Joseph Wayne Scott v. Joan A. Scott ( 2007 )


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  •                                   COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Kelsey, Haley and Beales
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    JOSEPH WAYNE SCOTT
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.     Record No. 2422-06-1                                   JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR.
    DECEMBER 18, 2007
    JOAN A. SCOTT
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF SUFFOLK
    Westbrook J. Parker, Judge
    Barry Kantor (Christie, Kantor, Griffin & Smith, on brief), for
    appellant.
    Kenneth A. Moreno (Kershner & Moreno, on brief), for appellee.
    Joseph Wayne Scott (“husband”) appeals from an equitable distribution order, arguing
    1) that the trial court erred in valuing husband’s accounting practice at $145,200 and finding
    90% of the practice to be marital property subject to equitable distribution; and 2) that the trial
    court erred in ordering him to pay some of his wife’s attorney’s fees. For the reasons that follow,
    we find no reversible error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Husband married Joan A. Scott (“wife”) on August 5, 1989. They separated on August
    11, 2003. Since 1982, husband has worked as a certified public accountant for the accounting
    firm of Frank E. Sheffer & Company (“Sheffer & Co.”). According to a stock agreement signed
    by the original shareholders in 1983, Sheffer & Co. was organized as a corporation under the
    laws of Virginia. All stockholders in the company were licensed accountants, and each of the
    * Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    original stockholders had an interest in the company of 1,000 shares of Class A common stock.
    Frank Edward Sheffer, the founder and president of the firm, also received 50,000 Class B shares
    according to the original agreement. In 1987, husband was made a shareholder in the company
    and received 7½ shares of stock. According to the testimony of husband’s colleagues at Sheffer
    & Co., husband received additional shares in 1988, 1989, and 1990.
    It is not precisely clear whether husband’s stock in Sheffer & Co. also formed 20% of the
    equity in the company at the time of his separation from wife because another accountant,
    Charles Louder, was given shares of stock at the same time as husband. Frank Sheffer’s
    testimony indicated that only he, Arthur Robb, and husband, were shareholders at the time of the
    equitable distribution hearing (March 31, 2006), suggesting Mr. Louder had left the company by
    then. But neither he nor any other witness mentioned when Mr. Louder left the firm and how his
    leaving affected each of the remaining shareholders’ stake in the company.
    The 1983 shareholder agreement requires that stockholders who end their employment
    with Sheffer & Co. sell their shares back to the company. In 1996, Steven Huber, one of the
    original stockholders, left the firm, gave up his shares, and received severance pay of $250,000.
    Mr. Huber testified that the employment agreement entitled him to receive the increase in
    accounts receivable and work in process from the time he acquired his stock to the time he left
    the company multiplied by his ownership interest in the company. Mr. Huber also testified that
    $250,000 was substantially less than he was entitled to according to the agreement, but that the
    agreement’s formula was discussed in their negotiating the sum he did receive. Husband, all of
    his colleagues, and even wife’s expert, Gregory Lawson, testified that husband would receive no
    money under the employment agreement if he were to leave the company because the debts of
    the company had greatly increased following Mr. Huber’s departure from the firm. Frank
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    Sheffer testified the company’s debt problem resulted from their failure to bill their clients for
    approximately two years.
    Sheffer & Co. has no stock book, no meetings of the board of directors, and no corporate
    minutes. Other than husband, who introduced into evidence a stock certificate for 18 and 2/3
    shares dated January 1, 1990, none of the shareholders who testified could say whether they had
    ever been issued stock certificates. Wife’s expert witness received written confirmation that
    Arthur Robb and Frank Sheffer each owned 40% of the company and that husband owned the
    other 20%. However, the three stockholders all shared equally in the profits of their accounting
    business, each receiving one third of the profits. Husband testified that this was $113,542 in
    2005. There were no documents reflecting any changes to the stockholders’ respective
    ownership interests as new stockholders joined the firm and others left. Mr. Sheffer and Mr.
