Marriage of General v. General

409 N.W.2d 511, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 14, 1987
DocketC8-86-1572
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 409 N.W.2d 511 (Marriage of General v. General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of General v. General, 409 N.W.2d 511, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4553 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

WOZNIAK, Judge.

Appellant Max General appeals from the trial court’s post-decree order, granting re *512 spondent Patricia General's motion for maintenance arrearages and attorney’s fees, and partially granting Max’s counter-motion for termination of the maintenance obligation by reducing the monthly maintenance payment from $950 to $300. Patricia did not file a notice of review and requested only that the trial court be affirmed in all respects. We affirm.

FACTS

Max and Patricia were married in 1968. They had three children, all of whom were over 18 at the time of the parties’ divorce in December 1982.

At the time of the dissolution, Max was self-employed, operating General’s Vegetable Markets in Hibbing and Virginia, Minnesota. Max was awarded the vegetable market business and equipment, and unencumbered real estate. The decree does not list his income, but Max claimed a business profit of $6,180 on his individual income tax return for 1982; however, his personal financial statements were more indicative of his financial standing at the time of dissolution. These statements revealed that he had earned salary of $48,000 in 1982, his businesses had gross sales of over two million dollars, and he had a net worth of over $800,000.

At the time of the dissolution, Patricia worked as a nurse part-time, netting $500 per month. The judgment awarded her the homestead and unencumbered real estate in approximately equal value to assets awarded to Max. She was also awarded maintenance of $950 per month until remarriage.

After the dissolution, Max married Kay, the bookkeeper for his business. About one year after his remarriage, in January 1984, Max changed his former sole proprietorship to several corporations, including General Trucking, Inc., General Markets, Inc., General Land Development, Inc., and the Howard Saloon and Eatery, Inc. The corporations were interrelated and loaned money to each other, performed services for each other, and leased and rented property to each other. The corporations paid for Max's and Kay’s personal expenses such as housing, utilities, and food. The four corporations were all privately owned by Max and Kay, and Kay became the only bookkeeper for all of the corporations. After Max was insulated from personal liability, he stopped making maintenance payments.

The claimed decline in Max’s prosperous businesses started shortly after incorporation. While Max's income tax returns had always indicated he was living in poverty, Max claimed his net worth also began declining.

Max’s financial standing. In 1982, the vegetable markets' gross sales amounted to $2,422,000. Max’s personal financial statement for 1982 revealed a net worth of $814,000 and a salary of $48,000 per year. He claimed business income of $6,000 on his income tax return.

In 1983, the vegetable markets’ gross sales totaled $2,423,000. Max reported taxable business income on his tax return of $2,035. This report was based on only ten months of sales because Max incorporated his businesses in November 1983. In January 1984, Max claimed a net worth of $791,-000 and a yearly salary of $50,000.

In fiscal 1984, the vegetable markets' gross sales totaled $2,623,000. For the next six-month period ending May 31,1985, the vegetable markets’ gross sales totaled $1,116,000. Max filed no corporate returns for 1985, but claimed business income of $4,295. At the hearing, Max claimed his net worth dropped from $800,000 at the time of the dissolution to “zero” in 1985.

In late 1984, Max closed the trucking business. At the close of the year, the trucking business showed a net profit of over $80,000. Max and Kay decided to sell the business, however, and sold the trucks for a loss, wiping out any gain and ending with a net loss of $23,000.

In 1985, Max closed the vegetable markets, claiming debt to the bank and creditors of $700,000. Neither he nor Kay was personally liable on any of this debt. He has since opened a new vegetable business hoping to make enough money to pay the *513 13 creditors from the previous vegetable markets.

Patricia’s income. During this period, Patricia worked about the same hours, with a slightly higher hourly wage than at the time of the dissolution. In November of 1984, she had open heart surgery, causing her to miss work through March 1985. During that time she was paid sick benefits, but did not receive her usual net income. She is currently in poor health.

The hearing. Patricia brought a motion requesting a judgment in the amount of arrearages and attorney’s fees. Max brought a countermotion requesting termination of the maintenance obligation.

Patricia’s expert witness, Thomas Lee, a CPA, testified that Max’s compilations were prepared by an LPA, rather than a CPA, and that LPA’s are probably not qualified to prepare compilations. The compilation, unlike an audit or a review, has no guarantee of accuracy and compilations are “at the bottom as far as reliability goes.” The specific problems found in the compilation included failure to comply with GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Procedures); failure to disclose the type of inventory, debt, accounts receivable, and intercorporate transactions; and failure to take a proper inventory or physical count. Max testified that no physical inventory was ever taken. GAAP requires inventory at least yearly, with physical counting of the merchandise. The inventory is crucial in determining the gross sales figure, which, in turn, is necessary to determine financial standing.

The most suspect problem was the erratic declining rate of markup (or profit), from an average of 35% to less than 10% in one year. The CPA stated that such a large decline in markup for one year was unusual and hypothesized that the declining markup was probably caused by understating the goods sold, overstating the cost of goods, inordinate spoilage, or improper inventory. A misstatement of markup would result in a showing of greater loss than actually existed.

The CPA was unable to trace exactly how the decline occurred or the corporations’ correct gain/loss figure. Max claimed he had plunged from near-millionaire status (net worth of $800,000 at the time of the dissolution) to poverty (claimed net worth of -$3,000). Yet, he seemed to have little working knowledge of the financial status of the corporations other than his claim that his businesses were losing money and failing. He did not call any expert witness, and neither he nor Kay was able to adequately explain the discrepancies in their corporations’ books.

The trial court failed to attach a memorandum to its order, but found that the corporations’ decline occurred, in part, from the poor economy on the Iron Range, but did not cause the degree of loss Max claimed. It concluded that terminating maintenance was inappropriate, but held Max liable for $600 per month maintenance in arrearages and required Max to continue paying $300 of the original $950 maintenance obligation. It also granted Patricia $2,500 in attorney’s fees. Max appealed. Patricia did not file a notice of review and requested only that the trial court be affirmed in all respects.

ISSUES

1.

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Bluebook (online)
409 N.W.2d 511, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 4553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-general-v-general-minnctapp-1987.