Sands v. Sands

482 N.W.2d 203, 192 Mich. App. 698
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1992
DocketDocket 109990, 111077, 112299, 113249, 113870
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 482 N.W.2d 203 (Sands v. Sands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sands v. Sands, 482 N.W.2d 203, 192 Mich. App. 698 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

After twenty-six years of marriage, Judy Sands filed for divorce from Gerald Sands. Following a lengthy trial, plaintiff was granted a divorce. The trial court split the marital assets equally and awarded plaintiff alimony of $200 a week for fifteen years or until her remarriage. The court ordered defendant to pay seventy percent of the plaintiffs attorney fees, on the basis of its finding that the bulk of plaintiffs attorney fees were incurred because of "defendant’s devious and deceptive conduct.”

One example of misconduct on the part of Gerald Sands can be seen in his attempt to conceal certain assets resulting from the sale of a bowling alley in California. Mr. Sands and his brother-in-law, John Yasment, owned a corporation called Southern California Leisure Time (sclt). The corporation’s main asset was a twenty-five percent interest in a California bowling alley. The bowling alley was sold on August 12, 1986, and sclt received $240,000 of the proceeds. Mr. Sands as *700 serted that he and Yasment were equal partners in sclt and that each received $120,000 from the sale.

On November 7, 1986, a hearing was held with regard to an order to show cause. Eugene Nowak, an attorney who had represented Mr. Sands in various matters and had prepared several documents concerning sclt beginning in 1980, received a pretrial order in the present action ordering him to turn those documents over to plaintiff. When Nowak examined the file, he found that several of the documents were missing. Nowak assumed that Mr. Sands had removed the papers from the file, including one that showed Mr. Sands owned 97.5 percent of sclt. Mr. Sands eventually admitted taking the documents, stating that the papers "weren’t important.”

On February 20, 1987, Mr. Sands was held in contempt on the bases of what had transpired at this hearing and the court’s finding that Mr. Sands had removed documents from his attorney’s file. At that time, Mr. Sands was ordered to pay $6,000 in fees and costs for plaintiffs retention of California counsel.

At a March 30, 1987, show cause hearing, Mr. Sands stated that he owned fifty percent of sclt when it was incorporated in 1981. Mr. Sands conceded that there was a document, signed by him and Yasment in February 1983, that transferred to him all but twenty-five shares of stock (which effectively amounted to complete ownership of the company, with Yasment retaining only voting shares). However, Mr. Sands contended that the agreement "was signed but not executed. That corporation has never changed shares since day one till the time it closed down.” The documents in question show that the exchange of shares was *701 in satisfaction of a $32,250 debt Yasment owed Sands.

At trial, on October 7, 1987, Mr. Sands again contended that the transfer of shares was never executed. However, on December 20, 1983, Mr. Sands had sent a letter to his accounting firm instructing them that the stock ownership of sclt was changed on February 12, 1983. The letter stated that Yasment owned seventy-five percent of the voting stock, while Sands owned twenty-five percent of the voting and one hundred percent of the common stock.

Yasment and Sands each received a check for $120,000 from the proceeds of the sale. Eight days later, on January 9, 1987, Yasment sent Sands a check for $120,000. Sands deposited the money into a bank account in his name. The money was then transferred to an account belonging to Sands’ father, in trust for Gerald Sands.

On the fourth day of trial, October 9, 1987, John Yasment was called as a witness by defendant. Mr. Yasment testified that beginning in February 1983, Mr. Sands was the sole owner of sclt, while he retained only some voting shares. Yasment then testified that before the sale of the bowling alley, he and Mr. Sands had a verbal contract that if Yasment could sell the bowling alley, he would receive fifty percent of the gross proceeds received by sclt. Yasment stated that he received $120,000 for his role in selling the bowling alley, which he deposited into his personal checking account. Yasment explained that he wrote a check to Mr. Sands for $120,000 so that it could be reinvested. However, as stated above, the money was merely held in trust for Mr. Sands.

In an attempt to reconcile this widely divergent, inconsistent testimony, on the eighth day of trial, November 6, 1987, Mr. Sands testified: "I never *702 transferred the stocks over at any given time. I had an exercise, I had an option to exercise. That was my choice to do. I could have did it. I didn’t do it. So in John Yasment’s mind, yes, I owned it all. In my own mind, I didn’t do nothing with it. That was my option. That’s what an option is for, as I understand it.”

Ultimately, the trial court found that Mr. Sands was in fact the sole owner of sclt’s common shares and that the $120,000 being held in trust by Mr. Sands’ father was owned by Mr. Sands.

After the close of trial, defendant was held in contempt four times, and a partial new trial was granted with regard to two pieces of realty. When defendant filed this appeal, plaintiff was granted a temporary award,of alimony giving her $700 a week.

Both parties now appeal. We reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand with instructions.

defendant’s issues

Defendant has entered before this Court a total of thirty assignments of error, consuming over 130 pages of argument. We find merit in one and accordingly reverse only the September 20, 1988, order of criminal contempt.

Defendant complains that he was not given notice that the contempt proceedings were criminal in nature until the sentence was imposed. We agree that the pleadings did not make it clear that defendant was about to participate in a criminal contempt hearing. The confusion was increased at trial when plaintiff’s attorney called Mr. Sands to testify under the adverse-party rule, which should not have been possible during a criminal contempt proceeding. See Jaikins v Jaikins, 12 Mich App 115; 162 NW2d 325 (1968). Defendant was entitled *703 to be informed of the nature of the offense with which he was charged. People v Johns, 384 Mich 325, 331; 183 NW2d 216 (1971). Because the record does not show compliance with the proper procedural safeguards, the conviction of criminal contempt cannot be sustained. Id. at 333. Because we vacate this order of contempt, we also strike the accompanying order for the payment of $900 of the plaintiffs attorney fees.

As noted, this is the only meritorious argument that emerges from defendant’s voluminous brief.

plaintiff’s issues

Plaintiff raised five issues on appeal.

We find merit in only one and accordingly remand for partial redivision of the marital assets.

Mrs. Sands complains that the decision to split the marital property equally is inequitable. A trial court’s decision dividing the parties’ property in a divorce action is a dispositional ruling. We review it de novo but will not reverse it unless convinced we would have reached a different result in the trial court’s place. Beason v Beason,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
482 N.W.2d 203, 192 Mich. App. 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-sands-michctapp-1992.