Stephen Douglas Keen v. Theresa Lorraine Keen ( 2023 )


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  •                 RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 15, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2022-CA-0590-MR
    STEPHEN DOUGLAS KEEN                                                 APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM HENDERSON FAMILY COURT
    v.        HONORABLE JOE W. HENDRICKS, JR., SPECIAL JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 20-CI-00450
    THERESA LORRAINE KEEN                                                  APPELLEE
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CETRULO, DIXON, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
    CETRULO, JUDGE: Appellant Stephen Douglas Keen (“Stephen”) appeals from
    a decree of dissolution of marriage from Appellee Theresa Lorraine Keen
    (“Theresa”). On appeal, Stephen argues that the family court abused its discretion
    by compelling a sale of the marital business. Finding no error or abuse of
    discretion, we affirm.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    Stephen and Theresa were married in September 1991 and had two
    children. In 1997, the couple started an auto body shop, Steve’s Auto Body &
    Paint (“marital business”). This marital business was their main source of income
    through the majority of the marriage. For 27 years, Stephen worked full-time at
    the marital business. The record was unclear as to the extent of Theresa’s
    involvement in the marital business, but her contributions at the shop were
    significantly less than Stephen’s, and at the time of dissolution, Theresa was
    employed by the Webster County Board of Education.
    On March 7, 2022, the family court conducted a six-hour evidentiary
    hearing (“March Hearing”) which was intended to be the “final” hearing in the
    matter.1 Theresa was represented by legal counsel, and Stephen appeared pro se.
    During that hearing, both parties submitted exhibits and presented evidence.
    Theresa and Stephen were the only witnesses to testify.2 The family court granted
    Stephen great leniency throughout the hearing, instructing him on the law, helping
    him phrase questions to avoid hearsay, listening to arguments beyond the scope of
    the current hearing, and many other allowances. The family court stated at the
    1
    The hearing was postponed more than once to allow Stephen to gather witnesses, none of
    whom testified at the March Hearing. At the start of the March Hearing, Stephen stated that he
    hoped to finish the trial that day, and did not want to postpone the hearing further.
    2
    Stephen attempted to call his two children as witnesses, but neither were present.
    -2-
    beginning of the hearing, “I need to know what the assets are, what the debts are,
    evidence to support how they are to be allocated, that’s what I’m focused on.”
    However, Stephen struggled to stay within those justiciable issues throughout the
    proceeding.
    After hours of testimony, the family court verbally walked through the
    distribution determinations for Theresa’s counsel to draft and tender. The marital
    allocations were complex due to the conflicting testimony and convoluted
    evidence, but in pertinent part, the marital business was allocated to Theresa with
    instructions to sell the property (and its contents), and the proceeds were to be used
    to pay off the couple’s various debts, liens, and encumbrances. At the conclusion
    of the hearing, the family court instructed the parties to assist in the sale and
    distribution of assets and instructed Stephen to deliver the marital business key to
    the office of Theresa’s counsel by noon the following day. Stephen did not deliver
    the key.
    The next day, on March 8, 2022, the family court entered a temporary
    order pending preparation of a final decree that, in part, granted Theresa ownership
    of the marital business and its contents, instructed Stephen to return all property
    removed from the marital business,3 and stated that failure of Stephen to do so
    would result in a finding of contempt.
    3
    Except his dog, clothing, medications, and personal effects.
    -3-
    Thereafter, Stephen filed a motion to set aside the decree4 and a
    motion seeking emergency custody of the youngest child.5 Theresa filed a motion
    to approve the sale of the marital business and a motion for contempt. A second
    evidentiary hearing was held on April 12, 2022 (“April Hearing”). At this seven-
    hour April Hearing, Theresa was again represented by counsel; Stephen AGAIN
    appeared pro se. While the family court attempted to limit testimony to relevant,
    properly preserved arguments, it again granted Stephen great latitude. The hearing
    did not substantively alter the family court’s prior oral determinations.
