Brozek v. Brozek ( 2016 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/courts/epub/
    02/05/2016 09:12 AM CST
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    BROZEK v. BROZEK
    Cite as 
    292 Neb. 681
    Shelley Jane Brozek, appellee and cross-appellant, v.
    K irk Steven Brozek, appellant and cross-appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed February 5, 2016.   Nos. S-14-957, S-14-1141.
    1.	 Divorce: Appeal and Error. In a marital dissolution action, an appellate
    court reviews the case de novo on the record to determine whether there
    has been an abuse of discretion by the trial judge.
    2.	 Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists if the
    reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriv-
    ing a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in matters
    submitted for disposition.
    3.	 Contracts: Statutes: Appeal and Error. The construction of a contract
    and the meaning of a statute are questions of law which an appellate
    court reviews de novo.
    4.	 Contracts: Stock. The general rules of contract construction apply to
    restrictive share agreements.
    5.	 Contracts. If a contract’s terms are clear, a court may not resort to the
    rules of construction and must give the terms their plain and ordinary
    meaning as a reasonable person would understand them.
    6.	 ____. A court must consider a contract as a whole and, if possible, give
    effect to every part of the contract.
    7.	 Divorce: Property Division. In a divorce action, the purpose of a
    property division is to distribute the marital assets equitably between
    the parties.
    8.	 Property Division. Equitable property division is a three-step process.
    The first step is to classify the parties’ property as marital or nonmarital.
    The second step is to value the marital assets and marital liabilities of
    the parties. The third step is to calculate and divide the net marital estate
    between the parties.
    9.	 ____. The ultimate test in determining the appropriateness of a property
    division is fairness and reasonableness as determined by the facts of
    each case.
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    10.	 ____. Generally, the date on which a court values the marital estate
    should be rationally related to the property composing the marital
    estate.
    11.	 Divorce: Property Division. Generally, all property accumulated and
    acquired by either spouse during a marriage is part of the marital
    estate.
    12.	 ____: ____. The marital estate does not include property that a spouse
    acquired before the marriage, or by gift or inheritance.
    13.	 ____: ____. Separate property becomes marital property by commin-
    gling if it is inextricably mixed with marital property or with the sepa-
    rate property of the other spouse.
    14.	 Property Division: Proof. The party claiming that property is nonmari-
    tal has the burden of proving the property’s separate status.
    15.	 Statutes. A court gives statutory language its plain and ordinary
    meaning.
    16.	 Statutes: Legislature: Intent. A court’s duty in interpreting a statute is
    to determine and give effect to the Legislature’s purpose as ascertained
    from the statute’s entire language considered in its plain, ordinary, and
    popular sense.
    17.	 Divorce: Jurisdiction: Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. An order
    helping a party pay for his or her attorney’s work on appeal is an
    order in aid of the appeal process under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-351(2)
    (Reissue 2008).
    18.	 Divorce: Alimony. In considering alimony, a court should weigh four
    factors: (1) the circumstances of the parties, (2) the duration of the mar-
    riage, (3) the history of contributions to the marriage, and (4) the ability
    of the party seeking support to engage in gainful employment without
    interfering with the interests of any minor children in the custody of
    each party.
    19.	 ____: ____. In addition to the specific criteria listed in Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 42-365 (Reissue 2008), a court should consider the income and earn-
    ing capacity of each party and the general equities before deciding
    whether to award alimony.
    20.	 Divorce: Property Division: Alimony. The statutory criteria for divid-
    ing property and awarding alimony overlap, but the two serve different
    purposes and courts should consider them separately.
    21.	 Divorce: Alimony. In weighing a request for alimony, the court may
    take into account all of the property owned by the parties when enter-
    ing the decree, whether accumulated by their joint efforts or acquired
    by inheritance.
    22.	 Divorce: Attorney Fees. A uniform course of procedure exists in
    Nebraska for the award of attorney fees in dissolution cases.
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    BROZEK v. BROZEK
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    23.	 ____: ____. A dissolution court deciding whether to award attorney fees
    should consider the nature of the case, the amount involved in the con-
    troversy, the services actually performed, the results obtained, the length
    of time required for preparation and presentation of the case, the novelty
    and difficulty of the questions raised, and the customary charges of the
    bar for similar services.
    Appeals from the District Court for Antelope County: M ark
    A. Johnson, Judge. Affirmed.
    David A. Domina and Christopher A. Mihalo, of Domina
    Law Group, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Russell A. Westerhold, of Fraser Stryker, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Connolly, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, and
    Stacy, JJ.
    Connolly, J.
    I. SUMMARY
    Shelley Jane Brozek and Kirk Steven Brozek separated,
    and the court later dissolved their marriage of about 20 years.
    The decree divided the marital estate and ordered Kirk to
    buy some of Shelley’s separate property. Kirk appeals, and
    Shelley cross-appeals. Kirk argues that the court erred by
    ordering him to buy Shelley’s shares in a closely held farming
    corporation for an amount higher than the value determined
    under a stock redemption agreement. He also argues that the
    court erred in dividing the marital estate, that it should have
    given him a credit for premarital property he disposed of
    during the marriage, and that it lacked jurisdiction to award
    Shelley attorney fees after he filed a notice of appeal. Shelley
    argues that the court should have awarded her alimony, a cash
    award for the inadequacy of the marital estate, and attorney
    fees. We affirm the decree and the order awarding Shelley
    attorney fees.
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    II. BACKGROUND
    1. Parties’ Work History
    Shelley and Kirk married in October 1993. They have two
    daughters, and Kirk adopted Shelley’s son from a prior mar-
    riage. The parties separated on December 24, 2011, after more
    than 18 years together.
    A month later, Shelley filed a dissolution complaint. When
    the court tried the case in April 2014, Shelley was 50 and
    Kirk was 47 years of age. Only one of their children was still
    a minor.
    Kirk has farmed since he graduated from college in 1986.
    He farms with his father, brother, and adopted son.
    Before Shelley married Kirk, she worked as a grocery clerk
    and secretary, and she also worked in sales. She did not pursue
    education beyond high school and testified that her marriage to
    Kirk did not interrupt her education or career.
    Shelley stated she and Kirk were in “total agreement” that
    she would not work outside the home. She maintained the
    marital home, brought meals and equipment parts to the field,
