In this divorce action, plaintiff appeals the trial court’s order with regard to issues concerning property division, spousal support, and marital debt. Defendant cross-appeals the same order with regard to the property division. For the reasons stated hereinafter, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. FACTS
Plaintiff and defendant were married in 1998, when plaintiff was 45 and defendant was 61 years old. Defendant has owned a steel business for over 40 years, while plaintiff worked for General Motors Corporation and also served as an officer of defendant’s company. Their relationship soured in 2004, when plaintiff filed for divorce, but the parties reconciled after signing a post-nuptial agreement that specified certain property divisions and mandated that the parties receive marital counseling. But the reconciliation did not last and plaintiff filed this divorce action five years later.
The trial court entered an order in 2011 on the contested issues of property division, spousal support, and marital debt. Neither party is totally pleased with the order and each appeals some aspect of the property division. Plaintiff claims that the trial court: (1) erred when it found that the balance of defendant’s Raymond James account (the “Raymond James account” or the “3177 account”) was defendant’s premarital asset, (2) erred when it held that a sailboat was the separate property of defendant, and (3) made an inequitable division of property. Defendant asserts that the trial court misclassified a monetary transfer from plaintiff to her children as a gift and that the property distribution was inequitable in plaintiffs favor.
We reverse the trial court’s holding that the sailboat was the separate property of defendant. An enforceable postnuptial agreement provided that the sailboat was marital property. The trial court erroneously invalidated the agreement. We remand this issue to the trial court for a determination of the proper equitable distribution of the sailboat. We affirm the trial court’s holding in all other respects and dismiss plaintiffs and defendant’s remaining claims.
II. ANALYSIS
A. PLAINTIFF’S APPEAL
1. THE RAYMOND JAMES ACCOUNT
In a divorce action, this Court reviews for clear error a trial court’s factual
Plaintiff asserts that the trial court wrongly classified the Raymond James account as defendant’s premarital asset and argues that it should be considered a marital asset. Her theory is one of free association: because plaintiff worked for defendant’s business and the Raymond James account was used to fund defendant’s business, her labor commingled with defendant’s money to convert the Raymond James account into a marital asset. See Cunningham,
As an initial matter, plaintiff waived this argument at trial and therefore cannot assert this claim on appeal. During cross-examination at the trial, plaintiff testified:
Q. So, is it your position this $210,000 [in the 3177 account] is marital or premarital?
A. I really don’t know. I know we made a lot of money together, but —
Q. No. I’m asking you are you asking the Court to divide this money?
A. He can have that money.
Q. He can have the $210,000. Okay.
A. But wasn’t it worth $437,000 before this year?
Q. It was, but it’s not now.
A. Well, it was $437,000 last year.
Q. Is there anything else you want to tell the Court before I ask you another question?
A. I was just going to say the $437,000 he can have.
Q. Okay, but there’s not $437,000 there.
A. I don’t know what he has.
Q. So, you’re okay with him keeping what remains as this marital [sic] 3177 account, $210,000, and you’re okay with him keeping the $229,000 in his IRA [individual retirement account], right?
A. Yes. [Emphasis added.]
A party cannot stipulate with regard to a matter and then argue on appeal that the resulting action was erroneous. Glen Lake-Crystal River Watershed Riparians v Glen Lake Ass’n,
In any event, were we to address her claims, plaintiffs argument is not convincing. The Raymond James account functioned as a short-term borrowing device for defendant’s business, with defendant borrowing and repaying capital through withdrawals and deposits to the account. Plaintiff fails to show that defendant’s actions constitute a commingling of assets—namely, she offers no authority that a properly accounted-for loan from, or repayment to, a premarital account transforms that premarital account into marital property. Nor has she demonstrated that her mere status as defendant’s employee suffices to transform a premarital, business-related asset into martial property. A party cannot simply announce a position and expect the court to search for authority to sustain or reject that position. State Treasurer v Sprague,
Further, the trial court examined defendant’s financial records and determined that defendant had fully accounted for all the money located in the Raymond James account at the time of the marriage.
