Candy A. (Bridges) Littell v. Cole G. Bridges , 2023 ME 29 ( 2023 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                             Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:    
    2023 ME 29
    Docket:      Was-22-50
    Submitted
    On Briefs: November 17, 2022
    Decided:     May 11, 2023
    Panel:          STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, JABAR, CONNORS, and LAWRENCE, JJ.
    CANDY A. (BRIDGES) LITTELL
    v.
    COLE G. BRIDGES
    STANFILL, C.J.
    [¶1]    Cole G. Bridges appeals from a judgment of divorce from
    Candy A. (Bridges) Littell entered by the District Court (Calais, Budd, J.). In his
    appeal, Bridges argues that the court erred in its valuation and classification of
    a Cessna airplane and lacked jurisdiction to dissolve Cole G. Bridges Wild
    Blueberry LLC (Wild Blueberry LLC). We vacate the judgment as to the
    disposition of property and the dissolution of Wild Blueberry LLC and remand.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] Bridges and Littell were married in 1992 and have three adult
    children together.        In 2019, Littell filed for divorce, but she voluntarily
    dismissed the complaint in June 2019. See M.R. Civ. P. 41(a)(1). On January 10,
    2020, Littell filed for divorce a second time. The final divorce hearing began on
    2
    September 14, 2021, continued on November 4 and 5, 2021, and concluded on
    February 1, 2022.
    [¶3] Based on the evidence presented during the hearing, the court found
    the following facts.         Bridges’s extended family has been involved in the
    blueberry farming industry for about one hundred years. Bridges and Littell
    have been involved in several blueberry farming businesses, including Wild
    Blueberry LLC, during their marriage. Bridges and Littell are the sole members
    of Wild Blueberry LLC and agree that their interests in Wild Blueberry LLC are
    marital.
    [¶4] During the marriage, the parties acquired multiple real property
    interests and a “universe of personal property items.” A significant personal
    property issue in the case involved two airplanes, a Cessna and an Aviat Husky.
    [¶5] The Cessna was owned by one of the businesses that the Bridges
    family operated, Bridges Wild Blueberry Co., Inc. In 2013, the business sold the
    Cessna to Bridges.1 After the first divorce suit was filed, Bridges transferred the
    1Multiple witnesses testified that they believed that Bridges was supposed to inherit the Cessna.
    Other evidence in the record, however, indicates that Bridges’s father transferred the airplane to
    Bridges Wild Blueberry Co., Inc., ten years before his death. Regardless, the court found—as
    supported by competent evidence—that the Cessna was owned by Bridges Wild Blueberry Co., Inc.,
    following Bridges’s father’s death and that it did not pass directly to Bridges through Bridges’s
    father’s will. Even on appeal, Bridges acknowledges that “[t]he Cessna was an asset of Bridges Wild
    Blueberry Company” and that Bridges came into ownership of the airplane through a later
    transaction with Bridges Wild Blueberry Co., Inc.
    3
    Cessna to his mother. Bridges’s mother intended to return the Cessna to
    Bridges after the divorce was finalized. Bridges testified that the Cessna was
    worth $150,000, and Littell testified that the Cessna was worth $185,000.
    [¶6] The court found that the parties did not dispute that the Aviat was
    “marital in character, and [it] is an asset of” Wild Blueberry LLC.2 Bridges also
    purported to transfer that airplane to his mother. As with the Cessna, Bridges’s
    mother intended to return the Aviat to Bridges after the divorce was finalized.
