Subsequent to their divorce, the family court equitably distributed the marital property of Debra and Richard Fields. Debra Fields appeals the court’s valuation of two family corporations and the exclusion from the marital estate of certain corporate distributions to Richard Fields. We affirm. 1
FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Debra J. Fields (Wife) and Richard H. Fields (Husband) were married in 1985 and separated in 1996. On January 31, 1997 Wife filed for divorce. The family court entered a pendente lite consent order at the time, and the parties later agreed to sever their divorce from other marital issues. On December 12, 1997, the family court granted Husband and Wife a divorce on the ground of one year’s continuous separation. Thereafter, on February 10, 1998, the court issued an order approving the parties’ “Custody and Visitation Agreement” pertaining to their three minor children.
The following day, Husband and Wife attempted to resolve outstanding financial matters in an in-court settlement agreement. An integral provision in the agreement stipulated that Wife’s father, along with a business partner, would personally guarantee Wife’s purchase of Husband’s ownership interest in three family corporations. On March 16 the family court approved the agreement, but vacated its order three days later when Wife’s father refused to sign the note necessary for Wife to purchase Husband’s stock shares. As a result, on
The principal dispute before the family court involved the equitable distribution of stock in three business interests informally known as Dove, Sparrow, and LFI. The stock in each business, all sub-chapter S corporations, was held in the name of Husband. Consequently, Husband owned 18% of Dove (18 shares), 40% of Sparrow (20,000 shares) and 3% of LFI (20 shares). 2 For most of the parties’ marriage Dove, the corporate parent of several temporary labor franchises, employed Husband as a vice president. Pursuant to a management agreement, Dove in turn controlled Sparrow’s operations. During the marital litigation, however, on October 31, 1997 Dove fired Husband. Subsequently, Wife’s father, Dove’s CEO and only shareholder besides Husband, ousted Husband from the corporation’s board of directors.
After several interim orders, the family court issued a final order on November 12, 1998. In fashioning an equitable distribution, the court awarded 53% of the marital assets to Husband, who by prior consent obtained sole custody of the parties’ minor children. . Regarding the disputed corporate assets, the court awarded Husband the shares in Sparrow (valued at $328,000) and LFI (valued at $100,000), while Wife received the 18% interest in Dove (valued at $415,710). Wife filed a timely motion to reconsider and argued, inter alia, that the family court erred in its valuations of the Dove and Sparrow stock and in failing to include certain corporate distributions in the marital estate. Following a hearing and arguments from counsel, the court denied the motion. This appeal followed.
LAW/ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
In appeals from the family court, this Court retains jurisdiction to find facts in accordance with our own view of a
The family court has wide discretion in determining how marital property is to be distributed.
Murphy v. Murphy,
I. Date of Stock Valuation
Wife first argues the family court erred in valuing the Dove and Sparrow stock as of December 31, 1997 rather than January 31, 1997, the date she filed her initial complaint for divorce. This issue is without merit.
In general, marital property subject to equitable distribution is valued as of the date marital litigation is filed or commenced.
See McElveen v. McElveen,
The family court valued the Dove and Sparrow stock as of December 31, 1997, the closest date to the parties’ December 12,1997 divorce for which corporate information was available. Because both stocks increased in value from December 1996 to December 1997, the family court was well within its discretion in deciding to value them on the later date. See id.
II. Valuation of Dove Stock
Wife next argues the family court erred in valuing the Dove stock. We disagree.
The family court has broad discretion in valuing marital property such that this Court will affirm when the findings below are supported by the evidence.
See Smith v. Smith,
At trial, Husband and Wife both presented expert testimony on the value of each stock.
3
During his direct examination
When I start a company, I issue myself [ ] fifty-one percent (51%) of the shares. The other forty-nine percent (49%) of the shares, as far as I am concerned, are valueless, because I determine whether they get a dividend or not. I have complete control—
In contrast, Husband’s expert Dennis Dabney emphatically stated that the appropriate method of valuation depended on who was holding the stock: “The value will vary ... depending on who holds [each] stock, and their relative position to the other shareholders in the corporation.” In essence, noted Dabney, the value for a stock accompanied by corporate control is “much, much more” than the value of the stock when its holder is in the minority. Dabney then explained that a “minority discount” usually is applied to offset, the lack of corporate control:
If I’m valuing a thirty percent (30%) [interest] in a corporation, I want to know who the shareholders are and how they’re aligned. And if they’re not aligned, and they’re all representing their own independent interests], then that thirty percent (30%) interest in that corporation is not worth thirty percent (30%) of the whole. It’s worth thirty percent of the whole times some minority discount for lack of control ... [or] direction of the corporation.
