William Sanchez v. Glenn E. Weeks ( 2023 )


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  •                                   Cite as 
    2023 Ark. App. 531
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CV-22-622
    Opinion Delivered November 15, 2023
    APPEAL FROM THE BENTON
    WILLIAM SANCHEZ
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    APPELLANT
    [NO. 04DR-19-1313]
    V.
    HONORABLE DOUG SCHRANTZ,
    JUDGE
    GLENN E. WEEKS
    APPELLEE AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
    REMANDED IN PART
    CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge
    Appellant William Sanchez appeals a Benton County Circuit Court decree divorcing
    him from the appellee, Glenn E. Weeks. On appeal, Sanchez argues that the circuit court
    erred in its division of the marital assets and debts, including its decision declaring the
    parties’ home to be marital property and its allocation of Sanchez’s 401(k) plan among
    Sanchez, Sanchez’s ex-wife, and Weeks. Because the court erred in designating the parties’
    home as marital property and because it erred in its allocation of the 401(k), we reverse the
    court’s division of marital property. Finally, we affirm the circuit court’s allocation of marital
    debt.
    William Sanchez and Glenn Weeks were married on November 6, 2015. Problems
    arose in the marriage, and in August 2019, Sanchez filed a complaint for divorce from
    Weeks. Weeks answered and counterclaimed for divorce. The parties ultimately stipulated
    that Sanchez would be granted the divorce but disagreed as to the division of property. The
    disagreement centered on the division of the marital home, Sanchez’s 401(k), and marital
    debt.
    As to the marital home, the following evidence was adduced at the final hearing.
    While married, Sanchez and Weeks purchased land and obtained a construction mortgage
    with the anticipation of building a home together. In order to purchase the land, Sanchez
    sold a house he owned prior to his marriage to Weeks. It is undisputed that the house
    Sanchez sold was his separate, nonmarital property. That sale netted Sanchez $50,000, which
    he placed in a First Western bank account in his individual name.
    Of the $50,000 Sanchez received from the sale of the home, Sanchez paid $10,000
    for the lot and $5,000 for upfront costs for the construction of what was to be their marital
    residence. The remainder of the money needed to build the home was funded by a
    construction loan for which Sanchez and Weeks were jointly responsible. Sanchez claimed
    that he made all the payments on the construction loan during the marriage using his
    separate funds. Weeks, on the other hand, argued that he contributed approximately $800
    a month to the household bills and believed that some of that money was used to pay the
    construction loan.
    By the time the home was built and it was time to convert the construction loan to a
    traditional mortgage, Sanchez and Weeks had separated. Because he did not want any
    responsibility for payments on the house, Weeks requested that the mortgage company
    2
    prepare a deed to convey his interest in the home to Sanchez. On July 24, 2019, Weeks
    quitclaimed the property to Sanchez. As a result, Weeks was not included on the mortgage.
    After Weeks had signed over his interest, the parties discussed trying to salvage their
    relationship, but Sanchez filed for divorce two weeks later.
    As for the 401(k), the evidence was slightly more complicated. Sanchez began working
    for Wal-Mart in 1996, prior to his marriage to Weeks. While he was employed by Wal-Mart,
    Sanchez contributed to his company’s retirement plan and took advantage of its contribution
    matching program. At the time he began contributing to the plan, he was married to his first
    wife, Glexy Sanchez, now Gotopo. They divorced in 2006 after twenty years of marriage.
    Their divorce decree did not address the division of the 401(k) plan.
    Sanchez continued to contribute to the 401(k) even after he married Weeks in
    November 2015, and Wal-Mart continued to match his contributions.
    In February 2020, Gotopo petitioned to reopen the 2006 divorce case 1 to address the
    division of the 401(k).2 In her petition in that case, Gotopo admitted that she and Sanchez
    had failed to include the equal division of the profit-sharing plan in the decree and requested
    1
    The petition was filed in the same county as the current divorce action but was
    assigned to a different judge.
    2
    The petition was filed on Gotopo’s behalf by Sanchez’s counsel in the current divorce
    action. This resulted in Weeks filing a motion for contempt for violation of the court’s
    standing order prohibiting the parties from disposing of marital property. It was the failure
    of the court to rule on this motion that resulted in the dismissal of the prior appeal for lack
    of a final order. Sanchez v. Weeks, 
    2021 Ark. App. 493
    . On remand, the court dismissed the
    motion as moot.