    mowed and sprayed pasture, and helped put up hay on a few
    small tracts. Kirk’s brother, though, testified that Shelley sel-
    dom helped with the farming operation and “was mostly in
    the way.”
    2. The Corporations
    Kirk’s farming is interwoven with two closely held corpora-
    tions. The first, Brozek & Sons, Inc., is “the operating entity
    of the farming operation.” It owns the land, sells the grain, and
    pays the Brozeks and others for their services. Its largest asset
    is about 3,400 acres of land. Kirk and his brother personally
    rent some of Brozek & Sons’ land, but the corporation “also
    operate[s] some of its own ground.”
    The other corporation is Brozek Farms, Inc., which is “prin-
    cipally an equipment company.” It leases the equipment it
    owns to Brozek & Sons.
    Kirk and Shelley are shareholders of both Brozek & Sons
    and Brozek Farms. Kirk’s parents gifted him shares of Brozek
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    & Sons before and during the marriage. Shelley testified that
    she received her shares by gift during the marriage. Kirk has
    75,541.67 shares, and Shelley has 12,000 shares of Brozek &
    Sons, comprising stakes of about 21 percent and 3 percent,
    respectively. Kirk has 437.5 shares, and Shelley has 62.5
    shares of Brozek Farms.
    Kirk, Shelley, and the other shareholders of Brozek & Sons
    signed a “Redemption Agreement” in 2003. The agreement
    states that no sale, assignment, or other disposition of Brozek
    & Sons shares is valid unless made under the agreement.
    At trial, the parties disputed the meaning of two paragraphs
    of the agreement. The second paragraph provides:
    Transfer to Related Stockholder. Anything in this agree-
    ment to the contrary notwithstanding, a Stockholder may
    at any time or from time to time transfer all or any part
    of his stock to his spouse, one or more of his children, or
    a trustee or custodian for the exclusive benefit of himself,
    his spouse, or his issue . . . .
    The third paragraph provides: “Sale During Life. A Stockholder
    desiring, during his lifetime, to sell or otherwise encumber his
    stock shall make a written offer to sell to [Brozek & Sons]
    upon the following terms and conditions, and [Brozek & Sons]
    shall purchase all of such shares of stock . . . .” The original
    price was $8.50 per share, but Kirk testified that the Brozek &
    Sons board increased it to $12 in 2013.
    Shelley testified that she did not want to remain a share-
    holder of either Brozek & Sons or Brozek Farms because
    “I don’t think that would be reasonable.” Kirk testified that
    he did not want to purchase Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares
    for a price above the value determined under the redemp-
    tion agreement.
    In contrast to Brozek & Sons, there is no redemption agree-
    ment for Brozek Farms. Kirk testified that he was willing to
    buy Shelley’s Brozek Farms shares at a price determined by
    the court.
    Kirk and Shelley hired experts to appraise their Brozek &
    Sons and Brozek Farms shares using a net asset approach.
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    Shelley’s expert valued a minority share of Brozek & Sons at
    $50 in August 2011 and August 2012. He valued a minority
    share of Brozek Farms at $341 in August 2011 and $290 in
    August 2012. As of December 24, 2011, Kirk’s expert valued
    Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares at about $34 each and her
    Brozek Farms shares at about $270 each. Shelley’s expert
    reviewed the reports of Kirk’s expert and testified that the main
    differences were the valuation dates and the discounts for lack
    of control and marketability.
    3. Disputed Personal Property
    Because Brozek & Sons held the land, Kirk and Shelley
    did not own any real estate. But they did accumulate signifi-
    cant personal property during the marriage, including several
    horses. Shelley could not remember how many horses she and
    Kirk had when they separated, but she thought there might
    have been six. She did not possess any of the horses at the time
    of trial because her current residence lacked facilities.
    In Kirk’s “Statement of Financial Condition” as of December
    31, 2011, he said that he had “Horses 7 head” but named only
    six animals. In a “2011 Depreciation and Amortization Report,”
    Kirk included a “Horse/MH” in addition to the six horses he
    named in his “Statement of Financial Condition.” Kirk had
    taken depreciation on all of the horses except one.
    Kirk valued the horses at $12,600. Shelley suggested that
    the court include half of the horses’ value in the marital estate
    and award the horses to Kirk.
    The parties acquired a horse trailer during their marriage.
    Shelley possessed the trailer at the time of trial but did not
    want it because she did not have any horses. Kirk stated that
    he did not want the trailer.
    Shelley and Kirk also bought automobiles during their mar-
    riage, including a 2004 Ford pickup truck. Kirk was driving
    the truck when he and Shelley separated but said that their
    adult daughter was driving it at the time of trial. Shelley testi-
    fied that their adult daughter drove, but did not own, the truck,
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    which was “part of the whole package of vehicles that Kirk
    and I own.”
    4. K irk’s Premarital Property
    Kirk attempted to identify and trace a significant amount of
    premarital personal property. For items that he no longer had at
    his separation from Shelley, Kirk asked for a “credit or set-off”
    against the marital estate.
    Kirk’s alleged premarital property included two checking
    accounts. He used one for household use and the other for
    farm use. Kirk said that the farm account had about $79,000
    when he married Shelley. He added Shelley’s name to both
    accounts after their marriage, and they used the accounts until
    they separated.
    For the premarital machinery that he had sold or traded in,
    Kirk wanted a credit against the marital estate. He submitted
    evidence of the purchase price of the machinery, which he said
    was evidence of its “value” because his equipment held its
    value as it aged or even appreciated. But he acknowledged that
    farm equipment generally depreciates.
    The premarital machinery that Kirk no longer possessed
    included two tractors, a disk, a cultivator, a fertilizer spreader,
    and a drill. Kirk testified that he sold or traded in each of these
    items at some point but could not remember what consideration
    he received. He remembered using the trade-in value of a pre-
    marital shredder and an unspecified amount of “cash boot” to
    acquire a different shredder in 2011. Asked what the trade-in
    value for the shredder was, Kirk took “a guess that my memory
    is $3,500.” He said he kept “unique files for each unique item
    of equipment,” but files matching that description are not in
    the record.
    Finally, Kirk wanted a “bushel for bushel set-off,” or at least
    a credit, for the crops he harvested in 1993. He said he farmed
    a particular number of acres of corn, popcorn, and soybeans in
    1993. Using an “average [yield] of the area of the other fields
    in the area,” he estimated how many bushels he harvested, and
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    valued them at $190,000. Kirk used the proceeds of his 1993
    harvest to “reinvest[] my cash fund, and inventory of grain to
    fund the next years crop” and “rolled such investments, year to
    year, from 1993 through December 24, 2011.”
    5. Parties’ Income and Their
    Postseparation Circumstances
    Most of Shelley and Kirk’s income came from Kirk’s per-
    sonal farming activities and the salaries he drew from Brozek
