Parde v. Parde , 313 Neb. 779 ( 2023 )


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  • Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
    www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
    03/17/2023 09:04 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    313 Nebraska Reports
    PARDE V. PARDE
    Cite as 
    313 Neb. 779
    Cynthia A. Parde, appellant,
    v. Arlan D. Parde, appellee.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed March 17, 2023.    No. S-21-497.
    1. Divorce: Child Custody: Property Division: Alimony: Attorney
    Fees: 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 in his or her determi-
    nations regarding custody, child support, division of property, alimony,
    and attorney fees.
    2. Evidence: Appeal and Error. In a review de novo on the record, an
    appellate court is required to make independent factual determinations
    based upon the record, and the court reaches its own independent con-
    clusions with respect to the matters at issue.
    3. 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.
    4. Divorce: Property Division: Equity. 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-365
     (Reissue
    2016) authorizes a trial court to equitably distribute the marital estate
    according to what is fair and reasonable under the circumstances.
    5. Divorce: Property Division. In a marital dissolution action, the pur-
    pose of a property division is to distribute the marital assets equitably
    between the parties.
    6. ____: ____. In a marital dissolution action, there is no mathematical
    formula by which property awards can be precisely determined, but as
    a general rule, a spouse should be awarded one-third to one-half of the
    marital estate, the polestar being fairness and reasonableness as deter-
    mined by the facts of each case.
    7. ____: ____. The appreciation or income of a nonmarital asset during
    the marriage is marital insofar as it was caused by the efforts of either
    spouse or both spouses.
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    8. Divorce: Property Division: Presumptions. Accrued investment earn-
    ings or appreciation of nonmarital assets during the marriage are pre-
    sumed marital unless the party seeking the classification of the growth
    as nonmarital proves: (1) The growth is readily identifiable and trace-
    able to the nonmarital portion of the account and (2) the growth is not
    due to the active efforts of either spouse.
    9. Divorce: Property Division. Any given property can constitute a mix-
    ture of marital and nonmarital interests; a portion of an asset can be
    marital property while another portion can be separate property.
    10. ____: ____. The original value of an asset may be nonmarital, while all
    or some portion of the appreciation of that asset may be marital.
    11. ____: ____. In a marital dissolution action, the equitable division of
    property is a three-step process. The first step is to classify the par-
    ties’ property as either marital or nonmarital, setting aside the non-
    marital property or nonmarital portion of the property to the party
    who brought the property to the marriage. The second step is to value
    the marital assets and marital liabilities of the parties. And the third
    step is to calculate and divide the net marital estate equitably between
    the parties.
    12. Divorce: Property Division: Real Estate. Whether appreciation in real
    estate is active or passive depends on the facts and circumstances of
    each case.
    13. Divorce: Property Division: Proof. The burden is on the owning
    spouse to prove the extent to which marital contributions did not cause
    the appreciation or income.
    14. Divorce: Property Division: Equity. The equity in property at the time
    of marriage is a nonmarital asset which, if established, should be set
    aside as separate property.
    15. Divorce: Property Division: Presumptions: Gifts. Gifts and inherit­
    ances, even when received during the marriage, are presumed to be
    nonmarital.
    16. Evidence: Appeal and Error. When evidence is in conflict, the appel-
    late court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial court
    heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts
    rather than another.
    Petition for further review from the Court of Appeals,
    Moore, Riedmann, and Arterburn, Judges, on appeal thereto
    from the District Court for Gage County, Ricky A. Schreiner,
    Judge. Judgment of Court of Appeals affirmed as modified, and
    cause remanded with directions.
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    PARDE V. PARDE
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    John W. Ballew, Jr., and Steven D. Burns, of Ballew Hazen,
    P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
    Terrance A. Poppe and McKynze P. Works, of Morrow,
    Poppe, Watermeier & Lonowski, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Cassel, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    We granted further review of a Nebraska Court of Appeals
    decision 1 applying the active appreciation rule to agricul-
    tural land in a marital property division. We agree that the
    rule applies to such land and that the owning spouse failed
    to show the appreciation in value of the land was not caused
    by the active efforts of either spouse. We affirm the decision
    of the Court of Appeals as modified and remand the cause
    with directions.