    [¶7] The court entered a judgment of divorce on February 15, 2022. The
    court ordered the parties to “sell [Wild Blueberry LLC’s] assets, divide the
    proceeds and then dissolve its corporate existence.” It classified the Cessna as
    marital property because Bridges purchased the airplane during the marriage
    with marital property. The court valued the Cessna at $150,000 and the Aviat
    at $125,000 and distributed both to Bridges. The court found that Bridges’s
    transfer of the airplanes to his mother constituted economic misconduct; it also
    2  The court also found that “[b]oth planes are, at the moment, owned by [Bridges’s] mother.”
    Indeed, it does not appear that Wild Blueberry LLC ever had title to the Aviat. Rather, it appears that
    Bridges purchased it in his personal capacity in 2006 and continued to own it in his personal capacity
    until he transferred the airplane to his mother. Although the Aviat was used to secure a loan from
    the USDA to Wild Blueberry LLC, it appears that the parties may have also been individually
    responsible for that loan. Whether it belonged to Bridges individually or to Wild Blueberry LLC does
    not change the analysis; it is now in the hands of Bridges’s mother.
    4
    noted that Littell filed a separate lawsuit in Superior Court alleging a fraudulent
    transfer of the airplanes.3
    [¶8] Bridges timely appealed the court’s judgment. See 19-A M.R.S. § 104
    (2023); M.R. App. P. 2B(c)(1).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶9]     Bridges argues that the court did not have jurisdiction over
    Wild Blueberry LLC and thus could not order its dissolution. Additionally,
    Bridges asserts that the court erred in its valuation and classification of the
    Cessna.
    A.         Jurisdiction over nonparties
    [¶10] We first consider whether the court lacked jurisdiction over
    Wild Blueberry LLC and, relatedly, whether the court lacked jurisdiction to
    distribute the airplanes. See Howard v. Howard, 
    2010 ME 83
    , ¶¶ 10-12, 
    2 A.3d 318
    . The limit of a trial court’s jurisdiction is an issue of law that we review
    de novo. Id. ¶ 10.
    1.      Jurisdiction over Wild Blueberry LLC
    [¶11] Bridges first contends that the court lacked jurisdiction to dissolve
    Wild Blueberry LLC. “In a divorce proceeding, the District Court has subject
    3   On appeal, Bridges does not challenge the finding of economic misconduct.
    5
    matter jurisdiction to determine the ownership interests of the spouses in
    order to divide their marital property.” Id. ¶ 11. However, “[a] person or entity
    must be a party to a case in order for the court to have personal jurisdiction.”
    Id. ¶ 12. Thus, because “[a] limited liability company is an entity distinct from
    its members,” 31 M.R.S. § 1504(1) (2023), courts may not exercise personal
    jurisdiction over an LLC in a divorce action because an LLC is not a party, see
    Howard, 
    2010 ME 83
    , ¶ 12, 
    2 A.3d 318
    .4
    [¶12]      We conclude that the court did not have jurisdiction over
    Wild Blueberry LLC because Wild Blueberry LLC was not a party and is a
    distinct legal entity from Bridges and Littell. Moreover, an LLC may not be
    dissolved as part of a judgment of divorce. “Maine’s Limited Liability Company
    Act provides that a court may order dissolution of an LLC only in certain
    circumstances. . . . [It] does not recognize the divorce of one or more of the
    parties who created an LLC as a basis for dissolution.”5 Ahern v. Ahern, 2008
    4  In Robinson v. Robinson, 
    2000 ME 101
    , ¶ 11, 
    751 A.2d 457
    , we recognized a narrow exception to
    this rule and held that a divorce court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a third-party business
    that is “represented in all but name before the court” such that the spouse and corporation are
    “essentially the same party.” Here, although Bridges and Littell are the only members of
    Wild Blueberry LLC, Robinson is inapplicable. In contrast to the court in Robinson, the court here did
    not allocate the entire interest in the marital business to one spouse, and, “given the acrimony
    between [Bridges and Littell] and the disregard each has for the other’s reliability,” Wild Blueberry
    LLC was not “represented in all but name before the court.” 
    Id.
