Mosley v. Mosley

747 So. 2d 894, 1999 WL 236508
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 23, 1999
Docket2961420
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 747 So. 2d 894 (Mosley v. Mosley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosley v. Mosley, 747 So. 2d 894, 1999 WL 236508 (Ala. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

The trial court divorced Gerald M. Mosley and Jacqueline L. Mosley and divided their marital property. It awarded custody of one minor child to the husband and the other two minor children to the wife. It ordered the husband to pay the wife $771 per month in child support. The husband appeals.

The parties were married in 1967. They had five children, three of whom were minors at the time of trial. The parties separated in December 1995, and the wife sued for a divorce in January 1996. The wife testified that after she sued for a divorce she began a relationship with an old friend, Don Moss, of Macon, Georgia. She stated, however, that her relationship with Moss was not the cause of the breakdown in the parties' marriage. The wife testified that the husband was incapable of showing affection and that he had been verbally and physically abusive to her for years. According to the wife, the husband told her to "get out" and to see a lawyer about a divorce.

Early in their 28-year marriage, the parties formed a construction business, Eight Mile Erection Company. In 1975, they incorporated the business under the name "G.M. Mosley General Contractors, Inc.," with each party owning shares of the corporation's stock. In 1983, the husband pleaded guilty to a federal mail-fraud charge. He was placed on probation and was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $110,000. The restitution was paid out of the corporate earnings. The husband later declared bankruptcy and the parties dissolved the corporation. In 1984, they incorporated another construction business under the name "Builders South, Inc." The husband was president and the wife was secretary-treasurer. The wife owned all the shares of stock, and the business was thereby considered a minority-business enterprise. In 1990, the wife's father gave her a $20,000 advance on her inheritance, and she invested that sum in Builders South. *Page 896

At the time of trial, the wife was 47 years old. She is a high school graduate and is in good health. She has worked in the family business from the beginning. She described her duties at Builders South as follows:

"[I did] all the payrolls, . . . general ledger [work], collected job cost information, [did] the routing of the trucks to get the equipment to and from the jobs, [did] all the financial things to go to the finance companies, talked to the finance companies, talked to the bankers concerning loans and setting up credit lines, talked to contractors on bids, [took] estimates on jobs, [and] actually got out and helped with the equipment if it had to be loaded and there was no one to load it."

The wife did not return to her duties at Builders South after she filed her divorce complaint. She stated that after she had been gone from the marital home for a while, one of the employees had trouble with a bookkeeping matter and asked for her help. When the wife went to Builders South to help the employee, the husband was verbally and physically abusive to the wife. After that confrontation, the husband changed the locks on the business premises. He also canceled the wife's health insurance. The wife was paid a partial salary for eight weeks and then received unemployment compensation. The trial court ordered the husband to pay the wife $18,000 in family support pending the outcome of the litigation.

The parties agree that shortly after the wife sued for a divorce the husband sold over $400,000 worth of construction equipment, closed the Builders South financial accounts, opened new accounts, and began doing business as "G.M. Mosley Sons." At trial, the husband testified that he sold the equipment in order to pay off tax deficiencies that he said were the result of the wife's negligence and mismanagement of the business finances. The wife testified that she had not failed to pay any taxes the business owed. She stated that she had received no notice of tax deficiencies for the current tax year. The husband maintained that, while the wife was working in the business, she had issued $74,000 worth of payroll checks to him and then had voided them. He said that after the wife left he had received notices of payroll-tax deficiencies and corporate-tax liabilities that were due.

At the time of trial, the husband was 51 years old. He is blind in one eye and takes Prozac for depression, but those disabilities do not prevent him from working.

I.
The husband argues that he is entitled to a new trial because a portion of the transcript was lost and cannot be reconstructed. The case was tried for five days: September 4, 1996; January 28, 29, and 30, 1997; and February 4, 1997. For January 28, 1997, the transcript contains 67 pages of testimony by the wife. It is apparent that some portion of the wife's testimony from January 28 is missing, because the record reflects that on January 29, the lawyers and the parties referred to matters that were taken up the day before but that do not appear in the record. The court reporter died before completing the transcript. Another court reporter finished the transcript but was unable to locate a portion of the original tapes and notes. She estimated that no more than two hours of testimony was missing. The wife alleges that only three pages of trial testimony is missing. The husband has no estimate of how much testimony is missing. The parties agree that the missing testimony consists of cross-examination of the wife. Neither the parties nor their lawyers have been able to reconstruct the specific questions and the answers given by the wife.

The trial judge who conducted the trial retired. Circuit Judge J. Donald Banks reported to this court that, although the parties had made diligent efforts to find or to reconstruct the testimony, the record does not contain all the evidence presented *Page 897 at trial. On December 8, 1998, this court certified the record as complete.

The record on appeal contains 706 pages, with 544 pages of testimony. Both parties agree that, during the portion of the wife's cross-examination that is missing from the record, six exhibits were admitted into evidence and the wife several times invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege not to testify. The exhibits consisted of telephone records for the period April 1995 through January 1997, showing over 900 calls between the wife and Don Moss. The parties agree that, during that portion of the trial that would have been recorded in the missing portion of the transcript, the wife repeatedly invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege not to testify as to her relationship with Moss after the date she filed her divorce complaint. She maintained, in other testimony that does appear in the record, that she and Moss did not have sexual relations before December 27, 1995, the date the parties separated.

The husband contends that, without a complete transcript, he will be denied his procedural-due-process right to an effective appeal. He claims that the missing testimony relates to the wife's misconduct and that, without that testimony, this court cannot determine whether the trial court equitably divided the marital property. He argues that there "may be other relevant and material matters contained in the missing testimony" that reflect on the wife's misconduct and that would suggest the trial court's property division was improper.

"[T]he standards of procedural due process are not wooden absolutes. The sufficiency of procedures employed in any particular situation must be judged in light of the parties, the subject matter and the circumstances involved." Ferguson v. Thomas, 430 F.2d 852, 856 (5th Cir. 1970).

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Bluebook (online)
747 So. 2d 894, 1999 WL 236508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosley-v-mosley-alacivapp-1999.