    II. BACKGROUND
    Arlan D. Parde and Cynthia A. Parde (Cindy) married in
    April 1994. It was a second marriage for both parties. In
    January 2019, the parties separated and Cindy filed a complaint
    for dissolution of the marriage.
    The district court conducted a trial in February 2021. The
    court received over 80 exhibits and heard the testimony of four
    witnesses: Cindy, Cindy’s daughter, Arlan, and Arlan’s sister.
    Our inquiry upon further review is focused on the nonmarital
    and marital portions of various parcels of agricultural land.
    1. Farming Operation
    The evidence established that both before and during
    the marriage, Arlan maintained a farming operation. Over the
    course of the parties’ 26-year marriage, Arlan and Cindy both
    contributed to the farming operation.
    1
    Parde v. Parde, 
    31 Neb. App. 263
    , 
    979 N.W.2d 788
     (2022).
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    PARDE V. PARDE
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    An agricultural balance sheet from January 1994 showed
    that Arlan had assets of $715,336, including land, and liabili-
    ties of $393,989. Several months after the marriage, Cindy
    signed a financing statement and security agreement obligating
    her for all of Arlan’s bank loans. Throughout the marriage,
    the parties had one checking account which they used for the
    deposit of all proceeds from the sale of cattle, crops, machin-
    ery, and property disposed of during the marriage. They paid
    farming operation expenses from the checking account.
    On a balance sheet near the date of separation, the parties
    listed their net worth as approximately $1.6 million. With
    updated real estate values, their net worth was over $2 mil-
    lion. When Arlan’s counsel asked if the increase in wealth
    from $400,000 to about $2 million came from anywhere aside
    “from the land, the dairy, the farm operation, the things that
    not only [he] had before the marriage but the two of [them]
    worked at during the marriage,” Arlan added that he started
    “trucking.” Arlan did not provide any additional testimony
    regarding the increased value or appreciation in value of the
    land or farming operation.
    2. Parcels of Property
    The dispute centers on the marital portion of five properties.
    We set forth the evidence related to each parcel.
    (a) Fertilizer Plant
    Prior to the marriage, Arlan bought the land called Fertilizer
    Plant, consisting of approximately 113 acres of dry cropland,
    for $90,720. At the time of the parties’ marriage, Fertilizer
    Plant was worth approximately $70,000. Arlan testified that
    he “paid off” this property prior to the marriage, but Cindy
    testified that they eliminated the debt during the marriage.
    Arlan sold 19 acres between 1993 and 2000. The money from
    the sales went into the farming bank account to pay loans.
    At the time of the parties’ separation, Fertilizer Plant was
    worth $403,750.
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    (b) Home Place
    In 2002, the parties built a house on 5 acres of Fertilizer
    Plant and called it Home Place. The house and land were
    appraised at $385,000. The parties stipulated that the land had
    a value of $25,000. A 2016 survivorship warranty deed con-
    veyed the property to Arlan and Cindy as joint tenants.
    (c) Lenard’s Farm
    Arlan purchased property called Lenard’s Farm, consisting
    of 160 acres of dry cropland, for $42,000 in 1991. On Arlan’s
    1994 agricultural balance sheet, he listed the property’s value
    at $64,000. At the time of marriage, he owed $40,000 for
    the property.
    Within 2 weeks of the marriage, Arlan presented Cindy with
    a promissory note for $60,000 and asked her to sign it. The
    promissory note included $40,000 from the initial Lenard’s
    Farm loan, plus an additional $20,000. The parties paid off the
    note during the marriage. Throughout the marriage, portions
    of the land were sold and the funds were deposited into the
    marital checking account. In 2002, the parties sold a portion
    of Lenard’s Farm, along with other farmland, and purchased
    property called Holmesville Farm in a “1031 exchange.” Arlan
    explained a 1031 exchange as a way to avoid paying capital
    gains tax when “you sell . . . a piece of property, and you
    transfer the proceeds from that to another piece of property that
    you’re purchasing within a certain time.”
    At the time of separation, Lenard’s Farm consisted of 36
    acres and was valued at $153,000. Arlan asserted that he
    should be awarded the property at a value of $40,000, repre-
    senting the amount that he owed on Lenard’s Farm at the time
    of marriage.