    & Sons and Brozek Farms. According to Kirk’s W-2 wage
    and tax statements, he received combined wages from Brozek
    & Sons and Brozek Farms of $31,800 in 2008, $33,600 in
    2009, and $33,600 in 2010. Brozek & Sons also paid the
    family’s health insurance premiums, telephone bills, Internet
    bills, and fuel costs. Brozek & Sons also let Kirk and Shelley
    live rent free in a house owned by the corporation. Kirk said
    his annual net farm income with straight-line depreciation
    was about $35,600 in 2008; $124,000 in 2009; and $77,400
    in 2010.
    After their separation, Kirk continued to farm and Shelley’s
    pursuits varied. She found employment with a large hog pro-
    ducer caring for “reject pigs” that had “something wrong with
    them.” Once the pigs put on weight, Shelley and the producer
    sold them and split any profits.
    Shelley also sold a few steers from her cattle herd. She took
    about 24 cows and 17 calves with her when she left the marital
    home in December 2011. Shelley had maintained the herd but
    could not grow it because of financial constraints. Her hope
    was to support herself by growing the herd, but she needed
    more pasture.
    Outside of her livestock operation, Shelley has done some
    “odd jobs” for friends. She thought that the only other jobs
    available to her in the area were those paying around minimum
    wage. She estimated that her living expenses were $5,160
    per month.
    According to her separately filed federal tax returns, Shelley
    had a total income of about $17,200 in 2012 and $17,600 in
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    2013. According to Kirk’s federal tax return, he lost $13,000
    in 2012.
    6. Decree
    In September 2014, the court entered its operative decree
    dissolving the parties’ marriage. It determined that Kirk and
    Shelley’s Brozek & Sons and Brozek Farms shares were
    their separate property. But Kirk should nevertheless buy
    Shelley’s shares in both corporations because leaving them in
    Shelley’s hands “would be impractical and lead to an inequi-
    table result.”
    The court valued Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares at $50
    each and her Brozek Farms shares at $315.50 each. It stated
    that the appraisals of Shelley’s expert reflected the “current
    market value closest to the date of trial” and were more persua-
    sive than the opinions of Kirk’s expert.
    The court ordered Kirk to pay Shelley $600,000 for her
    12,000 shares of Brozek & Sons and $19,718.75 for her 62.5
    shares of Brozek Farms. And, on the issue that has largely
    driven this appeal, it found that the redemption agreement
    did not apply to Kirk’s purchase of the Brozek & Sons shares
    because the agreement, by its terms, did not apply to transfers
    between spouses.
    The court rejected Kirk’s attempts to trace his premarital
    property. Regarding the checking accounts, it stated that the
    funds “have been so commingled that it is not practicable to
    attempt to separate them to any logical end.” Similarly, giving
    Kirk a credit for the value of the premarital machinery that he
    traded in during the marriage would require speculation. Nor
    was Kirk entitled to a “grain-for-grain credit” for his 1993
    harvest. He only estimated the number of bushels he actually
    harvested. Plus, the court was not persuaded that “after nearly
    20 years of marriage the [market] value of the grain was not
    completely commingled in the years that farming operations
    were not as profitable as when they were more so.”
    The court valued the parties’ net marital estate at about
    $2.5 million, nearly $2.4 million of which it awarded to Kirk.
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    The most substantial items were about $1.2 million of crops
    held in storage in December 2011 and $485,000 of machin-
    ery. The court determined that funds in both the household
    and farm checking accounts on December 23 and 24, 2011,
    were marital property. It awarded Kirk the 2004 Ford pickup,
    the horse trailer, and “7 head of horses valued at $6,300.” It
    awarded Shelley 36 head of cattle valued at about $40,000.
    To equalize the marital estate, the court ordered Kirk to pay
    Shelley about $1.1 million.
    Shelley argued that she should receive additional compensa-
    tion because the corporate ownership of farming assets made
    the marital estate inadequate. The court referred to Shelley’s
    request as one for a “Grace award” under our decision in Grace
    v. Grace.1 The court declined Shelley’s invitation, emphasizing
    that the marital estate was substantial and that Kirk’s average
    income from 2009 to 2011 was $96,000. Furthermore, Shelley
    would be compensated for the effort she and Kirk put into
    the Brozek family corporations through the forced sale of her
    shares to Kirk for about $620,000.
    The court similarly denied Shelley’s request for $3,000
    per month of alimony for 10 years. It acknowledged “a great
    disparity in incomes of the parties.” But it concluded that
    the marriage had not interrupted Shelley’s career or educa-
    tional pursuits and that she would not have to delay any such
    pursuits to care for the children, the youngest of which was
    nearly the age of majority. Plus, the court noted that Shelley
    would receive cash for her shares in the Brozek corporations
    and a large equalization payment: “This will, as a natural
    consequence, reduce [Kirk’s] earning capacity and likewise
    increase [Shelley’s] earning capacity due to access to over
    $1,887,984.00 in cash or assets for investment in her cattle
    herd or otherwise.”
    The court ordered each party to pay their own attorney fees
    and costs.
    1
    Grace v. Grace, 
    221 Neb. 695
    , 
    380 N.W.2d 280
    (1986).
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    In October 2014, Kirk filed his notice of appeal. About 2
    weeks later, Shelley filed a “Motion for Temporary Relief
    Pending Appeal.” Because she had not paid any of her attor-
    ney fees yet, she asked for “a reasonable amount of attor-
    neys’ fees to allow for her defense of [Kirk’s] appeal.” The
    court sustained Shelley’s motion and awarded her $10,000 of
    “[t]emporary attorney fees.”
    Kirk filed a notice of appeal from the court’s order on
    Shelley’s motion for temporary relief. We sustained his motion
    to consolidate the two appeals for briefing and disposition.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Kirk assigns, restated, that the court erred by (1) ordering
    him to buy Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares at a price contrary
    to the redemption agreement; (2) not valuing Shelley’s Brozek
    & Sons and Brozek Farms shares as of the date of the parties’
    separation; (3) awarding him the horse trailer, the 2004 Ford
    pickup, and the horses; (4) not giving him a credit against the
    marital estate for the value of his premarital checking accounts,
    machinery, and crops; and (5) awarding Shelley attorney fees
    after he appealed from the decree.
    On cross-appeal, Shelley assigns that the court erred by not
    awarding her (1) alimony, (2) a Grace award, and (3) attorney
    fees in the decree.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1,2] In a marital dissolution action, an appellate court
    reviews the case de novo on the record to determine whether
    there has been an abuse of discretion by the trial judge.2 A
    judicial abuse of discretion exists if the reasons or rulings of a
    trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of
    a substantial right and denying just results in matters submitted
    for disposition.3
    2
    See Coufal v. Coufal, 
    291 Neb. 378
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 74
    (2015).
    3
    