    On April 13, 2022, the family court entered its Findings of Fact,
    Conclusions of Law, and Decree of Dissolution of Marriage (“Final Decree”). In
    the Final Decree, the family court, in relevant part, authorized Theresa to liquidate
    the marital business “in a reasonably prompt and commercially reasonable
    manner” in order to satisfy the marital debts including taxes, the business property
    mortgage, debts owed to business suppliers, and other encumbrances. The Final
    Decree indicated that Stephen had made arguments without evidentiary support,
    and that the family court questioned Stephen’s veracity. Stephen moved for post-
    judgment relief under Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (“CR”) 59.02, 59.05, and
    4
    A final decree of dissolution had not yet been entered.
    5
    At the time Stephen petitioned for dissolution of the marriage in 2020, only the youngest child
    was still a minor.
    -4-
    60.02.6 The family court denied Stephen’s motion in full in a written order entered
    on April 26, 2022 (“Hearing Order”). Stephen appealed.
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Here, Stephen challenges the family court’s determination that the
    marital business was not a going concern7 at the time of dissolution, the sale of that
    business, and the use of sale proceeds to pay off the marital debts.8
    The family court’s findings of fact are reviewed pursuant to CR 52.01.
    CR 52.01 provides that “[f]indings of fact, shall not be set aside unless clearly
    erroneous[.]” A finding of fact is not clearly erroneous if supported by substantial
    evidence of a probative value. Moore v. Asente, 
    110 S.W.3d 336
    , 353-54 (Ky.
    2003).
    Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 403.190 governs the disposition of
    marital property in a dissolution of marriage. Family courts have broad discretion
    in dividing marital property, and this Court may not disturb a family court’s ruling
    6
    Stephen filed this same motion twice: once before the Final Decree was entered, and an
    identical motion after the family court entered the Final Decree. However, Stephen did not argue
    for a new trial (CR 59.02), nor did he argue which grounds under CR 60.02 were relevant,
    leaving CR 59.05 (motion to alter, amend, or vacate a judgment). However, denial of a CR
    59.05 motion is interlocutory and not subject to appellate review. See Ford v. Ford, 
    578 S.W.3d 356
    , 365 (Ky. App. 2019). Therefore, our review is focused on the Final Decree and the
    evidentiary hearings supporting that order.
    7
    “Going concern” refers to “[a] commercial enterprise actively engaging in business with the
    expectation of indefinite continuance.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
    8
    Stephen also appealed the custodial determination, but as the youngest child is now of the age
    of majority, that issue is moot.
    -5-
    as to the division of marital property, unless it has abused its discretion. Smith v.
    Smith, 
    235 S.W.3d 1
    , 6 (Ky. App. 2006). “The test for abuse of discretion is
    whether the trial judge’s decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or
    unsupported by sound legal principles.” Commonwealth v. English, 
    993 S.W.2d 941
    , 945 (Ky. 1999). “[A] trial court is not obligated to divide the marital property
    equally. Rather, a trial court need only divide the marital property ‘in just
    proportions.’” Smith, 
    235 S.W.3d at 6
     (citations omitted).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    On appeal, the parties agree that the business in question was a marital
    asset under KRS 403.190(3). The marital business was established in 1997, five
    years after the marriage. At the time Stephen petitioned for divorce, the state of
    the business was in question. The parties disagree about how much business was
    being conducted at the time of dissolution, and whether Stephen, with his health
    issues, was still able to keep the business operating. At the time of dissolution, the
    value of the marital business assets – building, tools, equipment – was valued at
    less than the business debts.
    At the March Hearing, the family court took great pains to determine
    if the marital business was still a going concern.
    The Court: I’m trying to figure some of this out. I’ve heard you say
    that you’re disabled, or you think you’re disabled, you
    believe you qualify for disability. Are you working now?
    -6-
    Are you working in the [marital business] that we’ve been
    talking about?
    Stephen:      Yes, sir.
    The Court: Okay, but you have no income other than the income
    from . . . .
    Stephen:      I had income. The problem is, without being able to
    refinance, Judge, I, as one person, cannot generate enough
    income to cover the overhead. I mean it’s a 9800 square
    foot place; I mean the utility bill is $1600-$1900 a month.
    The only people that I have talked to, that I know are
    qualified [to work for me], wouldn’t take the position
    because they knew I was going through this divorce and
    them having a job might be temporary.