    5 Title 31 M.R.S. § 702 (2006), the iteration of the Maine Limited Liability Company Act cited in
    Ahern v. Ahern, 
    2008 ME 1
    , ¶ 20, 
    938 A.2d 35
    , has since been repealed and replaced, but its
    replacement similarly does not include divorce in its exhaustive list of circumstances in which courts
    6
    ME 1, ¶ 20, 
    938 A.2d 35
    ; see also 31 M.R.S. § 1595(1) (2023). Indeed, generally
    the District Court does not have jurisdiction to dissolve an LLC; such an action
    must be brought in the Superior Court. 31 M.R.S. § 1595. Although courts
    should “avoid creating situations where the divorced parties remain in joint
    management of . . . income producing property,” Smith v. Smith, 1997 ME 29,
    ¶ 4, 
    690 A.2d 970
     (quotation marks omitted), they may not exceed their
    jurisdictional limitations in pursuit of this goal. For these reasons, the court
    erred in ordering the dissolution of Wild Blueberry LLC as part of the judgment
    of divorce.
    [¶13]       To be clear, although it lacked jurisdiction to dissolve
    Wild Blueberry LLC, the court had jurisdiction over the marital personal
    property owned by the parties, which included their respective fifty percent
    membership interests in Wild Blueberry LLC. The court could have set aside
    some or all of the membership interest of either party to the other, or it could
    have left each party with a fifty percent interest. What it could not do was
    dissolve the company.
    can order the dissolution of an LLC. See P.L. 2009, ch. 629, §§ A-1, A-2 (effective July 1, 2011) (codified
    at 31 M.R.S. § 1595(1) (2023)).
    7
    2.      Jurisdiction to distribute the airplanes
    [¶14] Relatedly, Bridges contends that a court cannot order, as part of a
    divorce judgment, a nonparty to sell or transfer assets. See 19-A M.R.S. § 953
    (2023). Although he raised this argument in the context of Wild Blueberry
    LLC’s assets, we note that the court distributed the Cessna and the Aviat to
    Bridges despite recognizing that “[b]oth planes are, at the moment, owned by
    [Bridges’s] mother.”
    [¶15]     “As we [have] articulated, the District Court lacks personal
    jurisdiction over a non-party to a divorce action.” King v. King, 
    2013 ME 56
    ,
    ¶ 21, 
    66 A.3d 593
    . A party to a divorce “must institute a separate action against
    a third party to resolve disputes over property.” 
    Id.
     Here, the Cessna was
    owned by Bridges’s mother and not Bridges or Littell at the time of the divorce
    and, consequently, was not part of the marital estate subject to division. See
    Howard, 
    2010 ME 83
    , ¶¶ 11-12, 
    2 A.3d 318
    .
    [¶16] The Aviat is somewhat trickier. It is not clear from the court’s
    findings whether the Aviat is currently owned by Wild Blueberry LLC or by
    Bridges’s mother. See supra ¶ 6 & n.2. Whether owned by Wild Blueberry LLC
    or Bridges’s mother, the Aviat would be outside the marital estate as nonparty
    property and thus not subject to distribution in this proceeding. See 31 M.R.S.
    8
    § 1505(2) (2023); see also Janvier v. Janvier, No. CV-13-139, 
    2017 Me. Super. LEXIS 70
    , at *7 (May 11, 2017) (“[A]n LLC is an entity distinct from its members
    and members do not have a property interest in the property of the LLC.”).6
    [¶17] In short, the court erred in distributing to the parties property
    presently owned by nonparties. Accordingly, we vacate the court’s judgment
    as it relates to the property distribution.
    B.       Classification and valuation of the Cessna airplane
    [¶18] Bridges next contends that the court erred in its classification and
    valuation of the Cessna airplane. We review the classification and valuation of
    property for clear error. Wandishin v. Wandishin, 
    2009 ME 73
    , ¶ 12, 
    976 A.2d 949
    .