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    [3] The construction of a contract and the meaning of a
    statute are questions of law which an appellate court reviews
    de novo.4
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. K irk’s A ppeals
    (a) Redemption Agreement
    Kirk argues that the redemption agreement should control
    the price he pays for Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares. The
    third paragraph of the agreement provides that shareholders
    who wish to sell their shares must offer them to the corpora-
    tion at a price determined under the agreement. At the time
    of trial, that price was $12 per share. But the court decided
    that the repurchase provision in the third paragraph did not
    apply, because a sale between Kirk and Shelley was a trans-
    fer to a related stockholder under the second paragraph of
    the agreement.
    Stock transfer restrictions, such as redemption agreements,
    are generally enforceable under Nebraska law.5 A transfer of
    shares contrary to a restrictive agreement is voidable in equity.6
    But we have not yet considered redemption agreements in a
    marital dissolution action.
    When dividing marital property, most courts do not treat
    a redemption agreement as conclusive evidence of a share’s
    value.7 Instead, a majority consider the price in the agreement
    4
    See, Cain v. Custer Cty. Bd. of Equal., 
    291 Neb. 730
    , 
    868 N.W.2d 334
          (2015); Labenz v. Labenz, 
    291 Neb. 455
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 88
    (2015).
    5
    See, Pennfield Oil Co. v. Winstrom, 
    272 Neb. 219
    , 
    720 N.W.2d 886
    (2006);
    F.H.T., Inc. v. Feurhelm, 
    211 Neb. 860
    , 
    320 N.W.2d 772
    (1982); Elson v.
    Schmidt, 
    140 Neb. 646
    , 
    1 N.W.2d 314
    (1941); 18 C.J.S. Corporations
    § 260 (2007).
    6
    See Pennfield Oil Co. v. Winstrom, supra note 5.
    7
    See 2 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 7:19 (3d ed.
    2005). See, also, 1 Barth H. Goldberg, Valuation of Divorce Assets § 6:4
    (rev. ed. 2005 & Cum. Supp. 2015-16); 2 Arnold H. Rutkin, Valuation and
    Distribution of Marital Property § 22.08[3][c] (2006).
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    as merely evidence of value.8 A few jurisdictions presume that
    the agreed-upon price is correct,9 and a minority hold that a
    redemption agreement is controlling as a matter of law.10
    But we need not decide how a redemption agreement would
    apply in this circumstance if the redemption agreement does
    not, by its terms, actually apply to the facts of this case. As
    the court noted, the mandatory redemption provision in the
    third paragraph of the agreement is preceded by an exception
    in the second paragraph for transfers between related share-
    holders: “Anything in this agreement to the contrary notwith-
    standing, a Stockholder may at any time or from time to time
    transfer all or any part of his stock to his spouse . . . .” The
    court reasoned that Kirk and Shelley were still spouses, so
    it could order Kirk to buy Shelley’s shares under the second
    paragraph notwithstanding the redemption provision in the
    third paragraph.
    [4-6] The general rules of contract construction apply to
    restrictive share agreements.11 If a contract’s terms are clear,
    a court may not resort to the rules of construction and must
    give the terms their plain and ordinary meaning as a reason-
    able person would understand them.12 A court must consider a
    contract as a whole and, if possible, give effect to every part
    of the contract.13
    We agree with the trial court that Kirk could buy Shelley’s
    shares notwithstanding the redemption provision in the third
    paragraph of the agreement. The second paragraph states
    that shareholders can “transfer” their shares to their spouse
    “[a]nything in this agreement to the contrary notwithstanding.”
    8
    See, e.g., Barton v. Barton, 
    281 Ga. 565
    , 
    639 S.E.2d 481
    (2007).
    9
    See, e.g., In re Marriage of DeCosse, 
    282 Mont. 212
    , 
    936 P.2d 821
    (1997).
    10
    See, e.g., Mocnik v. Mocnik, 
    838 P.2d 500
    (Okla. 1992). See, also, 2
    Turner, supra note 7.
    11
    See 18 C.J.S., supra note 5, § 253.
    12
    See Kercher v. Board of Regents, 
    290 Neb. 428
    , 
    860 N.W.2d 398
    (2015).
    13
    See 
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    And a transfer is “[a]ny mode of disposing of or parting with
    an asset or an interest in an asset, including . . . the payment
    of money . . . .”14 A sale of property (voluntary or not) is a
    transfer of the property.15 Kirk was Shelley’s spouse, so under
    the second paragraph of the agreement, the court could order
    him to buy Shelley’s shares for $50 each, notwithstanding the
    buy-back provision in the third paragraph.
    We note that Kirk, Shelley, and the court all agreed that
    Shelley’s Brozek & Sons shares were her separate property.
    Generally, a dissolution court should award separate prop-
    erty to the spouse who owns it, and any other division of
    the nonmarital property is suspect.16 But Kirk does not argue
    that the court lacked the power to order him to buy Shelley’s
    Brozek & Sons shares because they were nonmarital. Instead,
    he complains that the court required him to pay too much
    for them. So we need not consider in what circumstances a
    court may order one spouse to buy another spouse’s sepa-
    rate property.17
    (b) Value and Division
    of Marital Property
    Kirk argues that the court “misvalued” and “misallocated” a
    horse trailer, horses, and a 2004 Dodge pickup truck that the
    parties acquired during the marriage.18 The court determined
    that these assets were marital and awarded them to Kirk. He
    contends that the court overvalued the horses because all
    but three of them “belong to” or are “owned by” the parties’
    14
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1727 (10th ed. 2014).
    15
    See, 
    id. at 1537;
    Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the
    English Language, Unabridged 2003 (1993). See, also, 11 Samuel
    Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 30:10 (Richard A. Lord
    ed., 4th ed. 2012).
    16
    See 2 Turner, supra note 7, § 8:33.
    17
    See In re Claims Against Pierce Elevator, 
    291 Neb. 798
    , 
    868 N.W.2d 781
          (2015).
    18
    Brief for appellant at 17.
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    daughters.19 He argues the court should have awarded the horse
    trailer to Shelley because she wanted it and he did not. And he
    argues that the court should not have awarded him the entire
    value of the 2004 Ford pickup truck because their adult daugh-
    ter drove the truck.
    [7-9] In a divorce action, the purpose of a property divi-
    sion is to distribute the marital assets equitably between the
    parties.20 Equitable property division is a three-step process.21
    The first step is to classify the parties’ property as marital or
    nonmarital.22 The second step is to value the marital assets and
    marital liabilities of the parties.23 The third step is to calculate
    and divide the net marital estate between the parties.24 The
    ultimate test in determining the appropriateness of a property
    division is fairness and reasonableness as determined by the
    facts of each case.25
    We conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion by
    distributing the horse trailer, horses, and pickup truck to Kirk.
    The court had a good reason for not awarding the horse trailer
    to Shelley: she did not have any horses. Contrary to Kirk’s
    argument, Shelley did not ask the court to award her the horse
    trailer. She testified that she did not have much use for a horse
    trailer but that “[i]f the Court feels that I need that trailer, then
    so be it.”
    The court did not err by awarding the horses to Kirk,
    because Shelley lacked the facilities to keep them. Nor did
    the court abuse its discretion by assigning the horses a value
    of $6,300. The court evidently accepted Shelley’s suggestion
    to include half of the horses’ value—$12,600 according to
    19
    