    3
    that the court reopen their divorce case for the entry of a QDRO dividing the account equally
    between them. The court in the newly reopened 2006 divorce action granted the request
    and issued a QDRO dividing the 401(k) equally between Gotopo and Sanchez as of February
    14, 2020—over four years into Sanchez and Weeks’s marriage.
    After the QDRO was entered by the court in the prior divorce case, Sanchez amended
    his complaint in the present action. In his amended complaint, Sanchez alleged in part that
    because the circuit court in the prior divorce action had found that Gotopo owned 50
    percent of his retirement account through February 2020, Weeks was entitled to only 25
    percent of the contributions and interest earned thereon since their marriage in November
    2015.
    As for the parties’ debts, Sanchez argued that he used his separate funds to pay off
    marital debt, including credit cards, and that Weeks should be required to reimburse him
    for half of the debt. Weeks stated that he never asked Sanchez to pay off their marital debt
    with his separate funds and claimed that he gave Sanchez approximately $800 a month to
    pay their bills.
    After reviewing the evidence, the court entered a divorce decree granting Sanchez a
    divorce from Weeks. As for the division of property, the court found the home to be marital
    property, despite the quitclaim deed from Weeks to Sanchez. The court ordered the property
    sold and the proceeds and any liability divided equally. The court took judicial notice of the
    QDRO entered in the prior divorce case between Sanchez and Gotopo and found that,
    because their divorce decree was silent in regard to the 401(k), Gotopo and Sanchez were
    4
    presumed to own the account equally. As a result, it found that they were entitled to share
    equally in the contributions and growth on the 401(k) through November 6, 2015. The court
    then stated that, as between Sanchez and Weeks, they were entitled to share equally in “all
    the accumulation in the 401(k) account by any contributions by either the employer or the
    employee or any growth or interest accumulated on the account” after November 6, 2015.
    Finally, as to the marital debt Sanchez claimed to have paid using his separate funds, the
    court refused to order Weeks to reimburse his share.
    Sanchez has now appealed the court’s division of property and debt. Because the
    court erred in its division of the real property and the 401(k), we reverse and remand for
    further proceedings. As to the court’s division of the marital debts, we affirm.
    Domestic-relations cases are reviewed de novo on appeal, but the appellate court does
    not reverse a circuit court’s findings unless they are clearly erroneous. Wilcox v. Wilcox, 
    2022 Ark. App. 18
    , 
    640 S.W.3d 408
    . A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is
    evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with a definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been made. 
    Id.
     Furthermore, a circuit court has broad
    powers to distribute property in a divorce to achieve equitable distribution; mathematical
    precision is not required. 
    Id.
     In reviewing a circuit court’s findings, we defer to the court’s
    superior position to determine the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be accorded to
    their testimony. 
    Id.
    I. Real Property
    5
    Sanchez first argues that the trial court erred in finding that the parties’ home was a
    marital asset. We agree.
    All earnings or other property acquired by each spouse after marriage must be treated
    as marital property unless it falls into one of the statutory exemptions contained in Arkansas
    Code Annotated section 9-12-315(b) (Repl. 2020). Wagoner v. Wagoner, 
    294 Ark. 82
    , 
    740 S.W.2d 915
     (1987). A gift is one of those exceptions. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315
    (b)(1);
    Dozier v. Dozier, 
    2014 Ark. App. 78
    , at 7, 
    432 S.W.3d 82
    , 86. The burden is on the party who
    asserts an interest in the property to establish that it is, in fact, separate property. Aldridge v.
    Aldridge, 
    28 Ark. App. 175
    , 
    773 S.W.2d 103
     (1989).
    Here, it is undisputed that, prior to the divorce, Weeks quitclaimed his interest in
    the property to Sanchez in exchange for being released from the liability on the mortgage.
