delivered the opinion of the court:
Husband, Paul C. Pittman, appeals from the judgment of the circuit court of Madison County pertaining to the distribution of the parties’ property in the second half of their bifurcated dissolution of marriage proceedings.
Paul and M. Louise Pittman were married in August of 1980. Husband was then 62 and wife 54. He worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, while she worked at Granite City Steel. Wife, however, gave up her job of 30 years shortly after the parties’ marriage. During 1983 and 1984, the parties separated for some six months, but later reconciled and resumed their marriage for a period of another two years. After a second period of separation, the parties decided to dissolve their marriage. A judgment of dissolution of marriage ultimately was entered July 22, 1987, on the issue of grounds only with the property distribution occurring in 1989. In the second half of the proceedings, the trial court awarded each party his or her nonmarital property and then ordered husband to pay wife one-half of the amounts he transferred from marital funds to his children as well as one-half of the funds in husband’s First National Bank of Vandalia accounts. Wife was also awarded a 1982 Chrysler automobile and one-half of the ratio of husband’s monthly service pension earned during the marriage. Neither party was awarded maintenance, and each was held responsible for his or her own attorney fees and costs.
Husband raises five issues on appeal: the trial court erred in (1) awarding wife $5,000 as reimbursement for her efforts involved in renovating husband’s nonmarital property; (2) not awarding husband one-half of the money wife removed from the parties’ joint account during their first separation; (3) ordering husband to pay wife one-half of the money loaned to his son during the marriage; (4) requiring husband pay wife one-half of the money in the First National Bank accounts; and (5) finding husband dissipated wife’s car while at the same time not awarding him one-half of the marital funds wife used during the marriage to purchase a new car titled in her name alone. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.
We initially note that in all dissolution cases, the trial court’s decisions pertaining to property division will not be disturbed on review in the absence of an abuse of the court’s discretion. (E.g., In re Marriage of Hilkovitch (1984),
Turning to the first issue, husband contends the court erred in awarding wife $5,000 as reimbursement for her personal efforts involved in renovating the nonmarital property of husband, specifically, a house which the parties used as their marital residence during the first part of their marriage. At the time when the parties married, husband was working out of Carrollton, Illinois. Both husband and wife had residences in other parts of the State, neither of which was particularly close to Carrollton. Husband therefore decided to purchase a residence in Carrollton. Wife chose not to participate in the transaction; consequently, husband purchased the house in his name with his own funds. Shortly after the parties moved in, however, wife began redecorating the house. Wife testified that over a six-month period she wallpapered four rooms and a stairwell, painted nine rooms, put in carpeting for two rooms, installed wainscoting in one room and along the stairway, re-caulked and painted 15 windows, hand-sewed curtains for seven rooms, installed shades for 22 windows and put in a garden. She estimated her labor to be worth some $7,000. Husband concedes wife did make some contributions to the refurbishing of the house, but asserts such contributions were not as significant as wife claims nor did they contribute substantially to the appreciation of the property. The trial court, in awarding wife $5,000 as reimbursement for her contributions, necessarily found such contributions to be significant. We cannot say the court’s award reveals any abuse of discretion in this instance. There was ample evidence for the trial court’s finding. More importantly, it is for the trier of fact to determine the parties’ credibility. (See In re Marriage of Hofstetter (1981),
For his second point on appeal, husband contends the court erred in failing to award him one-half of. the money removed by wife from their joint accounts upon the parties’ first separation. According to husband, wife withdrew some $1,500 from these accounts for moving expenses. While this may be true, the parties reconciled a short time later and cohabited for another two years. Under such circumstances, the trial court did not err in not requiring any repayment, a point which husband conceded in oral argument before this court.
Husband next argues the trial court erroneously ordered him to pay wife one-half of a $5,000 loan to his son. Husband claims the money was either loaned before the marriage or, if during the marriage, came from his nonmarital funds. Other evidence, however, revealed the loan was made during the marriage. And, no evidence established the source from which the money was drawn. Again, we are faced with a credibility issue which the trial court resolved in wife’s favor. And once again, we cannot say the court erred in reaching this resolution. Even uncontradicted testimony, if inherently unreasonable or improbable, need not be believed. Hilkovitch,
Up to this point, we have ruled against husband. But, with respect to issues four and five, we find that husband’s contentions not only have merit but also require reversal and reconsideration by the trial court.
In point four on appeal, husband asserts the trial court erred in directing him to pay wife one-half of the sum of monies (specifically $6,774.35) from his accounts at First National Bank of Vandalia. We have no quarrel with wife’s assertions that these accounts now held in the names of husband and his son originally were marital property. Nor do we have any quarrel with requiring husband to pay wife one-half of the sum of the monies in the accounts. The problem lies in the amount to be divided. In making its division, the trial court used a July-August 1988 statement to value the accounts. The parties’ marriage, however, was dissolved a year earlier. It is well established that the date of valuing marital assets is the date the judgment of dissolution was entered. (E.g., In re Marriage of Jones (1989),
We also remand for further consideration husband’s final point on appeal. Husband contends the trial court erroneously awarded wife “her” car purchased during the marriage out of marital funds without requiring any reimbursement to husband based on the finding husband had dissipated wife’s nonmarital car. We find absolutely no evidence of dissipation in this instance, no matter which party is believed as to how much mileage was put on wife’s nonmarital car during the marriage prior to being traded in. Dissipation generally is defined as the use of marital property for the sole benefit of one spouse for a purpose unrelated to the marriage while the marriage is in the process of breaking down. (See In re Marriage of O’Neill (1990),
For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm in part the judgment of the trial court of Madison County with respect to the issues of reimbursing wife for her contributions to husband’s nonmarital property, refusing to award husband one-half of the money wife used for moving expenses during the parties’ first separation, and ordering husband to pay wife one-half of the money loaned to his son during the marriage. With respect to the issues of husband’s dissipation of wife’s car and the valuation of the First National Bank accounts, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.
LEWIS and GOLDENHERSH, JJ., concur.