    Id. at 31.
    20
    Tyma v. Tyma, 
    263 Neb. 873
    , 
    644 N.W.2d 139
    (2002).
    21
    
    Id. 22 Id.
    23
    
    Id. 24 Id.
    25
    
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    Kirk—in the marital estate and award the horses to Kirk. Kirk
    argues that the decree, which included “7 head of horses” in the
    marital estate, “awards more horses than exist.”26 Asked how
    many horses she and Kirk had when they separated, Shelley
    testified, “Six, maybe, or something. I don’t know.” But Kirk
    said in his December 2011 “Statement of Financial Condition”
    that he had “Horses 7 head,” and his “2011 Depreciation and
    Amortization Report” seems to list seven different horses. So
    the record supports the court’s finding that the parties had
    seven horses.
    Finally, the court did not abuse its discretion by including
    the 2004 Ford pickup truck in the marital estate and awarding
    it to Kirk. Kirk does not dispute that he and Shelley bought the
    truck during the marriage with marital funds. And he testified
    that he was driving the truck when he and Shelley separated.
    Even if the parties were allowing their adult daughter to drive
    the truck at the time of trial, she was not the owner. So this fact
    did not oblige the court to “neutralize[]” the truck for equitable
    distribution purposes.27
    (c) Valuation Date
    Kirk argues that the court should have used the separation
    date instead of the trial date to value “the assets.”28 He states
    that he and Shelley “stayed away from one another” after
    December 24, 2011, and suggests that “[t]he assets are not
    more related to the trial date than the separation date.”29
    [10] Generally, the date on which a court values the marital
    estate should be rationally related to the property composing
    the marital estate.30 But as Shelley notes, the court actually
    valued much of the marital property on the separation date. For
    26
    Brief for appellant at 31.
    27
    
    Id. at 32.
    28
    
    Id. at 23.
    29
    
    Id. at 22,
    24.
    30
    Blaine v. Blaine, 
    275 Neb. 87
    , 
    744 N.W.2d 444
    (2008).
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    example, the court valued the household and farm checking
    accounts as of December 23 and 24, 2011. The values that
    the court used for automobiles, trailers, cattle, snowmobiles,
    and other personal property match those in Shelley’s “Marital
    Balance Sheet” and Kirk’s “Statement of Financial Condition,”
    which are dated December 24 and 31, 2011. An exception is
    the parties’ farm equipment, for which the court accepted the
    values from an appraisal dated December 12, 2012. But Kirk
    put that appraisal in evidence, so he can hardly complain about
    the court’s using it.
    Kirk’s main complaint is that the court should have used
    his appraisal of Shelley’s corporate shares, which valued them
    on the date of separation. The court found Shelley’s apprais-
    als more persuasive, in part, because they were “reflective of
    the current market value closest to date of trial.” The shares
    were Shelley’s nonmarital property, and we are not aware of
    any authority requiring a court to value nonmarital corporate
    shares as of the date when the acrimony between two share-
    holders reached a boiling point. Shelley’s expert testified
    that appraisers generally prefer the most recent information
    because the value of a corporation’s assets can fluctuate.
    Kirk counters that a “price-spike” occurred between the
    dates of separation and trial which, in hindsight, proved to
    be “a short-term artificial run-up in land values.”31 Even if
    Kirk is correct, the court had no way of knowing what the
    future held.
    (d) Tracing of Premarital Assets
    Kirk argues that the court should have given him a credit
    against the marital estate for the value of some of his pre-
    marital property. In his brief, he reproduces a list of about 30
    assets copied from his “Statement of Financial Condition” and
    asserts that “[t]hese are the nonmarital assets.”32 The court
    31
    Brief for appellant at 23, 25.
    32
    
