Appellant William Hill Holman (“Husband”) appeals the trial court’s judgment dissolving his marriage to Respondent La-Vonne Carol Holman (“Wife”). As discussed below, Husband alleges five points of trial court error, chiefly centered on the trial court’s determination that Wife acquired marital interests in the increased value of real property titled solely in Husband’s name together with the trial court’s division of these marital interests. Husband also challenges the trial court’s determination that the antenuptial agreement entered into by the parties was unconscionable and, thus, unenforceable.
In a dissolution proceeding, this Court must affirm the trial court’s decree of dissolution “unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the evidence, or unless it erroneously declares or applies the law.”
In re Marriage of Thomas,
Viewing the record in the light most favorable to the trial court’s judgment,
Kirkwood v. Kirkwood,
Wife testified at trial that prior to the parties’ marriage she owned a home in Rogers, Arkansas, which she sold for $75,000.00 when she moved in with Husband. Before their wedding, Wife gave Husband $20,000.00 “to pay for half of the home that [they] bought” together in Cass-ville, Missouri. Husband also contributed money toward the purchase of this home (“the Cassville house”). When the Cass-ville house was purchased, it was titled jointly and the home loan was signed by both parties. The parties later sold the Cassville house for $45,000.00.
At the time of the parties’ marriage, Husband owned a house (“the Farmhouse”) on thirty acres, but was not living at that location because his ex-wife resided there. When Husband’s former wife vacated the Farmhouse in May of 1992, Husband and Wife began remodeling it. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the Cassville house were used by the parties to remodel the Farmhouse. Wife testified that when she and Husband took possession of the Farmhouse it “wasn’t livable” and they “gutted it.” Wife testified the parties spent $90,000.00 remodeling the Farmhouse. She stated the parties took out a loan for the remodeling, the
Wife also testified the parties borrowed $75,000.00 to construct a commercial building (“the Commercial Building”) on real property (“the Commercial Property”) Husband inherited during the course of the marriage when his father passed away in 1997. According to Wife, Husband made all of the payments on the loan for the Commercial Building out of their joint account. 2 She testified without objection that at the time Husband inherited the Commercial Property the value of the “bare land” was $30,000.00. Wife also testified the parties spent $62,000.00 on the Commercial Building together with $5,600.00 constructing a parking lot adjacent to it. She stated the parties received rental income from the Commercial Building and that she opened a business in the newly constructed Commercial Building. Wife also related she purchased fixtures for her business with $15,000.00 of her own money and the fixtures were then sold with the business. Wife also testified she placed the money she received from selling the business into her separate account to pay for her “living expenses” and “personal needs.”
Wife also stated the Commercial Building and Commercial Property were appraised shortly before trial at $127,000.00. Wife opined that the value of the marital interest in the Commercial Building and Commercial Property was $97,000.00, that is $127,000.00 for the Commercial Property plus the Commercial Building minus $30,000.00 for the “bare land” inherited by Husband.
The record also reveals that during the marriage the parties constructed a rental house (“the Rental House”) for Wife’s disabled son on the real property where the Farmhouse was located. Wife testified her son contributed $15,000.00 toward the construction of the Rental House. She also related the property was appraised prior to trial at $66,000.00 and she believed the parties invested approximately $74,677.00 in the building of the Rental House. To build the Rental House, the parties took out a loan and Husband used the rental payments collected on the Rental House to make payments on the loan.
In his testimony, Husband related the parties purchased the Cassville house prior to their marriage for $40,000.00 and Wife contributed $20,000.00 to that purchase. He stated they owed $20,000.00 on the
Husband also testified he gave Wife money to start her business in the newly constructed Commercial Building because, “[h]er money was tied up in CDs” and “when the CD matured she repaid [him].” He stated he paid for some of the fixtures for Wife’s business “[i]n the beginning, but she repaid [him]” and she placed the profits from her business in her bank account. He also related he made all of the loan payments on the Commercial Building loan out of the previously mentioned joint bank account.
Husband testified that Wife’s son paid $450.00 a month in rent to live in the Rental House and he “put [the money] in [the joint] account” to make payments on the loan.
