Richter v. Richter ( 2020 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA19-442
    Filed: 2 June 2020
    Iredell County, No. 16 CVD 3040
    SARAH RICHTER, Plaintiff,
    v.
    ALLEN RICHTER, Defendant.
    Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 29 November 2018 by Judge Edward L.
    Hedrick, IV in District Court, Iredell County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 30
    October 2019.
    Pope McMillan, P.A., by Clark D. Tew, for plaintiff-appellant.
    Lake Norman Law Firm, by Adam G. Breeding, for defendant-appellee.
    STROUD, Judge.
    At issue is whether the trial court erred in classifying proceeds from a life
    insurance policy on the life of Husband’s former wife, paid to Husband during his
    marriage to Wife, as a gift to Husband and thus his separate property. Based upon
    this classification of the life insurance proceeds, the trial court also classified other
    assets acquired with the proceeds as Husband’s separate property. Where Husband
    did not own the life insurance policy and paid no premiums for the policy during the
    parties’ marriage, the trial court did not err by classifying the proceeds as a gift to
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    Husband. The trial court’s findings of fact are supported by the evidence and those
    findings support the trial court’s conclusion of law classifying the disputed assets as
    Husband’s separate property, so we affirm the trial court’s order.
    I.     Background
    The parties married on 16 April 2011. Husband had been previously married
    to Jeanne Richter with whom he had two children. Husband and Wife had one child
    in 2012. During the parties’ marriage, Jeanne Richter passed away, and proceeds
    from her life insurance policy in the amount of $500,603.68 were paid to Husband
    (“life insurance proceeds”). Wife filed a complaint in December 2016 with claims for
    child custody and support, divorce from bed and board, postseparation support and
    alimony, and counsel fees. Because the parties had not yet separated, Wife also noted
    her intent to file for equitable distribution after their separation.
    On 10 February 2017, the parties separated. Husband then filed his answer
    and counterclaims for custody, child support, and equitable distribution. On 18 April
    2017, Wife filed an amended complaint including a claim for equitable distribution.
    Both parties sought distribution of their marital property.
    Husband listed the following items as his separate property on his equitable
    distribution affidavit based upon his claim that they were purchased with the life
    insurance proceeds: real property in Mooresville (“Fieldstone house”), a Prudential
    Alliance Account, a Prudential Retirement B Annuity, and a Prudential IRA
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    (collectively, “the disputed assets”). The life insurance proceeds from his former wife
    were initially deposited into the Prudential Alliance Account. Prior to the parties’
    separation, Husband transferred money from the Alliance Account to establish the
    IRA and the Retirement Annuity Account. For purposes of clarity and because these
    were the accounts the trial court classified, we will refer to these accounts
    respectively as the Alliance Account, the IRA, and the Annuity Account.
    In a pretrial order for equitable distribution, the parties listed the Fieldstone
    house under Schedule E, which was defined as “items as to which there is
    disagreement as to whether the item is martial property or a marital debt.” Wife
    alleged the real property was “purchased with comingled funds” and should be
    classified as marital; Husband alleged it should be classified as separate. The IRA
    and Annuity Account were also listed on Schedule E, with Wife alleging they should
    be classified as marital and Husband alleging they were his separate property. The
    Alliance Account was listed on Schedule H, “Items agreed by parties as Husband’s
    separate property” because “Husband acquired during marriage from deceased ex-
    wife.”
    The equitable distribution claims were heard before the Honorable Edward L.
    Hedrick, IV on 26 and 28 September, and 1 October 2018 in District Court, Iredell
    County.     The trial court found the Alliance Account, the IRA, and the Annuity
    Account were established entirely from the life insurance proceeds and were therefore
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    the separate property of Husband. The trial court classified the Fieldstone house as
    part marital and part Husband’s separate property. Husband purchased the home
    with the life insurance proceeds, but the parties made improvements to the house
    during the marriage which increased the value. Wife timely appealed.
    II.     Classification of Life Insurance Proceeds
    Wife argues the trial court erred in classifying the life insurance proceeds and
    property acquired with the life insurance proceeds during the marriage as Husband’s
    separate property.       Husband disagrees with Wife’s framing of the issue as
    classification of the life insurance “proceeds” since some of the proceeds had been
    transferred to other accounts and contends the parties stipulated in the pretrial order
    that the Alliance Account was his separate property, and since the other assets came
    from the Alliance Account, this stipulation resolved the classification of all of the
    disputed assets, including the Fieldstone house, the IRA, and the Annuity Account.
    Husband’s argument is logically based upon the evidence and theories presented by
    Wife at trial, but the pretrial order’s stipulation is not so broad as he claims. And
    although Wife’s evidence at trial focused primarily on whether Husband had
    converted separate funds from the life insurance proceeds to marital property by
    comingling assets, Wife is correct that the issue on appeal is “not whether the
    purportedly separate property of the Defendant was, through his actions or
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    intentions, converted into marital property . . . but whether or not the Life Insurance
    Proceeds were the Defendant’s separate property to begin with.”
    A.    Standard of Review
    “Pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
     [ (2017) ],
    equitable distribution is a three-step process requiring the
    trial court to ‘(1) determine what is marital [and divisible]
    property; (2) find the net value of the property; and (3)
    make an equitable distribution of that property.’” Under
    North Carolina law, marital property is “all real and
    personal property acquired by either spouse or both
    spouses during the course of the marriage and before the
    date of the separation of the parties, and presently owned,
    except property determined to be separate property or
    divisible property[.]” Separate property is that acquired by
    a spouse before marriage, or acquired by devise, descent, or
    gift during the marriage. Generally, divisible property
    refers to certain property received after the date of
    separation but prior to distribution.
