Nackard v. Nackard

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedOctober 14, 2021
Docket1 CA-CV 20-0621-FC
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Nackard v. Nackard, (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

In re the Marriage of:

PATRYCIA JEWEL NACKARD, Petitioner/Appellant,

v.

PATRICK NACKARD, Respondent/Appellee.

No. 1 CA-CV 20-0621 FC FILED 10-14-2021

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County No. FN 2018-091830 The Honorable Alison Bachus, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Burt Feldman Grenier, Scottsdale By Elizabeth Feldman, Mary K. Grenier Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant

Jeffrey G. Pollitt PC, Phoenix By Jeffrey G. Pollitt, Lindsay Cohen, Jennika McKusick Co-Counsel for Respondent/Appellee

Berkshire Law Office PLLC, Tempe By Keith Berkshire, Erica Leavitt Co-Counsel for Respondent/Appellee NACKARD v. NACKARD Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the decision of the Court, in which Judge Samuel A. Thumma and Chief Judge Kent E. Cattani joined.

C A M P B E L L, Judge:

¶1 Patrycia Nackard (Wife) appeals from the decree dissolving her marriage to Patrick Nackard (Husband). She challenges the superior court’s classification and allocation of certain businesses and its denial of her request for an award of attorneys’ fees. Because Husband inherited the businesses as his sole and separate property and the community enjoyed the profits and increase from the businesses during the marriage, the superior court properly allocated the businesses to Husband. Additionally, the superior court acted within its discretion in denying Wife’s request for fees. Accordingly, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 After 36 years of marriage, Wife petitioned for dissolution. The superior court adopted the parties’ partial settlement agreement, entered summary judgment rulings designating some businesses as community property (the community businesses) and other businesses as Husband’s separate property (the contested businesses), held a two-day trial on contested issues, and entered a decree of dissolution.

¶3 In the decree, and specific to this appeal, the superior court: (1) reaffirmed its summary judgment rulings;1 (2) found the community “enjoyed the profits” from the contested businesses during the marriage and therefore “no additional apportionment of Husband’s separate entities” was warranted; (3) determined Husband’s distribution of profits from the contested businesses to the community “did not constitute

1 Despite the superior court’s prior ruling on Husband’s motion for summary judgment, the character of the contested businesses was fully litigated at trial. Wife was not foreclosed from presenting any evidence on any issue, and at the conclusion of the trial, the court confirmed its prior ruling: “After carefully considering the evidence presented at trial, the Court continues to find that the [contested businesses] are Husband’s sole and separate property.”

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transmutation or commingling”; (4) awarded the community businesses to Husband with corresponding offsets to Wife for her one-half share in each; (5) ordered Husband to pay Wife an equalization payment of $665,057.99; (6) reaffirmed the parties’ property settlement agreement, which, among other things, awarded Wife $1.9 million in unencumbered real estate and financial accounts totaling more than $700,000; (7) awarded Wife indefinite spousal maintenance of $10,000 per month; and (8) denied both parties’ requests for attorneys’ fees and costs. Wife timely appealed.

DISCUSSION

I. Characterization of the Contested Businesses

¶4 Wife challenges the superior court’s characterization of the contested businesses as Husband’s separate property.

¶5 “The characterization of property as separate or community is a question of law we review de novo.” Schickner v. Schickner, 237 Ariz. 194, 199, ¶ 22 (App. 2015). In conducting our review, we “defer to the [superior] court’s determination of witnesses’ credibility and the weight to give conflicting evidence.” Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 193 Ariz. 343, 347, ¶ 13 (App. 1998); see also Hurd v. Hurd, 223 Ariz. 48, 52, ¶ 16 (App. 2009) (“Even though conflicting evidence may exist, we affirm the [superior] court’s ruling if substantial evidence supports it.”).

¶6 The character of property is established at its acquisition, Myrland v. Myrland, 19 Ariz. App. 498, 503 (1973), and property acquired by a spouse during marriage “by gift, devise or descent . . . is the separate property of that spouse,” A.R.S. § 25-213(A). While it is “possible” to change the separate character of property, in the absence of an “agreement, gift or commingling,” separately acquired property remains separate in nature. Myrland, 19 Ariz. App. at 503-04.

¶7 The parties married in 1982. Although Husband owned some interest in his family’s businesses before the parties’ marriage, he acquired the balance of the businesses two years after the marriage. Specifically, upon his father’s death, Husband inherited a soft drink bottling distributorship (the bottling company), a land subsidiary, a wholesale liquor subsidiary, and a trucking subsidiary.

¶8 Wife does not dispute that these inherited businesses, the predecessors to the contested businesses (the predecessor companies), became Husband’s separate property at the time of their acquisition. Instead, she argues that she acquired a community property interest in the

3 NACKARD v. NACKARD Decision of the Court

contested businesses because Husband “transmuted and commingled [the inherited] separate property into community property.”

¶9 “Mere mutations of form do not of themselves work a transmutation of the character of property.” Porter v. Porter, 67 Ariz. 273, 283 (1948), declined to follow on other grounds by Cockrill v. Cockrill, 124 Ariz. 50 (1979). Rather, “separate property remain[s] separate as long as it can be identified,” and it is only when “the identity of separate property is lost” and cannot be traced that “transmutation takes place.” Id.

¶10 At trial, Wife testified that during most of the marriage, she believed the parties jointly held the contested businesses as community property. As support for this contention, Wife presented: (1) corporate meeting minutes of the predecessor companies, which for a time identified her as a “shareholder,” and (2) expert opinion testimony that she is a “beneficial owner” of the contested businesses, though not a record shareholder.

¶11 Husband, in turn, testified that he owns the contested businesses as his separate property. When confronted with the corporate meeting minutes identifying Wife as a shareholder of the predecessor companies, Husband testified that the designations were erroneous, noting that Wife was the one who had drafted the documents. See Porter, 67 Ariz. at 284-85 (holding the inclusion of wife’s name on notes, mortgages, and contracts relating to the purchase of real property with husband’s separate funds did not transmute the separate property to community property because no evidence demonstrated “that the insertion of the wife’s name in the conveyances was by the direction of the husband”). Husband also pointed out that Wife was not included as a shareholder, owner, or officer in the 2008 operating and restructuring agreements converting the contested businesses from C corporations to S corporations.

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Related

Nace v. Nace
448 P.2d 76 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1968)
Marriage of Gerow v. Covill
960 P.2d 55 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1998)
Myrland v. Myrland
508 P.2d 757 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1973)
Marriage of Gutierrez v. Gutierrez
972 P.2d 676 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1998)
Grant v. Grant
581 P.2d 704 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1978)
Cockrill v. Cockrill
601 P.2d 1334 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1979)
Rueschenberg v. Rueschenberg
196 P.3d 852 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2008)
Battiste v. Battiste
662 P.2d 145 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1983)
Marriage of Bell-Kilbourn v. Bell-Kilbourn
169 P.3d 111 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2007)
Hurd v. Hurd
219 P.3d 258 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2009)
Myrick v. Maloney
333 P.3d 818 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2014)
Schickner v. Schickner
348 P.3d 890 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2015)
Porter v. Porter
195 P.2d 132 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1948)

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Nackard v. Nackard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nackard-v-nackard-arizctapp-2021.