Paul Sanford Ishel v. Ashley Nicole Floyd-Ishel

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 2024
Docket360720
StatusUnpublished

This text of Paul Sanford Ishel v. Ashley Nicole Floyd-Ishel (Paul Sanford Ishel v. Ashley Nicole Floyd-Ishel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Sanford Ishel v. Ashley Nicole Floyd-Ishel, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PAUL SANFORD ISHEL, UNPUBLISHED April 4, 2024 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 360720 Wayne Circuit Court Family Division ASHLEY NICOLE FLOYD-ISHEL, LC No. 20-110984-DO

Defendant/Counterplaintiff-Appellee,

and

EDIE FLOYD,

Intervenor.

Before: GARRETT, P.J., and RIORDAN and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this divorce action, plaintiff appeals as of right the judgment of divorce distributing his and defendant’s property. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case arises from a divorce between plaintiff-husband and defendant-wife. The parties were married in 2015, and plaintiff filed for divorce in December 2020.

At trial, plaintiff and defendant stipulated to the distribution of all assets and liabilities of the marital estate except for the marital home and a second home. During their marriage, they purchased two homes together. Defendant and plaintiff bought the first home, the marital home, in 2017, and both of their names were on the deed and mortgage. The second home that defendant and plaintiff purchased together was located directly next door to the marital home. The second

-1- home previously had been owned by Edie Floyd,1 defendant’s mother. In 2012, Edie and defendant’s father entered into a land contract for the second home, and they paid about $1,700 in monthly payments. After defendant’s father passed away in 2014, Edie fell behind on about nine payments on her land contract. To make payments on the home, Edie was forced to liquidate some of her assets, and her son, Austin Floyd, sold a significant portion of his business assets. Austin and his family then moved into the second home to save on expenses and help Edie afford the home.

Sometime after Austin and his family moved into the second home with Edie, Edie approached defendant and discussed having defendant purchase the home. Defendant testified, “we [plaintiff and defendant] thought it would be in [Edie’s] best interest for us to use our good credit, to make sure that she was secure in her home, next door.” Defendant, plaintiff, and Edie then entered into a purchase agreement whereby defendant and plaintiff would purchase Edie’s interest in the second home and pay off the original land contract. Defendant and plaintiff bought the second home in March 2018, where Edie, Austin, and Austin’s family still reside. The second home was then titled to both defendant and plaintiff. To purchase the second home, defendant and plaintiff acquired a loan for $39,000, secured by a mortgage, to pay off the outstanding balance of the original land contract. Both defendant’s and plaintiff’s names were on the mortgage. Edie then made all loan payments herself; defendant and plaintiff did not contribute to the loan payments.

Later, defendant learned that an additional $16,000 was due at the closing on the home as a down payment. Edie then gave defendant $16,000 to “cover all the closing costs, and down payment.” Defendant testified that neither she nor plaintiff “put any money in” at closing. When asked why Edie gave her the down payment money to buy the home, defendant responded, “Because the house [was not] meant to be ours [defendant and plaintiff]. This was her, using her money, to keep her home, just using our name for credit.”

Concerning the second home, defendant and plaintiff never made a house payment, never paid property taxes, never paid for home insurance, and never paid for improvements out of pocket. Defendant testified that the parties never considered the second home to be an investment home, nor did they plan to make any financial gain from the home. Defendant also stated that plaintiff never declared to anyone, “prior to the divorce, that he was the owner of the house and [Edie] [did not] have any ownership interest.”

A few months later, Edie wanted to renovate the second home to add more room since both Edie and Austin’s family were living in the home. In September 2018, defendant and plaintiff refinanced the second home and acquired another loan, secured by a second mortgage, to finance the renovations. Both parties’ names were on the refinanced mortgage. Defendant and plaintiff received about $60,000 after the refinancing and second mortgage, which they then deposited into

1 In May 2021, Edie Floyd filed a motion to intervene in the case. The trial court added Edie as an intervenor in July 2021. In December 2021, the trial court dismissed Edie’s claims with prejudice. Edie is not involved in this appeal, and thus, we do not address her lower-court claims.

-2- their joint bank account for Edie to use on the renovations. Edie continued to pay all of the loan payments after the refinancing and second mortgage.

Plaintiff testified that, concerning improvements made on the second home, Edie made all payments to the various contractors. Plaintiff also helped Edie put down new flooring in the second home after some flooding occurred and installed new shelves in the kitchen. However, Edie paid for the materials.

The trial court issued its opinion after trial outlining the distribution of the parties’ property. As is relevant, the trial court first awarded defendant the marital home and ordered her to refinance the home, remove plaintiff’s name from the home, and pay plaintiff for half of the equity. Regarding the second home, the trial court determined that “Edie Floyd gave the property to her daughter, and her daughter included plaintiff in the transaction, under the assumption that the parties would remain married.” It was undisputed that plaintiff did not pay for “any of the costs associated with the down-payment, financing, or closing on the property.” Additionally, while plaintiff’s name was included on the title and both mortgages, he “did not disclose this property on his Financial Affidavit Disclosure indicating that he knew, at least in the outset of this case, that he did not consider this his joint property.” Further, unlike defendant, plaintiff testified that he “expended very little effort to obtain the [second] property.” Regarding plaintiff’s improvements to the second home, the trial court found that plaintiff simply “did nominal projects as would be expected for a son-in-law to help his widowed mother-in-law.” Ultimately, the trial court concluded that the purchase of the second home “was a poor attempt at estate planning that subsequently went very wrong when [plaintiff] and [defendant] filed for divorce.” Thus, the trial court awarded the second home to defendant as her separate property.

II. SECOND HOME AS DEFENDANT’S SEPARATE PROPERTY

Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred when it found that the second home was defendant’s separate property and not part of the marital estate. We disagree.

We “review[] a property distribution in a divorce case by first reviewing the trial court’s factual findings for clear error, and then determining whether the dispositional ruling was fair and equitable in light of the facts.” Olson v Olson, 256 Mich App 619, 622; 671 NW2d 64 (2003). “Findings of fact, such as a trial court’s valuations of particular marital assets, will not be reversed unless clearly erroneous.” Butler v Simmons-Butler, 308 Mich App 195, 207-208; 863 NW2d 677 (2014). A trial court’s finding is clearly erroneous if we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake was made.” Id. at 208. “The dispositional ruling is discretionary and will be affirmed unless this Court is left with a firm conviction that the division was inequitable.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Paul Sanford Ishel v. Ashley Nicole Floyd-Ishel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-sanford-ishel-v-ashley-nicole-floyd-ishel-michctapp-2024.