    Robb testified that they conducted their business with one another largely by informal
    agreement. In response to Mr. Robb’s testimony, the trial judge asked him about how husband’s
    original seven and a half shares could constitute a significant stake in the company if the original
    shareholders each owned 1,000 shares. Mr. Robb answered that he believed that at some point
    the firm informally agreed to reduce the number of shares because of, “the cost of filing with the
    security exchange. SCC.” Mr. Robb mentioned that there was no written agreement reflecting
    this change in the number of outstanding shares.
    Gregory Lawson, an accountant, was certified as an expert witness in business valuation.
    Mr. Lawson testified as to the value of Sheffer & Co. Wife introduced into evidence a report,
    written by Mr. Lawson, that included estimates of the company’s intrinsic value, or the economic
    benefit the owner derived from ownership of the business, based on ownership interests in the
    company of 20% and a 33.33%. Mr. Lawson also answered questions from counsel for both
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    parties explaining the valuation methods and sources of information he used. Mr. Lawson made
    his estimates after meeting with the shareholders. Mr. Lawson also reviewed the employment
    and shareholder agreements, the firm’s corporate tax returns for 1998 through 2004, the firm’s
    salary schedules, and summaries of the firm’s accounts receivable and work in process for
    December 2003 and December 2004. Using a capitalization of earnings method, and after
    subtracting the debts of the company and his estimate of the proportion of husband’s share of the
    business attributable to husband’s personal goodwill, Mr. Lawson valued husband’s ownership
    interest in 20% of Sheffer & Co. at between $83,500 and $87,200. Mr. Lawson valued a 33.33%
    ownership interest in the company at between $139,200 and $145,200.
    The trial court declined to value Sheffer & Co. using Mr. Lawson’s 20% figure because:
    While it appears that Frank Edward Sheffer and Company registers
    with the State Corporation Commission each year, that is the only
    act consistent with this entity being a corporation. Mr. Scott owns
    one-third of the business, but the Court cannot use the purported
    value of the stock because this is a corporation in name only. The
    original stock agreement describes 3000 shares of Class A stock
    (in 1983) and the testimony was that 4 years later, Mr. Scott was
    given 5% of the stock, which amounted to 7.5 shares – that doesn’t
    compute; additionally, Mr. Scott was given (or it is alleged he was
    given) 18-3/4 shares of stock between 1987-1990, but the stock
    certificate describes 18-2/3 shares. While this is a miniscule
    difference, it illustrates that no one knows what the stock amounts
    are. After Mr. Huber left the firm, Mr. Scott became the owner of
    20% of the stock, but there is no legal explanation of that; to
    further complicate matters no other stock certificates are available
    as proof of ownership. There are no original corporate documents
    or corporate minutes to establish that a corporation in reality exists.
    Instead, the trial court used Mr. Lawson’s 33.33% figure, concluding that husband’s stake in
    Sheffer & Co. had a value of $145,200, of which 90% was marital property. That percentage is
    approximately the proportion of husband’s time as a shareholder in Sheffer & Co. that he was
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    married to wife before their August 11, 2003 separation. The trial court awarded wife 40% of
    the share of husband’s accounting practice classified as marital, or $52,272.
    The trial court also ordered husband to pay wife $4,500 of her attorney’s fees, having
    found that this was the cost of unnecessary discovery expenses. The trial court found that these
    expenses were the result of Sheffer & Co.’s defiance of wife’s subpoena duces tecum. Husband
    objected to paying the $4,500 on the grounds that it was the corporation’s lack of cooperation,
    and not his own, that caused these unnecessary expenses.
    ANALYSIS
    Our applicable standard of review gives considerable deference to the discretion of the
    trial court.
    Unless it appears from the record that the trial judge has abused his
    discretion, that he has not considered or has misapplied one of the
    statutory mandates, or that the evidence fails to support the
    findings of fact underlying his resolution of the conflict in the
    equities, the equitable distribution award will not be reversed upon
    appeal.
