McCarty v. McCarty

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 2019
DocketA-18-597
StatusPublished

This text of McCarty v. McCarty (McCarty v. McCarty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarty v. McCarty, (Neb. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

MCCARTY V. MCCARTY

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

CRYSTAL A. MCCARTY, APPELLANT, V.

BRENDA S. MCCARTY AND JON PARSONS, APPELLEES.

Filed May 7, 2019. No. A-18-597.

Appeal from the District Court for Sarpy County: STEFANIE A. MARTINEZ, Judge. Vacated and remanded for further proceedings. Chinazo C. Odigbo for appellant. Stephanie Weber Milone, of Milone Law Office, for appellee Brenda S. McCarty. Jon Parsons, pro se.

MOORE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and BISHOP, Judges. RIEDMANN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Crystal A. McCarty appeals from a decree of dissolution entered by the district court for Sarpy County dissolving her marriage to Brenda S. McCarty and dividing their property and debts. On appeal, Crystal assigns error to the district court’s denial of her request for a continuance, denial of her request for a new trial, and various errors in the division of property. Similarly, Jon Parsons, the necessary party, claims error in the judgment levied against him. We find that the district court abused its discretion in denying Crystal’s request for a continuance, and therefore, we vacate the dissolution order and remand the cause to the district court for further proceedings.

-1- BACKGROUND Crystal and Brenda met in 2012 in Montego Bay, Jamaica. They married in Iowa in 2014. In July 2017, Crystal filed a complaint for dissolution, alleging that her relationship with Brenda was irretrievably broken. The circumstances which led to Crystal’s complaint are disputed. While in Jamaica for a family event for Crystal, there was an altercation between Crystal and Brenda. Following the altercation, Brenda returned to the United States, and Crystal returned the next day. Brenda alleged that the day after Crystal returned from Jamaica, Crystal withdrew $24,900 from their joint bank account and put the money in an account which was solely in Crystal’s name. After Crystal filed her complaint for dissolution, the district court entered a temporary order awarding Brenda exclusive use and possession of the house. The court further ordered Crystal to deposit the money she withdrew from the couple’s joint account with the clerk of the district court. Brenda subsequently filed a motion to join Parsons as a necessary party and filed a cross-claim against him for conversion of $8,700. She alleged that Crystal paid $8,700 to Parsons out of the money Crystal withdrew from their joint account. Trial was originally scheduled for March 2018; however, in February, Brenda filed a motion for a continuance. Before the court ruled on the motion, the parties stipulated to continue the trial date for 60 days. Trial was ultimately held in May. Neither Crystal nor Parsons appeared at trial; however, Parsons’ counsel was present. At the start of trial, the court indicated that it received an informal communication from Crystal that morning explaining that she was admitted to the hospital the previous night and requesting a continuance of the trial. Crystal, who had numerous attorneys throughout the divorce proceedings, was pro se at the time. Brenda objected to Crystal’s request for a continuance because it did not comply with the statutory requirements for a motion to continue. The court denied Crystal’s request and denied a subsequent oral motion for a continuance made by Parsons’ counsel. Brenda was the only witness who testified at trial. She testified that she owned the house in which she and Crystal resided during the marriage and Crystal’s name was added to the title 3 months before Crystal filed for divorce. At the time of trial, Brenda was receiving roughly $1,888 per month from the Veteran’s Association for pension and disability, and she used those payments to pay the mortgage on the house. Brenda also testified that she had three joint bank accounts with Crystal, but they did not have any joint credit cards. Brenda further stated that she made a police report regarding the money that Crystal withdrew from their joint account. Although Crystal previously stated that she withdrew the money to pay the couple’s bills, including $8,700 to Parsons for a loan he provided them, Brenda indicated that she never signed a loan agreement with Parsons and never intimated to him that she would repay any money he loaned to Crystal. Brenda also stated that she did not authorize Crystal to pay Parsons from their joint account. Records from the district court submitted by Brenda indicate that Crystal deposited only $6,350 of the $24,900 she withdrew from the joint account. Brenda provided additional testimony regarding the vehicles that she owned during and after the marriage, including Crystal’s use of a 2017 Hyundai Tucson. She also identified certain other personal property she owned and a pension plan, but we need not recount those details here.

-2- Brenda testified regarding a 25-acre property in Jamaica which she asserted she owned. The Jamaica property belonged to Crystal’s family, but had been in foreclosure, and Brenda paid the back taxes on the property. Brenda indicated that she is not on the deed for the Jamaica property, but is on the tax record as paying for it. In her property statement offered at trial, Brenda stated that the Jamaica property was worth $50,000. Brenda was then called as a witness by Parsons’ counsel. He questioned her regarding two wire transfers from Parsons to Crystal in February 2017, which purported to show that Parsons loaned money to Crystal and Brenda. Brenda testified that she did not know anything about these money transfers. However, Brenda did testify that in July 2017 she learned that Parsons loaned Crystal money to pay off her credit card debt so that Crystal could be added to Brenda’s deed to the house. Brenda stated that once she learned of the loan she agreed to pay Parsons back because she was still married to Crystal at the time. Brenda further testified that Crystal transferred money from a joint account which was in both of their names into an account solely in Crystal’s name, and then transferred money to Parsons from that account. Following trial, the district court issued a decree dissolving the marriage between Crystal and Brenda. The court found that Crystal dissipated $15,502.62 of the $24,900 in marital funds that she withdrew from the couple’s joint account. The court divided the property, but because we are remanding the case for a new trial, we do not detail the division here, other than to note that the division substantially conformed to Brenda’s proposed property statement. A judgment was also entered against Parsons, ordering him to repay $8,700 to Brenda. Crystal and Parsons each timely filed a motion for new trial. Crystal argued that a new trial should be granted because she was ill and was not able to attend the trial. She submitted a copy of her medical record indicating that she went to the hospital the night before the trial with dehydration and a urinary tract infection. Parsons argued that a new trial was warranted because Crystal did not attend trial and therefore he was unable to present his defense. The district court denied both motions. Crystal timely appealed. Parsons also filed a nonconforming brief seeking affirmative relief.

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Bluebook (online)
McCarty v. McCarty, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-mccarty-nebctapp-2019.