Mary Anne Marciante v. William Harold Perry

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 26, 2008
DocketM2006-02654-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mary Anne Marciante v. William Harold Perry (Mary Anne Marciante v. William Harold Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Anne Marciante v. William Harold Perry, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE DECEMBER 12, 2007 Session

MARY ANNE MARCIANTE v. WILLIAM HAROLD PERRY

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 32000 Russ Heldman, Chancellor

No. M2006-02654-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 26, 2008

This appeal involves the classification and division of marital property after a marriage of approximately thirteen years. We have determined that the trial court erred in its classification of various assets and debts, and the resulting distribution of the marital estate was inequitable. Therefore, we modify the judgment and affirm as modified.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed as Modified

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT, J., and JON KERRY BLACKWOOD , SR., J., joined.

Joanie L. Abernathy, Franklin, TN, for Appellant

Abby R. Rubenfeld, Nashville, TN, for Appellee OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

William Harold Perry (“Husband”) and Mary Anne Marciante (“Wife”) married on December 29, 1992. Husband was 40 years old at the time, and Wife was 36 years old. This was Husband’s second marriage, and he had two daughters from his first marriage. Wife had never been married and had no children. Husband and Wife did not have any children together, but Husband’s youngest daughter came to live with them in 1998 when she was 14 years old.

Husband and Wife each owned several assets at the time of the marriage. Each party already had a retirement plan: Husband’s plan was worth approximately $44,000, and Wife’s plan was worth approximately $66,000. In addition, each party owned property in Florida. Wife owned a condominium in Cape Canaveral, which the parties referred to as “Ocean Woods.” She had purchased the condo approximately nine years before the marriage for $64,000, paying $25,000 down and financing the balance through a mortgage. Wife added Husband’s name to the deed after they married, and Husband and Wife lived in the Ocean Woods condo for approximately eight months. The parties then moved to Tennessee and rented the Ocean Woods condo to tenants whenever possible. The mortgage on Ocean Woods was paid off in 2002, and the parties sold it in 2005 for $275,000. Approximately $200,000 of the proceeds was used to pay off the mortgage on the parties’ marital home in Franklin, Tennessee.

Husband owned four real properties in Florida when the parties married in 1992, but he did not add Wife’s name to the deeds. Husband owned a condo in St. Augustine, referred to as the “A1A condo,” which was apparently unencumbered and worth approximately $70,000 when the parties married. This condo was sold in 2002 for $152,000. Husband also owned a condo in Titusville, Florida, called the “LaCita condo,” which was worth about $70,000 at the time of the marriage, and he owned a condo in Jacksonville worth about $40,000. These two condos were encumbered by mortgages and rented whenever possible. Finally, Husband owned a one-half interest in an undeveloped parcel of property near Jacksonville, referred to as the “Mandarin” property. It appears that this property was jointly owned with Husband’s ex-wife, and his interest in the property was worth about $10,000 at the time he married Wife.

Husband and Wife are both licensed certified public accountants, but Husband earned significantly more money throughout the marriage. From 1992 to 2002, Husband’s yearly wages ranged from $62,948 to $144,705. During those same years, Wife’s wages increased from $31,884 to $66,266.

In 2002, Husband lost his job through no fault of his own, when his employer, Arthur Andersen, LLP, entered the process of dissolution. According to Husband, he applied for various other jobs to no avail. Husband then became involved in “day trading” or “cyber trading,” but his trading business was never profitable. However, Husband continued to receive investment income and retirement income while he was unemployed that exceeded Wife’s yearly income. Husband

-2- went to Florida numerous times while he was unemployed to repair the parties’ condos and refurbish them. In addition, Husband acted as “property manager” for the Ocean Woods condo from 2003 until it sold in 2005, locating prospective tenants and evicting tenants when necessary.

Wife filed for divorce on October 31, 2005, and Husband subsequently counterclaimed for divorce. In March of 2006, the parties were declared divorced pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-4-129 upon stipulations that each party had grounds for divorce. The parties had no minor children, and neither party sought alimony. Thus, the only issue remaining for trial involved classifying and distributing the marital assets and debts. A bench trial was held on May 3, 2006, and on August 17, 2006, at which only the parties testified.1 The parties agreed that each should be awarded his or her own vehicle and checking account, which they claimed were of comparable values. The following assets were at issue: the parties’ marital home in Franklin, Tennessee, and its furnishings; the remaining properties in Florida; and the two retirement accounts. The parties also had a significant amount of credit card debt.

The parties gave very different accounts of their financial situation during the marriage. It is clear that each party had a separate checking account coming into the marriage, and each party added the other spouse’s name to his or her checking account not long after the marriage. Husband and Wife had several credit card accounts in his or her own name, and they were both cardholders on one American Express account. In 1997, the parties opened a joint checking account and “pooled” their money, depositing their salaries into the joint account. In 2000, the joint checking account was closed, and the parties went back to using their other two checking accounts. At trial, the parties disputed the significance of closing the joint checking account and the extent to which they separated their finances thereafter.

According to Wife, she separated the parties’ finances completely in 2000 because she was upset with how much money Husband was spending on his daughters. Both parties’ names remained on both of the checking accounts, but generally, Wife used one and Husband used the other. Wife claimed that each party began paying for his or her own expenses, and if one spouse paid an expense that benefitted them both, the other would reimburse him or her for exactly one-half the expense. Both parties continued to use the joint American Express credit card account, but Wife claimed that each party was responsible for paying their own charges to the account and one-half of any charges that benefitted both of them. Husband, on the other hand, denied that any of the parties’ finances – the checking accounts, credit cards, or expenses – were treated separately during any part of the marriage. He acknowledged that Wife would occasionally ask him to transfer money to the checking account that she “managed,” but he insisted that neither party classified their expenses and asked for reimbursement. According to Husband, Wife never told him that he owed her any money for charges on their American Express account until just before she filed for divorce.

1 We note that Husband became employed on May 15, 2006, while this case was pending in the trial court. He accepted a position in Alabama as a director of finance with an aerospace contractor, and at the time of trial, his annual salary was $125,000

-3- The parties’ debts totaled approximately $163,500. The credit cards in Wife’s name had a combined balance of approximately $15,500, and she claimed that she owed her parents $10,000 for a loan related to this litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
Mary Anne Marciante v. William Harold Perry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-anne-marciante-v-william-harold-perry-tennctapp-2008.