Moyer v. Moyer ( 2020 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    JUDY KAY MOYER, Petitioner/Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    ROBERT MOYER, Respondent/Appellant/Cross-Appellee.
    No. 1 CA-CV 18-0703 FC
    FILED 8-11-2020
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FN2015-005506
    The Honorable Howard D. Sukenic, Judge
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART
    COUNSEL
    The Cavanagh Law Firm PA, Phoenix
    By Philip C. Gerard, Helen R. Davis, Nicholas J. Brown
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee/Cross-Appellant
    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    Berkshire Law Office PLLC, Tempe
    By Keith Berkshire, Kristi A. Reardon
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellant/Cross-Appellee
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge James B. Morse Jr. delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge David D. Weinzweig and Judge Jennifer M. Perkins joined.
    M O R S E, Judge:
    ¶1             Robert Moyer ("Husband") and Judy Kay Moyer ("Wife")
    appeal and cross appeal from several rulings in the decree of dissolution.
    For the reasons stated below, we affirm the allocation of stock shares
    originally gifted to Wife but reverse the allocation of the shares Husband
    purchased during the marriage and remand for reconsideration. We affirm
    the orders allocating the bank accounts but reverse the awards of spousal
    maintenance and attorneys' fees and remand for reconsideration.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2             Throughout the marriage, Husband worked at Heritage
    Bank, a bank his family established in Nebraska. During the parties' 34-
    year marriage, Husband's parents gifted several shares of Heritage Group,
    Inc. ("HGI") stock to Husband and Wife individually.1 This was part of an
    overall estate plan to gift the maximum amount allowed to each of the five
    Moyer siblings, spouses, and grandchildren. Then, to ensure that the five
    Moyer siblings received an equal amount of their parents' estate and to
    protect the stock in the event of divorce, each of the spouses transferred the
    shares back to the family trust, CONBA & Co.
    ¶3            At issue on appeal are four separate stock transfers Wife made
    to CONBA & Co. Ultimately, the family trust transferred these shares to
    Husband. The superior court awarded 1,111 shares to Wife as her separate
    property, finding clear and convincing evidence that Wife's transfer of
    those shares to the family trust was not knowing and voluntary because the
    1      Initially, the shares were in Aurora First National Company, but
    were later converted HGI shares, so we refer to them as HGI shares.
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    transfer document was blank when Wife signed them. The court found the
    other three transfers were valid.
    ¶4            The parties also disputed the community or separate
    character of another 3,619 shares of HGI stock. Husband claimed he
    purchased these shares during the marriage with funds from a separate
    property partnership, CBSMS. The superior court found the community
    had an interest in a portion of CBSMS and thus found that a corresponding
    portion of the 3,619 shares were community property.
    ¶5             The superior court awarded Wife spousal maintenance in the
    amount of $7,000 per month for ten years. The court equally divided a
    Heritage Bank account and declined to reimburse Husband for paying the
    parties' taxes. The court ordered Wife to reimburse Husband for half of the
    funds she withdrew from community bank accounts prior to the petition
    being served. The court also awarded attorneys' fees to Wife, finding a
    financial disparity. After Husband objected to Wife's fee application, the
    court awarded Wife a portion of her total fee request based on the
    percentage of Wife's overall success. Then the court awarded Wife
    attorneys' fees related to Husband's motion to set aside a portion of the
    decree.
    ¶6           Husband's appeal and Wife's cross appeal were timely, and
    we have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(1) and (2).
    DISCUSSION
    I.    The Superior Court Properly Considered and Allocated the HGI
    Shares Originally Gifted to Wife.
    ¶7            Between 1987 and 1990, Husband's parents gifted a total of
    3,741 HGI shares to Wife in four separate stock certificates. The parties do
    not dispute that these were Wife's separate property. See A.R.S. § 25-213(A)
    (separate property includes property acquired by gift during the marriage).
    In four separate transactions between 1988 and 1990, Wife assigned these
    shares to CONBA & Co., which is the trustee of a Moyer family trust of
    which Husband is a beneficiary. In 1992, the trust assigned these shares to
    Husband, as reflected in HGI stock certificate 193.
    A.     The Superior Court Had Statutory Authority to Allocate the
    Disputed Shares.
    ¶8            The superior court found that Wife knowingly and
    voluntarily transferred three stock certificates (numbers 125, 137, and 174),
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    MOYER v, MOYER
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    because she signed the back of the stock certificates which showed what
    and to whom Wife was assigning her interest. The court found no fraud,
    coercion, or undue influence as to those three assignments. In contrast, the
    court found the assignment of 1,111 shares, represented by certificate 109,
    was not knowing and voluntary because Wife signed a blank assignment
    form and did not know what it purported to transfer.
