TABITHA ANN TAYLOR, Appellant/Respondent v. RICKEY DEAN TAYLOR, LIN-J FARMS I, LLC, and LIN-J FARMS, II, LLC, Respondents/Cross ( 2019 )


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  • TABITHA ANN TAYLOR,                           )
    )
    Appellant/Respondent,                  )
    )   Nos. SD35629 & SD35631
    vs.                                    )        (Consolidated)
    )
    RICKY DEAN TAYLOR, LIN-J FARMS I,             )   FILED: October 7, 2019
    LLC, and LIN-J FARMS, II, LLC,                )
    )
    Respondents/Cross-Appellants.          )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CEDAR COUNTY
    Honorable James V. Nichols, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    This appeal and cross-appeal follow a marriage dissolution case that was
    consolidated with a civil action over commingled business and personal affairs
    related to a family farming operation. Tabitha 1 appeals the determination that she
    was not a partner in the operation. Respondents cross-appeal several property and
    debt determinations. We deny all complaints and affirm the judgment.
    Background
    Ricky began farming with his father in 2003. In 2007, Ricky’s parents
    formed Lin-J Farms I, LLC (“LLC-I”) to own equipment and operate the farming
    operations, and Lin-J Farms II, LLC (“LLC-II”) to hold the farm real estate.
    1Ricky and Tabitha referred to themselves by first names throughout these proceedings.
    We do likewise. The court also thanks the parties and their attorneys for graciously
    agreeing to have their case argued before an audience of students, teachers, and other
    members of the public at Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar.
    Ricky’s full-time efforts and management grew the farming operation
    significantly after his father died in 2009, but personal and business funds and
    expenses were commingled with little or no attention to details of proper
    accounting. Whoever had money at the time paid the farming expenses. The LLCs
    paid personal debts of Tabitha, Ricky, and Ricky’s mother and bought cars,
    motorcycles, and boats for their personal use. Ricky received no set salary, but,
    without objection, frequently wrote LLC checks for personal living expenses. Ricky
    and Tabitha were named as borrowers or guarantors for millions of dollars of LLC
    debts and were named as lessees or co-lessees on 658 acres farmed by LLC-I.
    In 2015, Tabitha and Ricky initiated proceedings to dissolve their 20-year
    marriage. Tabitha also filed a separate declaratory judgment action seeking to be
    declared a partner in the family farming operations. The LLCs filed counterclaims
    and cross-claims seeking (1) to quiet title to certain farms; (2) judgment against
    Ricky on a promissory note; and (3) a declaration that LLC-I owned certain farm
    equipment. The dissolution and declaratory judgment cases were consolidated.
    The declaratory issues were tried first. After hearing three days of evidence
    and testimony, the court denied every pleaded claim, counterclaim, or cross-claim.
    In ruling that Tabitha had not proved her claim, LLC-I had not proved either of its
    claims, and LLC-II had not proved any of its seven claims, the court specifically
    found:
    •   Written documents directly contradicted the existence of the
    partnership alleged by Tabitha, whose testimony on that subject
    was “unclear, imprecise and sometimes contradictory.”
    •   Although there was no partnership, the court was “clearly and
    unequivocally convinced” that the parties understood and intended
    Ricky and Tabitha to have an equitable ownership in certain farm
    equipment and irrigation systems. “Given the history of the
    parties[’] conduct of the farming business, commingling of funds,
    and joint liability on indebtedness that has financed the entire
    farming operation,” it would be “grossly inequitable” to deny
    Tabitha and Ricky any marital interest in those assets.
    •   No credible evidence supported LLC-II’s claims for equitable
    contribution, which the court characterized as a “strategic
    afterthought as a result of the pending dissolution of marriage
    action.”
    2
    •   Equitable interests in three farms mirrored the legal interests
    reflected on the vesting deeds: Ricky and Tabitha 50% and LLC-II
    50% as tenants in common. Purchase-money and tax payments
    made by LLC-II or Ricky’s parents with commingled funds were
    intended as gifts or as compensation for Ricky’s farming work, with
    no expectation of repayment expressed until after the dissolution
    case was filed.
    •   Ricky’s promissory note was executed to avoid the appearance of a
    taxable gift, with the maker, payee, and current holder of the note
    having no intention or expectation that Ricky would pay the note,
    and the current demand that he do so was another “strategic
    afterthought made as a consequence of the pending dissolution of
    marriage.”
    That judgment remained interlocutory until the court could hear the dissolution
    case and determine the extent and value of the marital interest in the farm assets.
    At that dissolution trial, again spanning three days, the court found that
    Ricky and his mother “clearly manipulated the farm’s financial affairs and
    distributions to reduce and understate [Ricky’s] actual income in the past 2 years.”
    The court’s task of classifying and dividing farm assets was further complicated by
    “careless and unsystematic ad hoc accounting practices” and the parties’ “equally
    unreasonable” claims of ownership and equity in the farming operation.
    Nonetheless, the court declared property-ownership interests consistent with its
    prior rulings and, as relevant here, entered a final judgment apportioning marital
    and separate property and debts, leading to this appeal and cross-appeal. 2
    Tabitha’s Appeal
    Point 1
    Tabitha first raises an against-the-weight challenge to the court’s finding
    that she failed to meet her burden to prove a partnership. Rule 84.04(d) violations
    aside, this point and supporting argument disregard our standard of review and
    the rubric required to successfully assert any against-the-weight claim.               See
    Houston v. Crider, 
    317 S.W.3d 178
    , 187 (Mo.App. 2010), and scores of cases
    2We commend the trial court for crafting thorough interlocutory and final judgments that
    clearly set forth the court’s fact findings, credibility determinations, and reasons why it
    ruled as it did, which were of considerable assistance in our review of these complex
    proceedings.
    3
    following it. “Failure to follow the applicable framework means the appellant’s
    argument is analytically useless and provides no support for his or her challenge.”
    Marriage of Adams, 
    414 S.W.3d 29
    , 34 (Mo.App. 2013).
    On an against-the-weight challenge, we defer to the trial court’s fact-finding
    on contested issues where witness credibility was at issue. Ivie v. Smith, 
    439 S.W.3d 189
    , 206 (Mo. banc 2014). We do so because the trial court was better
    situated to weigh contested evidence in the context of the whole case. 
    Id. Our standard
    of review thus considers which party bore the burden of proof and the
    trial court’s right to believe or disbelieve evidence offered to prove contested facts.
    
