HAROLD TERRENCE TRIVETT v. CONSTANCE BONITA RATLIFF TRIVETT
No. 0286-87-3
Salem
September 6, 1988
George M. Warren, Jr. (Warren & Dickert, on brief), for appellant.
J. D. Bowie (Bowie, Robinson & Bates, on brief), for appellee.
OPINION
KOONTZ, C.J. — This case involves an appeal from an award of equitable distribution. The issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred in the amount of the monetary award granted to the wife.
Harold testified that, in consideration for this conveyance, he executed and delivered a promissory note dated December 23, 1980, in the sum of $64,000 bearing six percent interest payable to his grandparents. This note was unsecured. Harold‘s grandfather testified that he twice credited the note for $5,000, although no such payments were actually made. He testified that at least on one occasion he had “torn up” one $5,000 check given to him by Harold.
After Constance filed for a divorce, Harold executed a deed of trust on the property in question, securing the payment of the original promissory note at the request of his grandfather. This deed of trust was properly recorded in the appropriate clerk‘s office on June 14, 1985. Harold‘s grandfather testified that this was done on the advice of his accountant “for tax purposes.”
By decree entered on February 4, 1987, Constance was granted a final divorce on the ground of continuous and uninterrupted separation for a period in excess of one year. The parties have mutually accepted the trial court‘s rulings concerning their various real and personal property except for the aforementioned commercial property.1
An expert witness testified that the value of Harold‘s one-half interest was $42,500. Harold testified that its value was $50,000. The trial court found that Harold‘s interest was marital property and granted Constance a monetary award of $25,000. For purposes of this decision we will assume that the trial court found the value of Harold‘s interest was $50,000.
Based on the contentions of the parties in this case, we take this opportunity to expand on and clarify our decision in Hodges. We note at the outset that Hodges concerned valuation of marital property, not classification of marital property.2 Once the property of the parties is properly classified as marital, the determination to grant a monetary award and the amount of the award is controlled by the equities and rights and interests of the parties in the marital property and not by legal title. However, to the extent that a valid indebtedness which is secured creates an encumbrance on the legal title, that indebtedness must be considered by the trial court in determining the value of the marital property for purposes of determining the amount of the monetary award. In most cases, indebtedness is incurred and encumbrances are created on property which is subsequently classified as marital property during the routine financial dealings of the parties during the marriage and not in anticipation of divorce. Thus in Hodges, where there was no allegation that the encumbrances on the property that was classified as marital property were created in anticipation of divorce or to deliberately reduce the resulting value of the marital property, we held that upon a determination that such
Our qualification in Hodges was intended to address those cases in which, based on the evidence, the trial court determined that an encumbrance on the property classified as marital property was created in anticipation of divorce and deliberately to reduce or eliminate the value of such property for the purpose of reducing or eliminating a monetary award to a spouse and thus to frustrate the provisions of
In order to clarify our decision in Hodges, we stressed in that case a valid indebtedness was secured by a valid encumbrance on the property which was classified as marital property. No allegations that the indebtedness or the encumbrance which secured it were fraudulent, shams or an attempt to frustrate a monetary award were involved. Thus, a secured debt, unlike an unsecured debt, because it is an encumbrance on the property which is classified as marital property reduces the value of such property for purposes of determining the amount of a monetary award. However, nothing in Hodges was intended to imply that a valid unsecured debt was not to be considered by the trial court;
Our difficulty with this case is with the trial court‘s application of these principles upon the facts in the record before us. That record is totally void of the trial court‘s basis for reaching its conclusion with regard to the equitable distribution award.3 We find nothing in the court‘s decree, the depositions, or the statement of facts, which indicates that the trial court determined whether the encumbrance on the property which secured Harold‘s indebtedness was deliberately created to frustrate the provisions of
All of the provisions of
In this case, the trial court‘s resolution of the issue of the indebtedness and the encumbrance which secured it on the property in question is inseparable from its decision to grant the monetary award and the amount of the award. In that regard, Constance argues on brief first that Harold does not owe a “bona fide debt” to his grandfather, and second, that the encumbrance was created deliberately to frustrate the provisions of
Thus, in the present case, having determined the property to be marital, the trial court was further required to determine whether Harold‘s previously unsecured indebtedness was later converted to a secured indebtedness on the specific property deliberately to frustrate the provisions of
