Williams v. Williams

905 So. 2d 820, 2004 WL 2251619
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedOctober 7, 2004
Docket2020879 and 2030105
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 905 So. 2d 820 (Williams v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Williams, 905 So. 2d 820, 2004 WL 2251619 (Ala. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 822

Amanda Denise Williams ("the wife") has filed two appeals arising from the same litigation.1 The appeal in case number 2020879 is from an April 1, 2003, judgment, as amended on May 23, 2003 ("the divorce judgment"), divorcing the wife from Thomas Timothy Williams ("the husband"). The appeal in case number 2030105 is from a September 23, 2003, order of the trial court modifying the custody and visitation rights of the parties.

The first appeal presents issues as to the trial court's division of property, its decision not to award alimony to the wife, and the award of visitation rights to the husband. We affirm the divorce judgment insofar as it relates to the visitation rights of the husband, but we reverse that judgment with respect to the issue of the property division and alimony. We dismiss the latter appeal because the trial court was *Page 823 without jurisdiction to enter the September 2003 order.

I. The Appeal in Case No. 2020879

The parties were married on February 18, 1995, in Dale County. The husband is a farmer. It is undisputed that the husband began fanning by helping his father, Joe Williams (sometimes hereinafter referred to as "Mr. Williams"), who has enjoyed a long and successful farming career. The evidence is in conflict as to the exact nature of the current relationship between the husband and Mr. Williams insofar as their farming operations are concerned; however, there is substantial evidence indicating that the husband continues to work closely with Mr. Williams.

Before the husband and the wife were married, the husband's mother, Faye Williams ("Mrs. Williams"), had sole bookkeeping responsibility for the Williamses' farming operations. Mrs. Williams testified that she was the bookkeeper for the farming operations and that she ran errands and worked in the house. Accordingly, Mrs. Williams considered herself a full "partner" in the farming operations.

After the parties were married, the wife assisted Mrs. Williams with, among other things, the bookkeeping, writing checks for the husband's expenses, and helping prepare the parties' tax returns. Before the marriage, the wife had been employed for several years with Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan, Alabama, as an accountant. The wife was already familiar with the responsibilities of a farmer's wife, because her father is also a farmer in the same community. The husband, according to his own testimony, has a learning disability that makes it difficult, if not impossible, for him to do the bookkeeping himself.

The wife testified that she also assisted with "outdoor" farm work full-time from September 1995 to January 1996. At that time, the wife began employment as a loan administrator with Regions Bank, through which she obtained family health-insurance coverage for herself and the husband. The wife testified that, in addition to doing the farm's bookkeeping, she continued to provide assistance with outdoor farm work during her lunch hour, after work, and even during vacations from her bank job.

As evidence of the success of their farming operations, the husband and wife were named as the "Top Farm Family" among Alabama peanut farmers by the Alabama Farmers Federation in 1996. The parties presented conflicting evidence at trial as to whether the fanning operation was conducted, either in whole or in part, in a partnership with the husband's father.2 It is unclear what, if any, conclusion the trial court reached as to this issue in making its division of the parties' property; however, we do not find it necessary to resolve this issue in order to conclude, as discussed below, that the trial court's property division Was inequitable.

According to an appraisal obtained by the wife, the parties' farm equipment, excluding certain vehicles, was worth $122,250. According to evidence introduced by the husband, the farm equipment, had a total value of $128,750, including *Page 824 $14,750 in value attributable to the vehicles excluded from the wife's appraisal.

In July 2001, the parties bought approximately 19 acres of real property that had been owned by members of the husband's family for several generations, and, thereafter, they built and lived in a house on that property. The husband testified that the land had sentimental value to him. The house and the real property (hereinafter referred to as the "marital home") are owned jointly by the husband and the wife, and, until the husband mortgaged the marital home during the course of the divorce proceedings, the marital home had never been encumbered.

The wife's annual salary from her employment with Regions Bank — which had gradually increased from less than $20,000 to approximately $26,000 over the course of her employment — was directly deposited into a money-market account at a brokerage firm, A.G. Edwards and Sons, Inc. ("the A.G. Edwards account"), during the parties' marriage. The parties used this account to fund their farming operations. Because of the availability of the funds in the A.G. Edwards account, it was not necessary before 2002 for the parties to obtain what is commonly referred to as a "crop loan" or to otherwise borrow any moneys to support themselves or their farming operations. At the time of the divorce, there was $91,840.95 in the account.

In response to a motion by the wife, the trial court entered an order on September 30, 2002, allowing an appraisal of the marital home by a professional appraiser. The resulting appraisal, which was admitted into evidence at trial, set the value of the marital home at $224,300. The husband testified at trial, however, that the value of the marital home was only $208,000.3

The parties have one child, a daughter, who was born on December 27, 2001. Shortly after the birth of their daughter, the parties began fighting over the care and custody of the child, and the wife moved out of the marital home with the child, At some point, the husband began a relationship with another woman, but the parties dispute whether this was before or after the parties' separation, and it is not clear if this relationship contributed to the breakup of the parties' marriage. It is undisputed, however, that the husband began the relationship before the trial of this case.

On April 17, 2002, the wife filed a complaint for a legal separation. That same day, the trial court entered an order granting temporary custody of the child to the wife and prohibiting the husband from "transferring, concealing, encumbering, or otherwise disposing of personal and/or specific property mutually owned or leased by the parties."

The husband filed a motion requesting the trial court to grant him pendente lite visitation rights; that motion was granted. The husband was granted visitation with the child on Wednesday evenings and on alternating Saturdays and Sundays.

There were numerous delays in the litigation, and it eventually became necessary for the husband to find funds to support his 2002 farming operations. The trial court's April 17, 2002, order had prohibited the husband from accessing the funds in the AG Edwards account. Thus, on July 3, 2002, the husband obtained a $150,330 loan from First South Farm Credit ("First South"). To obtain the loan, however, the husband executed a mortgage on the parties' *Page 825

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Bluebook (online)
905 So. 2d 820, 2004 WL 2251619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-williams-alacivapp-2004.