Stephanie J. Pate v. Samuel D. Pate

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 18, 2006
DocketW2005-00883-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Stephanie J. Pate v. Samuel D. Pate (Stephanie J. Pate v. Samuel D. Pate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephanie J. Pate v. Samuel D. Pate, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON February 22, 2006 Session

STEPHANIE J. PATE v. SAMUEL D. PATE

An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-001443-03 Robert L. Childers, Judge

No. W2005-00883-COA-R3-CV - Filed July 18, 2006

This is a divorce involving the classification of property as “marital” or “separate.” The parties were married in 1986. In 1998, the wife received a substantial inheritance. She used a portion of the inheritance to pay off the mortgage on the marital home, to purchase undeveloped property adjacent to the marital home, and to purchase a vehicle. Later, the parties separated and the marital home was sold. From the proceeds of the sale, the wife received her separate contribution to the property, as well as half of the profit earned on the property. She used her proceeds to purchase another home. The husband’s name was on the title of the new home, but he was not an obligor on the mortgage. The parties made an unsuccessful attempt to reconcile, and subsequently filed cross petitions for divorce. They resolved all issues, except for the classification and division of certain property that was titled in both parties’ names but purchased with the wife’s inheritance. After a hearing, the trial court found that the wife did not intend to transmute any of her inheritance into marital property. Based on this finding, the trial court determined that the parties had already equitably divided their interest in the marital property, and that there was no property left to divide. From this order, the husband now appeals. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

Michelle L. Betserai, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant, Samuel D. Pate.

Bradley W. Eskins, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Stephanie J. Pate.

OPINION

Plaintiff/Appellee Stephanie J. Pate (“Wife”) and Defendant/Appellant Samuel D. Pate (“Husband”) were married in October 1986 when they were both seventeen years old. Husband did not graduate from high school, but he obtained a GED (general education development) degree. He supported the family by operating a carpet store and by performing construction work. The parties had two children, Matthew Doyle Pate (born September 11, 1989), and Zachary Marshall Pate (born April 12, 1995). During the marriage, Wife was a stay-at-home mother, and she attended nursing school part-time. In 2001, Wife graduated from nursing school.

In 1996, the parties bought a home in Adamsville, Tennessee, at 980 Old Morris Chapel Drive (“Adamsville home”), where they lived until September 2001. The Adamsville home was purchased by using a $10,000 gift to Wife from Wife’s grandfather, Marshall H. Norton (“Grandfather”), as a down payment. The home was titled in the names of both Husband and Wife.

In April 1998, Grandfather died, leaving Wife approximately $325,000. Wife opened separate financial accounts in her name, used exclusively for the money she received from Grandfather.

Funds from Wife’s inheritance were used to make three significant purchases in 1998 and 1999. In December 1998, Wife used $59,900 of her inheritance to pay off the mortgage on the Adamsville home. She also purchased a 1999 Dodge Durango by trading in the parties’ 1995 Jeep Cherokee, and by using additional funds from her inheritance. The Durango was titled in the names of both Husband and Wife. In 1999, the parties purchased an unimproved lot adjacent to the Adamsville home with $8,300 of Wife’s inheritance. This property was also titled in the names of both Husband and Wife.

In July 2001, the parties separated, and Husband rented an apartment in Jackson, Tennessee. In January 2002, the parties sold the Adamsville home. Out of the proceeds of this sale, Wife received a check for $86,960.01; this total represented Wife’s investment in the property from the $10,000 gift to her from Grandfather, her inheritance monies, plus half of the profit from the sale. Husband also received a $14,000 check, which was half of the profit on the sale of the home. In September 2001, in anticipation of the sale of the Adamsville home, Wife purchased a home at 215 Oak Pointe Drive (“Lexington home”) in Lexington, Tennessee, taking out a mortgage solely in her name. The title of the Lexington home, however, listed the names of both Husband and Wife. After the closing on the sale of the Adamsville home, Wife invested her portion of the proceeds from the sale of the Adamsville home in the Lexington home.

After the separation, the parties attempted to reconcile. During this time period, Husband lived part of the time with Wife in the Lexington home and part of the time in his apartment. The reconciliation attempt was unsuccessful.

In September 2002, the Lexington home was sold. The purchaser paid for it with a check for approximately $165,000 in the names of both Husband and Wife. Husband endorsed the check to Wife, and Wife retained the proceeds. She used the funds to purchase a home at 299 Cedar Post Cove (“Collierville home”) in Collierville, Tennessee. The Collierville home was titled solely in Wife’s name, and Wife obtained a mortgage solely in her name. Husband never lived in the Collierville home.

-2- On March 14, 2003, Wife filed a complaint for divorce in the trial court below. On September 10, 2003, Husband filed an answer and a counterclaim for divorce. Eventually, the parties were able to resolve all issues except for the classification and equitable division of property. On February 28, 2005, the trial court conducted a hearing on that issue.

Both Husband and Wife testified at the hearing. In Wife’s testimony, she used a chart she had prepared which outlined how she treated the money she inherited from Grandfather. Wife explained that she put some of the funds in certificates of deposit, put some of it in two money market accounts, and also used the monies to pay for some of her college expenses.

Wife traced the funds from her inheritance to the purchase of her three homes – the Adamsville home, the Lexington home, and the Collierville home. She noted that the $10,000 gift to her from Grandfather was used as a down payment for the Adamsville home, and that the balance of the mortgage was paid in December 1998 with $59,900 of her inheritance from Grandfather. Wife testified that she and Husband separated in July 2001, and that they had “discussed and had an agreement that the principal, the money that I put into this home from my inheritance, was my separate property and when this house sold the profit off the home was divided between myself” and Husband. She stated that “it was understood . . . that the principal, the initial separate property . . . was mine – or was separate and the profit off this sale, we did agree to divide that.” The Adamsville home was sold in January 2002, and Wife introduced into evidence a copy of an $86,960.81 check she received from the sale of the Adamsville home.

Wife stated that she used her portion of the proceeds from the sale of the Adamsville home to purchase the Lexington home. She said that the Lexington home was purchased in September 2001, at a time when she and Husband were separated but before they had sold the Adamsville home. Wife obtained the loan for the Lexington home in her name only, and Husband made no payments on the loan. Wife acknowledged that Husband’s name was on the title of the Lexington home.

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Bluebook (online)
Stephanie J. Pate v. Samuel D. Pate, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephanie-j-pate-v-samuel-d-pate-tennctapp-2006.