    Crago v. Crago, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    834 S.E.2d 700
    , 704 (2019) (alterations in
    original) (citations omitted), review denied, ___ N.C. ___, 
    838 S.E.2d 181
     (2020).
    Wife challenges some of the trial court’s findings of fact and the conclusion of
    law classifying the assets acquired with the life insurance proceeds.
    On appeal, when reviewing an equitable distribution order,
    this Court will uphold the trial court’s written findings of
    fact “as long as they are supported by competent evidence.”
    However, the trial court’s conclusions of law are reviewed
    de novo. Finally, this Court reviews the trial court’s actual
    distribution decision for abuse of discretion.
    Mugno v. Mugno, 
    205 N.C. App. 273
    , 276, 
    695 S.E.2d 495
    , 498 (2010) (citations
    omitted).
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    B.    Effect of Stipulation Regarding Alliance Account
    Both parties devote much of their briefs to a dispute regarding the meaning
    and effect of the stipulation in the pretrial order regarding the classification of the
    Alliance Account as Husband’s separate property. Husband contends this stipulation
    covers not only the Alliance Account but also the Fieldstone house, the IRA, and the
    Annuity Account, since funds from the Alliance Account were used during the
    marriage to acquire each of these assets. Wife contends the stipulation does not apply
    to any asset other than the Alliance Account, but she also argues that the trial court
    improperly relied upon the stipulation in classifying the other disputed assets, based
    upon the trial court’s statement in Finding of Fact 30, “This finding is consistent with
    the parties’ stipulation regarding the funds remaining in the Alliance Account
    pursuant to Section H of the Pretrial Equitable Distribution Order.” Both parties
    assign far more importance to the stipulation than it deserves, and, instead of
    simplifying the issues, their arguments regarding the stipulation have made the one
    classification issue presented on appeal more complex.
    In the parties’ equitable distribution affidavits, both clearly identified each of
    the disputed assets individually—the Alliance Account, the IRA, the Annuity
    Account, and the Fieldstone house—and stated their contentions regarding the value,
    classification, and desired distribution for each asset. Although the “life insurance
    proceeds” are mentioned as the source of the assets, the life insurance proceeds
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    themselves had been received in April 2014, and Husband used the proceeds to
    acquire or establish the disputed assets. Likewise, in the pretrial order, the parties
    stipulated that “Husband’s Prudential Alliance account” should be classified as the
    separate property of Husband. The pretrial order also listed the other disputed assets
    as individual assets and included the parties’ contentions regarding each one. “It is
    well-established that stipulations in a pretrial order are binding upon the parties and
    upon the trial court.” Clemons v. Clemons, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 
    828 S.E.2d 501
    ,
    505 (2019). Husband argues that Wife stipulated that all property acquired with
    funds originally in the Alliance Account—the entire life insurance proceeds—would
    be his separate property. Thus, he argues that there is no need to consider the
    classification of the Fieldstone house, the IRA, and Annuity Account—all would be
    his separate property because they flowed from the Alliance Account and this was
    stipulated to be his separate property.      However, the stipulation regarding the
    Alliance Account was a stipulation only to the classification and value of that
    particular account as of the date of separation. Neither the pretrial order nor the
    trial court’s equitable distribution order classified the life insurance proceeds as a
    discrete asset existing on the date of separation; this is appropriate, since Husband
    received the life insurance proceeds in April 2014 but the parties separated on 10
    February 2017. The trial court is required to classify and value property existing as
    of the date of separation. Robinson v. Robinson, 
    210 N.C. App. 319
    , 323, 707 S.E.2d
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    785, 789 (2011). Both the pretrial order and equitable distribution order addressed
    the various assets existing as of the date of separation, including those acquired with
    the life insurance proceeds. Husband is correct that Wife is bound by the stipulation
    as to the classification of the Alliance Account as listed on the pretrial order. But the
    other accounts and Fieldstone house were clearly listed separately on the pretrial
    order and the parties did not agree on the classification of those assets.          The
    stipulation regarding the Alliance Account did not require the trial court to classify
    all of the disputed assets as Husband’s separate property and does not prevent Wife’s
    challenge to the trial court’s classification of the Fieldstone house, the IRA, and
    Annuity Account. The stipulation only applies to the Alliance Account, which the
    trial court properly classified as Husband’s separate property based upon the
    stipulation.
    Wife argues the trial court improperly relied upon the stipulation as part of its
    classification of the disputed assets. We will address the classification issue in more
    detail below, but upon consideration of all of the findings in context, the trial court
    did not classify the disputed assets based upon the stipulation regarding the Alliance
    Account. The trial court simply noted the classification of the other disputed assets
    as separate property (or partially separate, as to the Fieldstone house) was consistent
    with the stipulation but there is no indication the trial court relied upon the
    stipulation to classify any asset other than the Alliance Account.
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    C.    Findings of Fact
    Wife challenges several findings of fact regarding the life insurance proceeds
    and properties acquired with the proceeds. The findings address the source of the
    insurance proceeds and then the acquisition of other properties with the proceeds.
    The first finding challenged, Finding 30, includes both findings of fact regarding
    Husband’s receipt of the insurance proceeds and conclusions of law regarding the
    classification as separate property.    We will first address the factual portion of
    Finding of Fact 30, as most of the other findings and conclusions relevant to the issues
    on appeal rely upon these factual findings. The trial court found as follows:
    30. Before Defendant was married to the Plaintiff, he was
    married to Jeanne K. Richter. With Jeanne Richter, the
    Defendant had two children, now aged 15 and 13. On or
    about August 27, 2013 Jeanne Richter executed a will
    acknowledging that she was divorced and leaving all of her
    property to the children of Defendant and Jeanne Richter.