    Id. at 28.
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    decided that some of these assets were Kirk’s nonmarital
    property. And, for the retirement accounts, the court awarded
    Kirk a portion of their value that is substantially higher than
    the value that Kirk claims in his brief. He specifically argues
    that the court should have given him a credit for the value of
    (1) the premarital portion of the farm checking account, (2)
    the crops from his 1993 harvest, and (3) the machinery he
    owned at the time of his marriage. We restrict our review to
    those issues.33
    [11-14] Generally, all property accumulated and acquired by
    either spouse during a marriage is part of the marital estate.34
    Exceptions include property that a spouse acquired before the
    marriage, or by gift or inheritance.35 Setting aside nonmarital
    property is simple if the spouse possesses the original asset,
    but can be problematic if the original asset no longer exists.36
    Separate property becomes marital property by commingling
    if it is inextricably mixed with marital property or with the
    separate property of the other spouse.37 If the separate property
    remains segregated or is traceable into its product, commin-
    gling does not occur.38 The burden of proof rests with the party
    claiming that property is nonmarital.39
    After reviewing the record, we conclude that Kirk did not
    trace the value of the premarital funds in the farm checking
    account, the crops from his 1993 harvest, or the premari-
    tal machinery. He cites an armful of exhibits and concludes
    that “[t]he evidence is of direct, concrete documents that
    33
    See In re Claims Against Pierce Elevator, supra note 17.
    34
    Coufal v. Coufal, supra note 2.
    35
    See, Gress v. Gress, 
    271 Neb. 122
    , 
    710 N.W.2d 318
    (2006); Gangwish v.
    Gangwish, 
    267 Neb. 901
    , 
    678 N.W.2d 503
    (2004).
    36
    See, Rezac v. Rezac, 
    221 Neb. 516
    , 
    378 N.W.2d 196
    (1985); Charron v.
    Charron, 
    16 Neb. Ct. App. 724
    , 
    751 N.W.2d 645
    (2008).
    37
    Coufal v. Coufal, supra note 2.
    38
    
    Id. 39 See
    Gangwish v. Gangwish, supra note 35.
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    substantiate the values.”40 But he does not identify the different
    permutations that his premarital property underwent during the
    marriage. And, after reviewing the evidence, we cannot follow
    the threads in the hodgepodge of figures.
    For the farm checking account, Kirk presented evidence of
    its value before the marriage and its value on the separation
    date. Between those two points, Shelley became an account
    holder and Kirk made an unknown number of deposits and
    withdrawals. Kirk did not present any evidence of the with-
    drawal amounts during the marriage. Without any evidence
    of what withdrawals the parties made during the marriage,
    “the overwhelming likelihood is that tracing of withdrawals is
    not possible.”41
    Similarly, Kirk did not show what form his 1993 crops had
    taken by the time he and Shelley separated. He said that he
    “rolled” the proceeds of his 1993 harvest into the next years’
    crop, a process which he repeated each year through 2011.
    The proceeds of the 1993 harvest were therefore mixed with
    the proceeds of marital harvests and subject to the vicissitudes
    of the farming economy for nearly 20 years. Besides, Kirk
    could not show the number of bushels he actually harvested in
    1993. He instead relied on an estimate using average yields for
    the area.
    For his premarital machinery, Kirk argues that we should
    require less specificity because “tracing the value of continu-
    ously traded-in equipment would be futile.”42 He analogizes
    his farm machinery to the cattle herd which the Nebraska
    Court of Appeals treated as a single asset in Shafer v. Shafer.43
    There, the husband brought into the marriage 116 head of
    cattle worth about $60,000. By the time of trial, the herd
    40
    Brief for appellant at 31.
    41
    See 1 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 6:52 at 637 (3d
    ed. 2005).
    42
    Brief for appellant at 30-31.
    43
    Shafer v. Shafer, 
    16 Neb. Ct. App. 170
    , 
    741 N.W.2d 173
    (2007).
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    was 166 head worth about $120,000. The husband testified
    that he continuously replaced the livestock as he sold them
    and that the herd gradually grew throughout the marriage,
    except for a brief period of drought. The husband sought a
    “set-aside” against the marital estate for the value of his pre-
    marital cattle.44
    The Court of Appeals “view[ed] the cattle herd as in effect
    a single asset—rather than taking a ‘cow by cow’ approach.”45
    The husband had sold his premarital cows, but the herd itself
    persisted through the roughly 13-year marriage:
    while an individual cow which [the husband] owned in
    1991 was long ago turned into hamburger, hot dogs, and
    shoe leather and thus is not traceable, the cattle herd
    itself, which has always been part of [the husband’s]
    farming operation, is in fact traceable. To do otherwise
    seems to us to exalt form over substance and ignore the
    equitable nature of a dissolution action.46
    The Court of Appeals decided that the trial court should have
    given the husband a $60,000 credit against the marital estate
    for the premarital portion of the herd.
    We conclude that Kirk’s premarital machinery is distin-
    guishable from the cattle herd in Shafer. A cow-and-calf herd
    is often a self-sustaining body: it produces calves each year,
    about half of which are heifers that eventually have calves of
    their own. The same cannot be said about farm equipment. The
    coupling of a tractor and grain cart will not produce a lawn-
    mower next spring.
    Ideally, to trace the value of an item of premarital machin-
    ery that Kirk traded in during the marriage, we would have
    evidence of the ratio of marital-to-nonmarital funds he used
    to acquire the new asset.47 With one exception, Kirk t­estified
    44
    