Husband also stated he never placed Wife’s name on any of the deeds to the real properties at issue “[b]ecause of the [Agreement], and [he] just wanted to maintain [his] assets for [his] children.” He stated Wife should receive “what the [Agreement] designates she should get.”
A portion of Husband’s deposition was read into the record at trial. Husband testified that Wife did not “directly” contribute money to the renovation of the Farmhouse but she “transferred” money to him which went toward the remodeling. He stated he borrowed $80,000.00 from Commerce Bank to improve the Farmhouse and that both he and Wife expended physical efforts in the improvement of the Farmhouse. He stated the Rental House cost approximately $70,000.00 to build and Wife’s son contributed $15,000.00 or $20,000.00 to the project.
At the close of all the evidence, the trial court found the Agreement to be unconscionable; found Wife had acquired a marital interest “in real property titled in [Husband’s] name;” found Wife’s nonmari-tal property to be valued at $89,223.00 and valued Husband’s nonmarital property at $624,799.00; and found there was an unequal division of marital property, such that Wife was entitled to a judgment against Husband in the amount of $203,832.67 to equalize the distribution of marital property. This appeal by Husband followed.
For ease of analysis we commence our analysis of Husband’s points relied on with Husband’s third point.
In his third point of trial court error Husband maintains the trial court erred in invalidating the Agreement and finding it to be unconscionable because such a finding was not based on substantial evidence and the trial court misapplied the law. On the other hand, while Wife acknowledges that the trial court correctly found the Agreement executed by the parties to be “unconscionable,” she, nevertheless, maintains the trial court abused its discretion in permitting Husband to introduce and receive the Agreement in evidence because Husband failed to plead his intent to rely on the Agreement so as “to avoid the designation of property as marital property.”
Wife raises no separate appeal relating to the trial court’s consideration of the Agreement. Nevertheless, she is entitled to make the aforementioned argument in her respondent’s brief. “Generally, in the absence of a cross-appeal, the respon
In the present matter Wife asserted in her petition for dissolution that the “parties have real property and personal property which is marital property....” In his answer to her petition, Husband offered a general denial to Wife’s allegations and “pray[ed] for an order ... awarding to each party martial [sic] items in a just and reasonable manner....” In his counter-petition for dissolution of marriage, Husband set out that “the parties have marital property for the Court to set aside and divide.”
At trial, when Husband’s attorney offered a copy of the Agreement into evidence, counsel for Wife objected that the Agreement was “beyond the scope of the pleadings.” Thereafter, the trial court ruled the Agreement was admissible; entered it into evidence; and overruled Wife’s objection.
Rule 55.08 sets out:
In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth all applicable affirmative defenses and avoidances.... A pleading that sets forth an affirmative defense or avoidance shall contain a short and plain statement of the facts showing that the pleader is entitled to the defense or avoidance.[ 3 ]
“An affirmative defense is waived if,the party raising it does not plead it.”
In re Estate of Kilbourn,
Based on the foregoing, we determine the trial court abused its discretion in permitting Husband to introduce the Agreement at trial because Husband failed to assert the Agreement as an affirmative defense in his pleadings. It has long been held that “[m]atters seeking avoidance , of a valid contract are affirmative defenses and must be set out in the pleadings.”
Id.
The terms of the Agreement clearly provide “ ‘additional facts [other than the statutory considerations of section 452.300] that permit [Husband] to avoid the legal responsibility alleged’ ” by Wife, i.e., that there was marital property to be divided.
Smith v. Thomas,
We now turn to Husband’s first and second points on appeal. They are in
In his first point relied on Husband asserts the trial court erred in finding “that any part of the value of Husband’s [nonmarital] [C]ommercial [B]uilding and [Commercial Property] were marital in nature .... ” He maintains the Commercial Property and Commercial Building should have been deemed separate property because the Commercial Property was inherited by Husband from his father; all of the funds used to improve the Commercial Property and construct the Commercial Building “came from Husband’s separate funds;” and “[w]hile Wife did invest $15,000.00 in buying fixtures for her business that was located in the [C]ommercial [B]uilding, she recovered these funds when she later sold the fixtures along with her business.”