    On or about March 28, 2014, Jeanne Richter appointed the
    Defendant her attorney in fact. On March 31, 2014 Jeanne
    Richter died. Defendant was the beneficiary of a life
    insurance policy on her life and as a result of her death, the
    Defendant received $500,603.88 on or about April 9, 2014
    which was disbursed to a Prudential Alliance Account.
    These funds were acquired during the marriage and some
    of the funds as well as items purchased with the funds
    existed on the date of separation. They were not acquired
    by devise (by will) or by descent (Defendant was not related
    to Jeanne Richter at the time of her death).
    The portion of Finding of Fact 30 quoted above includes findings of fact, and
    these are supported by competent evidence. Indeed, the basic facts as Husband’s
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    prior marriage and divorce, the date of Mrs. Richter’s death, and Husband’s receipt
    of the insurance proceeds are not disputed. It is also undisputed that the insurance
    proceeds were not acquired by will or descent. The dispute is whether the trial court
    erred in classifying the life insurance proceeds as a gift under North Carolina General
    Statute § 50-20(b)(2).
    Wife also challenges Findings of Fact 31, 32, 33, 39, 40, 48, 49, and 50. But the
    basis for her challenge to each of these findings is the same as to Finding 30. Findings
    31 through 33 address the marital and separate contributions to the Fieldstone
    house, based upon the prior finding that Husband used his separate funds from the
    insurance proceeds to purchase the house.1 Findings 39 and 40 address the IRA and
    Annuity Account, which were established entirely with funds from the insurance
    proceeds. Findings 48, 49, and 50 include listings of the classifications and values of
    all the parties’ property, including the disputed assets previously addressed in the
    prior findings. Thus, because the factual findings of Finding 30 are supported by
    competent evidence, the remaining findings challenged by Wife are also supported by
    the evidence.
    D.      Classification of Property
    1 The trial court held the Fieldstone house was partially separate and partially marital, based upon
    marital contributions to renovation of the house. Wife challenges the findings of fact and classification
    of the Fieldstone house only as to the separate component based upon Husband’s purchase of the house
    with the life insurance proceeds.
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    The remainder of Finding of Fact 30 is actually a conclusion of law, as it
    addresses classification of the assets acquired with the life insurance proceeds. We
    review the conclusion of law de novo. Robbins v. Robbins, 
    240 N.C. App. 386
    , 396,
    
    770 S.E.2d 723
    , 729 (2015) (“Because the classification of property in an equitable
    distribution    proceeding   requires   the   application   of   legal   principles,   this
    determination is most appropriately considered a conclusion of law.” (quoting Hunt
    v. Hunt, 
    112 N.C. App. 722
    , 729, 
    436 S.E.2d 856
    , 861 (1993))). “While findings of fact
    by the trial court in a non-jury case are conclusive on appeal if there is evidence to
    support those findings, conclusions of law are reviewable de novo.” Id. at 395, 770
    S.E.2d at 728 (citing Lee v. Lee, 
    167 N.C. App. 250
    , 253, 
    605 S.E.2d 222
    , 224 (2004)).
    North Carolina General Statute § 50-20 defines “separate property” in
    pertinent part as follows:
    “Separate property” means all real and personal property
    acquired by a spouse before marriage or acquired by a
    spouse by devise, descent, or gift during the course of the
    marriage. . . . Property acquired in exchange for separate
    property shall remain separate property regardless of
    whether the title is in the name of the husband or wife or
    both and shall not be considered to be marital property
    unless a contrary intention is expressly stated in the
    conveyance. The increase in value of separate property and
    the income derived from separate property shall be
    considered separate property.
    
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    (b)(2) (2019).
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    The remainder of Finding of Fact 30 addresses the source of the funds in the
    IRA and Annuity Account and for the purchase of the Fieldstone house and includes
    the trial court’s conclusion of law as to classification of the disputed assets. The trial
    court concluded that the insurance proceeds were a gift to Husband, as follows:
    30. . . . However, these funds [the life insurance proceeds]
    were acquired by the Defendant by gift. Although the
    actual trigger for the transfer may have been a contractual
    obligation of Prudential to Jeanne Richter; Defendant’s
    position as the beneficiary of the contract was without
    consideration paid by Plaintiff or Defendant to Jeanne
    Richter or to Prudential. This $500,603.68 was received by
    Defendant during his marriage to the Plaintiff from a third
    party without consideration of the Plaintiff or Defendant
    and is therefore a gift and is therefore Defendant’s separate
    property. This finding is consistent with the parties’
    stipulation regarding the funds remaining in the Alliance
    Account pursuant to Section H of the Pretrial Equitable
    Distribution Order.
    Because this portion of Finding 30 applies legal analysis to the facts and draws
    the conclusion that the insurance proceeds should be classified as a gift to Husband
    and thus his separate property under North Carolina General Statute § 50-20(b)(2)
    we review this conclusion de novo. Blair v. Blair, 
    260 N.C. App. 474
    , 478, 
    818 S.E.2d 413
    , 417 (2018) (“[T]he labels ‘findings of fact’ and ‘conclusions of law’ employed by
    the trial court in a written order do not determine the nature of our review. If the
    trial court labels as a finding of fact what is in substance a conclusion of law, we
    review that ‘finding’ de novo.” (quoting Westmoreland v. High Point Healthcare Inc.,
    
    218 N.C. App. 76
    , 79, 
    721 S.E.2d 712
    , 716 (2012))).
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    This Court has very recently addressed the issue of classification of life
    insurance proceeds on the former spouse of a party in Crago, ___ N.C. App. ___, 
    834 S.E.2d 700
    . Although the life insurance policy at issue here is different from Crago
    because there was no marital contribution to the premiums and neither party owned
    the policy, this Court’s analysis of the question helps highlight the factors relevant to
    the classification of insurance proceeds.