2. THE SAILBOAT
“This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s interpretation of a contract and its resolution of any legal questions that affect a contract’s validity, but any factual questions regarding the validity of the contract’s formation are reviewed for clear error.” Wright v Wright,
Here, plaintiff seeks to enforce a handwritten agreement that the parties signed in 2005 when they agreed to dismiss their prior divorce action filed in 2004. It states in its entirety:
Ground Rules (30 days - 60 day [sic]) 5-6-05
1) Intensive counseling (joint) w/counselor of our mutual choice (David Hall) (Amy Taylor)
2) Avalanche - joint title. Will be brought back to house.
3) Boat - ours equally to be used by both without stating “it is mine, because Ipd for it. ” The boat is our boat owned by both Darrell & Sheila. Should be titled by both.
4) Sit together to do a budget - putting on table all assets between both.
5) Kids not to interfere w/our marriage or relationship - to allow us to grow as a couple.
6) Treat each other w/love & respect and no rehashing of old issues. No fowl [sic] language directed at each other period.
7) Both names on house - joint-ownership. Add’l assets to be added later.
By: Darrell Parks [and] Sheila Hodge. [Emphasis added; underlining in original.]
This agreement is thus akin to the one described in Rockwell—it is intended to keep the marriage intact, not to encourage a separation. Nothing in the agreement itself or the record suggests that the parties contemplated a separation in the near future when they signed the agreement. On the contrary, the agreement was made in connection with the dismissal of their prior divorce action. And the agreement reflects the parties’ intent to reconcile, by requiring them to engage in intensive counseling, treat one another with love and respect, and not allow their respective children to interfere with their marriage or relationship.
Further, unlike the agreement in Wright, nothing in this document encourages a separation by leaving one party in a much more favorable position if the marriage ended. In fact, the agreement is relatively balanced: it effectively treats both defendant’s premarital sailboat and plaintiffs premarital house as marital assets and requires both parties to work together to improve their relationship, marriage, and finances. The trial court thus erred, as a matter of law, when it held that the agreement could not be enforced.
Accordingly, we reverse the award of the sailboat to defendant and remand the case to the trial court to determine an equitable disposition of this marital asset. See Cunningham,
3. THE PROPERTY DIVISION
“The goal in distributing marital assets in a divorce proceeding is to reach an equitable distribution of property in light of all the circumstances. The trial court need not divide the marital estate into mathematically equal portions, but any significant departure from congruence must be clearly explained.” Berger v Berger,
We are not left with a definite and firm conviction that the trial court’s ultimate property division was inequitable. To the contrary, the trial court’s property division appears equitable. Though plaintiff suffers from multiple sclerosis (MS), earns income only from Social Security disability payments, and has debts totaling $217,000, her debt is comprised primarily of her mortgage and home equity loan of $160,000, which she obtained herself. Further, plaintiff has a pension, a 401(k) account, and an IRA, the combined premarital portions of which amount to $446,000. Plaintiff is only required to divide with defendant the marital portions of those retirement assets, which comprise an additional $449,000. And, as already discussed, plaintiff is also entitled on remand to an equitable distribution of the sailboat, which will further increase the amount of money she receives from the property division.
Defendant is in his mid-70s and testified that the financial condition of his business
On balance, far from being inequitable, the overall property division seems quite fair.
B. DEFENDANT’S CROSS-APPEAL
Defendant’s claims that the trial court misclassified a monetary transfer from plaintiff to her children as a gift and that the divorce judgment was inequitable in plaintiff’s favor lack merit. The trial court did not clearly err when it found that the funds contributed by plaintiff to her children constituted a gift. Plaintiff assisted her sons in the 2002 purchase of a Florida condominium, by making the $50,000 down payment. Plaintiff obtained the $50,000 through a loan against her 401(k) account—which existed before the marriage—and repaid the loan with money she earned during the marriage. One of plaintiffs sons testified that he and his brothers formed a corporation to manage the condominium and that they do not intend to pay their mother back. The trial court therefore classified the monetary transfer as a gift (not a loan) and found that plaintiff does not own the condominium.
