Martin v. Martin
This text of 530 P.2d 1386 (Martin v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
We must decide in this' case whether the trial judge in a divorce action abused his discretion in refusing to grant a new trial for newly discovered evidence and whether the trial judge abused his discretion by making a property settlement which was clearly unjust. We conclude that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion, and we affirm his ruling.
Willie Martin married Callie M. Martin on June 25, 1966, at Ft. Wainwright, Alaska. They adopted one child who had reached six years of age at the time of the divorce. Before this marriage Callie Martin had acquired an apartment house in San Francisco, California, and a lot on Mary Ann Street and 16th Avenue, Fairbanks, Alaska. During the marriage the Martins acquired a home and household furnishings at 2127 McCullam Street, Fairbanks, a 1968 Cadillac and a 1969 Oldsmobile, a lot at Turner Street and 16th Avenue, Fairbanks, and some savings bonds.
On February 13, 1973, Willie Martin filed for divorce, precipitating bitterly contested divorce proceedings. In his decree the trial judge awarded the custody of the child to Callie Martin, saving to the father reasonable rights of visitation. The father was ordered to pay child support of $100 per month. Callie Martin was allowed her own personal property, the San Francisco apartment house, the 1968 Cadillac, the household furnishings found by the court to be worth $15,000, and a one-half interest in the net proceeds of the sale of the home at 2127 McCullam Street. She was also awarded $800 in back support to be paid out of Willie Martin’s one-half share in the proceeds from the sale of the home. In addition to his one-half interest in the net proceeds of the home, Willie Martin was awarded the 1969 Oldsmobile, the lot [1387]*1387located at Turner Street and 16th Avenue and the lot at Mary Ann Street and 16th Avenue, and his personal property.
Callie Martin was required to assume responsibility for a J. C. Penney account and the balance due on a note secured by the two automobiles.
A few days after the entry of the decree Callie Martin discharged her trial attorney and retained her present counsel. She promptly filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the parties and the trial judge were mistaken as to the value of the household furnishings and on newly discovered evidence that the values established at trial for the two lots were erroneous due to errors in valuation in the tax, records of the Fairbanks North Star Borough. The trial judge refused a new trial, reasoning that Callie Martin had failed to establish either that she was unaware of or could not have known the value of her property at the time of the trial.
Callie Martin in her application for new trial claims that the household furnishings have a fair market value of no more than $4,000, while the value of the two lots is at least $9,920. While the record of this bitter contest discloses much testimony of incompatibility between the parties, it contains a surprising paucity of evidence of the value of the properties involved.
The only testimony at trial concerning the value of household furnishings was given during the cross examination of Willie Martin. He estimated the household furnishings to be worth $15,000 to $18,000. In other testimony Callie Martin stated that she examined the borough tax records to ascertain the value of the lot at Turner Street and 16th Avenue and that according to the records, the lot was worth about $2,700. The value of the lot at Mary Ann Street and 16th Avenue was estimated by Willie Martin to be approximately $5,000.1
Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 59(a) states that a new trial may be granted “in an action tried without a jury, if required in the interest of justice.” Civil Rule 59(d) requires that a motion for new trial based upon newly discovered evidence must, together with accompanying documents, show “that the evidence was in fact newly discovered and why it could not with reasonable diligence have been produced at the trial.” In Montgomery Ward v. Thomas, 394 P.2d 774, 776 (Alaska 1964), we said that the requirements which must be met in determining whether a new trial should be granted on grounds of newly discovered evidence are that the evidence :
(1) must be such as would probably change the result on a new trial; (2) must have been discovered since the trial; (3) must be of such a nature that it could not have been discovered before trial by due diligence; (4) must be material; (5) must not be merely cumulative or impeaching.2
From the date that Callie Martin filed her first answer in this case on March 1, 1973, until trial January 21, 1974, the parties had an opportunity to obtain evidence of property value. But even at the time the trial judge stated the values, which he [1388]*1388accepted from the evidence in making his property disposition, no objection was voiced. So far as the record shows, the first effort by Callie Martin to obtain reliable information concerning property values was in conjunction with her motion for a new trial on February 14, 1974. The record shows that Callie Martin obtained appraisals of her home furnishings on January 30, 1974, and February 5, 1974, and that her counsel for this appeal obtained an appraisal of the two house lots on February 12, 1974. In denying the motion for retrial, the trial court stated:
This case had been in court at least 3 or 4 times, and on 2 occasions I remember telling the parties that they had better be prepared with proper evidence when they come into court .... [Property appraisals are] evidence that should have been in the reasonable preparation of a case — it can reasonably be anticipated by attorneys that when property is involved, real property is involved, that an appraisal should be made of that property to come up with a value so that it can be presented to the court and the court can have something to base its decision on.
We agree. Appraisals could surely have been obtained before trial with due diligence.
It is suggested that Callie Martin was justified in relying on the property values contained in the borough tax records even though these records reflect mistakes and incorrect values, and that she is on this ground alone entitled to a new trial. We have on at least one earlier occasion noted the unreliability of tax records as a basis for establishing property values. State v. 45,621 Square Feet of Land, 475 P.2d 553, 557 (Alaska 1970). There we said:
The majority rule excludes property tax assessments from evidence in condemnation cases on the rationale that such an assessment is res inter alios acta, notoriously unreliable as a criterion of true value or the opinion of persons not called as witnesses and subject to cross-examination. (footnote omitted)
Moreover, the cases relied upon and cited to this court in support of the contention that Callie Martin was entitled to rely on the borough records have nothing to do with property valuation but rather were concerned with title to property.3 As such, they are inapposite.
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530 P.2d 1386, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-martin-alaska-1975.