Tomal v. Anderson

426 P.3d 915
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 2018
Docket7282 S-16720/S-16760
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 426 P.3d 915 (Tomal v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomal v. Anderson, 426 P.3d 915 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Alaska has long recognized unique legal standards for property disputes between two people ending a domestic partnership. Our case law has treated the end of a domestic partnership as coextensive with both the end of a marriage-like relationship and the end of the partners' cohabitation, as has generally been the case in the appeals we have decided. But this appeal presents the novel factual circumstance of a couple who continued living together after their marriage-like relationship ended. We must therefore clarify several aspects of our domestic partnership case law to decide this appeal, including when and how a domestic partnership terminates, when post-partnership payments must be reimbursed, and how the trial court should award attorney's fees. Applying these clarified standards, we conclude that most of the trial court's property distribution was correct but that some minor aspects were in error. We therefore remand for the trial court to revise its property division.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

DeWayne Tomal and Jeanette Anderson began living together in Wrangell in 1998. The following year Tomal bought beachfront land off the Zimovia highway (the Zimovia property); they began working to make it their permanent home. Anderson initially worked full time making the property habitable but later was sporadically employed, while Tomal sometimes worked on the property and sometimes earned money from other employment. The couple eventually restored a cabin on the property to serve as their primary home; they also docked Anderson's float house at the beach.

Tomal began experiencing financial difficulties shortly after he and Anderson began living at the Zimovia property. They took out a loan secured by the property to pay some of his debts, and Tomal granted the property to himself and Anderson as tenants-in-common to secure financing. Anderson then took over managing the couple's finances; her practice was to transfer money from the couple's joint bank account into her personal savings account, where the funds earned interest, then back into the joint account to pay bills. Tomal and Anderson each deposited their earnings into the joint account and Anderson used the commingled funds to pay joint expenses like the mortgage, credit cards, and utilities.

Tomal took a salaried construction job in 2005; he began accruing a pension and continued contributing his earnings to the joint account. His work required him to live away from the Zimovia property during the construction season, usually from March to November. Anderson continued living and working at the property.

In July 2011 Tomal returned to the property during the construction season and discovered Anderson's money transfers from their joint account to her personal account. Tomal confronted Anderson and asked her not to transfer money into her personal account. Tomal then opened a separate bank account and began transferring money from the joint account into his separate account. Tomal also began depositing his earnings into and paying bills from the separate account.

*921 By the end of 2011 there was little money left in the joint account.

Early in 2012 Anderson told Tomal that she would no longer sleep in the same house as him. When Tomal returned from his seasonal construction work in the following winters, Anderson slept in the float house while he was home. Anderson remained in the cabin in 2015, after living in the float house in the winter became too difficult to manage. The parties cooked their own meals, did their own laundry, and engaged in separate employment while living in the same home.

Anderson obtained counsel in 2015 and proposed partitioning the Zimovia property. Tomal did not agree to the partition. Tomal filed suit against Anderson in 2016; he claimed that she was liable for her share of the Zimovia property expenses he had been paying and for unauthorized expenditures she had made with his earnings and credit card. Anderson denied making any unauthorized expenditures with Tomal's money and counterclaimed for a domestic partnership property division.

The superior court held a three-day bench trial in February and March 2017. Tomal and Anderson both testified about their relationship, living arrangements, finances, and property. Tomal also presented testimony from a pension-valuation expert setting three different values for his pension based on when the relationship might have terminated, an accounting expert who analyzed the couple's financial transactions, and a real estate appraisal expert who valued the Zimovia property.

The court issued a written decision in April dividing the property. The court found that Tomal had not proved his misappropriation claims and that the parties were in a domestic partnership requiring equal division of property. The court found that the domestic partnership terminated in 2012, when Anderson told Tomal she no longer would sleep in the same house as him. The court also resolved various valuation disputes and included about $50,000 of Tomal's pension as partnership property. The court awarded Tomal the Zimovia property, valued at $275,000, and ordered him to make Anderson an equalization payment of a little less than $100,000. The court declined to credit Tomal for post-separation property expense payments, reasoning that "as cotenants, [the parties] continued to both contribute to the household in roughly equal fashion with ... Tomal making the necessary payments to maintain the household and ... Anderson doing other regular maintenance and upkeep."

Tomal sought reconsideration of the denial of post-separation expenses, and he sought prevailing party attorney's fees and costs. 1 Anderson asked that the court amend its judgment to grant her the Zimovia property, and she sought to enjoin Tomal from entering the property, citing a fear of domestic violence. Anderson attached a police report to support the reasonableness of her fear, which Tomal moved to strike as hearsay. Anderson also sought attorney's fees and litigation costs.

The court denied Tomal's reconsideration motion and Anderson's motions to amend the judgment and for a preliminary injunction. The court admitted the police report as evidence but excluded the hearsay statements it contained, except for one statement by a police officer. The court declined to award Tomal prevailing party attorney's fees, reasoning that the "divorce exception" applied. 2 The court instead awarded Anderson just over $500 in litigation costs in light of her "relative economic disadvantage" and nothing *922 in attorney's fees because she did not provide sufficient factual support for an award.

Both parties appeal.

III. DISCUSSION

This appeal presents several novel issues of domestic partnership law. Anderson appeals the trial court's finding that the parties' domestic partnership terminated in 2012, requiring us to clarify when a domestic partnership terminates.

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Bluebook (online)
426 P.3d 915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomal-v-anderson-alaska-2018.