In his second point on appeal, Husband asserts the trial court erred in finding that the value of the Commercial Property and Commercial Building, set in at $97,000.00 by the trial court, was marital property. He maintains such a finding by the trial court was in error because the Commercial Property was inherited by him and never titled in Wife’s name; the value of the Commercial Property at the time of his inheritance was $62,000.00; and the fair market value of the property after the construction of the Commercial Building was $127,000.00, which was only an increase in value of $65,000.00.
Husband also maintains, as previously set out, that Wife’s contribution to the construction of the Commercial Building was, if anything, only $15,000.00, “while the remaining cost was financed by a $75,000.00 loan paid exclusively from the rental income from the property, and therefore under the “source of funds rule” the marital portion of the $65,000.00 increase in value ... was only 16.7 [percent] of the increase or $10,855.00.”
“The circuit court has broad discretion in classifying and dividing marital property.”
Moore v. Moore,
under the source of funds rule, when property is acquired by an expenditure of both nonmarital and marital property, the property is characterized as part nonmarital and part marital. Thus, a spouse contributing nonmarital property is entitled to an interest in the property in the ratio of the nonmarital investment to the total nonmarital and marital investment in the property. The remaining property is characterized as marital and its value is subject to equitable distribution. Thus the spouse who contributed nonmarital funds, and the marital unit that contributed marital funds each receive a proportional and fair return on their investment![ 5 ]
Herr,
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Returning to the instant case, both parties agree the real property upon which the Commercial Building was constructed was inherited by Husband from his father and, as such, is clearly Husband’s separate property. At issue is the increase in value to the Commercial Property and how that increase should be distributed. In this connection, we observe that “[t]he source of funds rule does not cause the entire increase in value of separate property accruing during a marriage to be marital property irrespective of the source of that increase.” Id. at 622.
Wife acknowledges the correctness of Husband’s assertions that, given the circumstances of this case, the mere fact that the loan for the construction of the Commercial Building was taken out in both of their names does not instantly convert it to marital property. Rather, Wife’s assertion is that it is not the loan which created a marital interest but “the construction and payment of the loan with income generated during the marriage which established a marital interest in the property.” In this connection she is correct. As previously related, “[a]ny increase in the value of separate property is marital property if marital assets or marital labor contributed to acquiring that increase.”
Selby v. Selby,
Wife testified the Commercial Property upon which the Commercial Building was constructed was worth $30,000.00 at the time it was inherited by Husband in 1997 when Husband’s father died; that the parties took out a $75,000.00 loan to construct the Commercial Building; and the entirety of the Commercial Building and Commercial Property was valued prior to trial at $127,000.00. She testified the loan was paid from the rental income
While the trial court was correct in its determination that the value of the “bare land” of the Commercial Property at the time of inheritance by Husband was $30,000.00 and that the undisputed value of the Commercial Property and Commercial Building at the time of trial was $127,000.00, it erred in its determination that the value of the “marital portion” subject to division between the parties was $97,000.00. This is because “a spouse contributing nonmarital property is entitled to an interest in the property in the ratio of the nonmarital investment to the total non-marital and marital investment in the property.”
Brooks,
Applying the formula set out in
Brooks,
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Accordingly, the ratio of the nonmarital investment by Husband to the total non-marital and marital investment in the property yields 28.57142% of the equity, hence the value of Husband’s nonmarital interest in the property is $36,285.70 (28.57142% x $127,000.00). Thus, the value of the marital interest in the property is $90,714.30 (71.42858% x $127,000.00). Therefore, the trial court’s judgment must be amended to reflect an increase in the value of Husband’s nonmarital property from $18,000.00 to $36,285.70 and a concomitant reduction in the value of Wife’s share of the marital property subject to division. Point One is denied. Point Two has merit, in part.
In his fourth point relied on, Husband essentially states the trial court erred in finding the marital portion of the Farmhouse was $130,360.00. Husband presented evidence showing the fair market value of the Farmhouse was $95,000.00 and that the parties spent about $80,000.00 on the remodeling. He maintains ‘Wife’s maximum contribution to the remodeling of the [Farmhouse] was $20,000.00 and therefore the marital portion of the increase in value of [the Farmhouse] using the source of funds rule was 22.2 [percent] ... or $19,980.00.”
