OPINION of the Court by
I. ISSUE
This dissolution-of-marriage action presents one primary issue for our consideration. Appellee owned an apartment building before his marriage to Appellant. During the marriage, in exchange for the apartment building, the parties acquired in their joint names an undivided one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park Partnership (Autumn Park), a real estate partnership. At the time of the exchange, Appellee had a 94% nonmarital interest in the apartment building. Both the trial court and the Court of Appeals held that Appellee’s nonmarital interest in the apartment building did not become marital property because the partnership interest was placed in the parties’ joint names. Therefore, Appellee was awarded a 94% nonmarital interest in the parties’ partnership interest in Autumn Park. Did Appel-lee’s nonmarital interest in the apartment building transmute into marital property when the partnership interest was placed in the parties’ joint names? Because, one, title is not controlling in determining property’s character, and, two, Appellee and his parents did not intend for Appellant to
II. BACKGROUND
Appellant, Jennifer Paige Sexton, and Appellee, Larry Duane Sexton, married on May 26, 1984. At the time of their marriage, Appellee owned an eight-unit apartment building valued at $165,000 with a mortgage debt of $89,900 against it. Ap-pellee thus had equity of $75,100 in the apartment building. During the marriage, the principal on the apartment building’s mortgage was reduced by $20,764 as a result of money gifts totaling $4,706 from Appellee’s parents and by the application of $16,058 in rental proceeds from the apartment building.
In March 1992, the parties 1 conveyed the apartment building to Autumn Park 2 in exchange for a one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest that was placed in the parties’ joint names. 3 In addition, Appellee individually executed a $69,000 note payable to his parents. This note represented the unpaid balance of the debt against the apartment building 4 and thus allowed Ap-pellee to make a partnership contribution equal to the apartment building’s unencumbered value. Appellee did not repay the note; rather, his parents gifted the $69,000 to him over the next few years. 5 The trial court determined that when the parties transferred the apartment building to the partnership, Appellee had a 94% nonmarital interest in the apartment building and the parties, together, had a 6% marital interest. 6
Appellant sought an award of her attorney’s fees and costs, totaling $22,810, that she incurred in connection with her legal representation in the dissolution action, but the trial court, without making any findings, totally denied her request. The Court of Appeals, although noting that Appellant references evidence from the record, which indicates that Appellee will earn 450% of what Appellant will earn in the same period, 11 found no abuse of discretion and affirmed the trial court. We reverse the Court of Appeals on this issue and remand the case to the trial court for reconsideration of Appellant’s request for an award of attorney’s fees and costs.
III. ANALYSIS
A. AUTUMN PARK PARTNERSHIP
Appellant claims that the trial court erroneously awarded Appellee a 94% non-marital interest in the parties’ one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park and advances a number of arguments in support of this claim: first, the trial court ignored Kentucky’s general partnership law in classifying the partnership interest and the allocation was erroneous under partnership law; second, the evidence presented by Appellee to show his nonmarital interest in the partnership was insufficient to meet the burden of proof for tracing nonmarital property; third, the debt forgiveness used to purchase the partnership interest was a gift to the marital unit, not Appellee individually; and fourth, Appel-lee’s use of his nonmarital property to purchase the partnership interest in the parties’ joint names transmuted Appellee’s nonmarital property into a marital interest in the partnership. We find none of these arguments persuasive, and accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s division of the parties’ partnership interest in Autumn Park.
1. Application of Partnership Law
Because the partnership agreement shows the one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park in the parties’ joint names,
i.e.,
“Larry D. Sexton and Jennifer
The disposition of parties’ property in a dissolution-of-marriage action is governed by KRS 403.190,
13
and neither record title
14
nor the form in which it is held,
e.g.,
partnership, corporation, or sole proprietorship,
15
is controlling or determinative. Under KRS 403.190, a trial court utilizes a three-step process to divide the
In the present case, prior to the parties’ marriage, Appellee owned the apartment building that was exchanged for the partnership interest, 20 and the apartment building’s equity increased during the marriage, at least partially, as a result of gifts from Appellee’s parents. 21 Thus, although the parties’ partnership interest was acquired during the marriage, the trial court found that Appellee’s nonmarital funds and property were primarily used to acquire it. Accordingly, the trial court properly rejected Appellant’s argument that partnership law controlled and characterized the parties’ interests in the Autumn Park partnership interest as both marital and nonmarital.