    Id. at 177,
    741 N.W.2d at 178.
    45
    
    Id. at 178,
    741 N.W.2d at 179.
    46
    
    Id. 47 See
    1 Turner, supra note 41, § 5:61.
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    that he did not know what consideration he received for sell-
    ing or trading in his premarital machinery. He was able to
    “guess” he received $3,500 for a premarital shredder which he
    applied toward the purchase price of a new shredder. A spouse
    can establish a “tracing link” through his own testimony,48 but
    the court was entitled to discount Kirk’s testimony about the
    shredder because of his admitted uncertainty.
    To summarize, as the spouse claiming a credit for nonmari-
    tal property, Kirk had the burden to show what portion of the
    parties’ machinery was attributable to his premarital assets.
    Kirk did not meet his burden. We are aware that, in Bussell
    v. Bussell,49 the Court of Appeals applied its reasoning from
    Shafer to premarital farm equipment exchanged for different
    farm equipment during the marriage. But we do not know
    what evidence the record contained in Bussell. To the extent
    that Bussell is inconsistent with this opinion, we disapprove
    of it.
    (e) Postappeal Attorney Fees
    Kirk argues that the court lacked jurisdiction to award
    Shelley $10,000 of attorney fees after he filed a notice of
    appeal from the decree. Shelley contends that the court retained
    jurisdiction to award her attorney fees for her lawyer’s antici-
    pated work on appeal.
    Generally, a trial court loses jurisdiction once a party
    appeals.50 But Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-351(2) (Reissue 2008) cre-
    ates several exceptions in dissolution cases:
    When final orders relating to [domestic relations actions]
    are on appeal and such appeal is pending, the court that
    issued such orders shall retain jurisdiction to provide for
    such orders regarding support, custody, parenting time,
    visitation, or other access, orders shown to be necessary
    48
    
    Id., § 5:63
    at 639.
    49
    Bussell v. Bussell, 
    21 Neb. Ct. App. 280
    , 
    837 N.W.2d 840
    (2013).
    50
    See Spady v. Spady, 
    284 Neb. 885
    , 
    824 N.W.2d 366
    (2012).
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    to allow the use of property or to prevent the irreparable
    harm to or loss of property during the pendency of such
    appeal, or other appropriate orders in aid of the appeal
    process. Such orders shall not be construed to prejudice
    any party on appeal.
    (Emphasis supplied.) Shelley argues that an award to help pay
    for her attorney’s work on appeal was an “appropriate order[]
    in aid of the appeal process” under § 42-351(2).
    [15,16] We give statutory language its plain and ordinary
    meaning.51 Our duty is to determine and give effect to the
    Legislature’s purpose as ascertained from the statute’s entire
    language considered in its plain, ordinary, and popular sense.52
    [17] We conclude that an order helping a party pay for his
    or her attorney’s work on appeal is an “order[] in aid of the
    appeal process.” The court therefore had jurisdiction under
    § 42-351(2) to award Shelley attorney fees after Kirk appealed
    from the decree. Nor can we say that the amount of the award
    was an abuse of discretion. The issues raised by the parties
    below warranted an assumption that the appellate work would
    be substantial.
    2. Shelley’s Cross-A ppeals
    (a) Alimony
    [18,19] Shelley argues that the court abused its discretion
    by not awarding her alimony. In considering alimony, a court
    should weigh four factors: (1) the circumstances of the parties,
    (2) the duration of the marriage, (3) the history of contribu-
    tions to the marriage, and (4) the ability of the party seeking
    support to engage in gainful employment without interfering
    with the interests of any minor children in the custody of
    each party.53 In addition to the specific criteria listed in Neb.
    51
    Pettit v. Nebraska Dept. of Corr. Servs., 
    291 Neb. 513
    , 
    867 N.W.2d 553
          (2015).
    52
    See 
    id. 53 See
    Anderson v. Anderson, 
    290 Neb. 530
    , 
    861 N.W.2d 113
    (2015).
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    Rev. Stat. § 42-365 (Reissue 2008), a court should consider
    the income and earning capacity of each party and the gen-
    eral equities.54
    [20] The statutory criteria for dividing property and award-
    ing alimony overlap, but the two serve different purposes and
    courts should consider them separately.55 The purpose of a
    property division is to distribute the marital assets equitably
    between the parties.56 The purpose of alimony is to provide for
    the continued maintenance or support of one party by the other
    when the relative economic circumstances and the other crite-
    ria enumerated in § 42-365 make it appropriate.
    Shelley emphasizes that she was married to Kirk for 18
    years before they separated and that his income far exceeds
    hers. She contributed to the marriage by raising the children
    and doing the “things that a typical Nebraska farm wife does
    on a day to day basis.”57 Her goal is to support herself by
    growing her cattle herd, and she estimated that it might take 10
    years for her to do so. She suggests that alimony of $3,000 per
    month for 10 years would be reasonable.
    [21] We conclude that the court did not abuse its discre-
    tion by declining to award Shelley alimony. The length of the
    marriage and disparity of incomes favors an award. But the
    marriage did not interrupt Shelley’s career or education, and
    she will not have any childcare duties to hamper her career or
    educational pursuits after the marriage. At the time of trial,
    she planned to support herself by growing her cattle herd. The
    main obstacle to increasing her stock was Shelley’s lack of
    capital, so the court was justified in considering the substan-
    tial amount of money that she will receive from Kirk’s pur-
    chase of her corporate shares and the payment to equalize the
    54
    See 
    id. 55 §
    42-365.
    56
    