    (d) Grandma’s Farm
    In September 2003, Arlan and Cindy purchased property
    called Grandma’s Farm, consisting of 160 acres of dry crop-
    land, from Arlan’s mother. The joint tenancy warrant deed
    showed consideration of $80,000. Internal notes from the
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    PARDE V. PARDE
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    parties’ bank reflect that on September 29 the bank advanced
    $80,296 for the purchase. The loan was to be paid over the
    course of 15 years.
    Arlan testified that after purchasing the land for $80,000,
    his mother wrote him a check for $20,000—25 percent of
    the purchase price—as an inheritance. Arlan’s sister testified
    that she also received $20,000 at that time from their mother.
    Arlan claimed that he applied the $20,000 to the purchase
    price of Grandma’s Farm and borrowed the rest from the
    bank. He did not have a copy of the check he claimed to have
    received from his mother. Bank records show normal monthly
    payments and do not reflect a $20,000 payment toward
    the loan.
    Cindy testified that the parties paid $80,000 to the bank
    “and then we received $20,000 credit” from Arlan’s mother.
    Cindy’s counsel asked, “So to clarify this: Perhaps, the ground
    was supposed to be sold for $100,000, and instead it was sold
    for 80 and you went to the bank and got the bank note to pay
    the 80?” Cindy answered, “Correct.” She did not recall that
    they received a check. She testified that Arlan’s three siblings
    “received $20,000 credit” and testified “[t]hat came out of the
    [$]80,000 that was paid is the way I understood it.” Cindy felt
    the $20,000 was a gift to both of them.
    At the time of separation, Grandma’s Farm had a value of
    $236,000 and 68 acres remained from the original purchase.
    Arlan claimed that 25 percent of its appraised value was non-
    marital, because he bought it from his mother for $80,000, but
    received $20,000 back from her.
    (e) Holmesville Farm
    During the marriage, the parties purchased property called
    Holmesville Farm, which is irrigated cropland, for $249,000.
    As noted earlier, in 2002, the parties purchased Holmesville
    Farm in a “1031 exchange.”
    Arlan claimed that 61 percent of the purchase price was
    nonmarital, because they purchased it with $32,000 related
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    to the Lenard’s Farm sale and with $121,500 of sale pro-
    ceeds from property called Rademacher Farm. At the time of
    marriage, Arlan valued Rademacher Farm at approximately
    $70,000 with debt of $27,500. Thus, at the time of marriage,
    Arlan’s equity in Rademacher Farm was $42,500. In 2002,
    Arlan sold Rademacher Farm for $149,000.
    During the marriage, a storm damaged an irrigation pivot
    and the equipment was replaced through insurance funds.
    Holmesville Farm was valued at $734,000 at the time of sepa-
    ration. Arlan contended after reducing that amount by 61 per-
    cent, the marital value of the property was $286,260.
    3. District Court’s Decree
    The district court found that Arlan met his burden of proof
    “with respect to property owned by [Arlan] prior to the mar-
    riage and . . . with respect to the tracing of the proceeds from
    the sale of portions of property that [he] owned prior to the
    marriage.” The district court did not mention appreciation or
    cite any case law discussing it.
    The district court approved Arlan’s proposed division of the
    land. Thus, it awarded Fertilizer Plant to Arlan and did not
    include any of the property’s value as marital property. After
    setting aside nonmarital portions, the court awarded Arlan as
    marital property Home Place valued at $361,000, consistent
    with Arlan’s proposed division of property listing that number
    along with “$386,000.00 [-] $25,000.00.” It awarded Arlan
    Lenard’s Farm valued at $40,000. With respect to Grandma’s
    Farm, the district court found that Arlan’s mother “gifted back”
    to him $20,000 and that he should receive credit for that gift.
    It awarded him the property with a marital value of $177,000,
    which we observe to be 75 percent of $236,000. The district
    court found that placing a marital value on Holmesville Farm
    of $286,260 was appropriate, citing a 2007 decision by the
    Court of Appeals. 2
    2
    Shafer v. Shafer, 
    16 Neb. App. 170
    , 
    741 N.W.2d 173
     (2007), modified on
    denial of rehearing 
    16 Neb. App. 327
    , 
    743 N.W.2d 781
     (2008).
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    The district court divided the net marital estate equally.
    Thus, it ordered Arlan to make an equalization payment of
    $398,664.88 to Cindy.