    Blank v. Blank, 
    10 Va. App. 1
    , 9, 
    389 S.E.2d 723
    , 727 (1990). “[T]he value of property is an
    issue of fact, not of law.” Howell v. Howell, 
    31 Va. App. 332
    , 340, 
    523 S.E.2d 514
    , 518 (2000).
    “We will not disturb a trial court's finding of the value of an asset unless the finding is plainly
    wrong or unsupported by the evidence.” Shooltz v. Shooltz, 
    27 Va. App. 264
    , 275, 
    498 S.E.2d 437
    , 442 (1998). However, “a trial court ‘by definition abuses its discretion when it makes an
    error of law.’” Id. at 271, 498 S.E.2d at 441 (quoting Koon v. United States, 
    518 U.S. 81
    , 100
    (1996)). “An abuse of discretion also exists if the trial court fails to consider the statutory factors
    required to be part of the decisionmaking process.” Congdon v. Congdon, 
    40 Va. App. 255
    , 262,
    
    578 S.E.2d 833
    , 836-37 (2003).
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    The Value of Husband’s Accounting Practice
    To determine the value of an asset for equitable distribution purposes, we look to the
    intrinsic value of the asset to the parties. Owens v. Owens, 
    41 Va. App. 844
    , 854, 
    589 S.E.2d 488
    , 493 (2003). Intrinsic value is a subjective concept, and different methods of valuation may
    be appropriate to different situations. Howell, 31 Va. App. at 339, 523 S.E.2d at 517-18. Prior
    decisions cite this need for flexibility as the reason for giving great weight to the factual findings
    of trial courts. Id. at 339, 523 S.E.2d at 518; Hoebelheinrich v. Hoebelheinrich, 
    43 Va. App. 543
    , 551, 
    600 S.E.2d 152
    , 155-56 (2004).
    Husband argues that the trial court erred in accepting Mr. Lawson’s testimony that his
    interest in Sheffer & Co. was worth $145,200. We disagree. Husband contends this was too
    high a figure. He cites the evidence of the large debts the company owed to banks and to Mr.
    Sheffer personally. Husband also emphasizes the testimony from all the witnesses, including
    Mr. Lawson, that he would not receive anything for his shares if he left the company. Mr.
    Lawson’s valuation letter and his related testimony both reflect that he reached the $145,200
    figure only after deducting the debts to which husband refers from the assets of the company.
    See Hoebelheinrich, 43 Va. App. at 552, 600 S.E.2d at 156.
    As for the probability that husband would not receive anything for his shares if he left,
    our prior decisions suggest this is too speculative a consideration to overcome the deference we
    owe to the finder of fact because there was no evidence that husband actually planned to leave
    the firm. Indeed, husband’s testimony was that he planned to stay because of a non-competition
    contract that he had signed. “The reason for rejecting the value set by buyout provisions is that
    they do not necessarily represent the intrinsic worth of the stock to the parties.” Bosserman v.
    Bosserman, 
    9 Va. App. 1
    , 6, 
    384 S.E.2d 104
    , 107 (1989). In Owens, husband complained that
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    the trial court had overvalued his business because it did not include “lack of marketability
    discount.” Mr. Owens argued that any buyer would pay less for his 50% in the company than the
    trial court awarded because the interest offered for sale was not a controlling interest.
    If a sale is improbable, the discount need not be applied. See e.g.,
    Howell, 31 Va. App. at 345, 523 S.E.2d at 521 (approving trial
    court’s rejection of minority and marketability discounts for a
    minority equity interest in law partnership where “no transfer of
    the partnership interest was foreseeable and no one in the firm, nor
    any group within it, exercised majority control”).
    Owens, 41 Va. App. at 856, 589 S.E.2d at 494-95. Mr. Lawson offered a thorough explanation
    for his conclusion that husband’s stake in the firm was worth $145,200 in 2004. He also
    described the sources of information he used in valuing the company: meetings with the
    stockholders, the company’s tax returns, accounts receivable, work in process, and the written
    stockholder and employment agreements of the company. Because Mr. Lawson offered a
    reasonable explanation for his treatment of the debts, it was within the trial court’s discretion to
    value the accounting practice as it did. Because there was no evidence that husband planned to
    leave the company, we hold the trial court did not err in accepting Mr. Lawson’s figure instead
    of what husband might have received for his shares if he had left the company.
