Roe v. Roe

429 S.E.2d 830, 311 S.C. 471, 1993 S.C. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 1993
Docket1990
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 429 S.E.2d 830 (Roe v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roe v. Roe, 429 S.E.2d 830, 311 S.C. 471, 1993 S.C. App. LEXIS 57 (S.C. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Cureton, Judge:

The court granted the wife a divorce on the statutory ground of adultery. The wife appeals, inter alia, the trial court’s division of marital property and its valuation of various items of marital property. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

*473 The parties married in December 1953 and separated in December 1988. The wife filed for divorce on August 31, 1989. She was 56 years old at the time of the hearing; the husband was 58.

The wife operated a bookkeeping service for a number of years. In 1978, the wife began to do accounting work for several Little Caesar pizza franchises. By the late 1980’s, she had 16 accounts. Prior to his retirement in 1988, the husband worked as a construction and maintenance supervisor at a bank in Michigan.

In 1987, the parties entered a partnership with Ernest Rouse to develop a Little Caesar franchise in Sumter. In May 1987, the wife incorporated “Roe and Roe Pizza Treats” (R & R Pizza) to operate the franchise; she became the sole shareholder.

In February 1988, Rouse borrowed $15,000 from the wife. The parties dispute whether this debt is owed to the wife or to R & R Pizza. By December 1988, R & R Pizza had acquired and was operating franchises in Sumter, Aiken, and Orange-burg. The parties funded the franchise fees, leasehold improvements, and other business expenses with money the wife had inherited, their savings, and a credit-line secured by the parties’ home in Michigan. Following the parties’ separation in December 1988, the husband was not involved in the operation of R & R Pizza or its franchises.

Subsequent to the parties’ separation but prior to their divorce, the husband received a distribution of retirement benefits from his former employer of $170,000, which he divided equally with his wife. The wife used $35,000 of her share of the distribution as well as an additional $15,000 which she borrowed from the husband to purchase a house in Orangeburg; she used the remainder to operate R & R Pizza. The wife removed an additional $5,500 in funds from the husband’s account to pay attorney and investigator fees; the parties dispute whether the wife had permission to remove these funds. The husband used $14,000 of his share of the retirement funds to buy a new vehicle and placed the remainder ($49,000) in a savings account.

The trial judge awarded to the wife as marital property: 1) a note for $160,353 given by R & R Pizza to the wife; 2) R & R Pizza, with a negative value of $173,000; 3) R & R Pizza’s *474 stock; 4) Rouse’s debt of $15,000; 5) a credit line used to finance R & R Pizza, with a balance owing of $94,000; 6) a home in Michigan valued at $60,000; 7) her life insurance policy valued at $14,000; 8) R & R Pizza’s furniture and office equipment valued at $10,000; 9) jewelry valued at $15,000; 10) a home in Orangeburg valued at $48,500; 11) her car valued at $2,000; and 12) her checking account of $744.

He awarded the husband as marital property: 1) a lot in Michigan valued at $5,000; 2) his IRA of $15,000; 3) tools valued at $10,000; 4) his vehicle valued at $12,000; 5) his life insurance policy valued at $14,000; 6) $5,000 in stock; 7) a collection of toy trains valued at $7,000; and 8) his savings account of $49,000.

Of the $190,597 identified by the trial judge as marital property, he awarded $117,000 or 61%, to the husband and $73,597, or 39%, to the wife. He found that the wife was primarily responsible for the parties’ involvement in R & R Pizza, that the parties had been in a comfortable financial situation prior to this involvement, and that she had “continued to sink money in that hole” both before and after the separation. He stated he had considered the misconduct of the wife as it affected the economic circumstances of the parties in accordance with S.C. Code Ann. § 20-7-472(2), and that the wife was guilty of economic misconduct both before and after the separation. He also observed that the wife had both misrepresented and failed to disclose to the court which marital assets she had invested in R & R Pizza subsequent to the parties’ separation.

The trial judge observed that although the equitable division did not restore the husband to his financial condition prior to the parties’ involvement in R & R Pizza, he was not entirely without fault in regards to this venture.

He also found that the wife owed the husband $20,500 because the parties had agreed to equally divide the husband’s retirement benefits, and that the wife would pay the husband 72 of the husband’s tax liability on these retirement benefits once its exact amount was determined. 1

On appeal, the wife asserts that the trial court erred in 1) “double counting” certain marital assets which she was *475 awarded because these assets were also considered in the valuation of R & R Pizza; 2) valuing and distributing as marital property jewelry inherited by the wife; 3) valuing the furniture and office equipment awarded to the wife; 4) requiring the wife to repay $20,500 to the husband; 5) valuing and awarding to the husband as marital property the collection of toy trains; 6) requiring the wife to be responsible for 1 h of the tax liability on the husband’s retirement funds; and 7) awarding the majority of the marital assets of the parties to the husband in its equitable division.

I.

As pertains to the “double counting” claim, the wife as-serfs that because she was awarded R & R Pizza, the trial court erred by awarding her the $15,000 debt owed by Rouse as a separate item of marital property, where the amount of this debt had been used by her appraiser as an account receivable in calculating the negative value of R & R Pizza. We agree. There is no dispute that both the debt and R & R Pizza were marital property. Although the evidence and testimony conflict as to whether this debt was payable to R & R Pizza, and accordingly was a corporate asset, or was payable to the wife personally, it is unnecessary for us to resolve this conflict because we are convinced the appraiser relied upon this debt in his calculation of R & R Pizza’s net value. Accordingly, the trial court erred in awarding the debt as a marital asset when the net value of R & R Pizza had been increased by its value. Brandi v. Brandi, 302 S.C. 353, 359 n. 2, (Ct. App. 1990) (it was error for the trial court to include as marital assets both the value of land owned by the husband’s corporation and the value of his stock in the same corporation).

The wife also asserts that the trial court erred by awarding her the Orangeburg home and valuing it at $48,500 without either reducing its equity by the $15,000 which she had borrowed from the husband for its downpayment, or absolving her of the requirement to repay the husband. We agree. Although we affirm the trial court’s finding that the wife must honor her agreement to repay the money which she borrowed from the husband, it was error to order repayment without reducing the value of the Orange- *476

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
429 S.E.2d 830, 311 S.C. 471, 1993 S.C. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roe-v-roe-scctapp-1993.