Appellant claims that the evidence presented by Appellee to show his nonmarital share in the Autumn Park partnership interest was insufficient to meet the burden of proof necessary for tracing nonmarital property. We disagree. “Tracing” is defined as “[t]he process of tracking property’s ownership or characteristics from the time of its origin to the present.” 22 In the context of tracing nonmarital property, “[w]hen the original property claimed to be nonmarital is no longer owned, the nonmarital claimant must trace the previously owned property into a presently owned specific asset.” 23 The concept of tracing is judicially created 24 and arises from KRS 403.190(3)’s presumption 25 that all property acquired after the marriage is marital property unless shown to come within one of KRS 403.190(2)’s exceptions. 26 A party claiming that property, or an interest therein, acquired during the marriage is nonmarital bears the burden of proof. 27
Here, Appellee introduced evidence as to his nonmarital interest in the apart
3. Forgiveness of Debt against Partnership Interest.
As previously stated, in addition to the parties’ conveyance of the apartment building in exchange for the one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park, Ap-pellee individually executed a $69,000 note payable to his parents. Appellee’s parents forgave this indebtedness over the next several years. Appellant contends that since the partnership interest was acquired during the marriage and placed in the parties’ joint names, the forgiveness of the debt that Appellee owed on the purchase of the partnership interest was a joint gift to the parties that resulted in an increased marital interest in the partnership interest. Again, we disagree with Appellant’s conclusion.
Like other nonmarital claimants of property acquired during marriage, a party claiming that property is nonmarital by reason of the gift exception has the burden to prove it.
30
Accordingly, the burden was on Appellee to prove that the forgiveness of the debt was a gift solely to him.
31
“A
In
O’Neill v.
O’Neill,
33
a case involving a gift between spouses, the Court of Appeals set forth four (4) factors that trial courts should consider in determining if a transfer was a gift and thus a spouse’s nonmarital property: one, “the source of the money with which the
‘gift’
was purchased,” two, “the intent of the donor at that time as to intended use of the property,” three, “status of the marriage relationship at the time of the transfer,” and four, “whether there was any valid agreement that the transferred property was to be excluded from the marital property.”
34
When the gift is from a third party, we would add a fifth factor: whether the purported donor received compensation for the transfer.
35
And, even though title is not determinative of whether a transfer to a party is a gift,
36
nevertheless, it is evidence for the trial court to consider.
37
Clearly, the donor’s intent is the primary factor in determining whether a transfer of property is a gift,
38
and we likewise hold
In the present case, the trial court found that the debt forgiveness was intended by Appellee’s father as a gift only to Appellee “with no intent to gift the interest to both parties in equal parts.” This finding was supported by the testimony of Appellee and his father and by the letter from Appellee’s father’s attorney, which evidenced Appellee’s father’s intent not to make a gift to Appellant. 42 Further, the trial court found that Appellant was added as an owner of the partnership interest “only because of her being [Appel-lee’s] spouse.” In other words, Appellee’s father did not intend to make a gift to Appellant; she was only added as an owner of the partnership interest because of her marriage to Appellee, and therefore, she received no additional interest by reason of the partnership interest being placed in their joint names. 43 We find that the trial court’s factual finding that the debt forgiveness was a gift intended solely for Appellee was not clearly erroneous and was sufficient to overcome the marital property presumption. Accordingly, the debt forgiveness against the partnership interest constituted a gift solely to Appel-lee that resulted in an increase in his nonmarital interest in the parties’ partnership interest.
Appellant argues that under the holding of the Court of Appeals’s decision in
Callo-
Jh Transmutation of Appellee’s Nonmarital Property.
Relying on cases from other jurisdictions, Appellant contends that Appellee’s nonmarital interest in the apartment building became the parties’ marital property when he used it to acquire the partnership interest in Autumn Park and then caused it to be placed in the parties’ joint names instead of Appellee’s name only. In other words, Appellant is asking this Court to adopt the doctrine of transmutation, which has been described as follows:
[Transmutation] occurs when separate property is treated in such a way as to give evidence of an intention that it become marital property. One method of causing transmutation is to purchase property with separate funds but to take title in joint tenancy. This may also be done by placing separate property in the names of both spouses. The rationale underlying [this doctrine] is that dealing with property in [this] way[] creates a rebuttable presumption of a gift to the marital estate. This presumption is based also upon the provision in many marital property statutes that property acquired during the marriage is presumed marital. The presumption can be rebutted by evidence of circumstances or communications clearly indicating an intent that the property remain separate. 51