    Husband’s Ownership Interest in the Accounting Practice
    Even if the trial judge valued the accounting practice correctly, husband claims that the
    trial court erred in valuing his ownership interest in the accounting practice at 33.33% instead of
    20%, which his colleagues testified was his interest in the outstanding stock of the company. We
    also disagree with husband on this question. In light of the deferential standard of review we
    owe to the trial court, we will not reverse this finding because the trial court’s use of a 33.33%
    figure was supported by credible evidence. Specifically, all of husband’s colleagues testified
    that the economic rewards they received in exchange for their work were not proportional to
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    their respective ownership interests in the outstanding stock. Mr. Robb, Mr. Sheffer, and
    husband ostensibly owned 40%, 40%, and 20%, respectively, of the stock of Sheffer & Co. Yet
    they all split the profits and losses one third each. Because the trial court was bound by our prior
    decisions to find the intrinsic value of Sheffer & Co. and intrinsic value is “a subjective concept
    that looks to the worth of the property to the parties,” Howell, 31 Va. App. at 339, 523 S.E.2d at
    517, we hold the trial court did not err in deciding that the 33.33% share husband had in the
    economic profits of the company was a more accurate measure of the worth of the property to
    the parties than his purported 20% interest in the company’s stock.
    In affirming the trial court’s use of the 33.33% figure, we hold that it was acceptable for
    the trial court to treat Sheffer & Co. as a partnership rather than as a corporation. The
    shareholders testified that they had not observed any corporate formalities since their lawyer
    drew up the original stock agreement between the original three shareholders in 1983. Yet these
    formalities were important to the maintenance of Sheffer & Co.’s status as a corporation.
    Indeed, the Code of Virginia provides for the automatic termination of a corporation’s existence
    if a domestic corporation does not file an annual report with the State Corporation Commission.
    Code § 13.1-752. Moreover, “[t]he existence of a partnership is a question of fact and the
    finding of such fact by the trial court will not be disturbed on appeal unless it is clearly
    erroneous.” United States v. Neel, 
    235 F.2d 395
    , 399 (10th Cir. 1956); see Boyd, Payne, Gates
    & Farthing, P.C. v. Payne, Gates, Farthing & Radd, P.C., 
    244 Va. 418
    , 
    422 S.E.2d 784
     (1992)
    (Law firm that incorporated for tax purposes but otherwise continued to function as a partnership
    was subject to partnership law). We therefore hold that it was not error to decide husband’s
    ownership interest in Sheffer & Co. was 33.33%.
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    90% Marital/10% Separate Hybrid Property Classification
    Husband also argues that the trial court erred in classifying husband’s stake in Sheffer &
    Co. as hybrid property pursuant to Code § 20-107.3(A)(3) and in determining that this property
    was 90% marital, 10% separate because (1) the evidence that he received 75% of his shares
    before the marriage meant that, at most, 25% of his stake in the accounting practice was marital
    property, and (2) wife failed to prove the value of Sheffer & Co. was an increase in the value of
    husband’s separate property due to the personal efforts of either party. 1
    We reject husband’s first argument because, pursuant to Code § 20-107.3(A)(1) property
    is presumed to be marital property. The only stock certificate admitted into evidence was dated
    1990, after the parties’ 1989 marriage. Because the number of shares of stock husband owned
    was unrelated to the economic benefits he received from working for the company, the trial court
    was correct in concluding that the number of shares of stock husband owned was not the best
    measure of determining intrinsic value. Having affirmed this holding, it would be illogical to
    decide that the time at which he acquired additional, but for our purposes irrelevant, shares
    determines the percentage of his accountancy practice classified as marital. Indeed, Sheffer &
    Co.’s sloppy corporate recordkeeping allowed the trial court to treat them as a partnership. This
    conclusion is justified by the facts and also inconsistent with allowing stock ownership to govern
    the percentage of the accounting practice classified as husband’s or the percentage of husband’s
    interest in the accounting practice classified as marital.