    4. Court of Appeals
    Cindy appealed, assigning numerous errors. Some of the
    errors concerned the district court’s classification, valuation,
    and division of the marital estate.
    The Court of Appeals recognized that we had not directly
    applied the active appreciation rule to farmland. After review-
    ing our decisions in Stanosheck v. Jeanette 3 and Stephens v.
    Stephens, 4 the Court of Appeals determined that the rule should
    apply to agricultural land.
    As will be discussed further in our analysis, the Court
    of Appeals disagreed with the district court’s determinations
    regarding each of the five parcels. It reversed this portion
    of the district court’s decision and remanded the cause with
    directions to equitably divide the marital estate in accordance
    with the Court of Appeals’ classifications of marital value and
    Arlan’s nonmarital value.
    Arlan filed a petition for further review, which we granted.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Arlan assigns five errors in his petition for further review,
    each dealing with a particular parcel of land. He assigns,
    restated and reordered, that the Court of Appeals erred in (1)
    finding that $333,750 of appreciation on Fertilizer Plant was
    part of the marital estate, (2) finding that $129,000 of Lenard’s
    Farm was marital property, (3) finding that the marital value of
    Holmesville Farm was $691,500, (4) including the value of the
    Home Place land as marital property, and (5) finding that all of
    Grandma’s Farm was marital property.
    3
    Stanosheck v. Jeanette, 
    294 Neb. 138
    , 
    881 N.W.2d 599
     (2016).
    4
    Stephens v. Stephens, 
    297 Neb. 188
    , 
    899 N.W.2d 582
     (2017).
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    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] 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 in his or her
    determinations regarding custody, child support, division of
    property, alimony, and attorney fees. 5
    [2] In a review de novo on the record, an appellate court
    is required to make independent factual determinations based
    upon the record, and the court reaches its own independent
    conclusions with respect to the matters at issue. 6
    [3] A judicial abuse of discretion exists if the reasons or rul-
    ings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a
    litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in matters
    submitted for disposition. 7
    V. ANALYSIS
    [4-6] 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-365
     (Reissue 2016) authorizes a
    trial court to equitably distribute the marital estate according
    to what is fair and reasonable under the circumstances. 8 In a
    marital dissolution action, the purpose of a property division is
    to distribute the marital assets equitably between the parties. 9
    There is no mathematical formula by which property awards
    can be precisely determined, but as a general rule, a spouse
    should be awarded one-third to one-half of the marital estate,
    the polestar being fairness and reasonableness as determined
    by the facts of each case. 10
    [7] Prior to our decision in Stephens, we treated separate
    property as remaining nonmarital unless both of the spouses
    5
    Simons v. Simons, 
    312 Neb. 136
    , 
    978 N.W.2d 121
     (2022).
    6
    Kauk v. Kauk, 
    310 Neb. 329
    , 
    966 N.W.2d 45
     (2021).
    7
    Simons v. Simons, 
    supra note 5
    .
    8
    Bock v. Dalbey, 
    283 Neb. 994
    , 
    815 N.W.2d 530
     (2012).
    9
    See Kauk v. Kauk, 
    supra note 6
    .
    10
    
    Id.
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    contributed to the improvement or operation of the property
    or the spouse not owning the property or not receiving the
    inheritance or gift significantly cared for the property during
    the marriage. 11 But in Stephens, we held that the appreciation
    or income of a nonmarital asset during the marriage is mari-
    tal insofar as it was caused by the efforts of either spouse or
    both spouses. 12
    [8] The active appreciation rule sets forth the relevant test
    to determine to what extent marital efforts caused any part of
    an asset’s appreciation or income. 13 Accrued investment earn-
    ings or appreciation of nonmarital assets during the marriage
    are presumed marital unless the party seeking the classification
    of the growth as nonmarital proves: (1) The growth is read-
    ily identifiable and traceable to the nonmarital portion of the
    account and (2) the growth is not due to the active efforts of
    either spouse. 14 Appreciation caused by marital contributions is
    known as active appreciation, and it constitutes marital prop-
    erty. 15 Passive appreciation is appreciation caused by separate
    contributions and nonmarital forces. 16
    [9,10] After Stephens, we have adhered to the frame-
    work that any given property can constitute a mixture of
    marital and nonmarital interests; a portion of an asset can
    be marital property while another portion can be separate
    property. 17 The original value of an asset may be nonmarital,
    11
    See Van Newkirk v. Van Newkirk, 
    212 Neb. 730
    , 
    325 N.W.2d 832
     (1982),
    abrogated, Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    .