5. Cosigning on Autumn Park’s Debt.
Both of the parties, along with the other named partners, cosigned on a $2,200,000 mortgage loan that Autumn Park obtained to purchase apartments for the partnership. Appellant seems to suggest that the partnership interest should be classified as marital property because she alleges that the parties’ cosigning on the mortgage loan represented a marital contribution by the parties to acquire the partnership interest. We disagree. First, the parties’ liability on the loan was contingent on Autumn Park not being able to repay the loan, and the value of the mortgaged apartments comfortably exceeded the loan amount. Appellant does not claim that the lender was looking to her as security for the loan. Clearly, the lender was looking to the mortgaged apartments to secure its loan. Second, Appellant’s signature was required simply because she was shown as a partner of Autumn Park. Third, the lender and the parties were looking solely to the rents from the apartments — not to the parties’ income — as the source for the monthly mortgage payments. Under the circumstances, the cosigning of the mortgage note by the par
B. ATTORNEY FEES AND COSTS
KRS 403.220 reads in relevant part as follows:
The court from time to time after considering the financial resources of both parties may order a party to pay a reasonable amount for the cost, to the other party of maintaining or defending any proceeding under this chapter and for attorney’s fees, including sums for legal services rendered and costs incurred prior to the commencement of the proceeding or after entry of judgment. 57
Under this statute, a trial court may “order one party to a divorce action to pay a ‘reasonable amount’ for the attorney’s fees of the other party, but only if there exists a disparity in the relative financial resources of the parties in favor of the pay- or.” 58 “But even if a disparity exists, whether to make such an assignment and, if so, the amount to be assigned is within the discretion of the trial judge.” 59 “ ‘There is nothing mandatory about it.” ’ 60 Thus, a trial court’s ruling on attorney fees is subject to review only for an abuse of diseretion. 61 “The test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial judge’s decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles.” 62
In exercising its discretion in the present case, the trial court was required to consider the financial resources of both parties. 63 As noted by the Court of Appeals, a disparity existed in the financial resources of the parties after the dissolution. Appellant was assigned property with a value of less than $100,000 and was imputed annual income of $25,000. On the other hand, Appellee received property, including the partnership interest in Autumn Park, valued at more than $600,000 and has income of $114,000 annually. In addition to the parties’ financial resources, the trial court should consider other relevant factors, including those set forth by our predecessor in Boden v. Boden: 64
(a) Amount and character of services rendered.
(b) Labor, time, and trouble involved.
(c) Nature and importance of the litigation or business in which the services were rendered.
(d) Responsibility imposed.
(e) The amount of money or the value of property affected by the controversy, or involved in the employment.
(f) Skill and experience called for in the performance of the services.
(g) The professional character and standing of the attorneys.
(h) The results secured.
Additionally, “obstructive tactics and conduct, which multiplied the record and the proceedings” are proper considerations “justify[ing] both the fact and the amount of the award.” 65
The trial court did not set forth findings with respect to its denial of attorney fees and costs; 66 however, in fairness to the trial court, we point out that the parties did not request such findings. 67 As a result, we do not know if the trial court considered any factors other than the parties’ financial resources before totally denying Appellant’s request for attorney fees. Consequently, with such a significant inequality of resources, we conclude that the trial judge abused her discretion in totally denying Appellant’s request for attorney fees and costs. 68 We, therefore, reverse the Court of Appeals’s decision affirming the trial court’s denial of attorney fees and costs and remand this issue to the trial court for its reconsideration.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we affirm the Court of Appeals’s decision upholding the trial court’s disposition of the one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park, and we reverse the Court of Appeals’s decision affirming the trial court’s total denial of attorney fees and costs. The issue of attorney fees and costs are remanded to the trial court for its reconsideration.
Notes
. Although the property was owned by Appel-lee prior to the parties' marriage and Appellee held record title solely in his name, Appellant was still required to join in the conveyance in order to convey or release her dower interest. KRS 392.020.
. Autumn Park owns several apartment buildings. The partnership was operated by Appel-lee's parents, Darrell and Allie Sexton. Ap-pellee's sister and her husband also conveyed an apartment building to the partnership in exchange for a one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest.
. The Partnership Agreement set forth the respective interests of the partners as follows:
Based on the contribution of the mortgaging and pledging of the respective parties' real estate the interest and ownership of the Partners shall be as follows:
Two-Thirds (2/3’s) interest- — Darrell Sexton and Allie C.
Sexton, husband and wife
One-Sixth (1/6) interest — Larry D. Sexton and Jennifer P.
Sexton, husband and wife
One-Sixth (1/6) interest — Gary D. Davis and Pamela S.
