Reshetar v. Reshetar

246 N.W.2d 846, 310 Minn. 563, 1976 Minn. LEXIS 1712
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 22, 1976
Docket46026
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 N.W.2d 846 (Reshetar v. Reshetar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reshetar v. Reshetar, 246 N.W.2d 846, 310 Minn. 563, 1976 Minn. LEXIS 1712 (Mich. 1976).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Carol Reshetar brought suit against her former husband, Gary D. Reshetar, seeking a declaration of the rights of each in a house owned by the parties, and Gary filed separate suits against Carol for waste and for partition, 1 The cases were consolidated for trial. Gary appeals from the judgment of the district court and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. We affirm.

On April 29, 1969, the district court entered a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony between the parties. The decree specified that they continue to hold their homestead, a house on Coolidge Street in Min *564 neapolis, in joint tenancy, but that it be placed on the market for sale. The decree also provided that each party be responsible for one-half of the mortgage payments (including interest, insurance, and taxes) made with respect to the Coolidge Street house between the date of the dissolution of marriage and whenever the house might sell. Finally, it provided that the net proceeds from the sale of the house were to be divided equally between the parties, except that Carol was to be guaranteed at least $10,000. Also, in contemplation of the possibility that the net proceeds before division might be less than $20,000, and in order to assure so far as possible that Carol would receive a minimum of $10,000 before Gary received any of the proceeds, the decree specified that in addition to the minimum of $10,000 Carol should be reimbursed for any payments she might make to reduce the principal balance of the mortgage loan. 2

The house on Coolidge Street did not sell readily, apparently because it was overbuilt for the area. The parties decided to trade it for a house on Rankin Road plus cash, hoping that the Rankin Road property would be more readily salable. On July 30,1969, the closing date for the trade, the Rankin Road house had not been sold, and Carol moved into that house. The major dispute in the case centers on whether the parties agreed that they would divide expenses for the Rankin Road house in the same way they had, pursuant to the divorce decree, divided the expenses for the Coolidge house.

*565 Gary testified that he and Carol had agreed Carol would pay all, and not merely half, of the expenses for the Rankin Road house until it sold. Carol testified, to the contrary, that she and Gary had agreed on or near the date of the closing that they would divide the expenses of the Rankin Road house in the same way the decree had specified they should divide the expenses of the Coolidge house. Gary’s attorney attempted to impeach Carol’s testimony by inquiring about a statement she had made in her deposition that she recalled no conversations with Gary on this topic at any time near the closing date. Carol explained this inconsistency as arising from her not having thought back thoroughly enough when she was first asked about these conversations in her deposition. Indeed, later in the same deposition she had recalled asking Gary near the closing date, “How about half the mortgage payments” for the Rankin Road house and that he had said, “You’ll get that money when the property sells.”

The testimony was in conflict, and the evidence was sufficient for the district court to believe either of the two parties. Thus, we cannot say that the district court’s finding that Carol and Gary agreed to divide the Rankin Road expenses in the same manner they were to have divided the Coolidge expenses was clearly erroneous.

The Rankin Road house was also slow in selling, and after 6 months when the listing contract with a real estate broker expired Carol caused some improvements to be made in that house. 3 While the testimony was not entirely explicit on how much was paid for these improvements and by whom, Carol testified that Gary had contributed cash of between $400 and $550. She testified that she had discussed decorating the property with Gary, and that the two had agreed she would do it and be compensated for both the out-of-pocket expenses and for her time, which she estimated at trial as having been 950 hours.

*566 Joseph Stanton, a builder and one of Carol’s former employers, testified as to the value of the improvements. He itemized the cost of the improvements considered singly, the total of which was approximately $3,500. He testified, however, that considered in toto the improvements increased the value of the Rankin Road house $4,500. The district court found from this evidence that the improvements had increased the value by approximately $4,500, and we cannot say its finding was clearly erroneous.

Gary also attacks the district court’s finding that he never accounted to Carol for any part of a $3,109 cash payment which was received from the new owners of the Coolidge house as part of the consideration for that house. 4 Gary collected this money at the closing and used it to repay part of a loan Gary’s mother had made to both Gary and Carol. The decree and property settlement, however, had required Gary unilaterally to pay all the marital obligations of the parties, apparently including the loan from Gary’s mother. The district court found, therefore, that Gary had never accounted to Carol for any part of the $3,109, and we cannot say this finding was clearly erroneous.

After all the improvements in the Rankin Road house were completed, it was again listed with a real estate broker, and it remained on the market’ until the fall of 1973. At that time Carol and Gary had a disagreement, and Carol became concerned that if an offer were received on the house, Gary would refuse to accept it. Carol, therefore, instructed her real estate broker that the house be removed from the market. The district court found that by so doing Carol waived her right to claim reimbursement for one-half of the expenses for the Rankin Road house beyond that time. It appears that Gary, as co-owner of the property, had the same right, responsibility, and ability to place the Rankin Road house on the market and search for a buyer as did Carol, but Carol has not challenged the district court's ruling that she waived her right to reimbursement after instructing her own broker to desist from searching for a buyer.

The district court fixed the rights of the parties as of the date Carol removed the Rankin Road house from the market. At that time Carol had lived there some four years and had paid $10,131 for mortgage service, insurance, taxes; and utilities. At the time of trial, taxes in the sum of $1,000.92 were due to Hennepin County, another $3,000 was due to the mortgage company to repay an advance it had made for taxes, *567 and the mortgage balance itself was $18,649. The house was sold shortly after trial.

On these facts, because the district court believed Carol’s testimony that the parties agreed to divide expenses for the Rankin Road house equally between themselves, the appropriate disposition was to order that the house be sold and the proceeds distributed as follows:

1. Pay all taxes due $ 1,000.92

2. Repay the mortgage company’s

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W.2d 846, 310 Minn. 563, 1976 Minn. LEXIS 1712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reshetar-v-reshetar-minn-1976.