Mastin v. Mastin

709 S.W.2d 545, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4123
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1986
Docket49745
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 709 S.W.2d 545 (Mastin v. Mastin) 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
Mastin v. Mastin, 709 S.W.2d 545, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4123 (Mo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

PUDLOWSKI, Judge.

In this marriage dissolution case, the husband appeals the trial court’s decision based upon an allegation of abuse of discretion. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The parties were married in St. Louis in 1973. During the first three years of the marriage, the wife, who had previously earned a college degree, was employed and the husband attended college in New Mexico. To supplement their income, the husband worked occasionally and his father sent them some money. Moreover, they received quarterly interest from a Revocable Living Trust that the husband had established prior to the marriage with assets that were given to him by his father. The value of these trust assets was in excess of $200,000. In addition, the husband owned a fifty per cent interest in a family business known as Lau-Ken Corporation which was liquidated during the marriage and provided an additional $196,000 in cash.

Shortly after the marriage, the wife deposited her personal securities, which were valued at approximately $11,400 in the Revocable Trust. In addition to the trust, the couple had a joint checking account in St. Louis into which the income from the trust was automatically transferred and a joint passbook savings account.

When the husband finished college, the couple moved to Memphis where the husband had accepted a job. They purchased a modest home and transferred their passbook savings account to a local bank. The trust and checking accounts remained in St. Louis as they had previously. While the couple was living in Memphis, a new account was opened with Merrill Lynch, in order to earn a higher rate of return. Funds from their joint accounts were transferred to this new account. The wife testified that it was titled only in the husband’s name to expedite the purchase and sale of securities.

In the fall of 1977, the husband was transferred to Louisiana. They purchased a home, which they still own and are currently renting, and they transferred their savings account and Merrill Lynch account. A few months later, their only child was born. The husband’s earnings from his job peaked during this period at approximately $32,000 per year plus a car and a generous expense account.

At some time in the spring of 1980, the husband’s behavior changed. He became involved with other women, asked for a divorce and left the family for a period of six months. He began to dress bizarrely, *547 wearing symbols of black magic and carrying weapons, and he announced that he was the “Center of the Universe”. Twice the wife contracted venereal disease from her husband. During his absence, the wife found receipts for gifts for other women and pornographic video tapes and magazines in the home.

The husband liquidated the Revocable Trust in December of 1980 and deposited the proceeds in a special Merrill Lynch account that contained marital funds. Later the funds were separated into several Merrill Lynch accounts. It appears that there was more than $400,000 in the Merrill Lynch accounts in 1980. About this time, the husband introduced his wife to a couple named Ron Woods and Nancy Hook. With the encouragement of these new friends, the husband invested approximately $70,-000 in a topless strip bar. The husband’s employer was unhappy about the investment in the bar and requested that he rid himself of his connection with it by Christmas of 1981. Rather than comply, the husband quit his job. The investment was disastrous; the bar was eventually closed after Ron Woods and Nancy Hook disappeared and the husband proved unable to manage the establishment on his own.

In 1981 the husband formed a corporation called SMK Enterprises, Inc. to invest in rental property. Approximately $60,000 went into the corporation in the form of stock purchases and loans. The corporation’s cash was kept in a separate account at Merrill Lynch and used to purchase five rental homes. The wife owned some shares in this corporation although the exact percentage is disputed. The corporation is still operational.

In a period of one year, most of the assets of the family had disappeared. The husband first claimed he had lost them in the commodities market, but later he asserted in his deposition that he “blew” $280,000 “on wine, women and song.” At the trial, he testified that he could account for all but fifty to sixty thousand dollars of the money. The wife alleged that he had hidden the money.

In 1982, the couple, who had reconciled, returned to St. Louis where the bulk of their remaining assets were used to pay $90,000 for a new home. The husband worked for a time as a commissioned insurance agent, but he was unable to successfully develop this business. As a result, he sold his interest in it in 1984. Since that time, his only employment has been as a part-time construction worker earning approximately $200 per week before taxes.

Since the dissolution proceedings began, the wife has been supporting herself from the savings that she accumulated during the marriage from annual $6,000 gifts the husband had given her in four previous years as part of an estate plan. In addition, she did some part-time work, but she found working difficult because of their young son’s asthma.

At the time of the divorce proceeding, the only known assets of the couple were divided as follows:

To the wife

1) Family home $100,000
2) Furniture and furnishings 15,000
3) 1981 Mercedes automobile 13,500
4) Wife’s savings account 18,000

To the husband

1) Any separate property (inheritance) $ 0
2) All shares of SMK stock 35,000
3) 1979 Ford Thunderbird automobile 2,000
4) Furniture and equipment 6,000
5) Home in Louisiana 47,500
6) Account receivable from insurance business 1,500
7) Account receivable from Mr. Drury 5,000

In addition, the husband was required to pay $10,000 to the wife as a settlement and $6,000 to the wife’s attorney for her legal fees. The husband timely filed a motion to amend the judgment or in the alternative for a new trial. The court overruled these motions, but on its own motion amended the judgment to find the value of SMK Enterprises, Inc. to be $25,000 rather than $35,000 and to reduce to $5,000 the judgment of $10,000 that the husband was to pay to the wife. This appeal followed.

*548 The husband raises five points on appeal: (1)that the trial court erred in awarding maintenance to the wife; (2) that the child support granted was excessive; (3) that the court failed to set aside his separate property; (4) that the division of marital property was inequitable; and (5) that the award of attorney’s fees to the wife and the failure to award attorney’s fees to the husband was error.

We will affirm the trial court’s judgment unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the evidence or unless it erroneously declares or applies the law. Murphy v. Carron,

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Bluebook (online)
709 S.W.2d 545, 1986 Mo. App. LEXIS 4123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mastin-v-mastin-moctapp-1986.