Pamela Lynn Lewis v. Andrew Robert Frances

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 7, 2001
DocketM1998-00946-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pamela Lynn Lewis v. Andrew Robert Frances (Pamela Lynn Lewis v. Andrew Robert Frances) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela Lynn Lewis v. Andrew Robert Frances, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 4, 1999 Session

PAMELA LYNN LEWIS v. ANDREW ROBERT FRANCES

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 23448 Henry Denmark Bell, Chancellor

No. M1998-00946-COA-R3-CV - Filed March 7, 2001

In this divorce case, Husband appeals from the trial court’s decisions classifying, valuing, and dividing the parties’ property incident to their divorce and asserts that he is entitled to an award much greater than the $250,000 granted to him by the trial court. Wife also appeals the trial court’s classification and distribution of property, asserting that Husband was not entitled to any portion of her separate property and that there was no marital property. An additional issue was raised by a post-judgment ruling by a successor trial judge setting aside the order of the prior judge declaring the parties divorced. We affirm the divorce and reverse the award to Husband.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , JJ., joined.

Fred C. Dance, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Andrew Robert Frances.

Sawnie R. Aldredge, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Pamela Lynn Lewis.

OPINION

Andrew Robert Frances (“Husband”) and Pamela Lynn Lewis ("Wife") were married on July 25, 1993, and Wife filed a petition for divorce twenty-three months later, in June of 1995. The next three years were spent in discovery and other pretrial matters in this divorce litigation. At the time of the marriage, both worked in the music industry. Wife was a partner in Doyle-Lewis Management Inc., a firm which, at that time, managed one of the world's most successful recording artists. Husband operated a management company in California related to the recording industry.

When they entered into this short-lived marriage, both parties were mature people with established professional careers in the music industry. Both had accumulated assets, but Wife’s success had enabled her to accumulate a substantial estate, primarily consisting of real property and investment accounts. As valued in the record, the premarital value of those separate assets of Wife was almost fifty times greater than the value of the premarital assets of Husband. During the marriage, both parties maintained separate checking and investment accounts, filed separate tax returns, and never held any property jointly.

Husband asserts that the value of the marital estate subject to distribution is $7.1 million, the value at the time of the hearing of Wife’s two major assets, her real property and her investment accounts. Through a series of separate arguments, Husband argues that Wife’s investment accounts, in their entirety, as well as the real property, were converted to marital property and, alternatively, that any increase in the value of Wife’s separate real property was marital property. Husband asserts that he should have been awarded half of the marital estate, or approximately $3.5 million. He includes none of his separately owned property, or its increase in value, in the marital estate.

Wife insists that there was no marital property and that her separate property remained separate. She also asserts that Husband did not make a substantial contribution to the preservation or appreciation of her separately owned property. Therefore, she argues, Husband was not entitled to any award of property. She does not seek any portion of Husband’s income during the marriage or the increase in value of his separate property.

The trial court determined that the marital estate was the increase in Wife’s net worth from the date of the marriage to the date Wife filed for divorce, and calculated that increase to be $1.4 million. The court awarded Husband $250,000 as an equitable distribution of the marital property, reasoning that an equal division of the increase in Wife's net worth during the marriage was inappropriate due to the marriage's short duration, Husband’s lack of need, and Husband’s failure to contribute to the marriage. As a basis for the award, the trial court acknowledged evidence that Husband was a good conversationalist, had been an asset at social gatherings among Wife's business associates, and had spent some time and energy on the renovation of Wife’s real property.

The parties have focused their evidence and argument on the classification of the property at issue. Regardless of the size of the marital estate, however, the ultimate determination to be made in the distribution of marital property is whether the distribution is equitable. With considerations of equity in mind, and as a background for our examination of the parties’ arguments, we must first review the facts of the parties’ situation.

I.

Prior to her marriage, Wife acquired two tracts of real property. The first, the Music Row properties, consisted of five parcels, four of which Wife still owned at the time of the divorce. The second was a house and sixty-eight acres, the Harrison House, where the parties lived during their marriage. During the five months between Wife’s purchase of these properties and the parties’ marriage, substantial renovations were undertaken, all of which were paid for by Wife. While Husband testified that he assisted with these renovations, overseeing workers, writing checks (on Wife’s accounts), etc., most of those efforts took place before the marriage because the parties wanted to move into the renovated house after the marriage.

-2- At some point, apparently prior to the marriage, Husband and Wife formed a "boutique" record label, North/South Records Incorporated, which was funded by a major label, and paid Husband an annual salary of $100,000. Husband received a total of $150,000 in salary from this company. The office of North/South was in one of the Music Row properties. Also in that building was the office of Wife’s company. Wife testified that she agreed to set up North/South in order to give Husband an opportunity for a career in Nashville. She also stated that the funding was available because of her reputation in the industry.

As discussed above, Wife’s primary business activity was her part ownership of Doyle- Lewis, which managed a very successful entertainer. Doyle-Lewis’s major asset was its right to receive management commissions from that artist, based upon record sales. Doyle-Lewis lost its management contract with its most successful client around mid-1994, and the business was dissolved. Litigation ensued, which was settled in October of 1996, resulting in a substantial payment to Wife. Wife started other business ventures related to the music industry.

North/South was apparently not a successful venture. During discovery in this divorce litigation, Wife learned of some activities by Husband related to his operation of North/South which caused her to question his business practices. Shortly after Wife filed for divorce, Husband, on behalf of North/South, sued the major record company which had provided the funding for North/South. Wife testified that she had asked Husband not to bring such a suit, and had been unaware that he had initiated the litigation until she was contacted during the discovery process in that lawsuit. Wife maintains that the litigation initiated by Husband had a negative effect on her position in, and eventual settlement of, the lawsuit resulting from the dissolution of her partnership. The North/South lawsuit was also eventually settled, but Husband was unable to document how the proceeds received by North/South (approximately $100,000) were distributed. Wife received none of that money.

Husband made few monetary contributions to the marriage.

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Pamela Lynn Lewis v. Andrew Robert Frances, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pamela-lynn-lewis-v-andrew-robert-frances-tennctapp-2001.