AUNDREA PLETCHER v. JARED PLETCHER
Case No. CT2019-0002
COURT OF APPEALS MUSKINGUM COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
September 9, 2019
2019-Ohio-3625
Hon. John W. Wise, P. J.; Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, J.; Hon. Earle E. Wise, Jr., J.
CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Civil Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, Case No. DA2017-0332. JUDGMENT: Reversed and Remanded.
For Plaintiff-Appellee
AUNDREA PLETCHER
PRO SE
640 Downard Road
Zanesville, Ohio 43701
For Defendant-Appellant
MILES D. FRIES
GOTTLIEB, JOHNSTON, BEAM & DAL PONTE, P.L.L.
320 Main Street, P.O. Box 190
Zanesville, Ohio 43702-7555
{¶1} Appellant Jared Pletcher appeals from his divorce in the Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division. Appellee Aundrea Pletcher is his former spouse. The relevant facts leading to this appeal are as follows.
{¶2} Appellee Aundrea and Appellant Jared were married in 2007. Two children were born as issue of the marriage.
{¶3} On December 14, 2010, during their marriage, appellee and appellant took title to a residential property located on Old River Road in Philo, Ohio, near the marital residence. The property was acquired by appellee and appellant from prior owner R.L., who had been renting the house on the property to Richard and Karen H., appellee‘s parents.1
{¶4} During the time the aforesaid property was owned by R.L., it was encumbered by a mortgage. R.L. had previously expressed some interest in selling the property to appellee‘s parents, but they were not in a position to buy it at that time. However, in lieu of that plan, appellee and appellant jointly obtained a mortgage from Community Bank to pay off R.L.‘s existing mortgage. Appellee‘s parents thereafter continued to reside in the house under the ownership of appellee and appellant. Appellee‘s parents paid rent, but an assignment of those rent monies to Community Bank was arranged.
{¶5} On May 2, 2017, appellee filed a complaint for divorce. Appellant filed an answer and counterclaim on June 14, 2017.
{¶6} The parties eventually entered into a shared parenting plan, which was subsequently incorporated into the divorce decree, with certain exceptions set forth by the court. The remaining issues, particularly the division of property, proceeded to a trial on October 25, 2018.
{¶7} On October 29, 2018, the trial court issued its decision and judgment entry, concluding inter alia that the aforesaid Old River Road property was not part of the marital estate.
{¶8} On December 20, 2018, the trial court issued a final “judgment entry / decree of divorce.” Among other things, appellant was granted the marital residence as his separate property, as he was found to have owned said residence since before the marriage.2 The court also treated portions of appellant‘s “savings and investment plan” and his personal retirement account as his separate property; the remainder (totaling $117,347.00) was treated as marital property. The court also listed a 2016 Jeep and 1998 Baja Outlaw boat as marital assets.
{¶9} All told, the court found the existence of $166,947.00 in marital assets, less $73,944.18 in marital debts, equaling $93,002.82 in net marital assets. The court then distributed the marital assets ($152,197.00 to appellant, $14,750 to appellee) and allocated the marital debts ($58,275.18 to appellant, $15,669.00 to appellee). Appellant was thus ordered to make an equalization payment to appellee of $47,420.41. See Decree at 2; Marital Balance Sheet Exhibit.
{¶10} Finally, as indicated previously, the Old River Road property occupied by appellee‘s parents was found to be appellee‘s separate property. Appellee was ordered within one year to refinance the mortgage encumbering said property so as to remove appellant‘s name therefrom.
{¶11} Appellant filed a notice of appeal on January 22, 2019.3 He herein raises the following sole Assignment of Error:
{¶12} “I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT REAL ESTATE OWNED BY THE PARTIES IS NOT PART OF THE MARITAL ESTATE.”
I.
{¶13} In his sole Assignment of Error, appellant contends the trial court erred in determining that the Old River Road property, titled to both appellee and appellant and occupied by appellee‘s parents, was not marital property for purposes of the parties’ divorce. We agree.
Applicable Law
{¶14} An appellate court generally reviews the overall appropriateness of the trial court‘s property division in divorce proceedings under an abuse-of-discretion standard. Cherry v. Cherry (1981), 66 Ohio St.2d 348, 421 N.E.2d 1293. An abuse of discretion connotes more than an error of law or judgment; it implies that the court‘s attitude is unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore (1983), 5 Ohio St.3d 217, 219, 450 N.E.2d 1140.
