Randall Wolffe v. Robin Wolffe

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 2025
DocketS19082
StatusPublished

This text of Randall Wolffe v. Robin Wolffe (Randall Wolffe v. Robin Wolffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall Wolffe v. Robin Wolffe, (Ala. 2025).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

RANDALL WARD WOLFFE, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-19082 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3AN-23-04354 CI v. ) ) OPINION ROBIN WOLFFE, ) ) No. 7779 – August 1, 2025 Appellee. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, David A. Nesbett, Judge.

Appearances: Randall Ward Wolffe, pro se, Port Orchard, Washington, Appellant. Notice of nonparticipation filed by Rory Butler, Law Offices of Blake Fulton Quackenbush, Anchorage, for Appellee.

Before: Carney, Borghesan, Henderson, and Pate, Justices. [Maassen, Chief Justice, not participating.]

CARNEY, Justice.

INTRODUCTION When a couple divorced, the superior court awarded them joint legal custody of their minor child, but awarded primary physical custody to the mother. The court also divided the couple’s marital estate. The father, representing himself, appeals. He argues that the division of the marital estate was inequitable. He claims that a number of the court’s determinations were made in error, including not crediting him for post-separation payments, not allowing him to apply for the child’s Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD), not allowing him to claim the child as a dependent for tax purposes, and its custody decision. We vacate the court’s division of the marital estate. The court’s treatment of the father’s 401(k) is unclear and there are no clarifying findings for our review. It was also legal error to fail to address post-separation payments when the court divided the marital estate. We therefore remand for further proceedings on these issues. We otherwise affirm the superior court. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Randall and Robin Wolffe married in Texas in May 2017 and Randall adopted Robin’s minor child. In July 2017 the family moved to Alaska. The couple bought a home in early April 2020. Around October 2022 they separated. Robin moved out of the house and Randall stayed in it. Randall has since moved outside Alaska. Robin filed for divorce in January 2023, seeking sole legal and primary physical custody of their child, child support, and the authority to claim the child as a dependent for tax purposes and the child’s PFD. She proposed that the court divide the couple’s property in accordance with her spreadsheet. Randall responded by requesting joint legal and shared physical custody, and that the parents alternate years for claiming the child for taxes. He also requested that the court divide their property according to his spreadsheet. In December 2023 the superior court held a one-day trial by videoconference. Robin and Randall each testified; neither called additional witnesses. Robin testified that they had taken out a loan of $35,000 to remodel their home. She said that she was not aware of two other loans until just before court proceedings began. She testified that four credit cards were in Randall’s name alone, and that she did not know what much of the credit card debt was for. In her spreadsheet

-2- 7779 Robin proposed that Randall receive the entire amount of his 401(k) retirement account ($31,315.97). Randall, who was representing himself, subsequently testified that he had not seen their child in a long time, and that his relationship with the child had been strained since Robin moved out, but that it had been good in the past. He showed the court text messages he had sent Robin seeking updates on the child. He testified that he had incurred expenses after separation related to the couple’s debt and marital bills, the mortgage, and getting the house ready to sell. Randall denied Robin’s claim that she had no access to the credit cards or knowledge of their use. He argued that the credit card debt and the other payments he had made since Robin moved out should be included in the property division as expenses to preserve marital property. Randall conceded that the parties’ camper was marital property, and he proposed splitting the camper loan equally with Robin. Randall’s spreadsheet indicated that Robin would keep the couple’s Toyota vehicle and a different trailer, but he requested credit for half of each item’s value at the time of separation. The parties sold their home in December 2023. They had previously agreed that Randall would be reimbursed for post-separation repair costs to get it ready to sell; and they had agreed that the lien on the house for a bathroom remodel would be paid off with the sale proceeds. The day after trial and before the court had ruled, Robin filed a “notice regarding the sale of home.” In it she notified the court that two amounts had been deducted from the home sale’s proceeds: a Child Support Services Division (CSSD) lien for $26,353.76 and an escrow shortage of $11,404.59. She stated that the court should value her share of the home at $46,374.55, asserting that was her share of the equity before the CSSD lien was deducted. She asserted that she should also receive credit for half of the amount of the escrow debit because the shortage was Randall’s responsibility.

-3- 7779 The superior court issued a decree of divorce and findings of fact and conclusions of law in April 2024. It awarded joint legal custody to both parties and gave primary physical custody of the child to Robin. In its division of real property, the court took into account the CSSD lien for Randall’s child support arrearage of $26,353.76. The court also agreed with Robin that she should be awarded $5,702.30 as “half of the equity lost by the escrow debit.” The court then added the CSSD lien amount of $26,353.76 to the home sale proceeds of $66,395.35, resulting in a total of $92,749.11. Then it divided that total in two to determine Robin’s fifty percent share ($46,374.55), unpenalized by the deduction of the CSSD lien. The court next added half of the debit from the escrow shortage accrued while Randall was responsible for the mortgage, $5,702.30, to Robin’s fifty percent share. Robin’s total award from the home sale was therefore $52,076.85. Turning to the couple’s vehicles, the court awarded the trailer and Toyota to Robin as agreed, but did not award Randall half of their value. The court assigned debts to each party based on their testimony and Robin’s spreadsheet. It assigned the entire camper loan to her. The court assigned the debt from the four credit cards in his name to Randall and assigned the other loan debts according to Robin’s spreadsheet. The court ordered that Robin would be responsible for the child’s PFD and that she could claim the child as a dependent for tax purposes. The court ordered that Randall’s 401(k) be “divided equitably between the parties according to the [spreadsheet] provided to the court [by Robin].” That spreadsheet assigned Randall the full and undivided amount of the account, $31,315.97, as Robin had proposed. Randall’s spreadsheet, on the other hand, had proposed that the 401(k) be split equally with Robin. Randall appeals, continuing to represent himself. He argues that each decision the court made was in error. More specifically, he asserts that the overall

-4- 7779 division of property was inequitable. He argues he should be credited for expenses after separation including monthly payments on the camper, a storage unit while the house was being sold, “tens of thousands of dollars on the maintenance required to sell the house,” and certain past medical expenses. And he argues that the court did not divide marital debts equitably. He disagrees with the court’s decision to allow Robin to claim the child on her taxes and apply for the child’s PFD.

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Randall Wolffe v. Robin Wolffe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-wolffe-v-robin-wolffe-alaska-2025.