Storey v. Storey

835 S.W.2d 593, 1992 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 17, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by171 cases

This text of 835 S.W.2d 593 (Storey v. Storey) 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
Storey v. Storey, 835 S.W.2d 593, 1992 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

FARMER, Judge.

Lenore Berry Ross Storey (wife) was awarded a divorce from Carl D. Storey, Jr. (husband) on the grounds of adultery. After reviewing the record, we adopt the following facts found by the trial court:

Lenore and Carl Storey married August 13, 1983, after a somewhat stormy romance wherein they were both married to other people when they started seeing each other. After both obtained a divorce from their then spouses, they married each other and began a marriage that has lasted approximately seven and one-half (7V2) years, the last year and one-half of which they have been separated. Mr. and Mrs. Storey immediately began to acquire marital property upon their marriage. They acquired an extensive array of personal property which is presently in storage with a lien upon it or which has been mostly dissipated by the parties at this point. Basically, the parties are broke financially except some personal property that has a lien on it for storage costs. Mr. Storey has taken bankruptcy on debts totaling 8.3 Million Dollars....
Prior to the parties’ marriage, Mr. Sto-rey had been in the real estate development business for a number of years and had a large net worth. Mrs. Storey started to work for Mr. Storey prior to their marriage and they became romantically involved in an adultrous [sic] relationship with each other. Both obtained a divorce from their spouses and ultimately married each other. Both Mr. and Mrs. Storey counseled each other on their pending divorce and settlements. After their marriage to each other, Mrs. Storey continued to work with Mr. Sto-rey and moved up to a management and decision making position in the business. The parties started acquiring assets as previously noted and began a lifestyle that few people enjoy or comprehend. Their social life was fast paced and extensive. Mrs. Storey served as Heart Gala Chairman which is one of Nashville’s premier social events each year. They purchased a home on Belle Meade Boulevard which is one of Nashville’s most desired residential addresses. They purchased an antebellum home in Galla-tin, Tennessee, a home in Spring Hill, Tennessee and a home in San Destín, *595 Florida. After purchasing the home on Belle Meade Boulevard for approximately $500,000, they expended another $750,-000 renovating the house. Testimony showed that Mr. Storey wanted to put forth a successful image and Mrs. Storey helped him obtain that goal. Later, Mr. Storey ran for President of the National Realtor’s Association and Mrs. Storey helped manage his campaign and did extensive travel and entertaining to assist him in that campaign. He lost the election by three votes.
Sometime during the campaign for the presidency of the National Realtor’s Association, Mr. Storey started an adult-rous [sic] relationship with another woman and has admitted to affairs with four women during this marriage. Testimony showed that at one time he was having an adultrous [sic] relationship with two women at the same time while still being married to Mrs. Storey. The parties had children from their former marriage, and at best the relationship with each other’s children was cool and tense. At about the time the campaign for President of the National Realtor’s Association was ending, financial problems started to beset the Storeys’ with the 1986 tax law starting to take effect. Mr. Storey had been heavily involved in real estate partnerships and using the depreciation write-offs to off-set income and started to lose those set-offs after the tax law change. Mr. Storey although having a large financial worth, was heavily financed and leveraged on his developments, and could not meet his financial obligations because of cash flow problems and the loss of the write-offs. Even after the divorce was started, Judge Muriel Robinson Rice had issued a restraining order for neither party to dissipate the assets of the estate, but several hundred thousand dollars were dissipated in the financial empire that was falling apart. There is a contempt petition pending on that matter and that will be addressed in a subsequent paragraph. ... At the time this divorce matter was heard, the parties had lost the home on Belle Meade Boulevard, the Spring Hill home, the San Destín home and the home in Gallatin is in foreclosure at the present time.
The parties have accumulated an estate which will be addressed in a subsequent paragraph.... It is uncontested that both parties have contributed to the marital estate and made investments which contributed to the marital estate, and it is also uncontradicted that the marital estate was accumulated after the marriage of the parties. The separate property owned by the parties will be ruled on in a separate paragraph.... For all intents and purposes the only property owned by the parties at this time is some furniture and personal property most of which is in storage with a lien upon it.
The Court does not deem it necessary and in the best interest of these parties to recite by chapter and verse all the details of the testimony heard by the Court, suffice it to say that the marriage has deteriorated to such degree that these parties are no longer living together as man and wife. Mrs. Storey is staying with a friend and Mr. Storey is renting an apartment at the Belle Meade Towers on a month to month basis.

Husband appeals from the trial court’s order and presents the following issues for review:

1. The Trial Court erred by awarding periodic alimony to a 43 year old wife following a five and one-half year marriage where no legal basis for alimony is shown and when the monthly alimony exceeds the Husband’s income.
2. The Trial Court erred by awarding to Mrs. Storey $58,158.00 for her attorney’s fees when no legal basis for the award was shown and when Mrs. Storey was awarded assets of $394,000.00 and Mr. Storey has no assets.
3. The Trial Court erred in awarding Mrs. Storey all of the marital property.
4. The Trial Court erred by ordering Mr. Storey to pay the storage costs for personal property awarded to Mrs. Sto-rey.
*596 5. The Trial Court erred in finding Mr. Storey guilty of contempt for failing to pay support, and in awarding Mrs. Storey a judgment, when the past due support had been paid.
6. The Trial Court erred in finding Mr. Storey guilty of contempt for dissipating the assets of the marriage in violation of a Temporary Restraining Order prohibiting him from spending “the parties’ assets ... except in the ordinary course of business.”

I. Alimony

The trial court ordered husband to pay wife $2,500.00 per month until she dies or remarries. Husband argues that the trial court erred in awarding the wife alimony of any nature and, in particular, alimony in futuro. The husband further argues that, even if an alimony award was proper, the trial court erred by not considering the possibility of rehabilitative alimony as required by T.C.A. § 36-5-101(d).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
835 S.W.2d 593, 1992 Tenn. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storey-v-storey-tennctapp-1992.