Davis, husband and wife.
. The exact balance was $69,136.
. Appellee’s parents, in effect, only gifted two-thirds (2/3) of the debt, or $46,091, since the debt against the apartment building was paid from partnership funds and his parents only owned a two-third (2/3) interest in the partnership. The loan forgiveness occurred over several years for tax purposes.
. The trial court adopted the calculations of Appellee’s expert witness, a certified public accountant, who calculated Appellee’s non-marital interest and the parties’ marital interest using the following methodology: First, he determined that Appellee’s nonmarital equity in the apartment building was $125,897 at the date of marriage. Appellee’s expert arrived at this figure by adding to the $75,100 equity in Appellee’s apartment building at the date of marriage, the following amounts: (1) the $4,700 in gifts from Appellee’s parents during the marriage, and (2) $46,091 of the $69,136
. Prior to including Appellant’s name in the Partnership Agreement, Appellee’s father, Darrell Sexton, received the advice of his attorney about the legal ramifications of doing so:
You have asked me about setting up the partnership for Autumn Park Apartments and the advisability of placing the children’s spouses in a title position. It is my understanding that you have concerns if either of the children get [sic] a divorce what might happen to the partnership. It is my opinion that title is not a factor in a dissolution action, but rather is a matter of intent as to whether the non family spouse is given any interest in the property. It is my understanding that you plan to set up the partnership for estate tax purposes and do not intend for either your son-in-law or daughter-in-law to have any interest in the event of divorce. This is particularly true with the Lexington apartments. I do not see that adding their names will nullify your desired interest, (letter to Darrell Sexton from his attorney, dated March 5, 1992).
. To determine the marital and nonmarital interests in the one-sixth (1/6) partnership interest in Autumn Park, the accountant, whose
. $134,622 x 93.5188% = $125,897.
. The entire marital share was assigned to Appellee; however, in order to effectuate an equal division of marital property, marital property corresponding in value was assigned to Appellant.
.The Court of Appeals also noted that Ap-pellee "shows that between the court’s award of maintenance and his own tax burden, the disparity between his after-tax income and hers is not as great.”
. The dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeals posited that because no provision exists in Kentucky’s Uniform Partnership Act (UPA), KRS 362.150 — 362.360, that “allows a married couple to share a single, undivided share of a partnership interest[,]” “the attempt to convey the partnership interest to the parties as a married couple was ineffective!]]" and resulted in the conveyance of a partnership interest to Appellant and Appellee "individually as partners, rather than as a couple with an undivided interest.” We disagree. Although the UPA does not directly address this issue, we find nothing in the UPA to indicate that the legislature intended to preclude two or more persons, including a married couple, from owning a partnership interest as tenants in common if allowed by the partnership agreement or with the consent of the other partners.
Cf. Wehrheim v. Brent,
.
Travis
v.
Travis,
Ky.,
. KRS 403.190(3) ("All property acquired by either spouse after the marriage and before a decree of legal separation is presumed to be marital property, regardless of whether title is held individually or by the spouses in some form of co-ownership such as joint tenancy, tenancy in common, tenancy by the entirely, and community property.”);
Angel v. Angel,
Ky.App.,
. 15 L. GRAHAM & J. KELLER, KENTUCKY PRACTICE, DOMESTIC RELATIONS LAW § 15.68 (2nd ed. West Group 1997) [hereinafter GRAHAM & KELLER] ("The form in which a business is held should not determine its classification as marital property”);
Holman v. Holman,
Ky.,
.Travis,
. Id. (footnotes omitted).
. Id. (footnotes omitted).
. Id. at 909 fn. 10 ((citing GRAHAM & KELLER, supra note 15, §§ 15.61 & 15.62) and Louise E. Graham, Using Formulas to Separate Marital and Nonmarital Property: A Policy Oriented Approach to the Division of Appreciated Property on Divorce, 73 KY. L.J. 41, 44 (1984-85)).
. KRS 403.190(2) ("'marital property’ means all property acquired by either spouse subsequent to the marriage ....”);
Chenault v. Chenault,
Ky.,
. KRS 403.190(2)(a) (excluding from the definition of marital property, "[plroperty acquired by gift ... during the marriage[.]”).
. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1499 (7th ed.1999).
. GRAHAM & KELLER,
supra
note 15, § 15.10.
Accord Brunson v. Brunson,
Ky.App.,
.
