Risa Stock v. Morris Stock

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 28, 2006
DocketW2005-02634-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Risa Stock v. Morris Stock (Risa Stock v. Morris Stock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Risa Stock v. Morris Stock, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON OCTOBER 24, 2006 Session

RISA STOCK v. MORRIS STOCK

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-007329-02 Jerry Stokes, Judge

No. W2005-02634-COA-R3-CV - December 28, 2006

This appeal involves a trial court’s distribution of marital property in a divorce proceeding. The parties owned their own business, and the husband generally ran its operations while the wife handled its financial aspects. After the business caught fire, the husband found $240,000 in the company safe. He took the money to a bank and placed it in a safety deposit box. The company’s head of security accompanied the husband to the bank and testified about these events at trial. The wife also had access to the box, and the bank records revealed that she accessed it over thirty times in the next five years. The husband and the security officer returned to the safety deposit box when he learned that the wife intended to file for divorce, but there was no cash remaining in the box. The trial court determined that the wife had dissipated the marital estate in the amount of $240,000 and subtracted half that amount, $120,000, from her award of the marital property. The wife appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., joined.

Patricia Chafetz, T. Tarry Beasley, II, and Timothy A. Perkins, Memphis, TN, for Appellant

Mitchell D. Moskovitz and Adam N. Cohen, Memphis, TN, for Appellee OPINION

I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Risa Stock (“Wife”) married Morris Stock (“Husband”) in 1984.1 When they married, Wife was 19 years old, and Husband was 28 years old. Husband had been working in the iron and scrap metal business for Lazarov Brothers since 1980. Neither party has a college degree. In 1991, Husband and Wife formed a corporation and purchased Husband’s employer’s business. They renamed the business Airways Iron and Metal Company (“AIMCO”). Husband was in charge of AIMCO, but Wife handled the company’s financial duties such as paying expenses, providing information to their accountant, and handling insurance matters and the company payroll. AIMCO is predominately a cash business.

Mr. Harold Wormser has been the company’s accountant since the second year of AIMCO’s operation. He would prepare the monthly books, corporate income tax returns, and payroll tax returns based on the statements and data that Wife would provide each month. According to Mr. Wormser, he frequently had to prepare a reconciliation of the “cash on hand” reports. In other words, the “cash on hand” reported by Wife was far less than the amount of cash that AIMCO should have had on hand each month, and Mr. Wormser would have to adjust his figures to account for the discrepancy. During some years, Mr. Wormser’s adjustments would exceed $50,000 annually.

In 1997, a major fire broke out at AIMCO. Apparently the only asset that was not destroyed in the fire was a safe, but the dial had burned off. Husband had a lock company open the safe, and at that time he discovered a large amount of cash inside a separate compartment in the safe. According to Husband, he put the money into a duffle bag and took it to a bank where he opened a safety deposit box in both parties’ names. Sergeant Marvin Townsend of the Memphis Police Department is employed part-time by AIMCO to provide security for the premises, and he testified that he accompanied Husband in taking the bag of money to the bank. Husband claimed that he counted the cash when he placed it into the safety deposit box, and it totaled $240,000. Sergeant Townsend testified that he observed Mr. Stock’s bag of money, and he did not know how much money there was, “but it was a lot of it.”

The safety deposit box’s admission record reflects that the box was first opened on November 26, 1997. Husband’s signature is dated 11/26/97.2 The admission record displays 33

1 The parties had three children – Isaac, Rachael, and Benjamin.

2 W ife testified that she had accompanied Husband to the bank when he opened the safety deposit box, not Sergeant Townsend. On the box’s admission record, Husband’s signature is located on the first line in the first column under “access signatures” and marked “11/26/97 8:30.” There are two columns on each card separated by a bold line. W ife emphasized that her signature on the first line of the second column across from Husband’s signature was also marked “8:30.” There is no date next to W ife’s signature, but not all entries have both dates and times. However, Husband’s and W ife’s signatures were initialed by different clerks. Also, for all of the other visits the signatures were (continued...)

-2- subsequent entries signed by Wife when she accessed the safety deposit box between 1997 and 2002. According to Husband, Wife would tell him she was going to the box to put more cash into it.

The parties separated on or about December 23, 2002. Wife accessed their safety deposit box on December 26, 2002. According to the admission record and Husband’s testimony, Husband only returned to the safety deposit box on December 30, 2002. He had not accessed the box since he had first opened it in 1997. Sergeant Townsend claimed that he had been urging Husband to go to the box to be sure the money was still there, and he testified that he again accompanied Husband to the bank on this second visit. Both Husband and Sergeant Townsend explained that there was no cash in the safety deposit box when Husband opened it. Wife acknowledged that she had opened her own safety deposit box at another bank on or around December 26, but she insisted that she had only removed her jewelry from the other box.

Wife filed a complaint for legal separation on December 31, 2002, in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, and she filed an amended complaint for an absolute divorce on April 1, 2003. Husband moved the trial court to require a third-party to pay AIMCO’s business expenses and to enjoin Wife from interfering with its business operations. He alleged that Wife had depleted significant amounts of cash from the business and requested that Mr. Wormser, the accountant, be appointed to handle AIMCO’s financial duties. Attached to Husband’s motion were the affidavits of Mr. Wormser, Sergeant Townsend, and an AIMCO employee, Elijah Williams. Mr. Wormser expressed his willingness to handle AIMCO’s finances. Sergeant Townsend explained the details of his two trips to the bank with Husband and the bag of money. Elijah Williams stated that during the latter part of 2002, he observed Wife at her desk at AIMCO with “significant amounts of cash,” which she referred to as “her ‘life’s savings.’” The court granted Husband’s motion on July 8, 2003, delegating the responsibility for paying AIMCO’s expenses to Mr. Wormser. After Mr. Wormser took over, Wife no longer worked at AIMCO. Two years later, Mr. Wormser testified that since he had taken over the company’s financial operations in July of 2003, AIMCO had “cash on hand” overages in amounts ranging from $500 to $1500 per month. Based on Mr. Wormser’s knowledge of AIMCO’s financial situation, he could think of no other source for the $240,000 cash in the safe other than the cash shortages that he had previously detected each month.

The trial court entered a final decree of absolute divorce on September 7, 2005. In dividing the marital property, the court awarded all right, title, and interest in AIMCO to Husband. The court valued the business at $437,000. Wife was then awarded one-half the value of the business, or $218,500, for her interest in the company.

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