    In Crago, the defendant-wife was married previously to Mr. Heintz and they
    had two children. 
    Id.
     at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703. In 2004, defendant-wife and Mr.
    Heintz took out a $1,000,000 life insurance policy on his life, naming defendant-wife
    as beneficiary.   Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703.          Defendant-wife and Mr. Heintz
    separated and later divorced. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703. In 2007, Defendant-wife
    married plaintiff-husband, Mr. Crago. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703. The defendant-
    wife continued to pay premiums on the life insurance policy on Mr. Heintz during her
    marriage to Mr. Crago. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703. She used marital funds to pay
    the premiums on the life insurance policy. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 703. In 2015, Mr.
    Heintz died, and defendant-wife received the life insurance proceeds. Id. at ___, 834
    S.E.2d at 703. In 2016, she and plaintiff-husband separated. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d
    at 703. In their equitable distribution order, the trial court determined the life
    insurance proceeds were marital property, and this Court affirmed. Id. at ___, 834
    S.E.2d at 710.
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    The Crago Court first rejected an “analytic” approach to the classification of
    the insurance proceeds. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 704. The defendant-wife argued the
    analytic approach should be used based upon the fact that the insurance proceeds
    were intended for the benefit of the minor children of her marriage to Mr. Heintz. Id.
    at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 704-05. The Court determined the “mechanistic” approach must
    be used:
    North Carolina courts have adopted two different
    approaches for determining what is marital and separate
    property: the “mechanistic” approach and the “analytic”
    approach. In Johnson v. Johnson, our Supreme Court
    described the mechanistic approach as:
    literal and looks to the general statutory
    definitions of marital and separate property
    and concludes that since the award was
    acquired during the marriage and does not
    fall into the definition of separate property or
    into any enumerated exception to the
    definition of marital property, it must be
    marital property.
    In contrast, “[t]he analytic approach asks what the award
    was intended to replace,” focusing on the purpose of the
    compensation rather than its statutory definition.
    In support of her argument the trial court erred by
    not applying the analytic approach, defendant cites several
    cases concerning classification of personal injury
    settlements and disability benefits. However, defendant
    also acknowledges North Carolina courts have never
    applied this approach in the context of life insurance
    proceeds. Nevertheless, she urges us to adopt the analytic
    approach in this case, based on “important public policy
    considerations” surrounding whether life insurance
    proceeds intended to benefit a spouse’s children from
    another marriage should be considered marital property.
    Furthermore, she argues Foster is distinguishable from the
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    present case and therefore should not be binding on this
    Court.
    In Foster, the husband and wife had purchased a life
    insurance policy on their children during their marriage.
    After the parties separated, the husband alone paid the
    premiums for the policy. During the separation period, one
    of the children passed away and the life insurance proceeds
    were paid and placed in a trust account. In divorce
    proceedings, the wife claimed the life insurance proceeds
    were a marital asset because some of the policy premiums
    had been paid for with marital funds. We disagreed,
    holding that because the claim for death benefits did not
    arise until after separation, when their son passed away,
    the policy proceeds were the husband’s separate property.
    In making our ruling, we noted that, pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    , “in order for property to be considered
    marital property it must be ‘acquired’ before the date of
    separation and must be ‘owned’ at the date of separation.”
    Defendant      argues    the    present    case     is
    distinguishable from Foster because that case concerned a
    life insurance policy on the lives of the parties’ own
    children, whereas the policy in dispute here covered the life
    of her ex-husband and was intended to be used to care for
    her children from her prior marriage. However, the
    relevant fact under the mechanistic approach we applied
    in Foster was whether the property was acquired before the
    date of separation, not who the policy covered or what its
    intended purpose was.
    
    Id.
     at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 704-05 (alteration in original) (citations omitted).
    Here, the trial court stated its rationale as follows:
    Defendant’s position as the beneficiary of the contract was
    without consideration paid by Plaintiff or Defendant to
    Jeanne Richter or to Prudential. This $500,603.68 was
    received by Defendant during his marriage to the Plaintiff
    from a third party without consideration of the Plaintiff or
    Defendant and is therefore a gift and is therefore
    Defendant’s separate property. This finding is consistent
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    with the parties’ stipulation regarding the funds remaining
    in the Alliance Account pursuant to Section H of the
    Pretrial Equitable Distribution Order.
    The trial court’s finding of fact that the parties paid no consideration for the insurance
    policy is supported by record. There was no evidence any premiums were paid by
    Husband during the marriage, so there was no marital financial contribution to the
    life insurance. This is an important factual difference between this case, Crago, and
    Foster v. Foster, 
    90 N.C. App. 265
    , 
    368 S.E.2d 26
     (1988).
    In Crago, this Court rejected the defendant-wife’s argument that the life
    insurance proceeds should be classified as partially separate based upon the source
    of funds for the premiums. Crago ___ N.C. App. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 705. She argued
    that some of the funds in the account she used to pay the premiums were her separate
    property, so the proceeds should be classified as part separate and part marital using
    the source-of-funds approach. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 706. But the Court rejected
    this approach because the defendant-wife had failed to trace the funds in the account
    from which she paid the premiums and thus did not prove she had paid any
    premiums, particularly the “last life insurance premium,” with her separate funds.
    Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 706.   Since all of the premiums paid during the marriage
    were from marital funds, this Court affirmed the trial court’s rejection of the source-
    of-funds approach to classification of the insurance proceeds. Id. at ___, 834 S.E.2d
    at 706 (“Accordingly, the trial court’s finding that the account ending in 3207 was
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    marital, and thus the funds used to pay the last life insurance premium were marital,
    was not an abuse of discretion.”).