    Arkansas Code Annotated section 18-12-401(a) provides that “[a] deed of conveyance of real
    property located in this state . . . by an individual to his or her spouse shall convey to the
    grantee named in the deed the entire interest of the grantor in the property conveyed, or the
    interest specified in the deed, as if the spousal relation did not exist between the parties to
    the deed.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 18-12-401
    (a) (Supp. 2023). The purpose of this section is to
    empower an individual to contract with his or her spouse in regard to real property in the
    same manner and to the same effect as if the spousal relation did not exist between the
    parties to the deed. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 18-12-401
    (d). Thus, under the statute, a quitclaim
    deed executed by one spouse to the other conveys the grantor spouse’s interest therein to the
    grantee spouse. See Ryan v. Roop, 
    214 Ark. 699
    , 
    217 S.W.2d 916
     (1949) (citing former statute
    6
    Ark. Stat. Ann. § 50-413). Because neither party alleged nor argued that the deed was invalid
    or that Weeks lacked the proper donative intent, the quitclaim deed of the property from
    Weeks to Sanchez in Sanchez’s individual name resulted in a transfer or gift of Weeks’s
    interest in the property to Sanchez, and the property became the separate property of
    Sanchez. See Horton v. Horton, 
    92 Ark. App. 22
    , 
    211 S.W.3d 35
     (2005); Cole v. Cole, 
    53 Ark. App. 140
    , 
    920 S.W.2d 32
     (1996); Lyons v. Lyons, 
    13 Ark. App. 63
    , 
    679 S.W.2d 811
     (1984);
    Dennis v. Younts, 
    251 Ark. 350
    , 
    472 S.W.2d 711
     (1971) (each finding deed of marital home
    from one spouse to another during the marriage resulted in the property becoming grantee
    spouse’s separate property). In light of the foregoing, we reverse the circuit court’s finding
    that the home was marital property.
    II. Retirement Account
    Sanchez next argues that the circuit court erred in its division of his Wal-Mart
    retirement account by improperly awarding Weeks a larger percentage of the 401(k) than he
    was entitled to. He maintains that this error occurred because the circuit court failed to
    properly consider his ex-wife’s interest in the retirement account. We agree that the court
    failed to give full consideration to the QDRO entered in the prior divorce action, and we
    reverse and remand for a recalculation of the parties’ interest in Sanchez’s 401(k).
    As stated above, all property acquired subsequent to the marriage is considered to be
    marital property. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315
    (b)(1). Retirement benefits based on
    contributions not made during the marriage constitute nonmarital property. See Thomas v.
    Thomas, 
    68 Ark. App. 196
    , 
    4 S.W.3d 517
     (1999). Likewise, the increase in value of property
    7
    acquired prior to marriage, including retirement plans, is excepted from the definition of
    marital property. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315
    (b)(5); Smith v. Smith, 
    32 Ark. App. 175
    , 
    798 S.W.2d 442
     (1990). Conversely, retirement benefits based on contributions made during the
    marriage constitute marital property, as does the associated gain in value of such plan. Wilson
    v. Wilson, 
    2016 Ark. App. 256
    , 
    492 S.W.3d 534
    . As a result, any contributions made prior
    to the marriage, along with the corresponding associated growth, constitutes Sanchez’s
    nonmarital property. Any contributions made after Sanchez married Weeks, along with its
    corresponding associated growth, constitutes marital property subject to division between
    Sanchez and Weeks. Accordingly, under normal circumstances, Weeks would clearly be
    entitled to one-half the retirement contributions made by Sanchez to the retirement account
    during the marriage as well as any interest and growth in the retirement account attributable
    to those contributions, which is what the circuit court appears to have given him.
    Sanchez, however, argues that the court should have reduced Weeks’s share in the
    retirement account because his ex-wife, Gotopo, is entitled to 50 percent of the contributions
    made during his marriage to Weeks pursuant to a QDRO Gotopo filed in her 2006 divorce
    from Sanchez. He claims that, as a result, Weeks is only entitled to a 50 percent interest in
    Sanchez’s remaining half of the contributions and growth made to the retirement plan
    during their marriage—that is, Weeks is entitled to only 25 percent of the contributions to
    and growth in the 401(k) during the marriage. He claims that the court’s failure to award
    Gotopo her entire interest in the retirement account amounts to reversible error.
    8
    The circuit court in this case took judicial notice of a facially valid QDRO 3 entered
    by a different court in a different case between two people, only one of whom is a party to
    this action. Since Gotopo was not a party to this action, the circuit court lacked jurisdiction
    to adjudicate or modify her claims to the retirement plan. Third parties may be brought into,
    or intervene in, divorce actions for the purpose of clearing or determining the rights of the
    spouses in specific properties, Copeland v. Copeland, 
    2 Ark. App. 55
    , 
    616 S.W.2d 773
     (1981).