    ¶9             Husband disputes the finding that 1,111 shares in certificate
    109 remained Wife's separate property and Wife disputes the finding that
    the other three transfers were valid. We review the superior court's
    allocation of property for an abuse of discretion; however, the classification
    of property as separate or community is a question of law that we review
    de novo. Bell-Kilbourn v. Bell-Kilbourn, 
    216 Ariz. 521
    , 523, ¶ 4 (App. 2007).
    ¶10           Under A.R.S. § 25-318(A), the superior court has authority to
    divide community property and assign separate property to the
    appropriate spouse. Husband contends the court exceeded its statutory
    authority by considering the validity of this thirty-year-old transaction
    between Wife and a third party, i.e., the family trust, negotiated by his
    brother, Sam Moyer ("Sam"). In ruling on Husband's motion to set aside,
    the court rejected this argument, finding it was contrary to the position
    Husband took at trial, which was that Wife gifted the shares to him.
    Because Husband argued in his joint pretrial statement (and somewhat
    obliquely at the close of trial) that Wife's claims against third parties were
    not properly before the court, we do not find waiver and will address this
    argument. Whether the court has statutory authority to address this
    dispute is a question of law we review de novo. See In re Marriage of Thorn,
    
    235 Ariz. 216
    , 220, ¶ 16 (App. 2014).
    ¶11           Husband contends that the superior court cannot divest him
    of his separate property and can only assign each spouse's separate
    property to that spouse, citing Proffit v. Proffit, 
    105 Ariz. 222
    , 224 (1969).
    Husband correctly states the law; however, in arguing that the court
    exceeded its authority, he presumes that all the shares are, in fact, his
    separate property. Which spouse owned the shares was the disputed issue
    before the court. The court had the inherent ability to determine which
    spouse owned the property and to order the return of separate property to
    the appropriate spouse. In Thorn, the court affirmed the family court's
    determination that a spouse's transfer of stocks and bonds was not a 
    gift. 235 Ariz. at 219-20
    , ¶¶ 13-15. Implicit in that holding is a determination
    that such a finding was within the family court's statutory authority.
    Although Husband contends Thorn is distinguishable because it involved a
    transaction between the spouses, the dispute over ownership here is also
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    MOYER v, MOYER
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    between the spouses. We find the court had authority to consider which
    spouse owned the disputed HGI shares. See
    id. B. The Evidence
         Supports   the    Superior          Court's
    Characterization of the Disputed Shares.
    ¶12            Husband argues the superior court should not have applied
    the heightened standard applicable to transactions between spouses
    because Wife assigned her shares to a third-party, not Husband. We
    disagree. The "third party" in this transaction was a family trust of which
    Husband was a beneficiary. Sam testified that he asked Wife to make this
    gift to Husband through Husband's trust at CONBA & Co. The superior court
    correctly concluded that "any action by [Sam] . . . was solely as a conduit to
    guide those shares from Wife to Husband as the ultimate recipient."
    Therefore, this was not a true arms-length transaction with a third party,
    but part of an overall family estate plan to ensure that stock in a family bank
    stayed within the family. On these facts, the superior court properly treated
    this as a transaction between spouses.
    ¶13           We agree with Husband, however, that the superior court
    improperly considered the transfer under the analysis applicable to
    postnuptial agreements discussed in In re Harber's Estate, 
    104 Ariz. 79
    , 88
    (1969), and Austin v. Austin, 
    237 Ariz. 201
    , 208, ¶ 20 (App. 2015). "A
    postnuptial agreement is defined as '[a]n agreement entered into during
    marriage to define each spouse's property rights in the event of death or
    divorce.'" 
    Austin, 237 Ariz. at 206-07
    , ¶ 14 (citing Postnuptial Agreement,
    Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014)). The transfer purported to be a gift
    and was not a postnuptial agreement. Therefore, the gift analysis in 
    Thorn, 235 Ariz. at 220
    , ¶ 14, applies. Likewise, we need not address the parties'
    fiduciary duty arguments because "[g]ifts from a husband to his wife are . .
    . governed by the same rules as gifts between strangers." O'Hair v.
    O'Hair, 
    109 Ariz. 236
    , 239 (1973) (quoting Rasmussen v. Oshkosh Sav. & Loan
    Ass'n, 
    151 N.W.2d 730
    , 732 (Wis. 1967)). To that point, "[t]he necessary
    elements of a gift are 'donative intent, delivery and a vesting of irrevocable
    title upon such delivery.'" 
    Thorn, 235 Ariz. at 220
    , ¶ 14 (quoting Neely v.
    Neely, 
    115 Ariz. 47
    , 51 (App. 1977)). Under Arizona law, a gift must be
    voluntary and intentional. McNabb v. Fisher, 
    38 Ariz. 288
    , 294 (1931).