    12
    Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    .
    13
    White v. White, 
    304 Neb. 945
    , 
    937 N.W.2d 838
     (2020).
    14
    
    Id.
    15
    
    Id.
    16
    
    Id.
    17
    See, Simons v. Simons, 
    supra note 5
    ; Kauk v. Kauk, 
    supra note 6
    ; Higgins
    v. Currier, 
    307 Neb. 748
    , 
    950 N.W.2d 631
     (2020); White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    ; Marshall v. Marshall, 
    298 Neb. 1
    , 
    902 N.W.2d 223
     (2017).
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    while all or some portion of the appreciation of that asset may
    be marital. 18
    [11] The oft-cited three-step process of a marital prop-
    erty division 19 must account for appreciation, which may be
    treated separately from the original capital or value of an
    asset. Thus, in a marital dissolution action, the equitable divi-
    sion of property is a three-step process. The first step is to
    classify the parties’ property as either marital or nonmarital,
    setting aside the nonmarital property or nonmarital portion
    of the property to the party who brought the property to the
    marriage. The second step is to value the marital assets and
    marital liabilities of the parties. And the third step is to cal-
    culate and divide the net marital estate equitably between
    the parties. 20
    With this refined three-step process in place, we start with
    the first step and turn our attention to whether the active
    appreciation rule should apply to agricultural land. The Court
    of Appeals cited our decisions stating that the rule applies
    equally to appreciation or income during the marriage of any
    nonmarital asset, 21 and it determined that the rule should apply
    to farmland. We agree.
    In Arlan’s supplemental brief in support of his petition for
    further review, he did not contest that the active appreciation
    rule should apply to agricultural land; instead, after observ-
    ing that we had not directly applied the rule to farmland, he
    contended that the Court of Appeals should have remanded the
    cause to provide him an opportunity to satisfy the two-prong
    test from Stephens. At oral argument, however, he backed
    away and contended that agricultural land should be treated
    differently, using “common sense.”
    18
    See Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    .
    19
    See, e.g., Kauk v. Kauk, 
    supra note 6
    .
    20
    See 
    id.
    21
    See, White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    ; Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    .
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    But the need for an evidentiary link between the apprecia-
    tion and its cause is no surprise. Although the rule’s applica-
    tion to agricultural land may have been novel, the rule itself
    was not.
    The underlying concept of the active appreciation rule is
    not new. Forty years ago, an annotation in the American Law
    Reports stated that courts in most cases had recognized that an
    increase in value of a spouse’s separate property—unattribut-
    able to funds, property, or effort by either spouse—constituted
    separate property. 22
    By the time of the trial in 2021, we had spoken on a num-
    ber of occasions about how appreciation on a nonmarital asset
    should be treated. In 2015, we examined to what extent the
    appreciation in a separate premarital portion of a retire­ment
    account was caused by the efforts of either spouse. 23 The next
    year, we set forth the two-prong test discussed above with
    respect to investment earnings accrued during the marriage on
    a nonmarital portion of a retirement account. 24 In 2017, when
    we decided Stephens, we held that “the principles set forth
    in Stanosheck apply equally to appreciation or income during
    the marriage of any nonmarital asset.” 25 We did not carve out
    any exceptions.
    Two decisions in 2020 further addressed the active apprecia-
    tion rule and the need for evidence regarding causation. 26 In
    one, we discussed in detail our case law and that of three other
    states concerning active appreciation and stated that “[w]e
    adhere to the active appreciation rule articulated in Stephens.” 27
    Notably, in both of the 2020 decisions, we cited the lack
    22
    Annot., 
    24 A.L.R.4th 453
     (1983).
    23
    Coufal v. Coufal, 
    291 Neb. 378
    , 
    866 N.W.2d 74
     (2015).
    24
    See Stanosheck v. Jeanette, 
    supra note 3
    .
    25
    Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    , 
    297 Neb. at 205
    , 899 N.W.2d at 595.
    26
    See, Higgins v. Currier, 
    supra note 17
    ; White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    .