    [¶19] Although the court lacked the authority to distribute the Cessna,
    the Cessna’s valuation and classification remain relevant on remand. The court
    found that Bridges’s transfer of the airplanes to his mother constituted
    economic misconduct,7 and it is entitled on remand to determine how much
    these transactions “unreasonably and inappropriately diminished the value of
    Despite its order setting aside the Aviat to Bridges and finding that the Aviat was an asset of
    6
    Wild Blueberry LLC, the court also acknowledged that it could not “simply order [Wild Blueberry
    LLC] to distribute individual items of equipment or property to [Littell or] Bridges individually.”
    If Littell’s fraudulent transfer action has been decided before the trial court considers this
    7
    divorce on remand, the consequences of that action should be taken into account.
    9
    the marital estate.” Harper v. Harper, 
    2017 ME 171
    , ¶ 14, 
    169 A.3d 385
    (emphasis added). Thus, we must address Bridges’s contentions that the
    Cessna was not part of the marital estate and that its value was nominal.
    [¶20] Property obtained during a marriage is presumed marital, but it is
    nonmarital if a spouse obtained it by gift, bequest, devise, or descent. 19-A
    M.R.S. § 953(2)(A). The party attempting to characterize the property as
    nonmarital bears the burden of rebutting the statutory presumption.
    Spooner v. Spooner, 
    2004 ME 69
    , ¶ 8, 
    850 A.2d 354
    . Bridges asserts that he
    obtained the Cessna by bequest or, in the alternative, by gift.
    [¶21] The court did not commit clear error in finding that Bridges failed
    to overcome the statutory presumption that the airplane—which he obtained
    during the marriage—was marital. Bridges did not obtain the Cessna by
    bequest because competent evidence in the record supports the finding that
    Bridges obtained the airplane from Bridges Wild Blueberry Co., Inc., four years
    after his father’s death.   Likewise, we find no clear error in the court’s
    determination that Bridges purchased the airplane from Bridges Wild
    Blueberry Co., Inc., because competent evidence in the record suggests that
    Bridges gave consideration in exchange for the Cessna.
    10
    [¶22] Similarly, the court did not err in finding the value of the Cessna to
    be $150,000. “The value of the parties’ property is determined as of the time it
    is to be distributed . . . .” Levy, Maine Family Law § 7.8[1] at 7-64 (8th ed. 2013).
    The parties to a divorce “may testify and give their opinion as to the value of
    [their] property.” Wandishin, 
    2009 ME 73
    , ¶ 13, 
    976 A.2d 949
    . “As with any
    other testimony or evidence, the court may then evaluate the credibility of that
    evidence and reach a conclusion which accepts the valuation offered by one or
    the other of the witnesses . . . .” 
    Id.
     Here, Bridges—“a veteran pilot and
    experienced airplane mechanic”—testified that the airplane was worth
    $150,000. Accordingly, the court did not err in accepting Bridges’s testimony
    and finding that the Cessna was worth $150,000 at the time of its order.
    III. CONCLUSION
    [¶23] The court erred when it ordered the dissolution of Wild Blueberry
    LLC because it lacked jurisdiction to do so. It also erred in setting aside
    personal property—the airplanes—to Bridges when that property was not
    owned by Bridges or Littell. Because the court erred in its personal property
    distribution, on remand the court may “reevaluate the property distribution.”
    11
    Mitchell v. Mitchell, 
    2022 ME 52
    , ¶ 10, 
    284 A.3d 89
    . Accordingly, we vacate the
    court’s judgment as it relates to the entire property distribution.8
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated as to the distribution of
    property. The remainder of the judgment is
    affirmed. Remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    Maxwell G. Coolidge, Esq., Ellsworth, for appellant Cole G. Bridges
    Donald F. Brown, Esq., Don Brown Law, P.C., Brewer, for appellee Candy A.
    Bridges
    Calais District Court docket number FM-2020-5
    For Clerk Reference Only
    8 We note that the trial judge in this case has since retired. On remand, the court may, in its
    exercise of sound discretion, decide the case based on the existing record or receive additional
    evidence.