    The Court: The reason I ask the question is, it’s a business that’s a
    marital asset, the assets in the building, of the business, are
    marital assets, so I’m gonna have to decide how to
    equitably apportion those assets, or what I’m going to do
    with them, and I’m trying to figure out if the evidence in
    this case is that this business is a going concern which
    would justify its continued operation by you or does it just
    need to be sold and I’m not getting a clear answer from
    you whether or not . . . it’s an on-going enterprise, you can
    continue its operation.
    Stephen:      I’ve done it for 27 years. I can’t do it when I am cut off
    from the bank.
    The Court: Alright.
    During that same hearing, Theresa also testified about the state of the
    marital business.
    Theresa’s Counsel:         The Judge asked [Stephen] if the business
    was still a going concern, had value as a
    business. Have you, over the course of the
    -7-
    last – almost two years – had cause to observe
    or be aware of what’s going on at the shop?
    Theresa:                       Yes.
    Theresa’s Counsel:             You can’t rely on, “oh somebody told me” or
    “I heard from so-and-so.” Do you, yourself,
    know if there is still on-going business
    activities at the shop?
    Theresa:                       Very little . . . there’s very little activity going
    on at the shop.
    Theresa’s Counsel:             What is your basis for believing that?
    Theresa:                       The parking lot is empty.[9]
    Theresa’s Counsel:             Has it been empty the last two years?
    Theresa:                       It has steadily been dwindling, yes.
    The Court:                     The parking lot is empty of cars that have
    been waiting for repair?
    Theresa nodded her head in affirmative.
    Theresa’s Counsel:             And I dimly recall over a year ago, there had
    been a civil discovery request for [Stephen’s]
    business records. As well as you can
    recall . . . have you ever been provided with
    records as part of the discovery process?
    Theresa:                       Not a complete set, no.
    9
    Later during the trial, Stephen stated that all the cars he worked on were inside the building, but
    Theresa then argued that that was not true.
    -8-
    In the family court action, Stephen argued that Theresa (and the
    couple’s adult son) were trying to steal his livelihood from him. Theresa argued
    that there was no business remaining to steal and selling the real estate to pay off
    the marital debt was the most equitable solution. On appeal, Stephen argues the
    family court erred by assigning him much of the marital debt and forcing the sale
    of the marital business to pay that marital debt, but Stephen did not present a
    cohesive plan or logical argument to support any other alternative. In fact, during
    the proceedings, both parties mentioned the possibility of bankruptcy, and the
    family court stated, “[w]e can avoid bankruptcy if we manage this right.”
    During the March Hearing, Stephen did not produce records or call
    witnesses to show the business was a going concern. At the April Hearing,
    Stephen called witnesses to testify that business was ongoing, but, as the family
    court noted during the hearing, that testimony was limited in its scope and did not
    show a pattern or consistency to the work. Stephen did not argue (or call witnesses
    or admit evidence) to show how or if he would be able to sustain the business.
    Stephen did not state if he was physically able to do the work nor how/if/who he
    would hire as an employee to assist him. Stephen stated he had undergone
    multiple back surgeries and was managing pain with medicine, but it was unclear if
    this amounted to a disability that prevented him from working or if he was able to
    -9-
    sustain the business despite the pain. In fact, throughout the trial, Stephen’s
    evidence was inconsistent and conflicting.
    For instance, during the March Hearing, the family court attempted to
    determine who owned a truck that was once part of the marital estate. During the
    March Hearing, Stephen – within a five-minute period of testimony – stated the
    title to a truck was held by himself, then he testified that his paramour held title,
    and then he testified that “the State of Indiana” held title. During the April
    Hearing, Stephen was asked the current location of this truck. He stated he did not
    know the location, but his paramour testified that same day that the vehicle was
    currently in her garage. After further inquiry, Stephen’s paramour confirmed that
    Stephen was living with her and he had been in her garage. As a result, the family
    court wrote in the Hearing Order that Stephen “likely perjured himself[,]” and
    noted in the Final Decree that Stephen “engage[d] in vexatious and harassing
    litigation in this matter.”
