Patrick A. Burrow v. Rachel L. Burrow

2014 ME 111
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 18, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 ME 111 (Patrick A. Burrow v. Rachel L. Burrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick A. Burrow v. Rachel L. Burrow, 2014 ME 111 (Me. 2014).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2014 ME 111 Docket: Lin-13-551 Argued: June 11, 2014 Decided: September 18, 2014

Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and JABAR, JJ.

PATRICK A. BURROW

v.

RACHEL L. BURROW

SAUFLEY, C.J.

[¶1] Patrick A. Burrow appeals from a divorce judgment and rulings on

post-judgment motions for findings of fact and conclusions of law entered by the

District Court (Wiscasset, J.D. Kennedy, J.). Patrick argues that the court

misapplied the law, erred in reaching factual findings, and abused its discretion

when it set apart to Rachel L. Burrow $75,000 of the value of the parties’ marital

real property before it equally divided the rest of the value. We discern no legal

error, but, because of a factual error, we vacate the judgment and remand for

further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] The court found the following facts, which, except where noted, are

supported by competent evidence in the record and are not in dispute. See Lesko v.

Stanislaw, 2014 ME 3, ¶ 17, 86 A.3d 14. The parties met in Florida, and Patrick 2

moved into Rachel’s home there in 2000. Patrick and Rachel’s son was born on

October 1, 2001. In 2002, the parties moved into a rental property in Maine.

Sometime thereafter, Rachel’s parents retired to Rachel’s Florida property, and

Rachel deeded the Florida property to herself, her parents, and Patrick.

[¶3] In 2003, Rachel’s grandmother offered to sell her home in Maine to

Rachel for $75,000. Rachel believed that the price was discounted because

Rachel’s grandmother wanted to keep the property in the family.1 Rachel

purchased the property by executing a $75,000 mortgage to her grandmother in

August 2003. Her grandmother sold the property to Rachel on the condition that

the grandmother be allowed to live in the house for the rest of her life. Rachel

made payments on the $75,000 mortgage directly to her grandmother. At first,

Rachel, Patrick, and their son lived in another building on the property while

Rachel’s grandmother lived in the house, but they eventually moved into the

house.

[¶4] Rachel’s grandmother died in December 2004. Rachel and Patrick

were married in January 2007. Between the 2003 purchase of the home and the

parties’ marriage in 2007, both Rachel and Patrick contributed funds and labor to

improve the property. In 2007, after the parties were married, Rachel individually

1 There is no evidence of any appraisal at the time of the sale, and the court did not—and, on the evidence presented, could not—determine the precise market value of the property at that time. 3

obtained a $75,000 bank loan, secured by a mortgage on the property. The value

of the property at that time was $245,000. Rachel used a portion of the new loan to

pay off her remaining debt to her grandmother’s estate. The estate was then

distributed to her grandmother’s heirs, Rachel’s mother and uncle. Following that

distribution, Rachel’s mother gave Rachel approximately $30,000. Rachel used

that money to add a two-car garage to the property.

[¶5] In 2011, Rachel deeded the property to Patrick and herself as joint

tenants, and they obtained a $100,000 bank loan, again secured by a mortgage on

the property. The value of the property at the time of the new mortgage was

approximately $310,000. Using some of the proceeds from the new loan, Rachel

and Patrick paid off the earlier loan and applied the rest of the money to improve

the property. Over the years, the parties spent nearly $184,000 to make

improvements. At the time of the divorce, they stipulated that the value of the

home was the value determined in the 2011 appraisal—$310,000. There remained

$95,000 to be paid on the mortgage.

[¶6] Patrick filed a complaint for divorce in July 2012, and the parties

proceeded to mediation in September 2012. They resolved all of the issues

regarding parental rights and responsibilities. They agreed that Rachel would have

primary residence and receive $135 per week in child support. Patrick also

voluntarily released his interest in the Florida property to Rachel and her parents. 4

The parties later agreed to a roughly equal division of accounts and personal

property worth a total of about $85,000 to $95,000. No spousal support was

requested or awarded.

[¶7] A trial was held in February 2013 on the sole remaining issue in

contention—the disposition of the real property. After hearing the evidence, the

court announced its decision from the bench. In so doing, the court appears to

have incorporated a concept of law that had been previously superseded. Despite

the fact that the property had been deeded to the parties jointly by Rachel, the court

noted, “I do believe that the concept of tracing is still alive.” Apparently applying

the “source of funds” rule, see Tibbetts v. Tibbetts, 406 A.2d 70, 76 (Me. 1979), it

determined that, if the concepts of tracing were strictly applied, Patrick might not

be entitled to any interest in the home, but it concluded that such a disposition

would be inequitable. It therefore awarded the home, with all of its equity, to

Rachel and ordered her to make an equitable payment of $25,000 to Patrick. The

court entered a written divorce judgment that incorporated this disposition of

property.

[¶8] Both parties moved for findings of fact and conclusions of law. See

M.R. Civ. P. 52(a). The court entered an order indicating that it would reconsider

its allocation of the value of the real property. After a nonevidentiary hearing, the

court vacated its earlier judgment with respect to the real property and entered a 5

judgment on October 10, 2013, that increased the equitable payment to Patrick to

$77,500.

[¶9] In that final judgment, the court estimated the amount that Rachel

received from her mother after Rachel’s grandmother died, finding that Rachel’s

“mother, who was the personal representative of the estate, gifted her portion of

that payoff to [Rachel], an amount of over $30,000.” That estimate was consistent

with Rachel’s testimony that she used proceeds from her 2007 loan to pay $64,000

or $68,000 to the estate to satisfy her remaining debt to her grandmother, and that

her mother then “gave [her] the 30 grand,” representing the share of the proceeds

that her mother inherited from the grandmother’s estate.2

[¶10] The court found that the real property was entirely marital and

accepted the parties’ stipulated value of $310,000. Subtracting the $95,000 still

owed on the mortgage, the court found that the parties’ equity in the property was

$215,000. The court “set aside” $75,000 of the equity “as having been gifts to

[Rachel] from her mother and grandmother,” and it divided the remaining

$140,000 equally. The court also added $7,500 to the equitable payment owed to

Patrick to account for his release of his interest in the Florida property. As a result,

2 Later in its judgment, however, the court mischaracterized the gift as an “inheritance from her grandmother’s estate of $37,500.” That exact amount, which would represent one-half of the original mortgage’s value, is not supported by the record, and the money was a gift from her mother, not an inheritance from her grandmother. 6

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2014 ME 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-a-burrow-v-rachel-l-burrow-me-2014.