Appellant Elizabeth Page and appellee Lamar Anderson were divorced on May 31, 2002, after thirty-one years of marriage. Elizabeth now challenges four post-decree rulings in which the trial court: 1) refused to divide as marital property Lamar’s undisclosed interest in a condominium, 2) awarded Lamar $8,850 in attorney fees, 3) refused to hold-Lamar in contempt, and 4) held Elizabeth in contempt. We affirm the trial court’s rulings.
The only area of contention in the parties’ divorce was property division. On
Lamar’s Interest In The Condominium As Marital Property
On May 10, 2002, two days after the final divorce hearing, Lamar executed a real-estate contract for the purchase of a condominium. He wrote the seller a $10,000 earnest-money check on May 12, the source of which is not revealed in the record, and closed on the purchase on July 3, 2002. Lamar’s execution of the contract was not revealed to Elizabeth prior to the entry of the divorce decree. However, she discovered it at some point, and on August 16, 2002, she filed a motion to set the decree aside. She alleged that Lamar had fraudulently failed to disclose his interest in the condominium and asserted that, because the condominium was acquired prior to the divorce, it was marital property and should have been divided accordingly.
At a November 8, 2002 hearing on the motion, Elizabeth testified that she was entitled to an interest in the condominium because Lamar purchased it before they were divorced, because Lamar had “cheated” her, and because anybody would want to “stick it to him.” However, she acknowledged that she had nothing to do with his acquisition of the property. Lamar testified that he had not tried to defraud Elizabeth out of her interest in the property and that he had no agreement to buy the property before the divorce hearing on May 8.
The evidence adduced at the hearing revealed that Lamar had contemplated buying the condominium as early as December 2001 for his post-divorce residence. However, it was not until May 10, 2002, two days after the final divorce hearing, that Lamar actually signed a contract to purchase the condominium. According to Robert King of the Bank of Fayetteville, Lamar sought a $420,000 loan to purchase the condominium on June 4, 2002. King said that Lamar had not spoken to him about the loan prior to May 31, 2002. A loan commitment was drafted by King on July 1, 2002, for $420,000, to be secured by the condominium itself. According to King, there was no problem in getting the loan approved because the condominium appraised for $820,000.
Richard Alexander, one of the owners of the condominium, testified by deposition on September 3, 2002, that Lamar had been talking about buying the condominium “for months.” However, it was Alexander’s understanding that Lamar could not make the purchase until the divorce was final. Alexander told Lamar prior to the divorce proceeding the price for which he would sell the condominium and told Lamar that, if he got another offer, he would give Lamar a chance to match the offer. Ultimately, no one made an offer, and Lamar signed the contract on May 10, 2002.
The trial court declined to set aside the decree and ruled that Lamar had not committed fraud in connection with his purchase of the condominium. The court further declared that the condominium was not marital property but that, even if it was, an unequal division of it should be made to Lamar “based upon the Court specifically finding that the evidence indicates
This court reviews division of marital property cases de novo. Copeland v. Copeland,
We first consider whether Lamar’s execution of the real-estate purchase contract created a property interest. We believe that it did. In executing the contract, Lamar acquired the right to enforce the sale of the condominium. See generally Bharodia v. Pledger,
Elizabeth contends that Lamar’s rights in the condominium were acquired during the marriage because they were acquired prior to the entry of the divorce decree. She relies on the case of Price v. Price,
It is undisputed that Lamar acquired an enforceable right to purchase the condominium on May 10, 2002, prior to the entry of the divorce decree. Given the clear holding in Price that the entry of the divorce decree determines the date of dissolution of the marriage, we cannot say that Lamar’s interest was not marital property. He and Elizabeth were still married when he acquired his interest. We therefore must disagree with the trial court’s conclusion on this point. However, we affirm the trial court’s alternative decision to award the condominium to Lamar as an unequal division of marital property.
The overriding purpose of the property-division statute is to enable the court to make a division of property that is fair and equitable under the circumstances. Hoover v. Hoover,
We do not believe that the trial court’s distribution of this property to Lamar was clearly erroneous. The court specifically found that the condominium was acquired by the sole contribution of Lamar and that Lamar was the only party at risk on the purchase of the condominium. Further, there is no evidence that Lamar used undisclosed marital funds to purchase the condominium. Moreover, he did not take title to it until after the divorce was final, and he intended to use the condominium as his post-marital residence. All of these factors support an equitable award of the condominium to Lamar as an unequal division of marital property. We therefore affirm the trial court on this basis. 1
Attorney Fee Award
After a November 8, 2002, contempt hearing, the trial court informed Lamar’s counsel that it would award attorney fees to Lamar, based on a finding that Elizabeth was in contempt. Counsel was asked to submit a bill and apparently prepared an affidavit setting out fees; however, the affidavit is not in the record. At a subsequent hearing, the court awarded Lamar’s counsel $8,850 in attorney fees. Elizabeth filed a motion for reconsideration, alleging that, because the court had reduced Lamar’s counsel’s fee request by over sixty-six percent, the fee request was excessive and counsel should not be entitled to any fee at all. The court ruled as follows:
[T]he attorney’s fees awarded [to Lamar’s] attorneys represents the amount which the Court believed a fair, just and equitable fee for plaintiff [Elizabeth] to pay. The Court arrived at that figure after considering all relevant factors set out by Arkansas case law, the Court’s examination of the affidavit submitted by defendant’s attorneys and the Court’s personal observation of the proceedings.
(Emphasis in original.) Elizabeth argues on appeal that the trial court erred in awarding attorney fees to Lamar.
