Pickering v. Pickering

314 S.W.3d 822, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 933, 2010 WL 2649855
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 2010
DocketWD 71489
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 314 S.W.3d 822 (Pickering v. Pickering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickering v. Pickering, 314 S.W.3d 822, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 933, 2010 WL 2649855 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

KAREN KING MITCHELL, Presiding Judge.

Appellant William Timothy Pickering (“Husband”) appeals the judgment entered by the Circuit Court of Cass County, the Honorable Daniel W. Olsen presiding. The circuit court’s judgment dissolved Husband’s marriage to Respondent Sherri Pickering (“Wife”); awarded joint custody of the parties’ children; entered a parenting plan; calculated and ordered child support for Husband to pay to Wife; divided marital assets between the parties, finding that Husband owed Wife an equalization payment; and awarded Wife her attorney’s fees. Husband raises thirteen points on appeal, challenging almost every aspect of the circuit court’s judgment. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and give such judgment as the trial court ought to have given. Rule 84.14. 1

Facts and Procedural Background 2

Husband and Wife married in 1990. They had two children who, at the time of trial, were seventeen and thirteen years old.

On December 25, 2006, Husband informed Wife that he had been unfaithful and that he wanted to dissolve the marriage. The parties officially separated in May of 2007. On May 24, 2007, Wife filed a petition to dissolve the marriage.

From May of 2007 until August of 2008, Husband made mortgage payments on the marital home. Wife lived in the home, and Husband lived in an apartment. The mortgage on the marital home (“the mortgage”) varied between $1,900 per month and $2,167 per month. Husband also paid $811 per month in rent for his own apartment. Upon selling the marital home in August of 2008, the parties agreed that Husband would pay Wife $750 per month as child support. Before that time, Husband had not paid any child support or maintenance. According to an understanding between the parties, 3 before they sold the marital home, Husband had paid the mortgage in lieu of paying child support and maintenance.

According to Husband, while he was paying the mortgage, his expenses exceeded his income, and therefore he liquidated various marital assets so that he could continue making the mortgage payments. He did so without informing Wife and without giving her any of the proceeds. These assets were a 401k worth $44,561.40 (after penalties and taxes, Husband received $31,200); a truck worth $8,800; and a generator worth $1,400 (collectively, “liquidated marital assets”).

*828 The circuit court held a bench trial on March 6, 2009. At trial, Wife argued that Husband squandered the liquidated marital assets. The court found that Husband had failed to prove that he used the proceeds of these assets for legitimate purposes. Husband spent a portion of the money on a trip to Las Vegas with his girlfriend (although she paid her own expenses), which the court found did not qualify as a legitimate expenditure. Further, the court found that Husband could only account for $27,500 of the funds ($12,000 of which was paid to Husband’s attorneys), which was “far less than the proceeds of the sale of the three marital assets.” Therefore, the court attributed $20,000 to Husband in the division of marital assets (“$20,000 attribution”). However, the court did not explain how it arrived at $20,000.

The trial court found that the parties had other marital assets totaling $28,798.82. To calculate the total amount of marital assets, the court added the $20,000 attribution to the $28,798.82 in other assets. Husband was in possession of an account worth $6,571. Thus, the court found that $26,571 (the $20,000 attribution plus value of the account) worth of marital assets were effectively in Husband’s hands. The court ordered the marital assets divided equally. As noted, the total amount of marital assets was $48,798.92. One-half of that is $24,399.41. Because the court had found that Husband already effectively had $26,571 in his hands, it ordered Husband to pay Wife the difference between that amount and one-half of the total marital assets, or $2,171.59 (“equalization payment”).

The trial court also awarded Wife her attorney’s fees. The court found that Husband was in a better financial position to pay the fees and that his conduct during the marriage, including infidelity and the unauthorized liquidation of marital assets, entitled Wife to an attorney’s fee award.

The trial court further ordered Husband to pay child support in the amount of $956 per month. In calculating child support pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule Form 14 (“Form 14”), the court attributed an income of $2,732 per month to Wife and $6,944 per month to Husband. The court also found that Wife paid $246 per month in “Other extraordinary child rearing costs” and ordered Husband to pay his proportional share of that amount. 4

Husband argued that the court should impute more income to Wife than she was currently earning as a teacher. Wife had worked as a nurse until 2004, when she and Husband agreed that she should become a teacher, so that she could spend more time with the children. Husband testified that Wife had the capacity to make more money as a nurse and also that she could make more money as a teacher in a different school district. Husband asked the trial court to impute $3,000 per month as Wife’s income, which was more than she currently made but less than what he thought she could make as a nurse. The trial court refused to impute income to Wife, calculating her income as $2,732 per month (her actual salary at the time of trial). Further, Husband argued that his income should be less than the $6,944 projected by the court in its Form 14 because, although that amount was close to his monthly income at the time of trial, that figure was based in part on commissions that he earned, and there was no guarantee that he would continue to earn commissions at his current rate.

The court awarded joint legal and physical custody of the children. Previous to *829 the court’s order, the children alternated weeks residing with each parent, and the children testified that they wished to continue with this arrangement. Husband asked the court to preserve this arrangement, and Wife asked that the court order that the children were to reside with her, except for every other weekend, Wednesday evenings, and alternating weeks in the summer. The court ruled that the children would reside with Wife except every other week from 6:00 p.m. Friday until Thursday morning the following week. In the summer, custody would alternate one week with Husband, the next with Wife.

Prior to their separation, the parties had always purchased health insurance for their children, separate from that available to them through the insurance provided by Husband’s employer. They did so because Husband frequently changed jobs, and they wanted the children’s health insurance to remain constant. Husband asked the court to order the parties to change the children’s insurance from their current plan to the plan provided by Husband’s employer, because the latter was less expensive. Wife testified that she wanted to keep the children on their current insurance policy because, as before, Husband’s employment was subject to change, and the children’s current policy covered preexisting conditions and could be maintained after the children went to college.

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Bluebook (online)
314 S.W.3d 822, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 933, 2010 WL 2649855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickering-v-pickering-moctapp-2010.