    Whether a gift was made is a question of fact, and we affirm the superior
    court's factual findings absent clear error. 
    Thorn, 235 Ariz. at 219
    , ¶ 13.
    ¶14           The evidence supports the finding that Wife voluntarily
    transferred three of the four stock certificates to the trust for Husband's
    benefit. Sam told Wife that the Moyer family estate plan was to gift shares
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    to the Moyer siblings' spouses to maximize the gift tax exclusions and asked
    Wife to gift her shares to Husband's trust so that the shares would stay in
    the Moyer family, in the event of a divorce. Wife admitted that she signed
    all four stock assignments. Based on Wife's testimony, the assignment form
    relating to 1,111 shares in certificate 109 – the very first presented to Wife –
    was blank when she signed it and was not attached to the corresponding
    stock certificate. This supports the court's conclusion that Wife did not
    know what or to whom she was assigning. Other evidence provided that
    the subsequent three assignments were included on the back of the
    corresponding stock certificates and stated that the family trust was the
    recipient. Thus, Wife would have known what shares she was assigning to
    the trust when she signed the certificates 125, 137, and 174.
    ¶15            Wife claims she did not know what CONBA & Co. was so she
    did not know she was gifting these shares to Husband and, therefore, did
    not manifest the requisite "intent to give to the party claiming as donee[.]"
    
    O'Hair, 109 Ariz. at 239
    . However, Sam testified that he told Wife that
    Husband was a beneficiary of this trust. Wife's counsel acknowledged at
    oral argument that there was conflicting evidence on this issue. This court
    does not reweigh the evidence and, absent clear error, we must defer to the
    superior court's resolution of conflicts in evidence. See supra ¶ 14.
    Reasonable evidence supports the superior court's findings that Wife
    validly transferred 2,630 shares to a trust for Husband's benefit, and that
    Wife did not knowingly transfer 1,111 shares when she signed a blank stock
    assignment that was not attached to a stock certificate. Accordingly, we
    find no clear error and affirm the allocation of the 3,741 shares of HGI stock.
    II.    The Record Does Not Support the Superior Court's Allocation of
    the HGI Shares Purchased During the Marriage.
    ¶16          In 2000, Husband purchased 3,619 shares of HGI using funds
    from a CBSMS bank account. CBSMS was a partnership formed during the
    marriage by Husband and his four siblings. Wife argued that CBSMS was
    a community partnership because it was formed during the marriage;
    consequently, the shares purchased through CBSMS were also community
    property.
    ¶17          Property acquired during marriage is presumed to be
    community property, "and the spouse seeking to overcome the
    presumption has the burden of establishing the separate character of the
    property by clear and convincing evidence." Cockrill v. Cockrill, 
    124 Ariz. 50
    , 52 (1979). The superior court correctly found that CBSMS was
    presumptively community property because it was formed during the
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    marriage, and Husband had the burden of showing by clear and convincing
    evidence that it was his separate property.
    ¶18            The superior court further found that Husband established
    that his interest in the CBSMS partnership was his separate property. In
    reaching this conclusion, the court found clear and convincing evidence
    that CBSMS was initially funded solely from Husband's separate property.
    Wife contends the record does not support this conclusion. We review the
    court's allocation of property for an abuse of discretion; however, the
    classification of property as separate or community is a question of law that
    we review de novo. 
    Bell-Kilbourn, 216 Ariz. at 523
    , ¶ 4.
    ¶19           Evidence supports the superior court's conclusion. The initial
    capital contribution to CBSMS consisted of $43,477 in property and cash
    given to the Moyer siblings from their grandmother. It was undisputed that
    Husband's CBSMS capital account included both separate and community
    funds. Husband contributed $127,500 from community funds to his CBSMS
    capital account in 1992. Husband's grandmother's estate also contributed
    $150,000 from a debenture, of which $30,000 was attributed to Husband's
    capital account. The latter contribution from his inheritance, therefore,
    consisted of Husband's separate property. A.R.S. § 25-213(A). CBSMS paid
    Husband a $77,500 distribution in 1993 but it does not appear that Husband
    received any other distributions.
    ¶20             Wife contends this comingling transmuted Husband's entire
    CBSMS interest into community property. The superior court found that
    Husband could trace the community funds in his separate property capital
    account and there was no transmutation. Because Husband was able to
    trace the separate and community funds, the entire capital account was not
    transmuted to community property. See Cooper v. Cooper, 
    130 Ariz. 257
    , 259-
    60 (1981) (when separate and community funds are commingled, the entire
    fund is presumed to be community property unless the separate property can
    be explicitly traced by clear and convincing evidence).