    The analysis of the source-of-funds issue in Crago and its reliance upon Foster
    and McIver v. McIver, 
    92 N.C. App. 116
    , 124, 
    374 S.E.2d 144
    , 149 (1988), shows that
    the holding was based not just upon the fact that the insurance proceeds were
    received during the marriage and owned on the date of separation, but also on the
    fact that the “last insurance premium” was paid with marital funds. Crago, ___ N.C.
    App. at ___, 834 S.E.2d at 706; see McIver, 
    92 N.C. App. at 124
    , 
    374 S.E.2d at 149-50
    (“North Carolina has adopted the ‘source of funds’ rule in determining whether
    property is marital or separate. Under the source of funds analysis, property is
    ‘acquired’ as it is paid for, and thus may include both marital and separate ownership
    interests. Under the rule, property acquired with separate funds prior to marriage
    remains separate, and is not converted to marital property merely because it was
    purchased in anticipation of marriage.” (citation omitted)). Here, Husband did not
    pay for the life insurance policy at all. This factual difference in the payment of
    premiums and policy ownership between this case, Crago, and Foster is essential to
    the classification issue.
    In this case, no insurance premiums on the former Mrs. Richter’s life were paid
    from marital funds or by Husband during the marriage. The trial court found that
    Husband received the life insurance proceeds “from a third party without
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    consideration of the Plaintiff or Defendant.” Husband was the beneficiary of the
    policy but not the owner, and he did not pay premiums on the policy during the
    marriage, so there was no marital contribution to the acquisition or maintenance of
    the policy, as in Crago and Foster.
    This Court also addressed the source of funds in Foster, 
    90 N.C. App. 265
    , 
    368 S.E.2d 26
    . It is easy to overlook the portion of Foster which addresses the cash value
    of the policy as of the date of separation, which was only $20.00, but this part of the
    analysis is important. In Foster, a portion of the policy value was classified as marital
    based upon the payment of premiums during the marriage, but as of the date of
    separation, the only value attributable to the marriage was the cash value. 
    Id.
     The
    insurance policy on the child’s life had a cash value of $20.00 as of the date of
    separation. 
    Id.
     The insured child died after the parties’ separation, and the husband
    was the beneficiary of the policy and had continued to pay premiums after the date
    of separation. 
    Id.
     The Foster Court noted the fact that the right to collect under the
    policy vested only upon the child’s death, after the date of separation, but did not
    classify the policy as entirely separate. Id. at 268, 
    368 S.E.2d at 28
    . Instead, Foster
    held that the insurance proceeds had a dual classification. 
    Id.
     The $20.00 cash value
    was classified as marital, based upon the value of the policy as of the date of
    separation; the $20,000 proceeds for the child’s accidental death were classified as
    husband’s separate property based upon the vesting of the benefits after separation
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    and the husband’s payment of premiums on the policy after separation. 
    Id.
     The
    Foster Court based this analysis on a comparison to the vesting of stock options:
    In Hall v. Hall, 
    88 N.C. App. 297
    , 
    363 S.E.2d 189
    (1987), this Court held that stock options which were
    vested prior to separation were marital property but those
    which had not vested prior to separation were separate
    property. In the present case, at the time of separation
    there were no vested rights under the insurance policy on
    the life of Richie M. Foster. The rights only vested at the
    death of Richie M. Foster, and until then plaintiff, as owner
    of the policy, could have cancelled the policy or changed the
    beneficiary. At the time of separation, the cash value of the
    insurance policies was marital property since the
    premiums to that point had been paid for with marital
    assets. The premiums after separation were paid for with
    plaintiff’s assets and therefore the proceeds from the
    insurance policy were separate property of plaintiff.
    
    Id.
    Therefore, although life insurance does not fit neatly into the methods of
    classification used for other assets such as real estate, and life insurance policies of
    different types will present different factual issues, it is clear that our Courts have
    applied the same legal analysis to the classification of life insurance policies as other
    assets. In Foster, the vested cash value of the whole life policy as of the date of
    separation was classified as marital, id.; a term life insurance policy normally has no
    cash value. In Crago, this Court affirmed the trial court’s determination that the
    premiums paid during the marriage were paid from marital funds and classified the
    proceeds as marital based upon a source-of-funds approach. ___ N.C. App. ___, 834
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    S.E.2d 700. Although Crago does not address whether the life insurance policy at
    issue was a term policy with no cash value, a whole life policy with a cash value, or
    some other form of policy, Crago rejected classification as separate property of the
    wife based upon a source-of-funds approach because defendant-wife failed to show
    premiums were paid with her separate funds.2 See 
    id.
    This case is different from both Foster and Crago because there was absolutely
    no marital contribution to the life insurance policy. It was not an asset purchased by
    either party, either during the marriage or after separation. Husband’s former wife
    owned and paid for the life insurance policy until her death. Although no prior North
    Carolina case has ever characterized life insurance proceeds as a gift for purposes of
    equitable distribution, no case has ever addressed insurance proceeds owned and paid
    for by a third party but received during the marriage by one of the spouses. Thus, we
    will rely upon cases classifying gifts from third parties during the marriage to review
    the trial court’s conclusion the proceeds were a gift and thus Husband’s separate
    property.
    Wife agrees we should rely upon cases regarding gifts from a third party but
    argues the trial court erred in classifying the life insurance proceeds as a gift because
    Husband failed to present evidence of “donative intent” by Husband’s former wife.
    2 Based upon the facts and analysis in Crago, the life insurance policy was apparently a term policy.
    See Crago v. Crago, ___ N.C. App. ___, 
    834 S.E.2d 700
    . There was no mention of any cash value for
    the policy. See 
    id.