As previously related, Wife testified that shortly after Husband’s ex-wife vacated “the home”, i.e., the Farmhouse, it was valued at $54,640.00 and the fair market value of the Farmhouse at the time of trial was $185,000.00. Wife testified the parties spent about $90,000.00 remodeling the Farmhouse. Both parties agreed they each expended time and labor in the remodeling process in addition to the aforementioned sums of money.
It is clear that in the instant matter the increase in value to the Farmhouse resulted
in part
from the expenditure of marital assets. Wife was entitled to a marital
In its division of property, the trial court found the Farmhouse was Husband’s separate property; that his “nonmarital portion” of the property was valued at $54,640.00; and that the fair market value of the property was $185,000.00. Again, we determine the trial court’s “ “valuation of property is within the range of conflicting evidence of value offered at trial
Tarneja v. Tarneja,
However, we disagree with the trial court’s determination that the value of the “marital portion” of the Farmhouse is $130,360.00. Once more applying the source of funds formula, we make the following calculations, to-wit:
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Accordingly, the ratio of the nonmarital investment by Husband to the total of the nonmarital and marital investment in the property yields $69,886.60 (37.77654% x $185,000.00), and the value of the marital interest in the property is $115,113.38 (62.22345% x $185,000.00). Therefore, the trial court’s judgment must be amended to reflect an increase in the value of Husband’s nonmarital property from $54,640.00 to $69,886.60, and a concomitant reduction in the value of Wife’s share of the marital property subject to division. Point Four has merit, in part.
Husband’s fifth point relied on asserts the trial court erred in finding the Rental House was marital property because, it “was. built during the marriage on property that Husband inherited from his father;” the Rental House “was never titled in Wife’s name;” and the construction “was financed by a loan taken out in both Husband and Wife’s names but which was paid by Husband’s separate funds or the rental proceeds from said house, and not by any funds of Wife or marital funds.”
“There are many cases where only one spouse’s name appears on the title but the other spouse has an interest.”
Selby,
The trial court found the value of the Rental House, exclusive of the real property, constituted marital property and valued the Rental House at $66,000.00. As previously related, “[a]ny increase in the value of separate property is marital property if marital assets or marital labor contributed to acquiring that increase.”
Selby,
“The duty of this [CJourt is declared by Supreme Court Rule 84.14. ‘Unless justice otherwise requires, the court shall dispose finally of the case.’ ”
Herr,
Notes
. The Agreement, in part, provided that the parties’ separate property would remain separate after marriage and only jointly titled property could be considered as marital property.
. The record shows that during the marriage the parties had a joint checking account which had originally been Husband’s account before the marriage. Wife and Husband both wrote checks and paid various household expenses including farm bills out of this joint account. Husband testified that during the course of the marriage he deposited money into this account from his earnings together with
income derived from the sale
of cattle and from business interests. As a general rule, "[ijncome earned during the marriage from separate property is marital property, including rental income.”
Selby v. Selby,
. Section 452.300.1 provides that "the Supreme Court rules apply to all to proceedings under §§ 452.300 to 452.415, statutes pertaining to dissolution of marriage.”
Weber v. Weber,
All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2006) and all statutory references are to RSMo 2000.
. Section 452.330.2, RSMo 2000, sets out that
[f]or purposes of sections 452.300 to 452.415 only, ‘marital property’ means all property acquired by either spouse subsequent to the marriage except:
(1) Property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent;
(2) Property acquired in exchange for property acquired prior to the marriage or in exchange for property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent;
(3) Property acquired by a spouse after a decree of legal separation;
(4) Property excluded by valid written agreement of the parties; and
(5) The increase in value of property acquired prior to the marriage or pursuant to subdivisions (1) to (4) of this subsection, unless marital assets including labor, havecontributed to such increases and then only to the extent of such contributions.
(Emphasis added:)
. The " 'enhancement in the value of a spouse’s separate property which is caused by appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions, or circumstances beyond the parties’ control is not jointly acquired property unless the non-owning spouse can prove that his/her contributions were also a causal factor.' ”
Brooks v. Brooks,