Chenault,
. KRS 403.190(3) ("All property acquired by either spouse after the marriage and before a decree of legal separation is presumed to be marital property, regardless of whether title is held individually or by the spouses in some form of co-ownership such as joint tenancy, tenancy in common, tenancy by the entirety, and community property.”).
. KRS 403.190(2) reads as follows:
For the purpose of this chapter, “marital property” means all property acquired by either spouse subsequent to the marriage except;
(a) Property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent during the marriage and the income derived therefrom unless there are significant activities of either spouse which contributed to the increase in value of said property and the income earned therefrom;
(b) Property acquired in exchange for property acquired before the marriage or in exchange for property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent;
(c) Property acquired by a spouse after a decree of legal separation;
(d) Property excluded by valid agreement of the parties; and
(e) The increase in value of property acquired before the marriage to the extent that such increase did not result from the efforts of the parties during marriage.
.
Terwilliger,
. Appellee's sister also signed a similar note.
. Supra note 6.
.
Supra
note 27;
Browning v. Browning,
Ky. App.,
.Browning,
.
Browning,
. Ky.App.,
. Id. at 495.
.
Supra
note 32;
Underwood,
. Supra note 14.
. 38 AM. JUR. 2D Gifts § 19 (1999) ("The form of the transfer is among the circumstances that may be considered. However, in order for a gift to be valid, a transfer of title is not necessary; a showing that it was the intent of the donor to make a gift can negate the fact that actual title was not transferred.”). See also Deborah H. Bell, Equitable Distribution: Implementing the Marital Partnership Theory through the Dual Classification System, 67 MISS. L.J. 115, 144-145 (1997) [hereinafter Bell, Equitable Distribution ] ("However, the basic test for determining whether a gift is joint or individual is the donor’s intent. To make that determination, courts have looked to the following: statements of the donor, statements of the spouses, the tax treatment of the gift, whether the gift was jointly titled, the person to whom it was delivered, and the relationship between the donor and the spouses.” (footnotes omitted)).
.
Underwood,
. Bell, Equitable Distribution, supra note 37, at 144 ("However, the basic test for determining whether a gift is joint or individual is the donor's intent.”).
. 38 AM. JUR. 2D Gifts § 19 (1999).
. CR 52.01 (“Findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.");
Ghali v. Ghali,
Ky.App.,
. Supra note 7.
.
Angel,
. Ky.App.,
. Id. at 892-893 (emphasis added).
. Id. at 893.
. Supra note 43.
. GRAHAM & KELLER, supra note 15, § 15.17.
. Bell, Equitable Distribution, supra note 37, at 145 ("If a joint gift was intended, almost all courts conclude that the gift is marital property subject to equitable distribution.”).
. KRS 403.190(2)(a) (excluding "[pjroperty acquired by gift ... during the marriage.”).
. 2 H. Clark,
The Law of Domestic Relations in the United States
§ 16.2, at 185 (1987) [hereinafter Clark,
Law of Domestic Rela
tions].
See also
GRAHAM
&
KELLER,
supra
note 15, § 15.14 ("Transmutation can best be described by its outcome rather than
. GRAHAM & KELLER, supra note 15, § 15.14.
. Supra notes 23 and 24 and surrounding text.
. Supra notes 18 and 19 and surrounding text; GRAHAM & KELLER, supra note 15 § 15.14.
. Clark, Law of Domestic Relations, supra note 51, at 186 ("The moral for spouses with large amounts of separate property would seem to be that they should not trust each other but should be careful to ensure that separate property does not get commingled or transmuted, a moral very destructive of good marriage relations.”).
.Terwilliger,
. KRS 403.220 (emphasis added).
.
Neidlinger,
. Id. (citations omitted).
. Id. (citations omitted).
. 5 AM. JUR. 2D Appellate Review, § 695 (1995).
.
Commonwealth v. English,
Ky.,
. KRS 403.220; GRAHAM & KELLER, supra note 15, § 19.2.
. Ky.,
.
Gentry v. Gentry,
Ky.,
. CR 52.01 ("In all actions tried upon the facts without a jury or with an advisory jury, the court shall find the facts specifically and state separately its conclusions of law thereon and render an appropriate judgment[.]”).
But cf.. Hollingsworth v. Hollingsworth,
Ky. App.,
. CR 52.04 ("A final judgment shall not be reversed or remanded because of the failure of the trial court to make a finding of fact on an issue essential to the judgment unless such failure is brought to the attention of the trial court by a written request for a finding on that issue or by a motion pursuant to Rule 52.02.”).
.
Beckner v. Beckner,
Ky.App.,