    27
    White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    , 
    304 Neb. at 960
    , 937 N.W.2d at 850.
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    of evidence to show that the increase in value resulted from
    something other than the active efforts of either spouse.
    To find active appreciation in nonmarital property, a trea-
    tise described three determinations that a court must make. 28
    First, the court must find that the nonmarital property in
    question appreciated during the marriage. 29 Second, the court
    must find that the parties made marital contributions to the
    property. 30 Third, the court must find a causal connection
    between the marital contributions and at least part of the
    appreciation. 31 This is generally consistent with our two-
    prong test which presumes the appreciation of a nonmarital
    asset during the marriage is marital unless the party seeking
    to classify the growth as nonmarital proves: (1) The growth is
    readily identifiable and traceable to the nonmarital portion of
    the account and (2) the growth is not due to the active efforts
    of either spouse. 32
    [12] Some assets are more subject to active appreciation,
    while others are more subject to passive appreciation. 33 By its
    nature, real estate is more prone to passive appreciation. 34 This
    is because real estate tends to rise and fall in value for reasons
    beyond the parties’ control. 35 However, a Tennessee court, in
    discussing a farming operation, stated:
    We have no doubt that the continued profitability of a
    farm operation serves to increase the land’s value, par-
    ticularly where the only apparent use of the land is farm-
    ing. The routine advance of expenses for the farming
    28
    See 1 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 5:56 (4th ed.
    2021).
    29
    See id.
    30
    See id.
    31
    Id.
    32
    See White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    .
    33
    See 1 Turner, supra note 28, § 5:57.
    34
    See id.
    35
    See id.
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    operation is, in our opinion, a real and substantial con-
    tribution made through the use of the [parties’] mari-
    tal funds. 36
    The treatise cautions that “while it is wrong to make a blanket
    assumption that all appreciation in real estate is passive . . . ,
    the nature of the asset nevertheless is a significant factor in
    accurately determining the cause of any increase in value.” 37
    Ultimately, whether appreciation in real estate is active or
    passive depends on the facts and circumstances of each case.
    In that regard, evidence relating to the cause of appreciation
    is key.
    [13] The burden is on the owning spouse to prove the extent
    to which marital contributions did not cause the appreciation
    or income. 38 With respect to the evidentiary burden, the trea-
    tise explained why placing the burden of proof on the own-
    ing spouse was the better policy. 39 To start, it is consistent
    with the general rule that the burden of proof rests with the
    party claiming that property is nonmarital. 40 Further, it places
    the burden of proof upon the spouse who, as the owner of the
    property, has the best access to the relevant evidence. 41 Doing
    so helps to curtail abuses of the discovery process by owning
    spouses, who are sometimes reluctant or unwilling to comply
    with discovery. 42
    With these principles in mind, we separately discuss the
    five parcels of property at issue, setting forth the Court of
    Appeals’ determinations before making our own indepen-
    dent conclusions.
    36
    Fickle v. Fickle, 
    287 S.W.3d 723
    , 730-31 (Tenn. App. 2008).
    37
    1 Turner, supra note 28, § 5:57 at 946.
    38
    White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    .
    39
    See 1 Turner, supra note 28.
    40
    See, id.; White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    .
    41
    See 1 Turner, supra note 28.
    42
    See id.
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    1. Fertilizer Plant
    At the time of marriage, Arlan valued Fertilizer Plant at
    $70,000. At the time of the parties’ separation, it was worth
    $403,750. The Court of Appeals determined that the apprecia-
    tion on Fertilizer Plant, amounting to $333,750, was marital
    property. We agree.
    Arlan satisfied the first part of the two-prong test. There is
    no dispute that the growth in Fertilizer Plant was readily iden-
    tifiable to Arlan’s premarital land.
    Arlan failed to carry his burden regarding the second prong
    of the test. The record contains no evidence regarding the
    cause of the appreciation. Arlan asserts in his petition for fur-
    ther review that the value increased due to market forces and
    not due to the active efforts of either spouse. But he provided
    no testimony or other evidence to support that assertion at trial.
    The burden of proof on Arlan was not insurmountable. For
    example, evidence that values of similar property in the same
    area had increased by a particular percentage during the mar-
    riage or evidence that the parties left the land untouched over
    the course of the marriage would have provided the district
    court with a basis to treat the appreciation as nonmarital. But
    because nothing in the record explains the increase in value,
    we agree with the Court of Appeals that the district court
    abused its discretion by treating the appreciation on this prop-
    erty as nonmarital property.
