Potts v. Potts

303 S.W.3d 177, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 181, 2010 WL 605323
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 2010
DocketWD 70196, WD 70455
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 303 S.W.3d 177 (Potts v. Potts) 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
Potts v. Potts, 303 S.W.3d 177, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 181, 2010 WL 605323 (Mo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Raymond Potts appeals the judgment of the Pettis County Circuit Court pertaining to the dissolution of his marriage to Susan Potts. He argues on appeal that the trial court erred with respect to awarding custody of the parties’ children, finding the parties’ prenuptial agreement to be unconscionable, classifying and dividing property, awarding maintenance, awarding child support, and ordering Raymond to pay Susan’s attorneys’ fees on appeal. The judgment is affirmed.

Facts

Raymond and Susan Potts were married on September 21, 1985. They separated on July 16, 2006, with Susan subsequently filing a petition for dissolution of marriage. They have four children. The oldest child is emancipated.

Raymond has been engaged in business as a roofing sheet metal contractor since 1979. Raymond’s business is incorporated as Potts Contracting Group, Inc. Raymond owns all the shares in his sole name. The record shows that Raymond has a track record of disregarding corporate formalities in transferring funds back and forth between his corporation and himself, and accordingly owes taxes to the government. At the time of the marriage, Susan was 30 years old and worked at a bank as a secretary for a loan officer. Susan had previously worked as a floral designer. At the time of the dissolution trial, Susan worked 30 hours per week for $7.00 per hour coordinating delivery meal service to the elderly at a senior center.

The parties signed a prenuptial agreement the day before their marriage. The prenuptial agreement contained a full disclosure of the parties’ assets and debts at the time of the marriage. The parties disagreed about the details surrounding the execution of the agreement.

Raymond testified to the following particulars concerning the prenuptial agreement. He had the agreement drawn up by his attorney several months prior to the marriage. He gave the prenuptial agreement to Susan for her review about a month prior to the wedding. Susan requested that Raymond change the provisions of the prenuptial agreement and suggested a formula so that she would get more money for each year that the parties remained married. Raymond’s secretary notarized the prenuptial agreement. He remembers it being signed in his office prior to the end of business on the Friday before the wedding.

Raymond’s business attorney also testified. He said that he prepared the prenuptial agreement at Raymond’s request. He said he would have talked generally with Raymond, as he did with all his business clients, about the need to prepare a prenuptial agreement not less than 60 days prior to the wedding. Raymond’s attorney recalled meeting with Raymond on July 10, 1985, and located his datebook reflecting that appointment. He recalled Raymond contacting him about a change that Susan wanted based on a formula that would provide more money for each year they were married. This was a formula that the attorney did not regularly use. Raymond’s attorney testified that, though he made changes in the prenuptial agreement, he did not make any changes to the agreement a day or two prior to the wedding. He recalled that Raymond spoke to him about changes Susan wanted made to the agreement prior to wedding invitations *183 being sent out. He recalled it because Raymond mentioned that he was not on the wedding invitation list. He did not testify that he was present when the agreement was signed, and he did not purport to know the date the agreement was signed.

Susan testified that she saw the prenuptial agreement for the first time on the Wednesday before the Saturday wedding. She said that although she did not read it completely, there was some language about receiving a certain amount of money in case of dissolution of marriage. Susan objected to some of what she read. Raymond agreed to have the agreement redone. Susan testified that she had never talked to Raymond’s attorney and that she had not been in his office. She said that she received the revised agreement at 7:00 p.m. on the Friday night before the wedding, just as they were leaving for the rehearsal dinner. Susan said she read a little of the revised agreement. Susan testified that she did not sign the agreement in front of a notary public. She said that she had no legal training and, until recently, no one with legal training had explained to her the meaning of the agreement.

Both Raymond and Susan sought custody of the children. Raymond was romantically involved with another woman (Teresa) during his separation from Susan.

Raymond and Susan’s children testified at the trial. Their 10-year-old son testified that he had stayed overnight with Raymond only twice in the previous six months. The son said this was less frequent than it had been because he did not like the fact that Teresa had started sleeping in Raymond’s bed. Their 16-year-old son testified that he had never stayed overnight at Raymond’s house because he did not “like it” at Raymond’s house. He said that he did not like the “sleeping arrangements” at Raymond’s house, and that Teresa and Raymond shared a bed. Their 18-year-old son testified that he had never spent the night at Raymond’s house because he was not comfortable there. Their 21-year-old son was estranged from Raymond. He testified that he and Raymond do not talk.

The parties also disagreed over Raymond’s financial position. Raymond gave the following testimony. Raymond’s business, Potts Contracting Group, Inc., has suffered financially since approximately 2003. The trouble began when there were two instances of material suppliers providing defective material to the business for use in large projects. The defects were not discovered until after installation, causing the owner to refuse payment. After the petition for dissolution of marriage was filed, Susan took the prenuptial agreement out of Raymond’s office. She told Raymond that she destroyed it. In reality, Susan hid the prenuptial agreement in a safe-deposit box and then gave it to her divorce attorney. Raymond obtained the prenuptial agreement during a deposition and submitted it to the trial court. Raymond needed the prenuptial agreement in order to obtain the commercial bonds that would enable his business to bid on large jobs. Without the prenuptial agreement, Raymond was unable to secure the needed bonds, and the business declined further. Raymond says his business corporation is deeply in debt and has not made a profit for several years. Raymond did not provide documentation supporting these assertions. Raymond offered some purported expert testimony by way of an accountant, but the court found that a lack of foundation was shown for the accountant’s opinion. During the separation and pendency of the divorce, Raymond says he borrowed approximately $9,000 per month from the business to pay *184 to Susan, and then $900 per week to pay temporary support.

The U.S. Individual Tax Return filed by the parties in 2005 included $98,500 in wages and $66,626 in rental real estate income plus additional sums for capital gains. Their 2006 U.S. Individual Tax Return included wages of $52,000 and $70,055 in rental real estate income.

The trial court determined that the asset known as Potts Contracting Group was nonmarital property. According to the prenuptial agreement, this asset was worth $627,373.57 at the time of the marriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 S.W.3d 177, 2010 Mo. App. LEXIS 181, 2010 WL 605323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-potts-moctapp-2010.