Defendant’s arguments that the trial court’s decision on this matter is improper are unconvincing. Again, the trial court thoroughly analyzed this issue, noting that if plaintiff did own the condominium, general principles of equity would dictate that it should be awarded to her. Defendant has failed to establish that such a disposition is inequitable— plaintiff suffers from MS and cannot work, has significant debts, and claims Social Security disability benefits are her only income. Her primary assets are retirement funds for which she suffers a penalty for early withdrawals. Under the settlement, defendant retains significant assets, including the $210,000 in his Raymond James account, other accounts
III. CONCLUSION
The part of the trial court’s order holding that the sailboat is the separate property of defendant is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion with regard to the disposition of the sailboat. In all other respects, the trial court’s order is affirmed. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
Although plaintiff suggests that defendant’s Social Security income was commingled with the funds in the Raymond James account, plaintiff fails to develop an argument on this point or to identify evidence to support this contention. She has thus abandoned that issue by failing to brief it. Id.
The Raymond James account was initially held with another financial organization that was subsequently purchased by Raymond James. On the date of the marriage, the predecessor account contained approximately $253,000—more than the $210,000 held in the account at the time of trial.
In addition, plaintiff notes that at one point before the trial, defendant was held in contempt for failing to return some funds that had been removed from the 3177 account. However, in its opinion and order issued after the trial, the court, after fully reviewing the financial records, determined that defendant had adequately accounted for all the money at issue. Again, plaintiff identifies no evidence to dispute this finding.
The postnuptial agreement at issue in Wright, which the trial court and the Court of Appeals found void, was particularly egregious:
In the case at bar, the trial court correctly determined that the postnuptial agreement at issue was calculated to leave plaintiff in a much more favorable position to abandon the marriage. The contract plainly had, as one of its primary goals, defendant’s total divestment of all marital property in the event of a divorce. The couple was not separated at the time and had never separated during the marriage, but plaintiff filed for divorce roughly eight months after defendant signed the agreement. [77.]
Berger goes on to list the factors a trial court “may consider ... in dividing the marital estate”:
(1) the duration of the marriage, (2) the contributions of the parties to the marital estate, (3) the age of the parties, (4) the health of the parties, (5) the life situation of the parties, (6) the necessities and circumstances of the parties, (7) the parties’ earning abilities, (8) the parties’ past relations and conduct, and (9) general principles of equity. When dividing marital property, a trial court may also consider additional factors that are relevant to a particular case. The trial court must consider all relevant factors but not assign disproportionate weight to any one circumstance. [Berger,277 Mich App at 717 (citations and quotation marks omitted).]
Indeed, to the extent plaintiffs argument on this issue hinges on the fact that the trial court treated the sailboat as defendant’s separate asset—plaintiffs brief refers to the sailboat as “the parties’ most prized possession”'—our conclusion that the sailboat is actually a marital asset to be distributed equitably on remand arguably renders moot plaintiffs argument that the trial court’s overall property division is inequitable. See Skelly,
Our conclusion is not altered by defendant’s purported transfer of some assets to his children. The trial court found that both parties had sometimes failed to be entirely honest in the years leading up to and during this divorce action, and the court listed specific examples of each party’s conduct that sought to conceal information or assets from the other party. Because both parties engaged in this conduct, and because concealment does not require automatic forfeiture, Sands,
Plaintiff fails to establish that defendant’s separate assets should be invaded, because she is unable to show that the property awarded is insufficient for her suitable maintenance and support. She receives Social Security disability income, will receive an equitable share of the sailboat on remand, and possesses equity in her home, vacant land in Charlevoix, two boat slips, a classic Corvette, personal property including jewelry, and over one-half million dollars in retirement funds. In addition, it is possible she will receive spousal support. Nor has plaintiff demonstrated that she significantly assisted in the acquisition and growth of defendant’s separate assets.