    2. Lenard’s Farm
    The record shows that at the time of marriage, Lenard’s
    Farm had a value of $64,000 and that Arlan owed $40,000
    on a note for the land’s purchase. By the time of separation,
    Lenard’s Farm was valued at $153,000. The Court of Appeals
    determined that Arlan was entitled to a setoff for $24,000,
    representing the equity he had in Lenard’s Farm at the time
    of marriage, and that the remaining value of $129,000 was
    marital property. Thus, it concluded that the district court
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    abused its discretion by including a marital value of $40,000
    for Lenard’s Farm.
    [14] The equity in property at the time of marriage is a
    nonmarital asset which, if established, should be set aside as
    separate property. 43 Thus, $24,000 of the value of Lenard’s
    Farm should be set off to Arlan as nonmarital property.
    Because the record contains no evidence regarding the cause
    of the increase in value of the land, there is nothing to rebut
    the presumption that the appreciation in Lenard’s Farm was
    marital. Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals
    that the district court abused its discretion in determining that
    $40,000 of Lenard’s Farm, rather than $129,000, was mari-
    tal property.
    3. Holmesville Farm
    The Court of Appeals recognized that although Holmesville
    Farm was purchased during the marriage, part of the purchase
    entailed an exchange involving Arlan’s premarital property.
    The Court of Appeals reasoned that Arlan was entitled to a
    set off of $42,500 due to the sale of Rademacher Farm, which
    was Arlan’s nonmarital property. Because Holmesville Farm
    was valued at $734,000 at the time of separation, the Court
    of Appeals determined that the marital value was $691,500. It
    concluded that the district court abused its discretion in clas-
    sifying only $286,260 as marital property.
    Relying on Shafer v. Shafer, 44 Arlan contends that the mari-
    tal value of Holmesville Farm should be reduced by 61 per-
    cent to account for the nonmarital property used to acquire
    it. Shafer, a Court of Appeals’ decision, was decided 10 years
    prior to Stephens. Even though we had not yet announced the
    active appreciation rule, the trial court in Shafer made findings
    related to the rule, reasoning:
    43
    See Onstot v. Onstot, 
    298 Neb. 897
    , 
    906 N.W.2d 300
     (2018).
    44
    Shafer v. Shafer, supra note 2.
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    “There is no evidence of any substantial improvements
    to the land after its acquisition and it further appears
    that the appreciation in value of the land from the 1992
    value of $150,000.00 to the present value of $260,500.00
    is due to market forces and circumstances separate from
    any improvements made to the property by the parties.
    Upon consideration of the evidence, the court finds that
    [the wife] has established that 45.33% of the current
    value of the 160 acres . . . is attributed to her inheritance
    and that such value should be set aside as her sole and
    separate property and the same is excluded from the mari-
    tal estate.” 45
    In finding no abuse of discretion, the Court of Appeals noted
    the absence of evidence to show that the appreciation in
    value was the result of any substantial improvement or the
    nonowning spouse’s farming and care of the property dur-
    ing the marriage. In Stephens, “[w]e expressly adopt[ed] the
    active appreciation rule that does not distinguish between
    the efforts of the owning spouse and the efforts of the non-
    owning spouse.” 46 We disapprove of Shafer to the extent it is
    inconsistent with Stephens.
    Here, Arlan failed to meet his burden with respect to the
    considerable appreciation in value of Holmesville Farm. The
    record is devoid of evidence that the increase was due to mar-
    ket forces and not due to the active efforts of either spouse.
    Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the
    marital value was $691,500 and that the district court abused
    its discretion in classifying only $286,260 as marital property.
    4. Home Place
    In 2002, the parties built their marital home upon 5 acres
    of Arlan’s premarital land. The Court of Appeals determined
    that Home Place was marital property. It reasoned that the
    45
    Id. at 173-74, 
    741 N.W.2d at 176
    .
    46
    Stephens v. Stephens, 
    supra note 4
    , 
    297 Neb. at 206
    , 899 N.W.2d at 595.