    1
    Wife argues that husband failed to make a timely objection on this basis and we should
    not consider it pursuant to Rule 5A:18. However the transcript includes the following objection
    from defense counsel: “But they have the burden of proving what participation, what personal
    effort my client made to increase that value from day one until now. I don’t believe they have
    submitted that, they have met that burden.”
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    We also believe that wife met her statutory burden, pursuant to Code § 20-107.3(A)(3),
    of proving an increase in the value of husband’s separate property and in proving that the
    increase in value was caused by husband’s personal efforts. An increase in the value of
    husband’s stake in the accounting practice was implicit in the trial court’s use of the part marital,
    part separate hybrid property classification of Code § 20-107.3(A)(3). “Absent clear evidence to
    the contrary in the record, the judgment of a trial court comes to us on appeal with a presumption
    that the law was correctly applied to the facts.” Yarborough v. Commonwealth, 
    217 Va. 971
    ,
    978, 
    234 S.E.2d 286
    , 291 (1977). Giving the benefit of all reasonable inferences to the party
    prevailing below, the existence of an increase was supported by the testimony of Mr. Lawson
    that husband’s interest was $142,500 in 2004 together with the testimony of Mr. Lawson and of
    husband’s colleagues that his shares were worth nothing at the time of the marriage.
    We also have no difficulty concluding that the increase in value of husband’s accounting
    practice was due to his personal efforts. In his testimony, Mr. Lawson explained why any
    increase in the value of husband’s practice was not passive appreciation:
    And personal service corporations, value is created through – and
    particularly in relation to law firms and CPA firms – through the
    personal efforts of its principals and their direction of their staff. I
    think particularly as it relates to CPA practices. I mean the value is
    not stagnant. You’ve got to recreate that value every three or four
    years. The original value evaporates and you replace it with new
    clients, new services to existing clients, new accounts receivable,
    new work in process.
    Husband’s colleagues testified that he worked full time as an accountant. The written conditions
    of husband’s employment required husband to “devote himself to the full-time practice of
    accountancy . . . .” The text of the original 1983 stock agreement also links the ownership of
    shares of stock in the company to the shareholder’s continued employment with the company.
    These facts particular to personal services companies distinguish husband’s accounting practice
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    from the assets examined in the authorities cited in appellant’s brief. Rowe v. Rowe, 
    24 Va. App. 123
    , 
    480 S.E.2d 760
     (1997) (newspaper company); Congdon, 
    40 Va. App. 255
    , 
    578 S.E.2d 883
     (trucking company); Martin v. Martin, 
    27 Va. App. 745
    , 
    501 S.E.2d 450
     (1998)
    (house); Bchara v. Bchara, 
    38 Va. App. 302
    , 
    563 S.E.2d 398
     (2002) (house). The assets in these
    cases were all susceptible to passive economic appreciation in a way that husband’s accounting
    practice was not. The value of the practice itself and the very existence of husband’s continued
    ownership interest in the practice both depended on husband’s personal efforts. We therefore
    affirm the trial court’s distribution of the parties’ hybrid property.
    Attorney’s Fees
    The trial court ordered husband to pay a portion of wife’s attorney’s fees because Sheffer
    & Co. defied wife’s subpoena duces tecum. “An award of attorney’s fees is a matter submitted
    to the trial court’s sound discretion and is reviewable on appeal only for an abuse of discretion.”
    Graves v. Graves, 
    4 Va. App. 326
    , 333, 
    357 S.E.2d 554
    , 558 (1987). Husband argues that the
    trial court abused its discretion because the defiance of the subpoena and resulting unnecessary
    discovery expenses were not his actions, but the actions of the corporation. Because of our
    holding above that the trial court was allowed to treat Sheffer & Co. as a partnership instead of a
    corporation, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in its order of attorney’s
    fees.
    Affirmed.
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