663 N.E.2d 1026 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
Defendant-appellant, Joseph R. Landry, appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Auglaize County granting a divorce between the appellant and the plaintiff-appellee, Patricia L. Landry, and dividing the parties' property. For the reasons that follow, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
From that final order the appellant brings this appeal. *291
The appellant's first assignment of error challenges the trial court's determination that the funds contained in a Society Bank savings account were subject to division as marital property. The referee recognized that the Society account funds were derived from the appellant's premarital holdings in a Schwab stock portfolio account. The referee concluded, however, that this separate asset had been transmuted into a marital asset.
In dividing property in a divorce proceeding, R.C.
A decision of the trial court in dividing marital property will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.Martin v. Martin (1985),
In this case, the referee found that the funds in the Society account constituted marital property. We have thoroughly reviewed the record, and do not find that the trial court abused its discretion. The testimony of the parties indicates that they treated the account in question as a joint account, as monies earned by the wife were deposited into the account during the course of the marriage in order to preserve the account while the husband was unemployed. The parties also deposited joint tax refunds into the Society account. Additional *292
testimony elicited during the March 31, 1994 hearing, provided further evidence of commingling, as the appellee testified that it was the parties' practice to deposit money into the Society account and then transfer these funds to their joint checking account. While the appellant traced the origin of the Society account to before the marriage, he failed to trace the monies in the account at the time of the divorce by a preponderance of the evidence so that the Society account could be classified as separate property. See Peck v. Peck (1994),
The appellant's first assignment of error is overruled.
The appellant submits in his second assignment of error that the referee erred in her determination that the marital equity in the parties' marital home amounted to $13,937 instead of $9,975.19. The appellant contends (1) that the referee selected an inappropriate date for valuating and dividing the marital home, and (2) that the referee miscalculated the amount the appellant contributed toward the down payment of the marital home. We will address these arguments in order.
The fair market value of the marital home, as stipulated to by the parties, was $138,000. The referee found that as of January 1, 1994, there was a mortgage due and owing to Society Bank in the sum of $58,873, leaving an equity of $79,127. The referee found that the appellant contributed $65,200 of his premarital assets towards the down payment of the home and subtracted the $65,200 figure from the $79,127 of equity, leaving the parties with $13,927 in net marital equity. The referee then awarded the appellant the $13,927 as part of the property division.
The appellant argues that subsequent to the parties' separation on July 31, 1993, he remained at the marital residence and was solely responsible for making mortgage payments. Therefore, the appellant contends that the referee should have calculated the mortgage balance from the July 31 separation date instead of January 1, 1994.
Marital property is all property acquired by the spouses "during the marriage," except separate property. R.C.
In this case, the referee failed to specify the dates she used in determining the meaning of "during the marriage." Instead, the referee selected a variety of dates for purposes of valuating and dividing the marital property. For example, the referee selected July 21, 1993, for valuating the parties' joint checking and savings account at Society Bank. July 21, 1993 was also chosen by the referee in valuating the parties' joint savings account at Bank One. Yet, the referee selected June 30, 1993 for valuating the appellant's 401(K) retirement plan at Goodyear. The referee valuated an IRA rollover account as of February 1994. As noted above, the referee selected January 1, 1994 to valuate the marital home.
The parties were married in July 1986. They separated on July 31, 1993. The final hearing before the referee occurred on April 12, 1994. The trial court's final decree of divorce was journalized on December 23, 1994. While there may be an equitable reason for selecting January 1, 1994 as the date to valuate the marital home, that equitable reason is not reflected in the referee's report. In the absence of such an equitable determination, the January 1, 1994 valuation date bears no logical relationship to the dates typically employed in valuating and dividing marital property, e.g., the date of permanent separation, the de facto termination date, or the date of the final hearing. Therefore, we conclude the referee's selection of January 1, 1994, as the date to valuate the marital home constitutes an abuse of discretion.
The appellant also argues that he contributed $68,000 towards the down payment of the marital home, instead of the $65,200 number chosen by the referee. The referee selected the $65,200 figure based on the appellant's Exhibit F. Exhibit F is a Housing and Urban Development Settlement Statement (the "statement"). Line 101 of the statement lists the purchase price of the marital home at $133,000. Line 103 acknowledges $2,652.42 in settlement charges assessed against the borrowers. Line 202 of the statement reports that the parties obtained a $65,000 mortgage. Line 205 documents a $200 loan processing fee paid on behalf of the borrower. Line 220 of the statement reports that $65,200 was paid by the bank for the parties, a combination of the $65,000 mortgage and $200 loan processing fee. Line 303 states that $70,452.42 was received in cash from the parties as a down payment, the sum of the $2,265.42 settlement charge and $67,800 balance due for the down payment ($133,000 — $65,200 = $67,800) The appellant testified at the April 12, 1994 hearing that his employer, Goodyear, paid the settlement charges. It is undisputed that the appellant paid the down payment. Based on the figures contained in the *294 statement and the appellant's testimony, it is apparent that the down payment amounted to $67,800. It is also apparent that the referee mistook the $65,200 loan figure contained in line 202 of the statement for the amount of the down payment. Consequently, the referee's final property division overstated the appellant's equity in the marital residence, thus skewing the referee's final division of the marital property.
R.C.
Accordingly, this cause is remanded to the trial court to select one date for the termination of the marriage and to value the martial assets as of that date. Additionally, in light of the documentary evidence, the trial court is to determine what effect, if any, the appellant's $67,800 down payment has on the equitable division of the marital property.
Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part and cause remanded.
THOMAS F. BRYANT, P.J., and HADLEY, J., concur. *295