Moore v. Moore

2022 Ohio 1862
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 2022
Docket21AP-276
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 1862 (Moore v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Moore, 2022 Ohio 1862 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Moore v. Moore, 2022-Ohio-1862.] IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

April Bott Moore, :

Plaintiff-Appellant/ : Cross-Appellee, : No. 21AP-276 v. (C.P.C. No. 16DR-209) : Robert Dean Moore, (REGULAR CALENDAR) : Defendant-Appellee/ Cross-Appellant. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on June 2, 2022

On brief: Giorgianni Law LLC, and Paul Giorgianni, for appellant/cross-appellee. Argued: Paul Giorgianni.

On brief: Eugene R. Butler; Baker & Hostetler LLP, James A. Loeb, and Suzanne M. Jambe, for appellee/cross-appellant. Argued: Eugene R. Butler.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

NELSON, J.

{¶ 1} April Bott Moore and Robert Dean Moore (given the shared surname, we will call them April and Robert) were married on May 4, 2013. The next year, April gave birth to their daughter. Some two years after that (and well shy of three years after the marriage began), on January 20, 2016, April sued for divorce, and the matter thereafter proceeded on Robert's counterclaim. The trial court granted April and Robert their long-sought divorce in its May 4, 2021 Judgment Entry—Decree of Divorce. April appealed from that judgment entry (a judgment entry she now contends is not a final appealable order), and Robert promptly cross-appealed. Although the litigation has had significantly more staying No. 21AP-276 2

power than did the marriage, with the former having run more than twice as long as the latter, we attempt here to err on the side of (only relative) brevity. {¶ 2} In due course, we will address questions such as the ramifications here of the trial court's having allowed one of April's former lawyers to work on the Judgment Entry in her then-capacity as a judicial law clerk, and whether the trial court erred in concluding that law impelled it to order Robert to pay child support in the amount of $37,710.49 per month (more than $450,000 a year) to support the lifestyle of his then six-year-old daughter. First, however, because it implicates our authority to decide any part of these appeals, we turn to April's suggestion "that this Court may lack jurisdiction over this case." July 23, 2021 Suggestion of Lack of a Final Appealable Order at 1. The Judgment Entry from which she appealed, April submits, did "not divide all of the parties' property as Civ.R. 75(F) requires for a final judgment." Id. The 120-page Judgment Entry may be less than a perfect model of clarity in some respects, but we think that a fair reading is that it did allocate the property in a way that we can review. {¶ 3} April purports to be unclear as to whom the trial court allocated 13 particular assets, see Suggestion at 4-5, and she correctly notes that Civil Rule 75(F) generally requires a trial court to divide property of divorcing parties in a final decree, id. at 5-7. But when the Judgment Entry is read as a whole, it did that. The Judgment Entry noted that marital property is to be divided equally unless the court finds that result would be inequitable, see, e.g., id. at 15; it identified the assets; it then designated the assets as either marital or separate, see, e.g., id. at 19-20 (or, as for example in the case of Robert's "second salary bonus," as a mixture of the two, with the specific marital and separate property amounts calculated, see id. at 30-32); and it specified those marital assets that were not to be equally divided. {¶ 4} The rationale and structure of the decree, moving from "Equitable Division" to "Separate Property" to "Agreed Upon Property" to "Disputed Property" and divisions there, was designed to allocate property. Id. at 15-52. Read in full, this particular decree with its particular structure and phrasing did allocate the parties' assets with sufficient clarity that it is a final appealable order (consistent with April's notice of appeal). See, e.g., id. at 32 (marital portion of specified bank account equally divided, with remaining balance being Robert's separate property), 33 (Robert retains his separate portion of New Albany real property, with marital balance then divided equally), 34 (same result for corporate No. 21AP-276 3

account), 35 (awarding April as part of her share of marital property the Aston Martin she used); 52 (court incorrectly assumes that whole of Vero Beach "Olde Doubloon" property is "marital in nature" and consequently orders Robert to pay April half of the appraised $2,600,000 value for her "marital interest in the subject property" he retains). {¶ 5} Reasonably consistently throughout the decree, with regard to divisible property and except where specified, allocations turned on whether the property was deemed marital or separate. See, e.g., id. at 111-12 (summarizing "Division of The Marital Estate and Offsets," and noting that with the award of the mostly marital Dublin residence to April and the largely marital Olde Doubloon residence to Robert, "even if the division of the marital estate is not exactly equal, it is equitable") (emphasis added); compare, e.g., Klik v. Moyer, 8th Dist. No. 100576, 2014-Ohio-3236, ¶ 15 ("the 1993 divorce decree provided sufficient information for the parties [and, we would add, courts] to understand the outcome of the case, namely, in the absence of awarding Klik any of Moyer's pensions, [Klik] retained possession of those interests"). {¶ 6} April seems to agree with a reading of the decree that "marital property was to be divided equally unless otherwise stated," Reply Regarding Suggestion at 4, but urges that this at least implicit division is not sufficiently clear for review. In the context of this decree, we disagree. The whole of the trial court's order makes sense only if it is read to allocate separate property as designated and to divide marital property equally except as otherwise indicated. See, e.g., Judgment Entry at 19-20 (specifying separate property of April and Robert, and marital property, charting all assets listed in April's Suggestion except for oil and gas leases and the second salary bonus, which it addressed elsewhere); id. at 18 (the parties "agreed upon a variety of marital assets totaling $7,408,887 and separate property totaling $3,234,017"); see also, e.g., Appellant's [April's] Brief at 45 (arguing that "[t]he Decree awards jewelry to April" on the basis of its designation of that as her separate property). {¶ 7} The clear import of the trial court's decision was to award the "separate" property to the designated individual. Robert noted in his briefing that April's acknowledgement that the decree awards her the jewelry underscores her understanding of this structure, see Appellee's Brief at 33, and April did not contest that point in her Reply. We agree that the same principle governs the other property specified as separate to April or Robert. Thus, for example, we understand the terms of the decree to leave April with her No. 21AP-276 4

J.P. Morgan 401(k) account, her Schwab IRA, and her separate shares of the N.Y. Life IRA and PNC account 9039, while leaving Robert his separate portions of his 401(k) account and Chase account 0525, and the Scottrade account. {¶ 8} We further understand the decree to allocate portions of marital properties equally between the parties unless otherwise specified. For example, in the context of this decree, that is what we see as the whole point of the trial court's exercise in assessing what part of Robert's second salary bonus was derived during the marriage and what part was attributable to work after the marriage had terminated and was therefore "the separate property of [Robert]." Id. at 30-32 (designating $224,335 of the second salary bonus as Robert's separate property and identifying the marital portion of that bonus as $255,431).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 1862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moore-ohioctapp-2022.