McLaren v. McLaren

268 P.3d 323, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2012 WL 163902
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 2012
DocketNo. S-13031
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 268 P.3d 323 (McLaren v. McLaren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaren v. McLaren, 268 P.3d 323, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2012 WL 163902 (Ala. 2012).

Opinions

OPINION

CARPENETI, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A husband sued his wife for divoree. The superior court divided the couple's property, intending to award each spouse approximately half of the marital estate. The wife, who appeared pro se in the proceedings below and remains unrepresented, appeals multiple aspects of the property division. After a thorough review of the record, we conclude that the superior court correctly resolved all of the issues appealed. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the superior court.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Teresa and Darren McLaren began living together in 1988 although the approximate date of Teresa's divorce from her second husband was July 1, 1989. Teresa and Darren did not become legally married until October 24, 1999. They had no children together and separated in 2005. Darren sued Teresa for divorcee in October 2006.

Darren provided initial disclosures to Teresa as required by Alaska Civil Rule 26.1, but Teresa did not meet her responsibility to provide disclosures to Darren. Several times, Darren's counsel asked Teresa for discovery; though she eventually responded, her responses were deficient, leading the court to issue an order compelling her to provide complete discovery responses. After Teresa still failed to provide Darren with the records he had requested-which included information regarding the value of her civil service retirement as well as credit records that would have shown when the credit card debt in her name was incurred-the superior court issued a subpoena duces tecum ordering her to bring the records to her deposition. Teresa refused to attend the deposition and at no point before or during the trial submitted the records Darren had requested, consequently leaving her claims as to the credit card debt and the civil service retirement unsubstantiated. In her response to Darren's first set of requests for production, Teresa stated that she gave Darren's counsel power of attorney to access her civil service retirement; however, this alleged power of attorney does not appear anywhere in the record and she made no mention of it in her testimony.

At trial, the parties disputed the value of several items and disagreed as to whom those items should be awarded. The superi- or court valued the entire marital estate, including property acquired by the parties during their pre-marriage cohabitation (after July 1, 1989),1 at $277,868.44, awarding 52.5% [328]*328to Teresa and the remainder to Darren. Several items and categories of property are at issue on appeal. The relevant facts with respect to these items are as follows:

1. Teresa's civil service retirement

The superior court characterized the portion of Teresa's civil service retirement that she earned in the ten years of cohabitation preceding the couple's legal marriage as part of the marital estate.

As noted, Darren made several discovery requests concerning the value of Teresa's retirement, but she did not provide discovery even after the superior court issued an order to compel discovery. At trial, lacking the documentation he had requested from Teresa, Darren presented an expert report estimating the value of the marital portion of Teresa's retirement to be $139,532. Although Teresa questioned the accuracy of the expert's estimate in her trial testimony, she did not offer an alternative valuation. In its findings, the superior court adopted Darren's expert's estimate.

2. The Glassply boat, the Jetcraft boat, and the Pioneer stereo

Teresa listed in her asset spreadsheet a number of items that the superior court did not include in its final distribution of the marital estate. These items include: a CGlassply boat that Teresa valued at $8,500, a Jeteraft boat that Teresa valued at $6,500, and a Pioneer stereo that Teresa valued at $1,000. On the asset spreadsheet she submitted in discovery and as an exhibit at trial, Teresa characterized these items as premarital. With respect to the Glassply and Jet-craft boats, in particular, Teresa stated in her pretrial brief that they should be awarded to Darren in the final distribution. Thus, Teresa's apparent position was that the boats were Darren's separate property. In the asset spreadsheet he submitted as an exhibit at trial, Darren made no mention of the stereo, but stated that the boats were his premarital property. At trial, neither party offered any specific testimony as to the stereo or either of the boats, and Teresa never revised her initial characterization of the items as premarital. Finally, there is nothing in the record indicating when these items were purchased (that is, before the couple began to cohabit or after).

The superior court did not include any of these items in its findings of fact or in the final distribution spreadsheet, adopting both Darren's characterization and what appeared to be Teresa's position that the items were not part of the marital estate.

3. Darren's tools

Darren has a large tool collection that he uses in his work. At trial, Darren submitted evidence that his tools were worth $12,500 and carried $4,677 in outstanding debt, resulting in a net value of $7,823. Darren testified that his valuation included all of the tools he had purchased since the time he and Teresa had "been together." He went on to testify that "a lot of the tools [are] premarital." Because he was referring to tools that he included in the marital estate, it is clear that he meant that he had acquired them before the couple married. Thus, Darren's valuation appears to have included all of the tools he acquired during the relationship, both before they were married and during the marriage. Darren based his valuation of the tools on his own receipts and the opinion of professional tool dealers.

While Teresa also valued the tools several times, her estimates varied greatly from one valuation to the next. In Teresa's June 2007 response to interrogatories, Teresa stated that the tools were worth $20,000. In the asset spreadsheet she submitted in discovery and at trial, Teresa valued the tools at $30,000. Finally, in her reply to the trial brief from October of the same year, she implied that the value of the tools was well over $60,000. She based this estimate on her memory of how much one of Darren's toolboxes cost and the cost of a new set of mechanic's tools similar to the sets that she said Darren had in his collection. (

The superior court adopted Darren's valuation, awarding him the tools with a net marital value of $7,822, and making him solely responsible for all the monies owed on them.

[329]*3294. Debts in Teresa's name

There were several debts in Teresa's name alone. In her briefing and later at trial, Teresa stated that these debts were incurred for marital expenses, and were consequently marital in nature.2

Darren conceded that one of the debts in Teresa's name, the Atlantic debt, was marital. But he contested the other debts in her name and he requested that Teresa bring her credit records to her deposition so that she could substantiate her claims that the other debts in her name were actually marital debts. Teresa refused to attend her deposition.

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Bluebook (online)
268 P.3d 323, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 21, 2012 WL 163902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaren-v-mclaren-alaska-2012.