In appealing the circuit court’s judgment in this dissolution action, Louis Accurso complains of the circuit court’s division of marital property, its award of maintenance, and its division of debt. Kimberly Accurso cross-appeals, complaining that the circuit court erred by not reserving *557 jurisdiсtion until it determined whether or not Louis Accurso’s law firm would receive a fee in a pending case in which it was involved. Because this court сoncludes that discussion of the parties’ allegations of eiTor regarding maintenance, debt division, and the circuit court’s declining to resеrve jurisdiction would have no prece-dential value, we affirm the circuit court’s decision on those issues by summary order pursuant to Rule 84.16(b). We have provided the parties with a memorandum of the reasons for our decision as to those issues. In this opinion, we address only Louis Accursо’s claim that the circuit court erred in its marital property division.
Louis Accurso charges the circuit court with error in awarding Kimberly Ac-curso title to the building in which Louis Accurso housed his law firm. He argues that Missouri’s public policy mandates total severance of property and pоssessory interests of the parties in a dissolution action. He also argues that he should be awarded the building because he uses it as security for his law firm’s line of credit, because he needs revenue from it to pay maintenance, child support, and other expenses relatеd to the couple’s children, and because Kimberly Accurso would have access to the building as landlord, making it impossible for him to protеct and ensure client confidentiality. Given our disposition of this case, we reach only the first of Louis Accurso’s arguments.
The standard by which we judge the circuit court’s judgment is to determine whether or not substantial evidence supports it, whether or not it is against the weight of the evidence, оr whether or not it erroneously declares or applies the law.
Murphy v. Carron,
The governing law is Section 452.330.1, RSMo 2000, which says, “In a proceeding for dissolutiоn of the marriage or legal separation, ... the court ... shall divide the marital property and marital debts in such proportions as the court deems just after considering all relevant factors[J” The parties do not dispute that the building at issue is marital property. Section 452.330.1 mandates that the circuit court consider each spouse’s economic circumstances, each spouse’s contribution to the acquisition of the property, the value of each spouse’s nonmarital property, the parties’ conduct during marriage, and the minоr children’s custodial arrangements. A circuit court has “great flexibility and discretion in its division of property pursuant to Section 452.330.”
Nelson v. Nelson,
Section 452.330 “seeks to effеctively minimize the necessity for recourse to further litigation to completely sever all relations between the parties.”
Corder v. Corder,
[T]he legislature intended a division of “marital property” which would effect a complete severance of all unity of possеssion, as well as unity of title, between the spouses, excepting only “the unusual situation where the economics involved call for” ... a division which stops short *558 of severing the relationship attached to the common ownership of property.
Corder,
The circuit court’s property division does not accomplish the policy intended by Section 452.330 of reducing the need for further litigatiоn between the parties by severing all relations between the parties. The record does not indicate that the party’s circumstances required the circuit court to award tenancy in the building to Louis Accurso and ownership of the building to Kimberly Accurso to effectuate а just property division. The circuit court’s property allocation obligates the parties to interact significantly more than a differеnt, yet equally equitable, property division would likely require. Because one of Section 452.330’s goals is to minimize the need for further litigation by cоmpletely severing all relations between parties to a divorce proceeding, Section 452.330 mandates that the circuit court аvoid placing the Accursos in a landlord-tenant relationship, if possible.
Kimberly Accurso relies on
In re Marriage of Stamatiou,
Stamatiou
recognizes that in some situations, equitable division of property mаndates an arrangement similar to that ordered by the circuit court in this case. In
Cochran v. Cochran,
We, therefore, affirm the circuit court’s judgment in part and reverse it in part. We remand the сase to the circuit court with instructions that it determine whether or not the couple’s property may be otherwise justly divided without placing Lоuis Accurso and Kimberly Accurso in a landlord-tenant relationship.
GENE R. MARTIN, Special Judge, concurs.
*559 ROBERT G. ULRICH, Judge, who participated in oral arguments, was no longer a member of the court when this opinion was handed down.