{¶16}
{¶17} There is a presumption in Ohio that an asset acquired during the course of the marriage is marital property, unless proved otherwise. Haven v Haven, 5th Dist. Ashland No. 12-COA-013, 2012-Ohio-5347, ¶ 23. Correspondingly, the definition of
{¶18} We also note
Analysis
{¶19} As set forth in our recitation of the facts, supra, appellant‘s focus in the present appeal is the residential property, acquired during the marriage, located on Old River Road in Philo, Ohio, which the trial court excluded from the marital estate, stating as follows:
The real property located at [****] Old River Road, Philo, Ohio is titled in the names of both Jared Pletcher and Aundrea Pletcher. This property is encumbered by a mortgage to Community Bank and it is a joint obligation of the parties.
From the evidence the Court finds the property at [****] Old River Road, Philo, Ohio is the primary residence of Rick and Karen [H.], the
parents of Aundrea Pletcher. The Court finds the [parents] first rented the property from the [R.E.L] Trust but thereafter the property was conveyed from the Trust to Aundrea and Jared Pletcher. At the time of the conveyance in December 2010 the property was encumbered by a mortgage. On the acquisition of the property by Aundrea and Jared Pletcher the previous mortgage was extinguished by way of a subsequent mortgage from the Pletcher‘s to Community Bank. The Court further finds at the time of the Community Bank mortgage Aundrea Pletcher and Jared Pletcher entered into and executed an assignment of rents on the property in favor of the Community Bank to secure the mortgage. Jared Pletcher‘s testimony indicated he had little understanding of the circumstances surrounding the acquisition of this property. The testimony of Aundrea Pletcher established that her parents had been living there as lessees but [R.L.] wished to sell the property. Because her parents did not have good credit they could not obtain financing to obtain the property in their name and therefore Aundrea Pletcher and Jared Pletcher acquired the property allowing the [parents] to remain as tenants. Aundrea Pletcher testified that no marital funds were used as a down payment to acquire this real estate nor were marital funds ever used to satisfy the monthly mortgage obligation. Jared Pletcher produced no evidence to contradict this testimony.
The Court finds from the evidence including the testimony of Aundrea Pletcher and the assignment of rents to Community Bank that the intent was
to provide an alternate method for Richard and Karen [H.] to obtain this property and this property is therefore not part of the marital estate.
{¶20} Decision and Judgment Entry, October 29, 2018, at 2-3.
{¶21} At trial, appellee testified on cross-examination that even though her parents “would never” suddenly decide to move out of the Old River Road house, if that event were to happen under the then-extant arrangement, she and appellant would be obligated as joint mortgagors. Tr. at 71. It appears presently undisputed that the appraised value of the property in question is $116,000.00. See Tr. at 33. As of the trial date, the Community Bank mortgage payoff balance was 64,971.93. Tr. at 34. No evidence was adduced that appellee intends to gift the property or to sell it at a break-even price to her parents in the future, nor is there any requirement of that nature set forth in the divorce decree. While no significant marital funds were apparently expended in acquiring the property, both appellee and appellant gave a form of consideration for the transfer of the deed, as “[e]xecution of a mortgage implies consideration.” Montgomery v. Mosley, 4th Dist. Pike No. 448, 1990 WL 127047 (Harsha, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Furthermore, during the marriage, the parties, until 2016, claimed the interest paid on the mortgage as a federal income tax deduction.
{¶22} Under the circumstances presented, we find no valid basis for the trial court to have deprived appellant of the benefit of
Conclusion
{¶23} Accordingly, we find the trial court abused its discretion in this instance in concluding appellee had met her burden to establish that the Old River Road property was her separate asset.
{¶24} Appellant‘s sole Assignment of Error is sustained, and this matter will be remanded with directions to the trial court to treat the Old River Road property as marital property and the Community Bank mortgage as marital debt, and to adjust the marital property distribution accordingly.
By: Wise, John, P. J.
Baldwin, J., and
Wise, Earle, J., concur.
JWW/d 0816
