Marriage of Aitchison CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
DocketA134450
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Marriage of Aitchison CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 1/24/14 Marriage of Aitchison CA1/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION TWO

In re the Marriage of GRACE AITCHISON and DAVID AITCHISON.

GRACE AITCHISON, A134450 Plaintiff and Appellant, v. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. MSD09-05412) DAVID AITCHISON, Defendant and Respondent.

“[T]he parties appear in this case to me to be in a position of both trying to achieve exsanguination of the other side. Death by a thousand paper cuts until there is no money left . . . .” So astutely observed the Honorable Charles Burch during the trial of this marital dissolution case. While, sadly, this is often true in divorce cases, it is particularly so here, where former spouses David and Grace Aitchison incurred more than $1.5 million in attorney and expert witness fees in their fight over property division and support after the demise of their 22-year marriage. At the end of the day, after having rejected two very generous settlement offers by David, Grace was left with a share of the modest community estate, while David retained his substantial separate property.1

1 As is frequently done in cases involving spouses, and to avoid confusion, we refer to the parties by their first names. We intend no disrespect in doing so. 1 Grace appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in the following three particulars: (1) finding that David did not transmute much of his separate property into community property; (2) failing to award her adequate attorney’s fees; and (3) sanctioning her for filing a writ petition. David cross-appeals, claiming that the trial court erred in finding the couple’s premarital agreement unenforceable. We affirm. BACKGROUND Marriage and Separation David and Grace met in college in 1981 and married six years later. On November 13, 2009, Grace filed a petition for separation. David responded with a request for dissolution of the marriage. At the time of separation, the couple had two minor children and two adult children. The Aitchison Family Business David came from a family of considerable wealth that derived from a business called Tharco Sales Company (Tharco), a cardboard cartons business founded by his grandparents. Over the years, David’s father and uncle helped operate and grow Tharco and other related companies into a significant enterprise. From a very young age, David, his two siblings, and his two cousins were gifted shares in the Tharco companies. These gifts continued as David grew up, as a result of which he owned a sizable portfolio of Tharco stock. Then, in early 1987, not long before his marriage to Grace, David agreed to purchase additional shares of Tharco stock from his siblings and cousins. He executed a promissory note for the agreed-upon purchase price of approximately $426,500. Premarital Agreement Shortly before David and Grace married, David’s father, James, suggested to David that he and Grace enter into a premarital agreement to protect the family business and his separate assets. David was amenable, so James contacted Herman Scampini, long-time attorney of the Aitchison family, who in turn worked with David to prepare the agreement.

2 David and Grace signed the resulting agreement on April 22, 1987. As pertinent here, it identified the amounts David owed his siblings and cousins for the Tharco stock as his separate obligation. Per paragraph 2, if community property was used to satisfy his separate obligations, those amounts would be treated as a loan from the community, entitling it to reimbursement at a rate of 12 percent interest. The evidence concerning the circumstances under which Grace executed the agreement was conflicting. David testified that he and Grace discussed the agreement; he suggested she have an attorney review it and left it for her on his kitchen table; and she gave him a signed copy several days later. According to Grace, the first time she saw the agreement was the night before she and David were to leave for their wedding. They were having dinner at his parents’ house, and David and James presented it to her there. Grace testified that she did not know what a prenuptial agreement was, but they assured her it was “no big deal” and that it had to do with voting shares of Tharco. She then signed it without reading it. At trial, Grace did not recall anyone suggesting she have an attorney review it. Grace further testified that she trusted David as well as James, with whom she was closer than her own father. She and David did whatever James told them to do. James denied presenting the agreement to Grace the night before she and David flew out of town for their wedding. He further denied that Grace signed the agreement in his presence or that he ever talked to her about it. “Gross Up” Arrangement David’s debt to his siblings and cousins for the Tharco stock remained outstanding, so in 1988, James—who by then was the president of the company—devised an arrangement that would allow David to retire the debt. He “grossed up” David’s salary, essentially tripling it for purposes of his paystubs and W-2 forms. The company withheld the additional money, however, sending it directly to David’s relatives. By 1993, David’s debts were paid off, and the additional payments were discontinued. James did not consider the gross-up funds compensation to David as a Tharco employee, but rather a gift.

3 Sales of Tharco Stock In 1998, and again in 2005, the Aitchison family sold its shares in the Tharco companies, with David reaping in excess of $10 million in the two transactions. With his proceeds, David made a down payment on a family home in Danville and bought a ranch in Burney, among other things, putting the remainder in various investment accounts. The Aitchison 2000 Family Trust Meanwhile, on February 28, 2000, David and Grace entered into a trust agreement, again prepared by attorney Scampini, for purposes of creating The Aitchison 2000 Family Trust, which they amended nine months later. Certain provisions of the trust agreement are relevant to Grace’s claim that David transmuted the majority of his separate property to community property. Specifically: Article I, paragraph 1.1 identified the purpose of the trust as follows: “This Trust has been established by the Settlors for the purpose of convenience in the management and disposition of their respective interests in the property which they have previously transferred or are going to transfer to this Trust.

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