Courts have the inherent power to award attorney fees in a domestic relations proceeding. Miller v. Miller,
Elizabeth argues that a lawyer who seeks to collect fees far in excess of a
Failure To Hold Lamar In Contempt
Elizabeth argues that the trial court should have held Lamar in contempt for his failure to abide by the dictates of an April 3, 2002 order and for his failure to pay certain money to her as required by the May 31, 2002 divorce decree. We limit our discussion to Elizabeth’s argument regarding the divorce decree because neither the April 3 order nor a portion of Lamar’s testimony that Elizabeth asserts was in contempt of it are contained in the record. As stated earlier, we do not consider matters outside the record on appeal. Arkansas River Rights Comm. v. Echubby Lake Hunting Club, supra.
In dividing the parties’ property in the May 31, 2002, decree, the trial court 1) ordered Lamar to deed his interest in the marital home to Elizabeth, for which Elizabeth would pay him $55,000, 2) ordered Elizabeth to convey her stock in Hugo’s, Inc., to Lamar, for which Lamar would pay her $225,000, and 3) ordered that the parties’ limited-liability company would convey a building at 25 North Block Street to Lamar, for which Lamar would pay Elizabeth $212,500. The court also ruled with regard to three lines of credit that the parties had at Arvest Bank, encompassing a $285,000 debt on the North Block Street building, a $76,000 debt on the home, and a $25,000 signature loan. Elizabeth was ordered to repay Arvest $68,742.99 that she had withdrawn from the three lines of credit, and each party was ordered to seek refinancing of one-half of the total debt remaining to Arvest.
Elizabeth contended at the November 8 hearing that Lamar should be held in contempt because he failed to pay her the $437,500 he owed under the decree, despite the fact that he had obtained a $600,000 loan commitment from the Bank of Fay-etteville for that purpose. The trial court declined to hold Lamar in contempt.
Refusal of a trial court to punish an alleged contemnor will be reviewed by an appellate court only to determine whether there has been an abuse of discretion. Warren v. Robinson,
The trial court found that the parties were at a “stalemate” over the problem of freeing up the 25 North Block building, which would allow the exchange of money under the decree to begin. The court recognized that the parties seemed to be operating under the misunderstanding that the decree required each of them to pay off one-half of the Arvest lines of credit. In its order, the court clarified that neither party was required to pay off the Arvest lines of credit but were merely required to finance their one-half portion.
While the evidence indicates that either party probably could have worked out an arrangement to begin the money-exchange process, both seemed to believe that the other should pay all or part of the Arvest loans before such a process could begin. The court clarified that matter, directed each party to use his or her best efforts to meet their obligations under the decree, and provided that they could petition the court in a contempt proceeding should either fail to use his or her best efforts. In light of these factors, we find no abuse of discretion in failing to hold Lamar in contempt.
Holding Elizabeth In Contempt
Elizabeth was held in contempt for failing to deliver certain items of personal property to Lamar as required by the divorce decree. The decree divided numerous items of tangible personal property, declaring some to be marital property, some to be the separate property of Elizabeth, and some to be the separate property of Lamar. On July 19, 2002, Lamar filed a petition for contempt, asserting, inter alia, that, although Elizabeth had delivered some of his personal items to a storage unit on July 5, 2002, many items were either missing or damaged. Lamar’s petition listed, with specificity, the missing and damaged items.
At the November 8 contempt hearing, the court viewed two videotapes, one that showed the contents of the marital home before the divorce decree was entered and one that showed the items that Elizabeth placed in the storage unit in July 2002. Lamar was able, in his testimony, to point out items on the videotape that were in the house prior to the divorce but were not provided to him in the storage unit. The trial court held Elizabeth in contempt for failing to provide Lamar with the items of property designated in the decree. However, the court withheld sentencing in order to allow Elizabeth to purge herself of contempt. The court directed the parties to examine and inspect the property at the former marital residence, where Elizabeth was residing, and to allow Lamar to take control of any property he believed to be his separate property. The parties went to the marital residence that same night, and several items of property were recovered by Lamar.
A hearing was held on January 9, 2003, for the court-to determine what Elizabeth had done to locate the items that she was responsible for providing to Lamar. Lamar presented an exhibit to the court, showing the items that he had removed from the marital residence during the court-ordered visit on the night of November 8, 2002. Included among the items
Following the hearing, the judge ruled that Elizabeth had failed to purge herself of contempt, and he sentenced her to two nights in jail. Elizabeth contends that the judge erred in holding her in contempt.
We will not reverse a trial court’s finding of civil contempt unless that finding is clearly against the preponderance of the evidence. Omni Holding & Devel. Corp. v. 3D.S.A., Inc.,
At the November 8 hearing, Elizabeth adamantly testified that she had provided Lamar with all property that was due him under the decree. Yet, when the parties visited her home that night, numerous items were found. Further, there was no evidence that Elizabeth cooperated in the retrieval of these items. As to the property that remained missing, Elizabeth’s testimony at the January 9 hearing indicated that she had done virtually nothing to locate it, and she continued to insist that she had already provided it to Lamar. This evidence supports a finding that Elizabeth violated the provisions of the divorce decree and did not avail herself of the opportunity to rectify her violation. We therefore find no error in the trial court’s decision to hold her in contempt.
Affirmed.
Notes
We also note that the critical inquiry in property division cases is how the total assets are divided. Copeland v. Copeland, supra. Because the record does not contain a transcript of the parties’ property-settlement agreement made in open court, we are uncertain if the divorce decree reflects a division of the parties’ total assets.
