Sivils v. Sivils

526 S.W.3d 375, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 906, 2017 WL 4049529
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 2017
DocketNo. SD 34633
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 526 S.W.3d 375 (Sivils v. Sivils) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sivils v. Sivils, 526 S.W.3d 375, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 906, 2017 WL 4049529 (Mo. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WILLIAM W. FRANCIS, JR., J.

Kent A. Sivils (“Husband”) appeals the “Judgment and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage” (“Judgment”) entered by the trial court.1 In two points on appeal, Husband asserts the trial court erred in failing to make a proper division of marital property. Finding no merit to Husband’s claims, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural History2

We recite the facts of this matter in accord with the principle that we view the facts in the light most favorable to the judgment. We credit all evidence and reasonable inferences in favor of the judgment, and disregard unfavorable facts and inferences. Landewee v. Landewee, 515 S.W.3d 691, 694 (Mo. banc 2017).

Husband and Patricia J. Sivils (“Wife”) were married on March 16, 1996. Two children were born of the marriage: daughter K.M.S., now age 20, and son C.A.S., now age 15.

After leaving the Navy, Wife3 obtained a radiology license and began employment at Ferrell-Duncan Clinic in Springfield as an x-ray mammographer in 1994. As of 2015, her yearly income was $69,633.00. Through that employment, Wife contributed to a retirement account with a balance of approximately $195,000,00, at the time of trial.

Husband held various jobs during the marriage, including auto body work, and heating and air conditioning work. At the time of trial, he was doing auto body work and . had been employed for a year and a half. His wages for 2015 totaled $38,064.69.

In the course of the marriage, Husband displayed bellicose and violent behaviors toward Wife. On at least two occasions, Husband hit Wife. Husband would go on “verbal rampages” against Wife, often in front of the children. In such instances, the children would become scared, run to their rooms, and put their sheets over their heads. Husband would also berate Wife in public, using coarse and derisive language.

When C.A.S. was two, he began sleeping with Husband and Wife in the marital bed.4 At this time, Husband was already primarily sleeping in the basement and had “disconnected” himself from .the rest of the family. Husband would work out in the garage until- the early morning hours and then would “crash out downstairs.” When C.A.S. began sleeping in the marital bed, Husband permanently removed himself from the marital bedroom and moved into the basement.

After Husband moved to the basement, he had little contact with the children. ,He attended very few school events or extracurricular activities, leaving the parenting duties to Wife. Both children were involved in competitive dance, particularly C.A.S. Wife took the children to regular dance practices and competitions. Husband had no substantive involvement with C.A.S., particularly with his dance activities. 'He also failed to attend parent-teacher conferences and school open houses for C.A.S. Husband also contributed very little to the children’s support, leaving Wife the burden of meeting the children’s needs. Wife paid, among other expenses, costs associated with the children’s health and dental insurance, accidental insurance for C.A.S., and $465.00 per month for CAS.’s dance expenses.

In 2010, Husband was involved in a motorcycle accident when he collided with a FedEx truck. Husband sustained scrapes, bruises, and a broken wrist. Husband was released to return to work after a few weeks, but refused Wife’s requests do so because he “thought that if he didn’t go back to work," they “would get more money.”. From 2010 until 2014, Husband mowed a few lawns, did some side auto body repair work, and received some unemployment funds. Husband kept the money he made from mowing lawns and the auto body repair work for himself, and only deposited the .unemployment funds in the couple’s joint account.

During this time, Wife was paying all of the household expenses, relying heavily on credit cards’at Husband’s’urging. Husband insisted that once he received a settlement for his accident, the money would be used to pay off the credit cards. Wife incurred substantial credit card debt as a result. Husband also utilized credit cards, but used the cards for personal rather than family expenses, Husband’s parents occasionally deposited money into the couple’s joint bank account to help with expenses.

In March 2012, Husband settled the personal injury lawsuit arising out of the motorcycle accident, and received net settlement proceeds of $103,076.72. The funds were initially deposited in Husband and Wife’s joint account, pending a temporary hold until the funds could be released for joint use by the parties. However, Husband’s father persuaded a senior vice president at the bank to remove the hold, and Husband then wrote a check to his mother for $25,000.00, and a check to his father for $60,000.00. Husband’s mother in turn wrote a check for $56,000.00, and used it to open a checking account in her name, but the account was for Husband’s exclusive use. Husband’s purpose in having the account opened was to prevent Wife from having any access to these funds, and so ■that Husband could conduct whatever financial transactions he wanted without Wife’s input or interference.

When Wife discovered that the hold on the account had been surreptitiously lifted and a significant portion of the funds removed, she moved the remaining $23,000.00 to her own separate account. She used those funds for household expenses, and expenses relating to the children.

Because of Husband’s actions, in 2012, the parties stopped operating from a joint checking account. Wife provided Husband with a list of expenses relating to the children, and requested Husband’s assistance in paying them. Husband refused, and even declined to contribute toward the children’s clothes and school lunches. He also decided, after he obtained his settlement, that he would no longer contribute any money toward groceries because Wife and his children “wasted so much food that I—I just couldn’t deal with that anymore[.]”

Husband initially paid some marital bills out of the $56,000.00, including mortgage payments on the marital home, utilities, and credit cards. Husband also paid for Wife’s car insurance in exchange for Wife keeping Husband on her healthcare insurance. However, at one point, Husband refused to pay the propane bill, and the propane company locked the propane tank, which left the family with only a pellet stove as a source of heat for the entire house.

Husband then squandered a significant amount of the settlement funds on personal entertainment such as online gambling, as well as betting on horse races and football games through a bookie.

Also in 2012, Husband threatened to kill ■wife. Wife sought an ex parte order of protection, which she subsequently dropped.

After K.M.S.’s graduation from high school, Wife wished to take the children on a cruise. Husband refused to consent and sign the necessary paperwork for the children to obtain passports. He later suggested he would have consented if the children were to “grovel[ ] a little bit.”

In February 2014, Husband obtained a check for $1,200.00 from the couple’s joint investment account at Edward Jones.

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Bluebook (online)
526 S.W.3d 375, 2017 Mo. App. LEXIS 906, 2017 WL 4049529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sivils-v-sivils-moctapp-2017.