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    She contends this case does not present an issue of first impression, as Husband
    argues, because “Appellant is actually asking this Court to apply its usual and
    customary gift analysis for an asset; the lack of case law specifically discussing this
    one asset type does not a case of first impression make.” We agree we can apply the
    “usual and customary gift analysis” but that analysis is more straightforward for
    some assets than others. As discussed earlier, life insurance policies may be classified
    differently depending upon the type of policy, policy ownership, payment of
    premiums, vesting of the right to proceeds, and the relationship of the insured to the
    beneficiary.    And no prior case in North Carolina has addressed life insurance
    proceeds from a policy on the life of a third party where the beneficiary-spouse paid
    no consideration for the policy.
    Under the gift analysis discussed in Burnett v. Burnett, 
    122 N.C. App. 712
    , 
    471 S.E.2d 649
     (1996), Husband had the burden of showing that the life insurance
    proceeds were his separate property. The Burnett Court discussed several factors
    which may show donative intent, and these factors may vary based upon the
    particular type of property in question:
    The party claiming a certain classification has the
    burden of showing, by the preponderance of the evidence,
    that the property is within the claimed classification. Thus
    a party claiming property acquired during the marriage to
    be separate, on the basis that it was a gift, has the burden
    of showing that the “alleged donor intended to transfer
    ownership of the property without receiving any
    consideration in return.” . . .
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    “The evidence most relevant in determining
    donative intent [or the lack of donative intent] is the
    donor’s own testimony.” Other evidence relevant to
    donative intent includes the testimony of the alleged donee,
    documents surrounding the transaction, whether a gift tax
    return was filed, and whether an excise tax was paid.
    Transfer documents stating that the property is a gift or
    characterizing the consideration as love and affection is
    strong evidence of donative intent. On the other hand,
    transfer documents indicating receipt of consideration is
    prima facie evidence that the recited consideration was
    indeed paid. A mere recital of consideration, however, does
    not compel a finding that consideration was received, if
    other evidence reveals that no consideration was in fact
    received. Bargain sales, or those where some small
    consideration is received in exchange for the transfer, if
    accompanied with donative intent, are treated as partial
    gifts.
    Burnett, 122 N.C. App. at 714-15, 
    471 S.E.2d at 651-52
     (second alteration in original)
    (footnote omitted) (citations omitted).
    Wife argues Husband failed to present evidence of “donative intent” citing to
    several cases addressing gifts of various types of property in different factual settings.
    For example, in Berens v. Berens, this Court held that the parties’ contributions to
    their children’s 529 accounts were not “gifts” to the children, noting that
    “[i]n order to constitute a valid gift, there must be
    present two essential elements: 1) donative intent; and 2)
    actual or constructive delivery.” “These two elements act
    in concert, as the present intention to make a gift must be
    accompanied by the delivery, which delivery must divest
    the donor of all right, title, and control over the property
    given.”
    
    260 N.C. App. 467
    , 469-70, 
    818 S.E.2d 155
    , 157-58 (2018) (citation omitted) (quoting
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    Courts v. Annie Penn Mem’l Hosp., Inc., 
    111 N.C. App. 134
    , 138, 
    431 S.E.2d 864
    , 866
    (1993)). The Berens Court explained:
    Applying this settled property law principle, the
    parties’ contributions to their 529 Savings Plans were not
    gifts. In their briefs, both parties discuss various tax
    implications of 529 Savings Plan contributions at length.
    But the treatment of these plans for tax purposes does not
    control the determination of ownership under the equitable
    distribution statute. Instead, we look to whether the
    parties delivered an ownership interest in those funds to
    their children, thereby divesting themselves of that
    interest.
    They did not.
    Berens, 260 N.C. App. at 470, 818 S.E.2d at 158 (citation omitted).
    As recognized by Berens, treatment of property for tax purposes or in another
    legal context may not control its classification for purposes of equitable distribution.
    Id. Indeed, classifying property based upon marital contribution instead of title or
    other legal principles is one of the fundamental principles of the equitable
    distribution statute. Hill v. Hill, 
    229 N.C. App. 511
    , 518, 
    748 S.E.2d 352
    , 358 (2013)
    (“One of the purposes of the Equitable Distribution Act was ‘to alleviate the
    unfairness of the common law [title theory] rule’ and to base property distribution
    upon ‘the idea that marriage is a partnership enterprise to which both spouses make
    vital contributions . . . [.]’” (first and second alterations in original) (quoting Friend–
    Novorska v. Novorska, 
    131 N.C. App. 508
    , 510, 
    507 S.E.2d 900
    , 902 (1998))).
    In Plymouth Pallet Co. v. Wood, this Court stated the elements of a gift between
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    living persons:
    The essential elements of a gift inter vivos are: (1) the
    intent by the donor to give the donee the property in
    question so as to divest himself immediately of all right,
    title and control therein; and (2) the delivery, actual or
    constructive, of the property to the donee.
    
    51 N.C. App. 702
    , 704, 
    277 S.E.2d 462
    , 464 (1981).
    Some of the factors noted in prior cases dealing with gifts of real estate or stock
    simply do not exist in a case dealing with life insurance. One obvious difference is
    that life insurance proceeds are not “delivered” to the donee until after the donor’s
    death; it is not a “gift inter vivos.”3 In equitable distribution cases in particular, where
    one spouse claims property was a gift, the analysis normally focuses on whether
    consideration was paid for the asset. For example, in cases addressing deeds to real
    estate to one or both spouses from a third party, courts have noted “documents
    surrounding the transaction, whether a gift tax return was filed, and whether an
    excise tax was paid.” Burnett, 122 N.C. App. at 715, 
    471 S.E.2d at 651
    . All of the
    factors noted in Burnett address the issue of consideration for the transfer of real
    property. Excise taxes are based upon the purchase price for land. 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 105-228.30
     (2019); see Patterson v. Wachovia Bank & Tr. Co., N.A., 
    68 N.C. App. 609
    ,
    612-13, 
    315 S.E.2d 781
    , 783 (1984) (“Under the provisions of G.S. 105-228.28, et seq.,
    every person who deeds real estate away for a consideration must pay the county an
    3Ownership of a life insurance policy could be given or transferred during the insured’s life, but we
    are discussing payment of life insurance proceeds upon death of the insured.
