Mato v. Birney

31 Va. Cir. 498, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1992
DocketCase No. C-90-12
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Va. Cir. 498 (Mato v. Birney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mato v. Birney, 31 Va. Cir. 498, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127 (Va. Super. Ct. 1992).

Opinion

By Judge William H. Ledbetter, Jr.

On July 11,1988, in a divorce suit styled Barbara Carr Mato v. Jose M. Mato, this court declared the marriage of these parties void. For reasons explained in an opinion filed in that suit, the court held that it had no authority to make adjudications regarding equitable distribution of the parties’ property under Virginia Code § 20-107.3, vacated its pendente lite orders, and dismissed the suit. 12 Va. Cir. 153.

This litigation is a sequel. On January 4, 1990, Mr. Mato filed this suit seeking partition of the parties’ jointly-owned residence and various articles of personal property acquired during their cohabitation. Mrs. Bimey filed a responsive pleading. On August 6, 1990, the case was referred to a commissioner in chancery. The commissioner conducted evidentiary hearings on October 30 and November 12, 1990. After receiving transcripts of the testimony and memoranda of counsel, the commissioner filed his 42-page report on November 12, 1991.

[499]*499Mr. Mato took exception to several key rulings and recommendations in the report. The court heard arguments on the exceptions on January 6, 1992, and took the case under advisement. This opinion addresses the disputed issues.

Factual Background

Mr. Mato and Mrs. Bimey participated in a marriage ceremony on July 2, 1977. Apparently, neither party thought at the time that there were any impediments to a valid marriage. In fact, Mr. Mato, a Marine Corps officer, was married to a woman from whom he had been separated for some time, and he remained married to her until she obtained a divorce in New York on July 13, 1977. As a consequence, the Mato-Bimey “marriage” was bigamous, and therefore, a nullity.

When Mr. Mato learned a few months thereafter that his marriage to Mrs. Bimey had pre-dated the divorce from his former wife, he shared that information with Mrs. Bimey. He further told her that he had consulted a JAG officer who advised him that their marriage was nonetheless “legal.”

The parties separated for several months in 1980 and 1981. During that time, Mrs. Bimey retained an attorney who informed her that her marriage to Mr. Mato was void. Mrs. Bimey filed a suit for annulment in Fairfax County Circuit Court. However, the parties reconciled, and the suit was dropped. Aware that their marriage was a nullity, the parties talked about resolemnizing the marriage but never did so.

In 1987, the parties separated for a final time. Mrs. Bimey instituted a divorce suit in this court in June of 1987. As explained above, that suit was dismissed on July 11, 1988, when the court declared the marriage void ab initio.

At the time the parties began cohabitation in 1977, Mrs. Bimey lived in a house in Springfield with the three children of a prior marriage. Her husband had died in 1972, leaving her the sole owner of that property and various other assets. In addition, Mrs. Bimey had received funds, and continued to receive them, as a result of her husband’s death. Mr. Mato moved into Mrs. Bimey’s home.

In 1978, Mr. Mato and Mrs. Bimey jointly purchased another home in Springfield. In anticipation of that acquisition, the parties executed an agreement on October 23, 1978, by the terms of which Mrs. Bimey would receive the first $53,000.00 of the proceeds of sale of that house when and if it was ever sold and the balance, if any, would be divided [500]*500equally between the parties. The reason for the agreement, as explained in its preamble, was the recognition of the fact that the new home would be purchased in large part with money obtained from the sale of Mrs. Bimey’s home. (Actually, when the parties went to settlement on this house, $43,000.00, not $53,000.00, was put down; nevertheless, the source of the down payment was the proceeds of sale of Mrs. Bimey’s home.)

The parties lived in the second home (except for a period of separation in 1980-1981) until Mr. Mato was posted to Japan. Upon his return, the parties moved to Arizona. There they purchased a home in March of 1982. They did not sell their Springfield house; instead, they assumed an existing mortgage on the Arizona house and put down approximately $18,000.00 from Mrs. Bimey’s separately-owned funds in Virginia.

While living in Arizona, Mrs. Bimey used between $10,000.00 and $15,000.00 of her separate funds to add a swimming pool and make other improvements to their Arizona home. Otherwise, the parties pooled their monies to pay household expenses, take trips, and maintain the home.

In 1985, they sold their Springfield house. Ignoring the 1978 agreement, they deposited the net proceeds of that sale, approximately $76,000.00, in a joint account in Arizona.

The parties returned to Virginia in March of 1986 and purchased a house in Sheraton Hills East that is the subject of this partition suit. Towards the purchase price of $86,800.00 and closing costs, almost $15,000.00 cash was paid from the joint account in Arizona. A month later, the Arizona house was sold. The net proceeds, approximately $20,000.00, were wired to Virginia. Mrs. Bimey immediately placed those funds in a separate account bearing her name only.

After the parties separated in 1987, Mrs. Bimey remained in the Sheraton Hills East home.

As for the personal property in dispute, those articles were acquired during the period of cohabitation. They are listed on Exhibit C attached to Mr. Mato’s bill and are all in Mrs. Biraey’s possession. Before the commissioner, the parties agreed that the china set belongs to Mr. Mato and that several items listed on page 23 of the commissioner’s report belong to Mrs. Bimey. The remaining items are subjects of this partition suit.

[501]*501 Partition of the Real Estate

Through more than 400 pages of transcribed testimony, accompanied by many exhibits, the parties have attempted to trace practically every dollar that each contributed to their relationship from its formation in 1977. This endeavor is especially important to Mrs. Bimey who seeks, in essence, to enforce the terms of the parties’ 1978 agreement against the Sheraton Hills East property and to recoup other monetary contributions made from her separate funds. This effort has not been lost on Mr. Mato, who has sought to repel it by demonstrating his monetary contributions and by presenting evidence that Mrs. Bimey “abandoned” or “waived” her rights under the 1978 agreement when the proceeds from the sale of the Springfield house were deposited in a joint account and drawn upon for various mutually-beneficial purposes.

Before addressing these and related arguments, it is helpful to review the elementary principles of partition. Further, in order to appreciate the court’s rulings, it is essential that the litigants and counsel remain mindful that this is not an equitable distribution proceeding under § 20-107.3; many if not most of the factors enumerated in that statute are immaterial to this litigation; and, for all practical purposes, this proceeding must go forward as a partition suit between co-tenants who have a relationship not much different in the eyes of the law than that of former friends or business associates who have had a “falling out” and look to the courts for a division of their jointly-owned property.

Partition is an equitable remedy, governed by statute. Virginia Code § 8.01-81 et seq.

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Related

George v. George
32 Va. Cir. 127 (Fredericksburg County Circuit Court, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
31 Va. Cir. 498, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mato-v-birney-vaccspotsylvani-1992.