ROSA H. NARANJO v. FREDDY RAUL OCHOA

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 5, 2023
Docket21-3084
StatusPublished

This text of ROSA H. NARANJO v. FREDDY RAUL OCHOA (ROSA H. NARANJO v. FREDDY RAUL OCHOA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ROSA H. NARANJO v. FREDDY RAUL OCHOA, (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

ROSA H. NARANJO, Appellant,

v.

FREDDY RAUL OCHOA, Appellee.

No. 4D21-3084

[July 5, 2023]

Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; Laura Johnson, Judge; L.T. Case No. 502020DR005681.

Christopher R. Bruce and Ashley M. Bustamante of Bruce Law Firm, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Michael S. Dyer of Law Office of Michael Samuel Dyer, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

GERBER, J.

The former wife appeals from the circuit court’s final judgment of dissolution of marriage. The former wife primarily argues the circuit court erred by equitably distributing, as a marital asset, the appreciation on the former wife’s nonmarital advanced inheritance. The former wife more specifically argues the former husband failed to prove by competent substantial evidence that the investment of the advanced inheritance into four mutual funds, and then employing a buy-and-hold strategy, constituted the requisite “efforts”—as that term is used in section 61.075(6)(a)1.b., Florida Statutes (2020), and interpreted by our court and other district courts—to have allowed the circuit court’s determination that the advanced inheritance’s appreciation was a marital asset.

We agree with the former wife’s argument. Thus, we reverse the final judgment’s equitable distribution determination as to the advanced inheritance’s appreciation. We remand for the circuit court to enter an amended final judgment determining that the advanced inheritance’s appreciation shall be treated as the former wife’s nonmarital asset. Procedural History

In December 2012 and February 2013, the former wife’s mother gifted a total of $665,000.00 to the former wife as an advanced inheritance. Within weeks of the February 2013 transfer, the former wife transferred $660,000 of those funds into a brokerage account which was separate from the former wife’s and the former husband’s joint bank account. Over the next two months, the majority of the $660,000.00 in the former wife’s brokerage account was used to purchase shares in three mutual funds.

In 2016, the former wife’s mother gifted another $170,000 to the former wife as a further advanced inheritance. Within a few days, the former wife transferred the $170,000 into her separate brokerage account. The $170,000 was then used to purchase shares in a fourth mutual fund.

In 2020, the former husband filed a petition for dissolution of marriage, and the former wife filed a counterpetition for dissolution of marriage. By the time the parties had proceeded on their petitions, the mutual funds had generated $892,687.94 in appreciation.

At trial, for purposes of the circuit court’s equitable distribution determination, the former husband and the former wife contested whether the circuit court should deem the $892,687.94 appreciation as a marital asset or a nonmarital asset.

The former husband argued that pursuant to section 61.075(6)(a)1.b., Florida Statutes (2020)—which defines marital assets as including “[t]he enhancement in value and appreciation of nonmarital assets resulting from the efforts of either party during the marriage” (emphasis added)—the circuit court should deem the appreciation as a marital asset because he had performed the research and purchased the four mutual funds which had generated the appreciation. According to the former husband, “I did the research all by myself. This took hours.” The former husband later testified that his investment strategy as to the couple’s investments during the marriage was “typically buy and hold. I was not a day trader and I wasn’t looking to invest small sums.”

In contrast, the former wife testified that she, and not the former husband, had performed the research and purchased the four mutual funds which had generated the appreciation. Further, the former wife’s testimony sought to establish—for what would be her later argument— that regardless of who had performed the research and selected the mutual funds, the circuit court should deem the appreciation as a nonmarital asset because neither party’s “efforts” had resulted in the “enhancement

2 in value and appreciation” of the invested funds under section 61.075(6)(a)1.b., Florida Statutes (2020). The former wife testified:

It was a buy and hold strategy. I selected some funds, purchased them and left them alone.

Because I didn’t want to be tracking this every day or every week or every month, I work full time. I was not in finance. I just wanted something that would grow the money in a better way than just leaving it in CDs or in [a] money market account.

In closing arguments, the former husband’s counsel emphasized that regardless of the parties’ factual dispute over who had researched and selected the mutual funds, the fact that either of them had done so should cause the circuit court to deem the advance inheritance’s appreciation to be a marital asset:

[The former husband] is … saying he picked the [mutual funds]. The [former] wife says she picked the [mutual funds].

But, Your Honor, it actually doesn’t make much of a difference because if [a spouse] take[s] an asset and … enhance[s] the value of the asset and that enhancement is made during the marriage, then you have marital enhancement.

So even if the [former] wife did pick the [mutual funds], she took her mother’s money and she’s enhanced the value by picking these [mutual funds]. If [the former husband] did that, then he took the money and he enhanced it as well.

So the appreciation in these [mutual funds] is twofold.

One, passive appreciation because the market has gone up.

Two, active appreciation because these [mutual funds] were picked by one [spouse] or the other.

There is no such thing as a nonmarital picking of [mutual funds] that occurs during the marriage.

3 During the former wife’s closing argument, the former wife’s counsel relied on Oxley v. Oxley, 695 So. 2d 364 (Fla. 4th DCA 1997), and other cases for the general proposition—using counsel’s words—that if a spouse delegates the investment management of a nonmarital asset to somebody else, “there is not marital effort that makes … an otherwise nonmarital asset’s enhancement [into a] marital [asset].” According to the former wife’s counsel:

The [former] wife outsourced the management of her investments [to] the four fund managers.

… [M]y suggestion is the Court should look at her … four one-time trades as no different than the husband in Oxley picking a trustee to manage his investments.

She picked four investment advisors and her only responsibility with managing this money after that was to let those advisors do their jobs. And they did that through the four funds.

And, you know, some did it better than the others, but my client’s role was to delegate that out and that’s basically what happened in the Oxley case.

...

And in [Steele v. Steele, 945 So. 2d 601 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006),] the appellate court affirm[ed] a trial court’s findings that the husband’s three trades in a nonmarital investment account over an almost six-year marriage were extremely de minimis and found that those three trades did not represent marital effort that would allow the wife in that case to entitlement of the enhancement of the account.

And here we have four trades during the intact marriage. [Steele] had three. My suggestion is that the wife’s efforts[,] to the extent they could be considered the type of efforts that are marital efforts that could lead to enhancement[,] are de minimis in nature based on that case.

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Related

Oxley v. Oxley
695 So. 2d 364 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1997)
Chapman v. Chapman
866 So. 2d 118 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2004)
Doerr v. Doerr
751 So. 2d 154 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2000)
Steele v. Steele
945 So. 2d 601 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2006)
Gromet v. Jensen
201 So. 3d 132 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
ROSA H. NARANJO v. FREDDY RAUL OCHOA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosa-h-naranjo-v-freddy-raul-ochoa-fladistctapp-2023.