Zegary Allen v. Joyce Bogan

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 2026
Docket369719
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zegary Allen v. Joyce Bogan (Zegary Allen v. Joyce Bogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zegary Allen v. Joyce Bogan, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

ZEGARY ALLEN, UNPUBLISHED April 15, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellee, 12:33 PM

v No. 369719 Genesee Circuit Court JOYCE BOGAN, LC No. 19-329068-DO

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: TREBILCOCK, P.J., and BOONSTRA and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals by right the Genesee Circuit Court’s order dividing defendant’s pension benefits and the equity in the marital home following the court’s judgment of divorce that dissolved her marriage to plaintiff. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff and defendant married in 1992. When defendant accepted plaintiff’s marriage proposal about a year and a half earlier, she believed that plaintiff made a good salary because plaintiff had told her that he was in charge of a $1 million budget as a bank’s purchasing agent. At that time, defendant had a bachelor’s and two master’s degrees, and she earned about $40,000 to $50,000 as a special education teacher at a high school. During their engagement, plaintiff told defendant that he had filed for bankruptcy and did not have any credit. Defendant accepted this news because she knew that plaintiff had a good job, and plaintiff was “very evasive” about answering her questions about the implications of his bankruptcy. Plaintiff maintained at the bench trial1 that he had filed for bankruptcy, even after defendant’s counsel impeached that testimony with a certified record from the United States Bankruptcy Court of the Eastern District of Michigan showing that there was no history of bankruptcy proceedings in his name.

1 The trial court held a bench trial on issues relating to property division. It later held a jury trial with respect to certain tort claims.

-1- After their marriage in 1992, plaintiff moved in with defendant at a house that defendant already owned. In 1993, their son, Jameson Bogan, was born. In 1995, they moved into what then became the marital home. Plaintiff and defendant picked out the marital home together, and defendant used the proceeds from the sale of her previous house as a down payment. When they applied for a loan, defendant provided all her financial information, but plaintiff suddenly said, “just her,” so the financing was only in defendant’s name. When they had a meeting to sign the note for the mortgage, plaintiff again said, “just her,” so only defendant signed the mortgage paperwork. Defendant made the mortgage payments exclusively from her own bank account, although plaintiff once contributed $800 toward a payment when defendant was temporarily out of work while recovering from a surgery. The mortgage was eventually paid off in 2017.

Plaintiff worked as a purchasing agent and later as a manager of a purchasing department for a bank, until the bank eliminated his position in 2000. The tax returns that he filed jointly with defendant showed that he made an average of about $50,000 per year in that position. He testified that he gave defendant unlimited access to write checks from his bank account for bills and other household expenses, but defendant testified that plaintiff would buy groceries when he got paid and that he then set a limit of between $400 and $600 that defendant was allowed to spend every two weeks. Defendant’s paycheck offset the cost of utilities, food, clothing, gas, home maintenance, and part of Jameson’s college expenses. When plaintiff lost his job, he received a severance payment of about $108,000, which was classified as a distribution from a retirement account on plaintiff’s tax forms. Plaintiff put those funds into several different investment accounts, but Jameson testified that plaintiff told him that the investments “did not go well” and that he lost the money. By 2018, there was less than $10,000 remaining, and by the date of the bench trial in August 2022, there was nothing left. Defendant stated that plaintiff never told her about the $108,000 and that she first learned of it during the divorce. She signed the tax forms that reported the income, but she did not look at the numbers because she trusted plaintiff’s statements that he did not receive any pension or severance payment.

After losing his job at the bank, plaintiff also recovered a settlement of about $30,000 to $50,000 from civil rights litigation, and he testified that he and defendant used about $5,000 from those funds to vacation in the Bahamas. Defendant testified that the trip to the Bahamas was a honeymoon funded by monetary gifts from their wedding guests, not from plaintiff’s funds. But she did remember that plaintiff gave her $5,000 from those funds and that he paid for a different vacation, a family cruise for defendant, their son, and plaintiff’s family. Plaintiff never told defendant what he did with the rest of the money.

Plaintiff eventually obtained new employment with Securitas Security Services as a security guard for General Motors. Defendant alleged that plaintiff wanted to seek unemployment benefits before he sought new work, but plaintiff denied that allegation and stated that he began work with Securitas immediately after losing his bank job. According to plaintiff, there were no job offerings for a purchasing agent, so he took the first job that he could find. His income as a security guard was only about half as much as what he had earned as a purchasing agent. Regardless of any changes in his income, defendant testified that plaintiff imposed the same limits on her spending from his account. Defendant expected plaintiff to only keep the security job until he could go back to banking, but plaintiff remained a security guard until he retired in 2012. Defendant said that plaintiff turned down any opportunity to work overtime and advised her and Jameson not to answer the phone if his work called.

-2- Plaintiff testified that defendant encouraged the decision to retire, telling him to “quit that damn job” because they did not need to work after defendant was approved for social security disability benefits. But defendant stated that she would never have asked him to retire because “he was not holding up his end of the finances,” and defendant had been working three jobs to make ends meet. As of the date of the bench trial, plaintiff’s only income was about $20,000 per year from social security disability benefits. He expected to remain retired because he was 72 years old and had high blood pressure, “borderline diabetes,” and arthritis. But his income was not enough to cover all his expenses, so he had to pay a lot of his bills with credit cards.

Defendant retired a few months before plaintiff in 2012, and her yearly income as of 2021 was about $68,000 from her social security and pension distributions. She did not want to retire because she was trying to help Jameson with college expenses, but she was forced into retirement after she had a stroke. She also had a medical history that put her at a high risk for an aneurysm, and there were other incidents before her retirement in which she experienced stroke-like symptoms. She testified that when she retired, she and plaintiff decided together that they would elect not to have surviving spouse benefits on her pension in exchange for a higher monthly payment because they needed more money to pay the bills.

On March 6, 2018, defendant discovered that one of the family dogs was critically ill. Defendant, plaintiff, and Jameson took the dog to the emergency veterinarian. When defendant checked into the office, she learned that she was approved for a $4,000 line of credit for veterinary expenses. Plaintiff misunderstood this to mean that defendant was about to pay $4,000 for the dog’s treatment, and he began yelling and cursing at defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
Zegary Allen v. Joyce Bogan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zegary-allen-v-joyce-bogan-michctapp-2026.