    - 24 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    excise tax based on the consideration involved, but no tax is required of those who
    give property away. Yet, though the evidence shows that the property was worth over
    $90,000, and the plaintiff Ross Coble, the only living person with personal knowledge
    as to the consideration involved, if there was any, is the one who had the deeds
    eventually recorded, no excise stamps were ever affixed to the deeds by the
    grantors.”). Gift tax returns are filed for gifts as defined by the applicable tax laws,
    but neither party here has made any argument based upon the treatment of the life
    insurance policy proceeds for tax purposes. In the cases addressing whether property
    is a gift, absence of consideration gives rise to an inference of donative intent, and
    thus a gift. See Joyce v. Joyce, 
    180 N.C. App. 647
    , 651, 
    637 S.E.2d 908
    , 911 (2006)
    (finding the transfer of property supported by adequate consideration from a father
    to son was not a gift). Payment of consideration gives rise to the opposite inference.
    See 
    id.
    Wife contends that Husband’s evidence regarding the lack of consideration and
    the circumstances of his prior marriage and the insurance policy on Mrs. Richter’s
    life was not sufficient to show Mrs. Richter’s “donative intent.” She argues Husband
    “failed to meet his burden of providing any material evidence that would establish or
    even hint at the origin, procuring circumstances and causes, or consideration (or lack
    thereof) for his status as Jeanne Richter’s life insurance beneficiary.” She claims,
    “Defendant’s own testimony as to the various components of the Life Insurance
    - 25 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    Proceeds was plainly silent on the purpose or intent of his status as a beneficiary,
    and largely in agreement with the Plaintiff’s in that it confirmed his receipt of the
    Life Insurance Proceeds during his marriage, and confirmed their existence as of the
    date of separation.” Wife is correct that Husband’s testimony at trial focused more
    on the tracing of the life insurance funds to the IRA, the Annuity Account, and the
    Fieldstone house, as part of his argument that these assets were his separate
    property because the life insurance proceeds themselves were his separate property.
    But Husband’s evidence was responding to Wife’s contentions regarding classification
    of the disputed assets.
    At trial, Wife did not contend that Mrs. Richter made a gift of the life insurance
    proceeds to both of the parties or that there was any marital contribution to the life
    insurance policy. Wife’s arguments and evidence at trial addressed tracing of the
    funds and comingling of marital and separate funds. Her arguments at trial—until
    her closing argument—treated the life insurance proceeds as Husband’s separate
    property when received but she contended he had commingled the insurance proceeds
    with marital assets; Husband responded by showing evidence the proceeds were not
    commingled with marital assets, except as to the Fieldstone house.
    Wife acknowledged at trial she had stipulated that the remaining funds in the
    Alliance account were Husband’s separate property because the funds came from the
    life insurance proceeds but she did not stipulate to the classification of the other
    - 26 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    accounts because she did not know if any marital contributions were made to those
    accounts. Regarding the stipulation on Schedule H of the pretrial order, Wife testified
    the funds in the Alliance Account as of the date of separation were from the insurance
    proceeds:
    Q: So you have stipulated that his Alliance account is his
    separate property?
    A. That is the balance that is left as of the date of
    separation. He has used funds out of that account, and I
    believe there was money left over as of the date of
    separation. I’m not sure of the balance now. But yes, that
    part of it, that balance of the date of separation, is separate.
    She then testified that she did not know whether marital funds had been contributed
    to the IRA and Annuity Account, although they were initially established with funds
    from the life insurance proceeds.
    Both parties have presented a slightly different argument on appeal than they
    did before the trial court. This change is reflected in the parties’ briefs, which devote
    a large part of their arguments to the stipulations instead of to the evidence. As we
    determined above, the stipulation regarding the Alliance Account did not entirely
    resolve the classification issues arising from the insurance proceeds, but the parties’
    equitable distribution affidavits and the pretrial order also present the classification
    issue as a tracing issue, not based upon the origin of the life insurance funds. Our
    Courts have long held that parties may not change horses on appeal to gain a better
    mount:
    - 27 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    The issues before the trial court, however, were set out in
    a pretrial order to which plaintiff freely consented while
    represented by competent counsel, and plaintiff may not
    now take an inconsistent position on appeal. “The theory
    upon which a case is tried in the lower court must prevail
    in considering the appeal and interpreting the record and
    determining the validity of the exceptions.” Parrish v.
    Bryant, 
    237 N.C. 256
    , 259, 
    74 S.E.2d 726
    , 728 (1953); see
    also Weil v. Herring, 
    207 N.C. 6
    , 10, 
    175 S.E. 836
    , 838
    (1934) (“the law does not permit parties to swap horses
    between courts in order to get a better mount in the
    Supreme Court[ ]”), and In re Peirce, 
    53 N.C. App. 373
    , 382,
    
    281 S.E.2d 198
    , 204 (1981) (where respondents stipulated
    to the use of “recording machines in lieu of a court
    reporter,” they waived on appeal any objection about the
    quality of the recording equipment used in the trial court).
    Inman v. Inman, 
    136 N.C. App. 707
    , 714-15, 
    525 S.E.2d 820
    , 824-25 (2000) (alteration
    in original).