Dabney further concluded Wife should receive the Dove stock because her father, as controlling shareholder, could financially penalize Husband in a tax squeeze-out if the stock were awarded to him. 5 In fact, the family court found that Wife’s father had subjected Husband to such a maneuver during the course of the instant litigation in an attempt to gain control and complete ownership of the companies in dispute. By again “squeezing” Husband in this manner, Wife’s father eventually could force Husband to sell his minority interest for less than fair market value. Indeed, Wife’s expert, Vondrak, testified he does it “all the time to depress my partner’s stock so I can buy it cheaper.” Finally, even Vondrak assumed Husband “would be an adversarial eighteen percent (18%) holder for the rest of the term — for the rest of the life of the company.”
Wife claims the family court erred in accepting Dabney’s “speculative” opinions regarding the Dove stock because there was no way to tell what her father would do in the future. The record, however, clearly demonstrates several attempts by Wife’s father to financially penalize Husband, including firing him from his job, removing him as a director of Dove, and giving himself the right of first refusal on any transfer of
In reaching its decision, the family court engaged in a detailed examination and thorough analysis of minority ownership as it relates to the control and marketability of corporate stock. Both its finding that the Dove stock would be worth more in Wife’s hands and its conclusion that it should be awarded to Wife are well supported by the record evidence. We therefore find no abuse of discretion in the family court’s distribution of this asset. 7
Finally, Wife contends the family court erred in failing to include as marital assets corporate distributions to Husband from LFI and Sparrow during the course of the marital litigation. To the contrary, our review of the final order reveals the court in fact identified and included these distributions in the equitable apportionment of the marital estate. Indeed, the order below specifically addressed the issue:
[Wife] claims that certain distributions from the corporations during these proceedings should be taken into account in the equitable division. The Court has taken those distributions into account as they were in the nature of income which [is] offset by payment of taxes and other obligations, all of which have been considered by the Court.
Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
AFFIRMED. 8
Notes
. We decide this case without oral argument pursuant to Rules 215 and 220(b)(2), SCACR.
. The remaining shareholders of these corporations are as follows:
Dove — Wife’s father (82%)
Sparrow — Wife's father (40%); Richard Vondrak (9%); Newton Burnette (9%); Byron Walker (2%)
LFI' — $100,000 value placed on Husband’s 3% interest is undisputed.
. Wife’s expert, Richard Vondrak, was a 9% shareholder in Sparrow at the time of trial. Although an experienced businessman, Vondrak had
. The parties do not dispute the underlying financial data used to assess the value of the stocks in question; Dabney, in fact, based his evaluation of each stock on individual share prices assigned by Vondrak.
. As a "sub-chapter S” corporation, Dove’s profits "pass through” to individual shareholders as taxable income in amounts equal to their respective percentages of ownership. However, these "paper” profits, which the shareholders must report as personal income, are not necessarily accompanied by corresponding cash payouts from the corporation. Since the decision to distribute profits rests solely with the directors, a corporate board can refuse to authorize monetary distributions to effectuate a "tax squeeze-out." When this happens, the shareholder remains personally liable for the applicable income tax, which he must then pay out of pocket.
. As this Court previously has noted, "[ujnfair treatment of holders of minority interests in family companies and other closely held corporations by persons in control of those corporations is so widespread that it is a national business scandal.”
Davis v. Hamm,
. Wife further asserts the family court could have avoided the valuation question entirely by distributing the Dove stock "in kind.” Although in-kind apportionment is often favored, it is not mandatory. To the contrary, in-kind distribution is unwarranted where, as here, the nature of the parties' relationship to the asset would make it inequitable.
See Ducate
v.
Ducate,
. Although Wife includes an allegation of error in the court’s allocation of marital assets in her statement of issues on appeal, she fails to argue the issue in the body of the brief and it is therefore deemed abandoned.
See, e.g., First Savings Bank v. McLean,