    “[D]ue regard shall be given to the opportunity of the family court to
    judge the credibility of the witnesses.” CR 52.01. Here, the family court had the
    opportunity – more than 13 hours combined within the March and April Hearings,
    numerous motions, extraneous communications with the court,10 and a record
    10
    Stephen sent “a significant number of communications” directly to the court’s staff and the
    county clerks, in addition to the motions filed with the court.
    -10-
    lasting more than two years – to evaluate the credibility of both Stephen and
    Theresa. It is clear the family court did not find Stephen to be credible.
    Stephen argues on appeal that the family court abused its discretion by
    not allowing him to purchase the marital business, buy out Theresa, and continue
    to own his auto body shop. Stephen states in his brief that he “offered to purchase
    his business for $185,000,” which was “$5,000 more than the proposed and
    accepted purchase price.” However, it was not Stephen who was attempting to
    purchase the marital business. During the March Hearing, Stephen expressed
    doubt as to his ability to obtain a loan from Field & Main Bank. During the April
    Hearing, Stephen’s paramour testified that she would purchase the marital business
    on Stephen’s behalf. She held11 a letter from Field & Main Bank stating that she
    had obtained loan pre-qualification to purchase the marital business property.
    However, she admitted under oath that she did not possess the elements that the
    pre-qualification was subject to, including a current property appraisal of the
    business. She further testified that the pre-qualification was only valid for 30 days,
    as set forth within a letter dated two weeks prior.
    Additionally, Stephen argues on appeal that his goodwill was not
    included in the valuation of the marital business. He argues that the success of this
    11
    That letter was not made part of the record, or if it was, an independent review by this Court
    was unable to locate it within the voluminous record.
    -11-
    business had been “100% attributable to my name, my reputation, and my own
    skillset.” However, Stephen did not proffer a goodwill value to the family court,
    present evidence of a goodwill value, nor call witnesses to value the business. As
    Theresa argues in her brief, “The [family] court cannot consider a value that was
    never provided.” Theresa only presented an appraisal for the property and argued
    that the real estate value alone was the business value. Moreover, if the intangible
    value that Stephen is requesting is personal goodwill,12 that type of goodwill
    depends on the continued presence of a particular individual and “represents
    nothing more than the future earning capacity of the individual[.]” Gaskill v.
    Robbins, 
    282 S.W.3d 306
    , 314 (Ky. 2009). However, it was unclear how and if
    Stephen was going to be able to continue with the marital business due to his
    medical concerns and his inability to find personal financing.
    When a business is established during a marriage and is thus marital
    property, the family court is required to fix a value and divide it between the
    spouses. Id. at 311. That is exactly what the family court did, to the best of its
    ability, with the information provided. The family court correctly stated that it had
    to make findings based on the evidence presented:
    There are a few fact-finding issues we should have been
    able to do. If everyone had simply put their cards on the
    table, by [supplying] valuations of what they own instead
    12
    It appears that Stephen is arguing personal goodwill (nonmarital) is the goodwill in question,
    not enterprise goodwill (marital), but the argument was made without specificity.
    -12-
    of having all of this chasing things down, and irrelevant
    arguments and emails that go on forever that cover things
    that were ruled on before. . . . I just got what I got. And I
    sat through a full day hearing. . . . But [Stephen] focuses
    on five thousand different issues. He could have used an
    attorney to help him narrow and focus in the issues that
    were being contested and presented competent evidence.
    Instead, we’re here talking about everything in the world
    and it’s 7:20 in the evening. . . . This is not a therapy
    session. This is a court of law. I’m here to divide
    property. . . . I’m going to try and figure this out.
    Accepting Stephen’s argument – that the sale of the marital business
    was an abuse of discretion – would require us to hold that the family court erred by
    making a decision based on the only evidence presented.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    We find that there was substantial evidence to support the family
    court’s finding that the marital business was not a going concern. We find no
    abuse of discretion in the family court’s conclusion that an equitable distribution
    included the sale of the marital business. Therefore, we AFFIRM the Henderson
    Family Court.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Thomas E. Springer, III                    Christopher Stearns
    Madisonville, Kentucky                     Morganfield, Kentucky
    -13-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2022 CA 000590

Filed Date: 9/14/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2023