    Id. We will
    not re-find facts based on credibility determinations through our own
    perspective. 
    Id. Absent explicit
    findings, we presume the trial court implicitly
    found facts that support the result reached. Id.; Mitchell v. Mitchell, 
    348 S.W.3d 816
    , 818 (Mo.App. 2011). “Because a trial court may accept all, part, or
    none of a witness’s testimony, ‘simply producing evidence that, if believed, would
    be sufficient to support an award is not the same thing as convincing the fact-
    finder.’” 
    Mitchell, 348 S.W.3d at 818
    (quoting Martz v. Martz, 
    323 S.W.3d 53
    ,
    58 (Mo.App. 2010)).
    Tabitha cites her own evidence, but largely ignores contrary proof and our
    duty to honor trial-court credibility determinations. Here, the trial court expressly
    found Tabitha’s testimony as to partnership “unclear, imprecise and sometimes
    contradictory.” Because Tabitha disregards how we must view the record and did
    not follow the proper framework for her challenge, her argument cannot prevail.
    Koch v. Koch, no. SD35561, slip op. at *11-12 (Mo.App. August 2, 2019). We deny
    Point 1.
    Point 2
    Tabitha next challenges the same partnership finding as a misapplication of
    the law, charging that the trial court failed to consider evidence from which it could
    have deduced that a partnership existed.         However, save for one new and
    unpersuasive paragraph, Tabitha merely incorporates by reference her failed Point
    1 argument and thus relies on evidence and inferences that the trial court expressly
    or implicitly rejected.
    4
    We presume the trial court considered all of the evidence. Bechtold v.
    Bechtold, 
    453 S.W.3d 813
    , 815 (Mo.App. 2014). Tabitha makes no effort to rebut
    that presumption. Further undermining her argument are the court’s nine pages
    of findings and conclusions rejecting her partnership claim. The trial court did not
    fail to consider the evidence; Tabitha failed to persuade the trial court with the
    evidence she presented. Point 2 fails, and with it, Tabitha’s appeal. 3
    Cross-Appeal
    On cross-appeal, LLC-II asserts Points 1-3 as to the declaratory judgment,
    while LLC-I raises Points 5-7 relating to the dissolution judgment. 4
    Point 1
    This multifarious point, charging that no substantial evidence supports the
    denial of LLC-II’s six claims for quiet title and resulting trusts as to three farms,
    fails because it was LLC-II’s burden to prove those claims, so a judgment against it
    needs no evidentiary support. White v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    321 S.W.3d 298
    , 305
    (Mo. banc 2010). 5 Point denied.
    Point 2
    Point 2 challenges the same rulings, this time asserting that the trial court
    “misapplied the law when it stated that the amounts that Lin-J Farms II overpaid
    for those [farm] properties were intended as a gift to Tabitha and Ricky Taylor in
    that there was never the delivery of any property from Lin-J Farms II to Tabitha
    and Ricky Taylor.” Noting that a donor must deliver the gift, and that LLC-II paid
    for these farms but had the farm sellers add Ricky and Tabitha to the deeds
    “immediately,” LLC-II urges that a gift by it was legally impossible because Ricky
    3 Thus we need not consider other arguments proffered by Respondents.
    4 Point 4 ostensibly was asserted by Ricky’s mother Linda, who is not a party to this appeal.
    As counsel candidly conceded at oral argument, no Respondent has standing to assert
    Point 4 in her stead, so that point fails summarily.
    5 “When the burden of proof is placed on a party for a claim that is denied, the trier of fact
    has the right to believe or disbelieve that party’s uncontradicted or uncontroverted
    evidence.” 
    Id. “If the
    trier of fact does not believe the evidence of the party bearing the
    burden, it properly can find for the other party.” 
    Id. Thus a
    judgment against a party that
    bore the burden of proof needs no evidentiary support. See Adoption of K.M.W., 
    516 S.W.3d 375
    , 382 (Mo.App. 2017).
    5
    and Tabitha got their deed interests directly from the farm sellers and not
    “through” LLC-II.
    LLC-II misunderstands gift law’s delivery element. Consider a dad who
    takes his daughter to a car dealership where she picks a vehicle, he writes the check,
    but has title issued in her name. His acquiescence in delivery of that title suffices
    to complete the gift; same for LLC-II and these farm deeds. Point 2 fails.
    Moreover, the trial court could rely on donative intent alone to reject LLC-
    II’s equitable claims for reimbursement. If LLC-II meant to make a gift, as the
    court found, that was enough to deny LLC-II’s later call upon equity to make Ricky
    and Tabitha pay up.
    Point 3
    Point 3, which charges that no substantial evidence supports the denial of
    LLC-II’s promissory-note claim against Ricky, fails for the same reason as Point 1.
    LLC-II had the burden to prove its claim, so a judgment against it needs no
    evidence. 
    White, 321 S.W.3d at 305
    .
    At any rate, there was evidence from which the court reasonably could infer
    that this note, recommended by a CPA for tax purposes, was made with no intent
    that it be paid. It was made for Ricky and Tabatha to sign, but only Ricky did, so
    it could not be enforced against joint assets. The five-year note called for annual
    payments on dates certain, but no payments were made, yet LLC-II never acted
    until its cross-claim years later in this case. We deny Point 3.
    Point 5
    Point 5 challenges the denial of LLC-I’s claim that Ricky and Tabitha owed
    it some $60,000, and fails for the same reasons as Points 1 and 3. As debt claimant,
    LLC-I had the burden of proof on that issue. England v. England, 
    454 S.W.3d 912
    , 921 (Mo.App. 2015). Even if Tabitha presented no contradictory evidence,
    she contested LLC-I’s evidence, so we will affirm the judgment “based solely on the
    fact that the trial court did not believe [LLC-I’s] evidence.” 
    Id. at 921-22;
    see also
    