We recognize that the amount of the monetary award is within the sound discretion of the trial court. The wisdom, if not the practicality, of such a rule is self-evident. Appellate courts do not and cannot stand in the equivalent position of trial courts in weighing the evidence presented by the parties. We also recognize the difficult tasks faced by the trial courts in determining an equitable monetary award. However, where as here, a determination of the value of marital property is dispositive of the amount of a monetary award, that determination by the trial court must be reviewable and have a foundation in the evidence presented. In this case, if the indebtedness was secured by a valid encumbrance on the property, not created deliberately to frustrate a monetary award, there is no basis for the amount of the monetary award to Constance because the property has no value for purposes of a monetary award. The mere fact that the encumbrance was created after the divorce was filed is not dispositive of the issue, though it may create a suspicion of an attempt to dissipate a basis for a monetary award. This is particularly true where the original debt has been found to be otherwise valid. We did not mean to imply in Hodges that the mere delay in recording an encumbrance for an otherwise valid debt amounts to a deliberate attempt to frustrate
We are left to conclude that, on the record before us, without a foundation in the evidence or findings of facts and conclusions of law by the trial court to support the monetary award, that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the monetary award to
For these reasons, we reverse the trial court‘s award and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Keenan, J., concurred.
Coleman, J., concurring.
I concur with the result and disposition, but I disagree with how the majority treats debts, whether secured or unsecured, in determining a monetary award.
One of the primary considerations for trial courts in fashioning an equitable distribution award is the asset-debt structure in relation to the parties’ property. Whether the state‘s procedure authorizes courts to divide and distribute assets and assign liabilities or to adjust the net marital wealth by making a monetary award, the
A panel of this court, of which I was a member, held in Hodges v. Hodges: “Where the marital property is encumbered with indebtedness which equals or exceeds its value, then for purposes of a monetary award it is essentially of no value. Without value, there is no basis for a monetary award.” 2 Va. App. 508, 515, 347 S.E.2d 134, 138 (1986). As the author of Hodges, Chief Judge Koontz undertakes in the majority opinion to “expand on and clarify” the Hodges decision by holding “to the extent that a valid indebtedness which is secured creates an encumbrance on the legal title, that indebtedness must be considered by the trial court in determining the value of the marital property for purposes of determining the amount of the monetary award.” Thus, the Hodges panel and the majority here hold that a secured indebtedness is to be considered part of the valuation procedure for determining the value of marital property.
Despite my prior concurrence in Hodges, I no longer believe that the legislature intended indebtedness to be considered as part of the valuation process. “If there are . . . ways of gracefully and good naturedly surrendering [my] former views to a better considered position, I invoke them all.” McGrath v. Kristensen, 340 U.S. 162, 178 (1950) (Jackson, Jr. concurring). I am comfortable with Chief Justice Taney‘s prologue: “The matter does not appear to me now as it appears to have appeared to me then.” Id. (citation omitted). In my view,
I believe that Hodges and the majority opinion in this case, while perhaps effecting no inequitable result in the specific situa-
In my view the majority decision allowing the trial court on remand to reconsider the validity of the indebtedness is improper because the evidence is undisputed that the debt was for purchase money and was represented by a promissory note executed contemporaneously with the deed of conveyance. The transaction occurred in December 1980 and could not have been in anticipation of equitable distribution. While the grandfather may have intended for tax purposes to forgive the obligations as they become due, the debt is nonetheless valid. See Wagner v. Wagner, 4 Va. App. 397, 403-04, 358 S.E.2d 407, 410 (1987). In the event of the grandfather‘s death his personal representative would be required to collect the obligation unless otherwise provided. Id. at 404, 358 S.E.2d at 410. Evidence that tax considerations may result in for-
Insofar as the majority directing the trial court on remand to consider whether the encumbrance was created to frustrate equitable distribution, it is unclear to me the reason for directing such inquiry. It is of little or no consequence whether the husband intended to frustrate equitable distribution provided the deed of trust secures a valid debt. Except in anticipation of bankruptcy,
I agree with the majority that the monetary award must be remanded for consideration because, in my view, the indebtedness is a significant factor which must be considered in arriving at a monetary award. The amount of the award is inexplicable under the facts of this case if the debt is valid and when considered in relation to all factors in
