Kimberley Arnold Bates v. Charles Anthony Bates

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 9, 2020
DocketM2019-00505-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kimberley Arnold Bates v. Charles Anthony Bates (Kimberley Arnold Bates v. Charles Anthony Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimberley Arnold Bates v. Charles Anthony Bates, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

07/09/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 1, 2020 Session

KIMBERLEY ARNOLD BATES V. CHARLES ANTHONY BATES

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Wilson County No. 2018-DV-8 Clara W. Byrd, Judge

No. M2019-00505-COA-R3-CV

A wife filed for divorce after approximately seventeen years of marriage. Following a bench trial, the trial court declared the parties divorced, divided the marital estate, and awarded the wife alimony in futuro. The husband appealed, challenging the trial court’s valuation of his separate property interest in a closely held corporation and the division of the marital estate. We have determined that the trial court erred in undervaluing the husband’s separate property interest and modify the valuation to $255,000. Because the trial court failed to allocate all of the marital debt, we vacate the trial court’s division of the marital estate and award of alimony and remand the case for further consideration.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part as Modified, Vacated in Part, and Remanded

ANDY D. BENNETT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., joined.

Donald N. Capparella and Kimberly Ann Macdonald, Nashville, Tennessee, and Melanie R. Bean, Lebanon, Tennessee, for the appellant, Charles Anthony Bates.

David W. Garrett and Jacob T. Thorington, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellee, Kimberley Arnold Bates.

OPINION

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Kimberley Arnold Bates1 (“Wife”) and Charles Anthony Bates (“Husband”) married on May 31, 2001. They had been married to each other once before, with their

1 Wife’s name also appears in the record as “Kimberly.” first marriage ending in divorce on November 20, 1997. On January 5, 2018, approximately seventeen years after marrying for the second time, Wife filed for divorce.2

The trial court heard the matter over the course of five days in January and February 2019. The primary issue at trial and on appeal concerns the classification and valuation of Husband’s interest in a car dealership at the time of the parties’ second marriage. During the parties’ first marriage, Husband became the general sales manager of Burchett Ford Subaru, Inc. (the “Company”). He acquired a 20% interest in the Company in 1994 after entering into a Management and Buy and Sell Stock Agreement (“the Agreement”) with the owner of the Company, Glen Burchett. At the time Husband and Mr. Burchett signed the Agreement, the total value of the Company was $1,000,000. The Agreement provided that, in exchange for Husband continuing to work as the general sales manager, Mr. Burchett agreed to surrender “eighty (80) shares of the Company stock” and to issue them to Husband on a vesting schedule from 1995 through 1997. In the Agreement, both Husband and Mr. Burchett agreed that the eighty shares had a value of $2,500 per share. Thus, the total amount of Husband’s interest in the Company at that time was $200,000, while Mr. Burchett’s interest was $800,000.

The Agreement contained a provision that allowed the Company to terminate Husband’s employment “for cause,” which the Agreement defined to include only the following: (1) “any dishonesty, fraud or criminal activity in connection with the operation of the Company” or (2) “any disability or incapacity which prevents [Husband] from performing the duties of his employment for 120 consecutive days.” If the Company terminated Husband for any reason, the Agreement required him to sell back to the Company the eighty shares he acquired under the Agreement for $1,250 per share and any shares he later purchased, if any, for $2,500 per share. The Company never terminated Husband.

The Agreement also included a buy-sell provision that provided, in pertinent part, as follows:

The Company agrees to buy or redeem and Burchett for himself, his estate, his Personal Representative and his heirs agrees to sell any and all stock in the Company that he owns at the date of his death for $2,500 per share, it being understood that the Company will apply to the purchase of said stock the net proceeds of any insurance policy that it owns on the life of Burchett and that the principal balance for said stock will be paid in five (5) equal annual installments plus seven percent (7%) per annum on the unpaid principal balance until paid in full. ....

2 The parties had two children from their first marriage. Both children were adults when Wife filed for divorce in 2018, and they are not a subject of this appeal. -2- It is specifically agreed by each of the parties that the purpose of the agreements as here set out . . . is to establish a smooth transition and uninterrupted transfer of the stock and ownership and full operation of the Company to [Husband] upon Burchett’s incapacitation or death and each party agrees for themselves, their heirs or assigns, that they will take no action that will hinder or disturb this intended transition.

When the parties divorced the first time in 1997, they entered into a Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”) that awarded Husband “all right, title in and to any ownership interest he ha[d] in [the Company].” Husband testified that, at the time of the parties’ second marriage in 2001, he still owned the eighty shares he received under the Agreement and had not purchased any additional shares. Following Mr. Burchett’s death in May 2007, however, Husband purchased the outstanding 320 shares of the Company stock that Mr. Burchett had owned for $800,000 ($2,500 per share) and changed the name of the Company to Bates Ford.3 Husband stated that he borrowed the $800,000 from Wilson Bank and Trust and then used funds from the Company to pay off the loan by creating a shareholder receivable.

Both parties presented expert testimony regarding the value of Husband’s 20% interest in the Company at the time of the parties’ second marriage and the value of the Company at the time of trial. Scott Womack testified on behalf of Wife. He began with his valuation of Husband’s 20% interest in the Company at the time of the parties’ second marriage in 2001. He provided the trial court with two valuations based on two different methods. First, he used a combination of the Company’s income, assets, and fair market value to calculate that the Company had a value of $2,120,000 in 2001. Because the stock was restricted and Husband did not have a controlling interest, Mr. Womack then applied a 20% discount for lack of marketability and a 20% discount for lack of control to conclude that the value of Husband’s 20% interest was $255,000 in 2001. Second, Mr. Womack testified that he believed that the termination provision in the Agreement was a better indicator of the value of Husband’s 20% interest in 2001. After providing the trial court with his interpretation of the Agreement, Mr. Womack concluded that the value of Husband’s 20% interest in 2001 was $100,000 because that was the maximum amount the termination provision allowed him to sell his stock for at that time.

Mr. Womack then testified regarding his valuation of the Company at the time of trial. He stated that his valuation method blended the tangible book value of the Company—“the assets you can see, touch, feel”—and the intangible value of the Company’s residual goodwill. Using this method, he determined that the Company had a value of $3,463,000 at the time of trial. Mr. Womack acknowledged that his valuation did not include $935,000 in shareholder receivables that he described as personal debt Husband

3 Husband has appeared in advertisements for Bates Ford stating the catch phrase, “We’ll trade for anything that don’t eat.” -3- owed to the Company.

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Bluebook (online)
Kimberley Arnold Bates v. Charles Anthony Bates, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimberley-arnold-bates-v-charles-anthony-bates-tennctapp-2020.