    White, 321 S.W.3d at 305
    . Point 5 fails.
    Point 6
    Point 6 complains that the court awarded Tabitha, as marital property, a
    pontoon boat bought with LLC-I funds.            Although LLC-I claims this was a
    6
    misapplication of law, it cites no case, statute, or other legal authority whatsoever
    – not in or immediately after the point relied on; not in the point’s supporting
    argument; not in the section of its reply brief related to this point. “If a party does
    not support contentions with relevant authority or argument beyond conclusory
    statements, the point is deemed abandoned.”                Carlisle v. Rainbow
    Connection, Inc., 
    300 S.W.3d 583
    , 585 (Mo.App. 2009).
    Further, LLC-I principal Linda Taylor acknowledged in court that the LLC
    funded this purchase for Ricky and Tabitha with no expectation of being repaid.
    We deny Point 6.
    Point 7
    Finally, LLC-I takes issue with the allocation to Ricky and Tabitha of 50%
    equitable ownership in specified farm equipment owned by LLC-I. LLC-I does not
    dispute that Ricky and Tabitha had an equitable interest or the court’s valuation of
    the equipment involved. LLC-I claims only that the degree of ownership (50%)
    awarded to Ricky and Tabitha was against the weight of the evidence.
    Such a claim presupposes that substantial evidence supports the judgment.
    
    Ivie, 439 S.W.3d at 205
    . We rarely grant an against-the-weight challenge, and
    only when we firmly believe the judgment is wrong. 
    Id. at 206.
           Farm-asset ownership and valuation were hotly contested at trial and the
    parties’ contentions “could not have been more diametrically opposed” to quote
    the court’s judgment. Where evidence was contested, we defer to the trial court’s
    weighing of evidence and credibility determinations. 
    Id. If two
    reasonable but
    different conclusions can be drawn from the evidence, we must go with what the
    trial court found. 
    Id. LLC-I proposes
    a 7% ownership percentage proffered by its expert witness.
    The trial court expressly discounted that expert’s opinion and explained why in the
    judgment. “This court will not refind facts based on credibility determinations
    through its own perspective. If we resolve all conflicts in testimony in accordance
    with the trial court’s credibility determinations, whether explicit or implicit, we
    cannot find the weight of evidence on [LLC-I’s] side of the scale.” Black River
    Elec. Coop. v. People’s Cmty. State Bank, 
    466 S.W.3d 638
    , 640 (Mo.App.
    7
    2015)(internal citations and quotation marks omitted). Point denied.
    Conclusion
    We find no merit to any point on appeal or cross-appeal. AFFIRMED. 6
    DANIEL E. SCOTT, J. – OPINION AUTHOR
    NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J. – CONCURS
    WILLIAM W. FRANCIS, JR., J. – CONCURS
    6   Motions taken with the case are denied.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SD35629, &, SD35631

Judges: Judge Daniel E. Scott

Filed Date: 10/7/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/7/2019