Wendellyn Kay Dane v. Kris Alan Dane

2016 WY 38, 368 P.3d 914, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 40, 2016 WL 1039188
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2016
DocketS-15-0171
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2016 WY 38 (Wendellyn Kay Dane v. Kris Alan Dane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wendellyn Kay Dane v. Kris Alan Dane, 2016 WY 38, 368 P.3d 914, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 40, 2016 WL 1039188 (Wyo. 2016).

Opinion

DAVIS, Jfistice.

[11] After slightly more than three years of marriage, Wendellyn Dane (Wife) filed for divorce from Kris Dane (Husband). She appeals from the decree entered in that case. We affirm,

ISSUES

[12] Wife identifies three issues, which we condense into two and restate as follows:

I. Did the district court abuse its discretion in denying Wife's motion, to amend her complaint to add a promissory estoppel claim, and in failing to enforce the alleged promise in its distribution of the couple's property?
II. + Did the district court abuse its discretion by d1v1d1ng the marital property as it dld?

FACTS

[13] Husband and Wife first met in late 2008 when he decided to sell his condominium in Naples, Florida Wife was a real estate agent designated to handle the resale of units in the condominium project of which his property was a part. At the time, Husband was apprommately 61 years old, and Wife was 55.

14] After their initial contact they did not see each other again until April of 2009, when Wife telephoned Husband to ask if she could rent a room in his condo. She had sold her own home and was planning to leave her boyfriend, with whom she was sharing an apartment. Husband agreed to rent her a furnished room and a bathroom for $500 per month. 1

[T5] Within two months their relationship became romantic, and Wife no longer paid rent or contributed to household expenses. Over a period of two years, Husband took her golfing and on trips, and he paid approximately $8,000 in relation to her arrest for driving while intoxicated after drinking wine with a girlfriend one afternoon.

[46] During those two years, Husband began to consider retiring, winding down his day-to-day involvement in businesses in which he had an interest, and moving to a cooler area of the country. He first concentrated on mountainous areas in the eastern United States, and he took Wife on a trip to explore a variety of optlons "up and down the east coast." He liked several locations, but she did not, and they thereafter shifted their focus to states in the Rocky Mountains. Their research and the recommendatmns of others eventually led them to take a trip to Sheridan, Wyoming in February of 2011.

[T7] During that trip, Husband made an offer on a house. In early April, the couple 'moved to Sheridan, and Husband completed the purchase of that home. A month later, he closed on the sale of his Florida condominium. On July 9, 2011, the couple wed.

[18] Husband made the down payment on the Sheridan home from his personal funds, and because he and Wife were not yet married at the time, titled it only in his name. It was furnished almost entirely with items he had purchased for his condominium, and he made all the mortgage payments during the marriage. Husband also paid all household expenses and for all vehicles, because Wife brought few assets to the marriage and worked only sporadically at a real estate office in Sheridan. 2 Husband's income came from Social Security retirement benefits, from distributions related to his interests in two Florida business entities, and *917 from a structured stock. repurchase involving one. of those. entities. 3

[T 9] On September 5, 2014, after slightly more than three years of marriage, Husband told Wife he wanted a divorcee. Four days later she sued him for divorcee. On September 15, she filed a motion for- temporary support, for payment of her attorney fees and prospective expert witness fees, and for temporary possession of their house and a 2018 Ford truck. Husband answered the complaint on September 24.

{110} The district court scheduled a pretrial conference for February 26, 2015, and set trial for March 4, 2015. On December 18, 2014, it entered an. order on Wife's motion for temporary support. Wife was granted temporary possession of the marital home and the pickup truck, Husband was ordered to make all mortgage and loan payments on that property, and to pay all other expenses relating to them, except for fuel for the pickup truck, The court also i’equlred Husband to continue to pay Wife's health insurance premiums and $2,000 per month in temporary support starting on January 1, 2015. However, it denied Wife's request for payment of her attorney fees and held consideration of her request for payment of expert witness expenses in abeyance until after trial.

[T11] On January 21, 2015, Wife filed a motion to amend her complaint pursuant to W.R.C.P. 15 so as to add a cause of action for promissory estoppel. She claimed that, in February of 2011, Husband "told [her] if [she] moved to Wyoming with him and [sic] that he would take care of [her] the rest of [her] life, and that [she] wouldn't have to work because [they] would have lots of money 39

[T 12] At the February 12 hearing on the motion to amend, the district court found that Wife possessed all the information needed to raise the promissory estoppel claim no later than six days after filing her original complaint, and that allowing the amendment a little over two weeks prior to the trial date would unduly delay the trial. It also found that such a delay would prejudicially extend Husband's obligations under the court's temporary support order. However, it also ruled that it could. and would consider the circumstances of the parties' marriage-including the alleged promise-in equitably dividing their property. The court therefore concluded that justice did not require leave to amend the complaint, and it denied Wife's motion. It entered its order to that effect on March 4, 2015.

[T 18] On April 28, 2015, the district court entered its "Findings of Fact, 0011011131th of Law, and Decree of Divorce." To briefly summarize that 21-page document, the court found it significant that the parties had a relatively brief marriage, that Husband had retired nearly a year before first visiting Wyoming, that he had acquired the great majority of the assets whose benefits the parties enjoyed long before their marriage, and that Wife had not contributed to the value of those assets. Moreover, from about the time she moved into Husband's Florida condominium through trial, Wife had only negligible earnings and lived almost entirely on Husband's income.

[T 14] As for the alleged promise she described in the motion to amend her complaint, the court appears to have found Husband's version of his statements more credible. He testified to several conversations relating to a move to Wyoming. At one point, Wife said she would go only if they were engaged. In response, Husband bought her an engagement ring. Another time she expressed concern about whether they could afford to live in Wyoming. He replied that it would be cheaper to live in Wyoming than in Florida, and that they would have enough money so that she would not need to work during their marriage.

[115] The district court dlstrlbuted the couple's property and property-related obligations to the party who brought it into the marriage, if it was acquired before they married. If an asset was purchased during the marriage, it awarded it to the party whose *918 assets were used to purchase it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 WY 38, 368 P.3d 914, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 40, 2016 WL 1039188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendellyn-kay-dane-v-kris-alan-dane-wyo-2016.