    Id. 57 Brief
    for appellee on cross-appeal at 32.
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    division of the marital estate. Shelley notes that the division
    of the marital estate and the award of alimony are separate
    inquiries under § 42-365. But that does not mean that a party’s
    resources are irrelevant to her need for alimony. In weigh-
    ing a request for alimony, the court may take into account
    all of the property owned by the parties when entering the
    decree, whether accumulated by their joint efforts or acquired
    by inheritance.58
    (b) “Grace Award”
    Shelley argues that the court should have given her addi-
    tional compensation for the inadequacy of the marital estate.
    She emphasizes that Kirk received a small salary relative to
    Brozek & Sons’ revenue and that the marital estate would have
    been larger if Kirk had received a higher salary. Kirk contends
    that Shelley is not entitled to additional compensation because
    she “departs this marriage with substantial assets.”59
    As noted, property received by gift or inheritance is usu-
    ally not part of the marital estate. But in Van Newkirk v. Van
    Newkirk,60 we recognized an exception if both spouses have
    contributed to the improvement or operation of the nonmarital
    property, or if the spouse who did not receive the nonmari-
    tal property nevertheless significantly cared for it during the
    marriage. We do not apply the Van Newkirk exception unless
    the contributions were significant and we have evidence of
    their value.61
    Here, the court found that the Van Newkirk exception did
    not apply because Shelley “failed to introduce evidence of
    the value of her contribution toward the improvements or
    operation of [Brozek & Sons].” Plus, the court said that the
    58
    See Bauerle v. Bauerle, 
    263 Neb. 881
    , 
    644 N.W.2d 128
    (2002).
    59
    Reply brief for appellant at 11.
    60
    Van Newkirk v. Van Newkirk, 
    212 Neb. 730
    , 
    325 N.W.2d 832
    (1982).
    61
    See Tyler v. Tyler, 
    253 Neb. 209
    , 
    570 N.W.2d 317
    (1997).
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    decree adequately compensated Shelley for her efforts during
    the marriage.
    On appeal, Shelley does not challenge the court’s refusal
    to apply the Van Newkirk exception. Instead, she argues that
    under Grace v. Grace, the court should have given her a cash
    award for the inadequacy of the marital estate.62 In Grace, the
    husband had a minority stake in a closely held family ranching
    corporation with assets of $6.8 to $9.1 million. The corpora-
    tion employed the husband, paying him $1,500 per month and
    providing him food, lodging, utilities, a truck, and fuel. He
    received all of his shares by gift or inheritance.
    We concluded that the Van Newkirk exception did not apply
    because the wife had not cared for or contributed to the
    improvement of the corporation. But we said that Van Newkirk
    was not “an ironclad, rigid rule for all circumstances.”63 We
    emphasized that the division of property depends on the facts
    and equities of each case. In Grace, “the fact remain[ed]
    that due to the way the parties to this marriage lived dur-
    ing the marriage, they did not acquire a house or a car or
    any property a married couple of 16 years, with above aver-
    age assets, would be expected to acquire.”64 So we ordered
    the husband to pay the wife $100,000 as part of the division
    of property.
    We have since referred to the award in Grace as “compen-
    sation for the inadequacy of the marital estate.”65 The Court
    of Appeals has affirmed the denial of a Grace award in cases
    with marital estates between $500,000 and $600,000.66 It has
    62
    Grace v. Grace, supra note 1.
    63
    
    Id. at 699,
    380 N.W.2d at 284.
    64
    
    Id. at 701,
    380 N.W.2d at 285.
    65
    Medlock v. Medlock, 
    263 Neb. 666
    , 679, 
    642 N.W.2d 113
    , 125-26 (2002).
    See, also, Walker v. Walker, 
    9 Neb. Ct. App. 834
    , 
    622 N.W.2d 410
    (2001).
    66
    See, Shuck v. Shuck, 
    18 Neb. Ct. App. 867
    , 
    806 N.W.2d 580
    (2011); Charron
    v. Charron, supra note 36.
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    affirmed the provision of a Grace award in cases in which the
    marital estate was about $130,000 or “consisted only of two
    vehicles and some furniture.”67
    We conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion by
    refusing Shelley’s request for a Grace award. The parties’ net
    marital estate is about $2.5 million. Shelley might wish that
    the marital estate were larger, but it is not inadequate. Because
    Kirk personally farmed some land in addition to his work for
    Brozek & Sons, he and Shelley acquired substantial assets,
    such as machinery and crops in storage. If Kirk’s efforts during
    the marriage enhanced the value of Brozek & Sons and Brozek
    Farms, the increased value was reflected in the price that Kirk
    paid for Shelley’s shares in both corporations.
    (c) No Attorney Fees in Decree
    [22,23] Shelley argues that the court should have awarded
    her about $200,000 for the attorney fees she incurred in pros-
    ecuting the divorce. A uniform course of procedure exists in
    Nebraska for the award of attorney fees in dissolution cases.68
    A dissolution court should consider the nature of the case, the
    amount involved in the controversy, the services actually per-
    formed, the results obtained, the length of time required for
    preparation and presentation of the case, the novelty and diffi-
    culty of the questions raised, and the customary charges of the
    bar for similar services.69
    After reviewing the relevant factors, we conclude that the
    court did not abuse its discretion by declining to award Shelley
    attorney fees in the decree. We note that Shelley stated the
    sums of attorney fees she had incurred from various law
    firms, but she did not submit an affidavit or other evidence
    that showed the work performed by her lawyers. An affidavit
    67
    Keig v. Keig, 
    20 Neb. Ct. App. 362
    , 374, 
    826 N.W.2d 879
    , 888 (2012). See
    Walker v. Walker, supra note 65.
    68
    Anderson v. Anderson, supra note 53.
    69
    See 
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    BROZEK v. BROZEK
    Cite as 
    292 Neb. 681
    is not a prerequisite to an attorney fee award, but it is the
    best practice.70
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the corporate buy-sell agreement in this
    case does not, by its terms, apply to transfers between spouses.
    Because the court ordered one spouse to buy the other spouse’s
    shares, it was not bound by the value determined under the
    agreement. As to the remaining issues raised by Kirk, we do
    not believe that the court’s division of the marital estate or
    its refusal to award Kirk a credit for the value of long-gone
    premarital property was an abuse of discretion. And the court
    had statutory jurisdiction to award Shelley attorney fees for the
    prospective appellate work of her lawyer after Kirk appealed
    from the decree. Nor do we find any merit to the errors that
    Shelley assigns in her cross-appeal. We therefore affirm.
    A ffirmed.
    Wright and McCormack, JJ., not participating.
    70
    Garza v. Garza, 
    288 Neb. 213
    , 
    846 N.W.2d 626
    (2014).