Mary Carter McConnell v. James Hoge Tyler McConnell, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 30, 2019
Docket0107192
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mary Carter McConnell v. James Hoge Tyler McConnell, Jr. (Mary Carter McConnell v. James Hoge Tyler McConnell, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Carter McConnell v. James Hoge Tyler McConnell, Jr., (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judge Beales and Retired Judge Bumgardner* Argued at Richmond, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

MARY CARTER McCONNELL MEMORANDUM OPINION** BY v. Record No. 0107-19-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES JULY 30, 2019 JAMES HOGE TYLER McCONNELL, JR.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY William H. Shaw, III, Judge Designate

Seth J. Ragosta (John Rinehart Bryant; Lenhart Pettit PC; Flora Pettit; Rinehart, Butler, Hodge, Moss & Bryant, P.L.C., on briefs), for appellant.

John B. Simpson (MartinWren, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

Mary Carter McConnell (“wife”) appeals the October 24, 2018 final decree of divorce of

the Circuit Court of Orange County awarding her a divorce from James Hoge Tyler McConnell,

Jr. (“husband”) and addressing matters of equitable distribution and spousal support. Husband

assigned cross-error, alleging that the trial court erred when it concluded that he had gifted the

home and property where the couple resided during the marriage to the marital estate.

I. BACKGROUND

Husband and wife were married on August 30, 1985, and separated on October 20, 2012,

after a twenty-seven-year marriage. There are no children from the marriage.

* Retired Judge Bumgardner took part in the hearing and decision of this case by designation pursuant to Code § 17.1-400(D). ** Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. Husband is an heir of the DuPont family and the beneficiary of several family trusts. The

evidence at trial established that, without invading the principal of any of these trusts, husband’s

income during the majority of the marriage was approximately $1 million per year.

Although husband did not produce any income during the marriage through employment

that generated tax withholding, testimony from husband and wife established that husband had

considerable knowledge and experience with the stock market and in investing. Husband, who

testified that he had been interested in investing since shortly after he graduated from college,

managed investment accounts for friends and family members during the parties’ marriage. The

trial court found that it was “clear from trial testimony that Husband has been a sophisticated

investor since before the marriage.”

Wife, who was completing her doctorate when the parties met, worked briefly as a

college professor for several years after the parties married. The trial court found that her “total

gross earnings during the marriage likely did not exceed $40,000.00” and that her only other

source of income was annual gifts from husband’s mother and stepfather, which she deposited

into the parties’ joint checking account. Wife stopped working completely a few years after the

parties married, a decision that the trial court found was made by mutual agreement.

After an eight-day trial in March 2017, the trial court awarded wife a divorce based on

the parties’ separation for more than one year. In addition, the trial court addressed equitable

distribution of the parties’ property and spousal support. While a number of assets were

addressed by the trial court in the distribution, at issue in this appeal is the trial court’s

assignment to husband of the entirety of the appreciation in value of his Merrill Lynch account

and the entirety of the appreciation in value of his Berkshire Hathaway stock as well as the trial

-2- court’s division of the value of the parties’ marital residence, “Summer Duck Wood.” Wife also

appeals as inadequate the trial court’s award to her of $17,500 per month in spousal support.1

The Merrill Lynch Account

The evidence presented at trial demonstrated that the Merrill Lynch account was

established through husband’s separate funds – namely from gifts and income from trusts of

which husband was a beneficiary. At trial, wife sought to prove that, although the account was

established with husband’s separate funds, the increase in the value of the account was marital

property pursuant to Code § 20-107.3(A)(3)(a) because the account experienced “substantial

appreciation” as a result of husband’s “personal efforts” employed during the marriage. See

Code § 20-107.3(A)(3)(a).

On the issue of whether the account experienced “substantial appreciation,” wife relied

on the testimony and reports of R. Jeffrey Malinak, her expert witness. Malinak stated that

husband’s account appreciated $659,264 from December 1989 through October 2012. He

testified that, in his opinion, no benchmark should be used to measure whether the appreciation

of husband’s Merrill Lynch account was substantial or, if a benchmark must be used, that the

performance of the account should be compared with the performance of a Treasury bill.

Husband relied on the testimony of his expert witness, Peter Tuz. Tuz opined that the

account appreciated $467,290 between 1997 and 2013. He testified that, in order to determine

how well the account performed, he needed to use a benchmark from which he could measure

the performance of the fund, and he stated that the S&P 500 index was the “most commonly used

benchmark in investing.” He testified that husband’s Merrill Lynch account underperformed the

1 We view the evidence regarding the Merrill Lynch account, the Berkshire Hathaway stock, and the spousal support award in the light most favorable to husband because he prevailed on those issues before the trial court. Wright v. Wright, 61 Va. App. 432, 451 (2013). Similarly, we view the facts regarding Summer Duck Wood in the light most favorable to wife because she prevailed on that issue before the trial court. -3- S&P 500, noting in his July 1, 2015 report that in a fifteen-year period (beginning in 1997), the

S&P 500 had a compound average return of 6.50%, while husband’s Merrill Lynch account

experienced only a compound average return of 3.96%.

In its June 7, 2018 letter opinion, which was incorporated into the final decree, the trial

court concluded that it could not use a benchmark of zero to measure the increase in value of the

account because Code § 20-107.3(A)(3)(a) requires that the asset experience “substantial

appreciation” – not just a mere increase – before income from separate property can become

marital. The trial judge found that “[b]ecause the composition of the Husband’s account more

closely approximates the composition of the S&P 500, than it does any other suggested

measuring tool,” the S&P 500 was the “proper measuring tool” for determining whether the

account had substantially appreciated. The trial judge found that if the account had

outperformed the S&P 500, that increase above the index would have been marital, but because

it had not, the increase in the account was “passive appreciation” – i.e., the result of “market or

other passive forces” – not from husband’s efforts.2 Therefore, the trial court concluded that the

increase in value of the Merrill Lynch account was not marital property and designated it entirely

as husband’s separate property.

The Berkshire Hathaway Stock

Husband testified that he first invested in Berkshire Hathaway in 1983, prior to the

parties’ marriage, when he purchased ten shares of the stock. He testified that he had been

following Berkshire Hathaway for almost two years prior to that point and that he had been

2 The trial court did not make any findings about whether husband expended “significant personal effort” in his management of the Merrill Lynch account.

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