. . . . THE COURT: How can it not be in [sic] yours if it’s in your name and not in your children’s [sic] name? A: Well, I just don’t think of it in those terms. It’s tucked away and it can’t be touched. THE COURT: Why can’t it be touched? A: It’s in a special kind of securities fund. It has to be capped at five years, can’t touch it for five years. THE COURT: It’s still your asset, ma’am. A: Okay.

On November 4, 2005, husband filed a motion to enforce the PSA, seeking to divide the

$100,000 Hale Street property proceeds as an undisclosed asset pursuant to the full disclosure

clause. Wife failed to respond to any discovery requests made by husband. Wife also failed to

appear at the scheduled deposition, or to appear at the hearing on husband’s motion to compel

discovery on May 26, 2006. According to wife’s counsel, she relocated to California and did not

leave her contact information.

-3- At trial, as noted above, husband offered evidence regarding the costs of improvements, his

efforts towards the same, and diminution in the principal balances of the two mortgages. In

accordance with the HUD-1 statement, he established the value of the property at $300,000 upon its

sale, and net proceeds to wife of $100,000. However, he offered no evidence as to the value of the

property before the sale. Rather, he argued to the trial court, as he does here, that because the

structure located on the land at 109 Hale Street had been condemned as not habitable in 1989, the

then value of the entire property was zero. This, he maintains, should be considered the value of the

property prior to his marriage. In short, he assumes the land on which the structure was located was

valueless, making no distinction between the value of the land and the value of the structure. Yet,

of course, both were sold in 1998.

In a letter opinion dated June 6, 2006, the trial court held that husband had failed in his

proof. The trial court wrote, “[T]o prove an increase in value of the North Carolina residence, it

was necessary for [husband] to prove its value before and after the improvements were made.” The

court continued:

In order to prove such an increase, [husband] had the burden of proving the value of the property prior to the marriage. In the absence of such evidence, value attributable to improvements is conjectural. For example, the property’s value might be a function of the value of the land, which, because of its potential land use, would have been worth more without the house than with it. In other words, the house may have had a negative value since the house would have to be razed for the property to realize it [sic] highest and best use. In such a case, the only pertinence of the value of the house would be a negative one—the cost of its razing.

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