Sheehan v. Sheehan
This text of 943 So. 2d 818 (Sheehan v. Sheehan) 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.
Opinion
Kelle SHEEHAN, Appellant,
v.
Crystal Morgan SHEEHAN, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*819 Amy D. Shield of Amy D. Shield, P.A., Boca Raton, for appellant.
Robert M.W. Shalhoub of the Law Offices of Robert M.W. Shalhoub, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellee.
STEVENSON, C.J.
In this appeal, the former husband challenges the equitable distribution scheme in the order dissolving his nearly seven-year marriage. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
The bulk of the assets of this marriage consisted of the family business, Sheehan Towing, Inc., and rental properties. The business was founded by the husband prior to the marriage and served as the employer and source of income for both parties. The divorce was tumultuous and gave rise to a variety of allegations of "misconduct" on both sides. Approximately one year after the filing of the petition for dissolution, the couple entered into a "Mediated Temporary Relief Agreement." The agreement provided that the wife would operate the business to the exclusion of the husband. The wife was to be responsible for collecting the rents and paying the expenses associated with the rental properties. The husband was to have exclusive possession of the former marital residence (the Carambola property). The wife was to pay the mortgage on the property and the additional sum of $10,000 per month to the husband. The agreement expressly declined to specify whether the payment of these sums was in the nature of support or an advance equitable distribution.
By the time of the trial, the parties had reached an agreement regarding custody and the husband's child support obligation; neither party was seeking alimony. The parties agreed the wife would receive the business and stipulated that the date of valuation for the business and other assets would be December 31, 2003. The parties disagreed about the value of the business, the distribution of the remaining assets, and the treatment to be afforded the payments made to the husband under the mediated agreement. With respect to the business, both parties presented the testimony of an expert witness on the issue of valuation. The experts disagreed as to the appropriate valuation method. Assuming *820 the same approach, however, the experts' figures were relatively in line with one another. The husband's expert ultimately valued the business at $400,000 and the wife's at $88,000.
The couple owned six properties. Four (the Conniston property, the Wilkens Avenue property, the Wilkens Avenue impound lot, and the Alpha property) are rental properties. During the marriage and the pendency of the divorce, the wife collected the rents, paid the expenses, and ensured necessary repairs were made. The rent monies were deposited into a bank account (the rental account); the rental income was used to pay the expenses associated with the rental properties and the mortgage on the former marital residence. The Conniston property was owned by the husband prior to the marriage. In 2004, it generated a profit of $6,706.62 and, during the first five months of 2005, a profit of $617.91. The Wilkens Avenue properties were rented to the business. The Alpha property was located near the business and rented to an employee. In addition to the four rental properties, there was the former marital residence (the Carambola property) and a home that was purchased by the wife with $20,000 taken from the rental account and later sold (the Cozumel property).
While the mediated agreement provided that the wife would pay the husband $10,000 each month, it was agreed that the wife had paid the husband only $35,000 in the approximately fourteen months between the entry of the agreement and the trial. The husband claimed his exclusion from the business and his wife's failure to make the payments required him to liquidate $49,161 from several bank accounts and an IRA to meet his living expenses. The wife insisted the husband had no such need, testifying he had taken $80,000 in cash from a safe in the marital residence. The husband denied this.
In entering the final judgment, the trial court accepted the parties' stipulations regarding custody and child support. It valued the business at $300,000 and awarded the same to the wife in accordance with the parties' agreement. The Wilkens Avenue, Wilkens Avenue impound lot, and Alpha properties were awarded the wife. The husband was awarded the Carambola residence and his non-marital Conniston property. The parties were held jointly responsible for the 2003 income taxes. As for the 2004 taxes, with the exception of the income generated by the Conniston property, the court ordered the wife solely responsible, reasoning that as a consequence of the parties' agreement to value everything as of December 21, 2003, the wife "effectively . . . owned everything as of that time and all the income from the rental properties (except Conniston), the business and everything is her income, from that date forward." The $49,161 removed from the accounts by the husband during the pendency of the divorce was charged to him in the equitable distribution scheme.[1] The $35,000 paid the husband, the mortgage payments on the Carambola residence, and $15,000 in attorney's and accountant's fees incurred by the husband, all of which were paid by the wife under the mediated agreement, were also charged to the husband. The $80,000 the husband was alleged to have taken from the safe and a $5,000 boat deposit that was lost were charged to the husband. After making these distributions, the wife had received $171,387 more than the husband; the judge required the wife to *821 write the husband a check for this amount.
In this appeal, the husband challenges (1) the trial court's valuation of the business, arguing the judge engaged in an impermissible "averaging" of the values testified to by the experts; (2) the trial court's decision to charge the entire amount of the Carambola mortgage payments to him and simultaneous failure to charge the wife with the mortgage payments on the Cozumel property; (3) the trial court's decision to charge him with the $35,000 and the $49,161, which he claims were used for support during the dissolution; (4) the trial court's failure to distribute the profits from the Conniston property to him; and (5) the trial court's charging him with the $15,000 in attorney's and accountant's fees and simultaneous failure to charge the wife with similar fees she incurred. We reject the first of the husband's claims, finding that the valuation assigned to the business by the trial court is supported by competent, substantial evidence and was not the result of improper "averaging" of the experts' values. See Matajek v. Skowronska, 927 So.2d 981, 986 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006) (recognizing "there must be competent, substantial evidence supporting the court's findings on valuation for marital assets"). We also reject the husband's claim of error in the trial court's failure to equitably distribute the profits of the Conniston property. First, based on the evidence at trial, the income from the Conniston property could have properly been treated as marital. See § 61.075(5)(b)3., Fla. Stat. (stating that income from nonmarital assets will be treated as nonmarital "unless the income was treated, used, or relied upon by the parties as a marital asset"). Second, none of the evidence at trial suggested that the profit had not been depleted during the pendency of the dissolution. See, e.g.,
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943 So. 2d 818, 2006 WL 2956389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheehan-v-sheehan-fladistctapp-2007.