    In this case, neither was done. Thus, the circuit court in this divorce action had jurisdiction
    to determine, as between Weeks and Sanchez, only what constituted marital property to be
    divided.
    3
    The resolution of this case has been complicated by the entry of this QDRO in the
    2006 divorce action. This complication is rendered even more complex because it is not clear
    from our record whether the circuit court in the Sanchez-Gotopo divorce action was advised
    of Sanchez’s marriage to Weeks or of their pending divorce prior to the entry of the QDRO
    at issue. It is also questionable whether Gotopo was actually entitled to any interest in the
    401(k) because it is undisputed the 401(k) was not divided at the time of their divorce in
    2006. Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-12-315 requires that marital property be divided
    at the time the divorce is granted. Jones v. Jones, 
    26 Ark. App. 1
    , 
    759 S.W.2d 42
     (1988).
    Failure to assert the right to property at that time or to appeal results in the waiver of the
    right to that property when it is based solely on the marital relationship. Id.; Mitchell v. Meisch,
    
    22 Ark. App. 264
    , 
    739 S.W.2d 170
     (1987). Moreover, Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure
    60(b) only allows the circuit to modify a decree within ninety days in order to correct any
    error or mistake or to prevent the miscarriage of justice. After the expiration of the ninety-
    day period, a court lacks jurisdiction to distribute property not mentioned in the original
    decree if grounds for modifying a judgment under Rule 60(c) are not present. Phillips v.
    Jacobs, 
    305 Ark. 365
    , 
    807 S.W.2d 923
     (1991); Harrison v. Bradford, 
    9 Ark. App. 156
    , 
    655 S.W.2d 466
     (1983). Thus, if Gotopo is unable to prove any of the grounds listed in Rule
    60(c), the court likely lacked jurisdiction to modify the divorce decree to provide for the
    division. These issues, however, are not before us and are issues to be decided between
    Sanchez and Gotopo (and possibly Weeks if he intervenes) in the 2006 divorce action.
    9
    But the court here did not limit its ruling to a simple calculation of the interests
    between Weeks and Sanchez. Instead, the court also recalculated Gotopo’s interest in the
    401(k), concluding that Gotopo was entitled to only 50 percent of the 401(k) through
    November 2015, despite the earlier QDRO defining her interest as 50 percent of the 401(k)
    through February 2020. The circuit court erred in recalculating her share of the retirement
    plan.
    Because the court erred in failing to give full credit to the QDRO entered in the 2006
    divorce action between Sanchez and Gotopo, and because that QDRO allocates to Gotopo
    an interest in the marital property of Sanchez and Weeks, we reverse the court’s allocation
    of the 401(k) plan as between Sanchez and Weeks and remand for recalculation of their
    interests therein. In doing so, however, we make no comment on whether the circuit court
    on remand should render an equitable division or an equal division of the remaining 50
    percent interest in the marital portion of the 401(k) as between Sanchez and Weeks.
    III. Division of Marital Debt
    As his final argument, Sanchez argues that the circuit court erred in failing to allocate
    a portion of the marital debt to Weeks. Sanchez claims that he paid a substantial portion of
    the parties’ marital debt with his own premarital funds and that the court was required by
    equity to allocate 50 percent of those expenditures to Weeks. We disagree.
    While Arkansas Code Annotated section 9-12-315 provides that all marital property
    shall be distributed one-half to each party unless the court finds such a division to be
    inequitable, it is well settled that section 9-12-315 does not apply to the division of marital
    10
    debts. Kinder v. Kinder, 
    2022 Ark. App. 476
    , 
    655 S.W.3d 880
    . We will not substitute our
    judgment on appeal as to the exact interest each party should have or what debt each party
    should be responsible for; we will decide only whether the order is clearly wrong. Vaughn v.
    Vaughn, 
    2021 Ark. App. 394
    . Here, the court could have found that Sanchez’s payment of
    the marital debt using his nonmarital funds was a gift to the marriage. Thus, the court’s
    refusal to order repayment of the marital debts was not clearly erroneous.
    Affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.
    ABRAMSON and KLAPPENBACH, JJ., agree.
    Evans & Evans Law Firm, by: James E. Evans, Jr., for appellant.
    Joseph Paul Smith, P.A., by: Heather Hersh, for appellee.
    11
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 11/15/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/15/2023