Marriage of Glenn v. Glenn

345 S.W.3d 320, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 930, 2011 WL 2637327
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 2011
DocketSD 30829
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 345 S.W.3d 320 (Marriage of Glenn v. Glenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Glenn v. Glenn, 345 S.W.3d 320, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 930, 2011 WL 2637327 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ROBERT S. BARNEY, Presiding Judge.

Appellant Diana R. Moore Glenn (“Wife”) appeals the judgment of dissolution entered by the trial court which dissolved her marriage to Fred A. Glenn (“Husband”). In her sole point on appeal Wife challenges the trial court’s finding that a home and 77 acres owned by Husband prior to their marriage was entirely Husband’s non-marital property. She contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law by its classification since the trial court ignored Wife’s marital contribution to the value of the property. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s judgment, Hight v. Hight, 314 S.W.3d 874, 878 (Mo.App.2010), the record reveals Husband and Wife were married on August 15, 1995, and they separated on April 23, 2009. Husband filed his petition for dissolution on May 5, 2009, and Wife filed her answer and counter-petition on June 3, 2009. There were no children born of the marriage and it was a second marriage for both parties. At the time of trial in March and April of 2010, Husband was sixty-two years old and Wife was sixty years old.

The trial testimony and evidence revealed that after his retirement eleven months into the marriage, Husband began receiving $4,400.00 per month from his retirement pension with the City of Springfield Police Department. 1 Husband also began receiving military retirement benefits in 2007 in the amount of $942.00 per month for his military service prior to the marriage. 2 Husband also worked part-time at a local golf course at which he made approximately $128.62 per month. Additionally, throughout the marriage Husband bought and sold cattle and at the time of trial owned thirty-one cows and calves. All of the money from his pension, his retirement benefits, his wages at the golf course, and his income from his cattle operation went into his solely owned account at Metro Credit Union.

Wife also worked throughout most of the marriage, but she was laid off in January of 2009. All of her wages, unemployment benefits, worker’s compensation settlements, profits from the sale of separate real estate and other monies was deposited into her TelComm Credit Union accounts to which Husband had no access. Further, Wife’s income taxes for the years 2006 to 2008 show income from a farming operation. Wife also had investments and a 401(K) solely in her name. Husband and Wife never had joint banking accounts and they only filed their income taxes jointly during one year of their marriage. Based *323 on an apparent understanding that “what’s hers is hers and what’s [his] is [his],” Husband waived any claim to any of Wife’s investments and 401(K).

At the time of the marriage, each party separately owned real property. In 1993, prior to the marriage, Husband purchased 77 acres of land in Lawrence County, Missouri (“the Lawrence County property”). 3 He purchased the property for $57,000.00 of which he paid $20,000.00 in cash and borrowed the remaining amount of $37,000.00 from Farm Credit Service. At the time of his marriage to Wife in 1995 he owed between $26,000.00 and $27,000.00 on this loan. Eleven months after the parties’ marriage, Husband retired following a twenty-eight year career with the City of Springfield Police Department. The mortgage for the Lawrence County property remained solely in Husband’s name as did the deed for the property and all payments on the mortgage were made from his accounts with Metro Credit Union to which Wife had no access. In 1998 Husband paid off the Farm Credit Service mortgage with a lump sum payment from his Metro Credit Union account.

After the parties’ marriage, in the spring of 1996, Husband built an $18,000.00 machine shop on the Lawrence County property. He paid for the shop with funds from his Metro Credit Union account. Then, in March of 1996 Husband obtained a $135,000.00 construction loan from First Savings Bank in order to build a home for the parties on the Lawrence County property. Wife also signed the documents for this construction loan which was secured by 20 acres of the Lawrence County property. By December of 1996, Husband had used funds from his Metro Credit Union account and from the sale of another piece of separate property to pay down the construction loan to $60,000.00 at which time he had it converted to a conventional mortgage in his name only. At the time of trial the balance on this mortgage was approximately $9,000.00 with all of the monthly mortgage payments coming from Husband’s Metro Credit Union account. Husband opined that the house, which needed some repairs, and the two acres on which it is located, were worth a total of $110,000.00. While admitting that Wife had done some minor landscaping work such as planting flowers at the house, he related she never contributed financially to the property. He further opined that the entire Lawrence County property complete with outbuildings, home, and 77 acres had a fair market value of between $260,000.00 and $280,000.00. 4

Prior to the marriage, Wife received as part of her dissolution of marriage settlement with her previous husband several tracts of real estate as well as a contract for deed on a parcel of real estate (“the Greene County property”). The Greene County property consisted of ten acres and a home, and at the time of her 1994 dissolution with her former husband it was valued at $54,500.00 with a $24,000.00 encumbrance in favor of Boatman’s Bank. Wife used the settlement from her prior dissolution of marriage to pay off the debt to Boatman’s Bank. The contract for deed party then defaulted and in 1996 Wife repossessed the Greene County property. She then re-titled the property solely in her name with no mention of her marital *324 status. 5 Thereafter, Wife borrowed approximately $30,000.00 to remodel the Greene County property and Husband cosigned on this loan with Commerce Bank. 6 The loan was later increased and Husband also signed those documents. The funds were used to put a new roof on the home as well as new siding, to install hardwood floors, to replace the furnace and air conditioner and make cosmetic alterations. Wife made all of the payments on the Commerce Bank loan out her own separate bank account. In 2003, Wife paid off the Commerce Bank loan with money from a TelComm Credit Union home equity loan she took out in the name: “Diana Moore, A Single Person.” Husband was not a signatory to this loan. Husband’s expert, Norma Vinson (“Ms. Vinson”), who conducted her appraisal without access to the interior of the house on the Greene County property, testified that the property had a value of approximately $210,000.00, but the property had a present “highest” and “best use” value as a commercial property at approximately $280,000.00.

After hearing the foregoing testimony, the trial court rendered its judgment on August 19, 2010. After considering the factors set out in section 452.330.1, 7

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Bluebook (online)
345 S.W.3d 320, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 930, 2011 WL 2637327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-glenn-v-glenn-moctapp-2011.