Marriage of Paschen

2015 MT 350, 363 P.3d 444, 382 Mont. 34, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 609
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 2015
DocketDA 15-0292
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2015 MT 350 (Marriage of Paschen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Paschen, 2015 MT 350, 363 P.3d 444, 382 Mont. 34, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 609 (Mo. 2015).

Opinion

*35 JUSTICE COTTER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 In March 2015, the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Flathead County, issued its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, Orders on Contempt and Decree of Dissolution, dissolving the marriage of the parties, dividing property, and imposing orders of maintenance and child support. Herbert Paschen (hereinafter Herb) appeals the order claiming the District Court’s distribution of the marital estate and its award of maintenance and child support were inequitable and were not supported by substantial evidence. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 Herb Paschen and Anne Kemsley (hereinafter Anne) were married in November 1996. They had three children between 1997 and 2003 and Anne remained at home with the children rather than working outside of the home. Beginning in 1998, Herb worked in sales and finance with various financial employers in California where the couple resided. In 2005, he became an officer and mortgage consultant with a national bank in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, earning approximately $100,000 annually. In 2007, however, he lost his banking job and established Fox Creek Holding, L.L.C., a land development corporation, with one of his banking clients. Herb and his partner each initially invested between $150,000 and $200,000 into the company, and obtained a loan for $3.2 million, personally guaranteed by Herb and his partner. In July 2008, Herb’s partner died in a helicopter crash. Herb attempted to keep the corporation viable but the company subsequently failed in 2010. The lending bank foreclosed on the unpaid note and obtained a judgment of $5.4 million against Herb and his business partner’s estate. Herb stipulated to a judgment against him in the amount of $5.4 million.

¶3 Between 2007 and 2010, while establishing and operating Fox Creek, Herb claimed he generated no income to support his family. Herb’s mother, Leslie Douglass (hereinafter Bunny), gifted the family $75,000 for each of those years. Herb accrued approximately $250,000 in legal fees during these years, some of which were incurred in the corporate lawsuit, and Bunny paid these fees in their entirety.

¶4 Anne did not actively participate in the family’s finances and testified that she believed the money from Bunny was the only money the family had at its disposal between 2007 and 2010. Undisputed evidence presented at trial, however, revealed that in 2007 Herb wrote checks for over $400,000, including a check to himself for $191,000, the purpose of which he could not recall at trial. Similarly, Herb spent *36 considerable amounts beyond the gifted $75,000 during 2008 and 2009. The District Court calculated that between 2007 and 2010, Herb spent approximately $1,724,000.00, or an average of $431,000/year. Herb could not account at trial for the source of most of this money.

¶5 In July 2011, Anne initiated two legal proceedings against Herb in Wyoming — one for marital dissolution and the other for a restraining order following a physical altercation. During this time, Anne and two of the children remained in the Wyoming home and Herb and the couple’s oldest son moved to California. Herb testified to the Wyoming court that he was able to earn $100,000/year. The court adopted this figure, and in September 2011, ordered Herb to pay $2,713.81/month in child support and temporary support to Anne. Herb did not challenge this ruling. However, in August 2012, the Wyoming court dismissed the dissolution proceedings by stipulation of the parties. Herb had not paid any of the court-ordered support as of the time of dismissal.

¶6 Subsequently, Anne and two of the children moved to Montana and Herb and the eldest son joined them in an attempted reconciliation. The reconciliation failed within weeks and Herb moved to Oregon in the fall of 2012. The three children remained with Anne. After Herb and Anne separated, Bunny stopped gifting the family $75,000 but began giving Herb approximately $30,000/year for his living expenses.

¶7 Herb filed for divorce in the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Flathead County, Montana, on December 27,2012. In September 2013, Bunny paid Herb’s delinquent support obligation arising from the Wyoming order of support. In October 2013, the District Court conducted a two-day bench trial at which both Herb and Anne testified, as did the Director of Family Court Services for the District Court, a psychologist who performed a parenting evaluation in the matter, and a former friend and neighbor of the couple.

¶8 On March 31, 2015, the District Court issued its order dissolving the marriage. The order describes both marital assets valued at $95,966, and distributed marital assets valued at $104,466. 1 The $95,966 value of the marital assets consisted of a checking account, 2 horses, a horse trailer, 2 vehicles, a piano and miscellaneous furniture, silver, china, and kitchenware. The most valuable item included in marital assets was $50,000 for missing jewelry belonging to Anne. The *37 court found that at the time of separation Herb removed the jewelry from a safe to which he alone had access; therefore, the court ordered Herb to return the jewelry or to pay Anne the $50,000 attributed value. The court also declared that the jewelry was Anne’s “sole and separate property,” which would not be considered a marital asset subject to distribution. The court did not include the value of this jewelry in the distribution of marital assets.

¶9 The court distributed all the marital assets with the exception of the $50,000 in jewelry. The court also attributed $25,000 — not included in marital assets — to Herb representing the value of guns Herb had taken upon separation. It attributed $15,500 — also not included in marital assets — to Anne representing the value of a tractor and other items sold by Anne post-separation. The District Court noted that none of the property distributed to the parties constituted income-producing or income-generating property.

¶10 The court also allocated marital debt between the parties. Anne was assigned $16,058 of family debt. Herb was assigned $5,580,625 of debt, which included $5,420,608 for the judgment associated with the Fox Creek Holding corporate failure and $160,017 for other marital debts. 2 The court expressly acknowledged the “grossly disproportionate allocation” but justified it based upon Herb’s claim that he intended to seek bankruptcy which would allow him to avoid most or all of the debt.

¶11 Lastly, the District Court addressed the proposed parenting plan, child support and maintenance. The court imputed an annual earning capacity to Herb of $175,000-$100,000 based upon Herb’s self-represented earning ability and $75,000 based upon past gifts from his mother. Using this imputed earning capacity, the court ordered Herb to pay $3,247.00/month in child support and $3,753.00/month as maintenance to Anne — both to be paid until January 2022. Other facts and arguments are further addressed below.

¶12 Herb appeals. Bunny, through counsel, has filed an amicus brief with respect to the propriety of including gifted property as income for purposes of calculating child support and maintenance.

ISSUES

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 MT 350, 363 P.3d 444, 382 Mont. 34, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-paschen-mont-2015.