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    value of the land could not be separated from the structure and
    cited a case 47 regarding commingling of separate property with
    marital property. We agree with the Court of Appeals’ conclu-
    sion, though perhaps not its reasoning.
    The Home Place land is 5 acres of land that was part of
    Fertilizer Plant. As discussed above, Arlan valued Fertilizer
    Plant at $70,000 at the time of marriage. In the Court of
    Appeals’ division of property, it set off $70,000 of Fertilizer
    Plant to Arlan as his nonmarital property. Thus, he has already
    received credit for the premarital value of the land that is now
    known as Home Place.
    At the time of trial, the parties agreed that the 5 acres of
    Home Place land had a value of $25,000. But Arlan’s attempt
    to receive credit for the appreciation in value of the land fails.
    He did not meet his burden to show that any appreciation in
    value was not due to the active efforts of one or both of the
    parties. Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals that
    the district court abused its discretion in setting off to Arlan
    $25,000 of Home Place as nonmarital property.
    5. Grandma’s Farm
    The Court of Appeals stated that the record showed the par-
    ties financed the full $80,296 for the purchase of Grandma’s
    Farm and did not show that the $20,000 gift from Arlan’s
    mother was used to purchase the property or was used as a pay-
    ment on the loan. The Court of Appeals determined that Arlan
    failed to meet his burden of proof, that the entire $236,000
    value of Grandma’s Farm was marital property, and that the
    district court abused its discretion in classifying 25 percent of
    Grandma’s Farm as nonmarital property.
    [15] Gifts and inheritances, even when received during
    the marriage, are presumed to be nonmarital. 48 The parties
    47
    Osantowski v. Osantowski, 
    298 Neb. 339
    , 
    904 N.W.2d 251
     (2017).
    48
    Burgardt v. Burgardt, 
    304 Neb. 356
    , 
    934 N.W.2d 488
     (2019).
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    agree that Arlan’s mother gave each of her four children
    $20,000 after Arlan and Cindy purchased this property from
    Arlan’s mother for $80,000. They dispute whether it was an
    inheritance to Arlan or a gift to both parties.
    [16] When evidence is in conflict, the appellate court con-
    siders and may give weight to the fact that the trial court heard
    and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the
    facts rather than another. 49 The district court found that Arlan’s
    mother “gifted back” to Arlan $20,000 and that he should
    receive credit for that gift. Given the conflicting evidence, we
    cannot say that this finding was clearly untenable.
    But the district court did more than merely set off $20,000
    to Arlan. By treating the $20,000 gift as 25 percent of the
    property’s purchase price, the district court essentially turned
    the $20,000 gift into a $59,000 set off. It abused its discretion
    in doing so.
    We conclude that $20,000 of the $236,000 value of
    Grandma’s Farm should be set off to Arlan. Accordingly,
    $216,000 of Grandma’s Farm is marital property.
    6. Resolution
    Upon further review, we conclude that the proper marital
    and nonmarital values of the property at issue are as follows:
    Property           Marital Value      Arlan’s Nonmarital
    Fertilizer Plant      $333,750               $70,000
    Lenard’s Farm          129,000                24,000
    Holmesville Farm       691,500                42,500
    Home Place             385,000                      0
    Grandma’s Farm         216,000                20,000
    We affirm the Court of Appeals’ determination as so modi-
    fied. We remand the cause to the Court of Appeals and direct
    that it remand to the district court for an equitable division of
    the marital estate using the above classifications.
    49
    White v. White, 
    supra note 13
    .
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    VI. CONCLUSION
    The Court of Appeals properly applied the active apprecia-
    tion rule to agricultural land. Because Arlan failed to show that
    the land’s appreciation was not caused by the active efforts
    of either party, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ determination
    that the appreciation on Fertilizer Plant, Lenard’s Farm, and
    Holmesville Farm was part of the marital estate. We further
    agree that the entirety of Home Place is marital property. But
    we cannot say that the district abused its discretion in finding
    that Arlan’s mother made a $20,000 gift in connection with the
    purchase of Grandma’s Farm.
    We affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision as modified to
    decrease the marital value of Grandma’s Farm determined by
    the Court of Appeals by $20,000. We remand the cause to the
    Court of Appeals with directions to remand to the district court
    for an equitable division of the marital estate using marital val-
    ues determined in this decision.
    Affirmed as modified, and cause
    remanded with directions.