    Neither party has entirely swapped horses on appeal, although both have at
    least changed the saddles on their horses. At trial, Wife’s testified she agreed the life
    insurance proceeds should be classified as Husband’s separate property but by the
    time of her closing argument, she attempted to avoid the stipulation and her own
    testimony. For the first time, she argued that none of the disputed assets should be
    classified as Husband’s separate property because he had failed to show “donative
    intent” by Mrs. Richter, going so far as to claim that the trial court was not “bound
    by the pretrial order” and requesting the trial court to classify all of the disputed
    assets as fully marital. She argued:
    Now, what does that include? Well, it includes the
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    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    Fieldstone property. It includes the [IRA]. It includes the
    annuity. It includes the Ford Escape. And even though,
    Judge, even though it’s listed on the Schedule, I think it
    was I,[4] the remainder of that Alliance account, I think,
    was listed there as a stipulation of separate property. I
    think that the evidence -- the Court isn’t bound by that
    Pretrial Order, if during the course of the proceedings,
    evidence is offered that contradicts the Pretrial Order.
    As discussed above, Husband’s evidence did rely heavily on the stipulation that
    the Alliance Account was his separate property because it contained life insurance
    proceeds and all of the proceeds were initially in that account. Even though both
    parties have changed their theories or arguments on appeal to some extent, there was
    evidence from both Husband and Wife regarding the source of the life insurance
    proceeds and the circumstances under which he received them.                         Wife testified
    Husband and Mrs. Richter had previously shared 50-50 custody of their two sons but
    during her terminal illness, as her condition worsened, she became unable to care for
    the children, so they spent more time with Husband and Wife. Shortly before her
    death, Mrs. Richter agreed for Husband to have full custody of their sons and she was
    seeing them only on weekends and not overnight. On 27 August 2013, Mrs. Richter
    4 It was Schedule H, and the trial court was bound by the pretrial order. “It is well-established that
    stipulations in a pretrial order are binding upon the parties and upon the trial court. Clemons, ___
    N.C. App. at ___, 828 S.E.2d at 505. The trial court may not ex mero motu modify or eliminate
    stipulations after completion of the trial without giving the parties “any notice or opportunity to
    respond to the modification.” Plomaritis v. Plomaritis, 
    222 N.C. App. 94
    , 107, 
    730 S.E.2d 784
    , 793
    (2012).
    - 29 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    executed her Last Will and Testament in which she appointed Husband as her
    Executor. She left all her assets to her sons in trust and appointed Husband as her
    trustee and Wife as her alternate trustee. She also executed a Power of Attorney
    appointing Husband as her attorney-in-fact on 28 March 2014. Mrs. Richter’s two
    sons were also the beneficiaries of her IRA accounts.
    The trial court may draw reasonable inferences from the evidence, and based
    upon the circumstances of Mrs. Richter’s death and Husband’s position as sole
    custodian of their two children upon her death, the trial court’s findings and
    conclusion that the life insurance proceeds should be classified as a gift to Husband
    are supported by the evidence.
    When a trial by jury is waived, and where different
    reasonable inferences can be drawn from the evidence, the
    determination of which reasonable inferences shall be
    drawn is for the trial judge.
    In Main Realty Co. v. Blackstone Valley Gas & E.
    Co., 
    59 R.I. 29
    , 
    193 A. 879
    , 
    112 A.L.R. 744
    , the court said:
    “In reaching his conclusions, the trial justice had the
    benefit of seeing and hearing the witnesses. He also was
    entitled to consider all the evidence and to draw therefrom
    such inferences as were reasonable and proper under the
    circumstances, even though another different inference,
    equally reasonable, might also be drawn therefrom.”
    Elec. Motor & Repair Co. v. Morris & Assocs., Inc., 
    2 N.C. App. 72
    , 75, 
    162 S.E.2d 611
    , 613-14 (1968) (citation omitted).
    Perhaps Wife could have argued at trial Mrs. Richter intended to benefit both
    her and Husband by the life insurance since at the time of her death, the parties were
    - 30 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    together and caring for her two sons. But she did not make this argument. Instead,
    she argues on appeal that Husband should have presented more specific or detailed
    testimony about Mrs. Richter’s “donative intent” in making him the beneficiary of her
    life insurance policy. Yet as in most cases in which there is a dispute regarding
    whether an asset was a gift to one of the spouses, the trial court may look to the
    circumstances of the case and may infer the donative intent from a transfer made
    without consideration.    See Burnett, 122 N.C. App. at 715, 
    471 S.E.2d at 651
    .
    Husband was the sole beneficiary of the life insurance policy, which supports the trial
    court’s conclusion that the former Mrs. Richter did not intend to make a gift of the
    proceeds to the marriage or to Wife. As simply stated in Burnett, “a party claiming
    property acquired during the marriage to be separate, on the basis that it was a gift,
    has the burden of showing that the ‘alleged donor intended to transfer ownership of
    the property without receiving any consideration in return.’” 122 N.C. App. at 714,
    
    471 S.E.2d at 651
     (quoting Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 5.16
    at 195 (2d ed. 1994)). Although this particular question was not the primary focus of
    the evidence presented by either party at trial, Husband’s evidence supported the
    trial court’s findings of fact and those findings support the trial court’s conclusion of
    law as to classification of the disputed assets. In fact, Wife’s evidence tended to
    support the trial court’s findings and classification as well.
    III.     Conclusion
    - 31 -
    RICHTER V. RICHTER
    Opinion of the Court
    Because the trial court’s findings are supported by the evidence and those
    findings support the trial court’s conclusion of law classifying the disputed assets as
    Husband’s separate property, we affirm the trial court’s order.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges ZACHARY and MURPHY concur.
    - 32 -