Kim Walker v. James Walker

CourtIntermediate Court of Appeals of West Virginia
DecidedApril 29, 2025
Docket24-ica-393
StatusPublished

This text of Kim Walker v. James Walker (Kim Walker v. James Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Intermediate Court of Appeals of West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kim Walker v. James Walker, (W. Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA FILED April 29, 2025 KIM WALKER, ASHLEY N. DEEM, CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK Petitioner Below, Petitioner INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

v.) No. 24-ICA-393 (Fam. Ct. Wayne Cnty. Case No. FC-50-2023-D-7)

JAMES WALKER, Respondent Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner Kim Walker (“Wife”) appeals the Family Court of Wayne County’s August 30, 2024, amended final divorce order holding that jointly titled real property was marital property subject to equitable distribution. The issue on appeal is whether the family court erred by finding that the property was a gift to the marital estate rather than Wife’s separate property. Respondent James Walker (“Husband”) filed a response in support of the family court’s decision.1 Wife filed a reply.

This Court has jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to West Virginia Code § 51- 11-4 (2024). After considering the parties’ arguments, the record on appeal, and the applicable law, this Court finds that there is error in the family court’s decision but no substantial question of law. For the reasons set forth below, a memorandum decision vacating and remanding for further proceedings is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

The parties were married in South Carolina on January 23, 2021. No children were born of the marriage. Prior to the marriage, Wife owned a home in South Carolina, and Husband owned a home in North Carolina. After marriage, Husband relocated to Wife’s home in South Carolina and the parties resided there for approximately seventeen months before relocating to Wayne County, West Virginia. The parties, along with several of Wife’s relatives, made repairs to Wife’s South Carolina home and she received $173,693.20 from its sale. Wife deposited the same into her separate bank account.

With the assistance of a realtor, Tracey Reynolds (“Realtor”), the parties located property in Big Hurricane Creek, Wayne County, West Virginia that they were interested in purchasing. During the course of their dealings, Wife allegedly expressed to Realtor that she planned to have the property deeded solely in her name as her separate property.

1 Wife is represented by Paula L. Harbour, Esq. Husband is self-represented.

1 However, on the closing date, July 22, 2022, Wife discovered that the attorneys who prepared the closing documents had mistakenly jointly titled the deed in both Husband’s and Wife’s names. Wife objected to the joint titling and Husband allegedly reassured Wife that he would never make a claim to the property. Allegedly, to prevent inconveniencing the sellers, and based on Husband’s assurances that he would not claim ownership of the property, Wife signed the closing documents titling the land in both parties’ names.

In November 2022, approximately four months after the closing, Husband left the marriage and relocated to his home in North Carolina. Wife filed for divorce on or about January 12, 2023. Husband filed an answer, counter-petition, interrogatories, a request for production, and a request for admissions. Wife responded to the interrogatories by stating the following about the property in Wayne County:

[Wife] bought the land with premarital money. [Husband] was to sell his property and use the money to build a home for the parties on the property. [Husband] stated, in front of the realtor, that the Wayne County real property would be [Wife’s] property until he built a house on it. That he would never take [Wife’s] property. [Wife] relied on that statement when she put [Husband’s] name on the deed.

Realtor provided a written statement on July 6, 2023, verifying that she remembered that the parties wanted the land titled solely in Wife’s name because the payment came from the sale of Wife’s property that she owned with her deceased husband. Realtor also stated that she remembered Husband saying the money was “her money” and that he was “not out to take her money.”

The final hearing was held on December 1, 2023. During that hearing, Wife, Husband, Realtor, Wife’s cousin, and Wife’s son testified.

Wife testified that the parties agreed that she would purchase the Wayne County property and keep it in her name until Husband sold his home in North Carolina and built a home on it. Upon completion, both the land and new home would be placed in both parties’ names. Wife further testified that she would not have agreed to the Wayne County property being titled in both parties’ names had Husband not represented to her that he would never make a claim of ownership. Wife also testified that Husband completed minimal work on her South Carolina home, that she helped install flooring in his North Carolina home, and that neither were paid for their work. Wife further stated that Husband contributed nothing toward the purchase of the Wayne County property, and approximately four months after she purchased it, Husband researched property rights during divorce and moved back to North Carolina without selling his home as he had promised. Lastly, Wife testified that Husband led her to believe she was his third wife, but she later found out she was his fifth wife.

2 During cross-examination, Wife first stated that she knew what jointly titled property meant but later expressed confusion about the term’s meaning. Regarding work completed on her South Carolina home, Wife testified that Husband helped tear down drywall from a roof leak, install laminate flooring in one bedroom, and slide new French doors into place. Wife testified that her family members also assisted with various repairs to her home and that the roof leak was professionally repaired. Lastly, she stated that she agreed to sign the jointly titled paperwork because Husband stated he would never take her property and because the sellers said it would create a hardship for them if they had to reschedule the closing.

The Realtor testified by phone that, during the closing, Wife inquired about why the paperwork included both parties’ names and that Realtor heard Husband state, “it was her [Wife’s] money” and “he was not out to take her [Wife’s] money.”

Husband testified that Wife helped install approximately five out of thirty-five cases of flooring in his North Carolina home. Regarding Wife’s home in South Carolina, Husband testified that it needed significant repairs when he moved in, he paid for her electricity to be re-connected two days after their marriage, and that he purchased spray guns, paint, and a few other supplies. Regarding work completed on the South Carolina home, Husband testified that he helped repair and/or replace flooring in a bedroom, living room, and foyer, repaired a toilet, repaired a guest room ceiling, replaced French doors, removed shutters and repainted them, replaced vinyl siding, replaced a dog door, hauled off trash, and replaced lights and outlets. Husband also testified that he bought some groceries and completed approximately twenty hours per week of work on Wife’s home over an approximate seventeen-month period. Upon relocating to West Virginia, Husband testified that the parties lived in Wife’s uncle’s home, where he installed a stove pipe, sealed the roof, and helped maintain it. Husband testified that he left the relationship due to chaos caused by Wife’s family. Husband also testified that his only income was social security, he had no retirement, and that the parties planned to have everything jointly titled.

During cross-examination, Husband testified that the parties never combined their finances and that he never expected to be reimbursed for the work he completed on Wife’s South Carolina home. He further stated that he did not remember stating “that’s her money” and “he would not take her property” during the closing process.

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Bluebook (online)
Kim Walker v. James Walker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kim-walker-v-james-walker-wvactapp-2025.