    ¶21           The evidence, however, does not support the superior court's
    conclusion that the $77,500 distribution resulted in the community having
    a $50,000 interest in CBSMS. The record does not show that the $77,500
    distribution went entirely to repay the community contribution. The court
    did not cite and the parties do not direct us to anything in the record
    showing what Husband did with the $77,500 distribution. In response to
    questions at oral argument, Husband's counsel did not point to any
    evidence to that effect, only referencing the superior court's finding. Absent
    some evidence that these funds were deposited into a community account
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    or otherwise expended for the community's benefit, we cannot affirm the
    court's conclusion that the entire $77,500 should be considered repayment
    of the community contribution. Accordingly, we conditionally vacate the
    allocation of the 3,619 HGI shares and remand for the superior court to
    determine whether the $77,500 distribution was, in fact, repaid to the
    community. If it was repaid to the community, the superior court shall
    reinstate the allocation of the HGI shares.
    III.   In Deciding Spousal Maintenance, the Superior Court Erred by
    Failing to Consider the Income-Earning Potential of the Property
    Awarded to Wife but Properly Considered the Marital Standard of
    Living and Wife's Contributions to Husband's Income.
    ¶22            In determining the amount and duration of spousal
    maintenance, courts must consider several statutory factors, including the
    marital standard of living, the receiving spouse's earning ability and ability
    to support herself, the receiving spouse's contribution to the other spouse's
    earning ability, and the financial resources of the receiving spouse. A.R.S.
    § 25-319(B)(1), (3), (5), (6), and (9). The superior court awarded Wife spousal
    maintenance of $7,000 per month for ten years. Husband does not dispute
    that Wife was entitled to spousal maintenance but contends the court erred
    in its consideration of several of the statutory factors. We review the award
    of spousal maintenance for an abuse of discretion. Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 
    193 Ariz. 343
    , 348, ¶ 14 (App. 1998).
    A.     Marital Standard of Living.
    ¶23            Husband contends the superior court erred in considering the
    marital standard of living because it relied on Wife's current expenses and
    did not consider how the parties lived during the entire 34-year marriage.
    See A.R.S. § 25-319(B)(1). We disagree with Husband's characterization of
    the court's findings.
    ¶24            The evidence supports the findings that the parties lived
    modestly in a small town in Nebraska, but after moving to a retirement
    community in Arizona in 2006, the marital standard of living increased
    overall. Although Wife claimed nearly $11,000 in expenses, the court
    rejected her increased expenses for dining out, clothing, and rent. The court
    based the award on Wife buying a modest house for cash instead of paying
    $4,250 in monthly rent for a luxury apartment. Thus, the court found these
    expenses did not reflect the marital standard of living and did not consider
    them. Although the court did not state what it found Wife's reasonable
    expenses to be, we find that deducting the rent alone would reduce Wife's
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    claimed expenses to approximately $6,700, based on the court's
    presumption that Wife would purchase a house and thus have no rent or
    mortgage expense.
    B.     Wife's Contribution to Her Own Financial Needs.
    ¶25            The superior court must consider the financial resources
    available to Wife and her ability to meet her needs independently. See
    A.R.S. § 25-319(B)(9). In doing so, the court must consider "all property
    capable of providing for the reasonable needs of the spouse seeking
    maintenance[,]" including "property presently producing income as well as
    property capable of producing income or otherwise transformed in order
    to provide for the reasonable needs of the spouse." Deatherage v. Deatherage,
    
    140 Ariz. 317
    , 320 (App. 1984). Although Deatherage interpreted A.R.S. § 25-
    319(A) to determine if the spouse was entitled to support, we will apply the
    same definition of property to § 25-319(B). See State ex rel. Larson v. Farley,
    
    106 Ariz. 119
    , 122 (1970) (noting courts construe statutes relating to the
    same subject together and seek to achieve consistency).
    ¶26           Wife was awarded $809,902 in "liquid" assets in addition to
    "less liquid" assets consisting of 2,618.11 shares of HGI (valued at
    $555,929.47), an interest-bearing loan (Wife's share valued at $90,500),
    several certificates of deposit and bank accounts worth approximately
    $193,725, and a retirement account worth $1,814.50. The court assumed
    Wife would use $465,000 of the liquid assets to purchase a house, and, after
    investing the remainder of the liquid assets, she would have $1,500 in
    passive income "until she reached a retirement age whereby she could
    liquidate and utilize her less liquid assets."
    ¶27            The decree and the parties did not indicate that the "less
    liquid" assets consisted of restricted retirement accounts (other than the
    Nebraska School Employee account); however, the joint pretrial statement
    refers to them as such. In any event, Wife, who was 60 at the time of trial,
    can take the interest earned on any such retirement accounts without
    depleting the principal or facing tax penalties, see 26 U.S.C. § 72(t). Yet the
    superior court did not consider any interest income from these assets. The
    superior court was within its discretion to find that Wife's HGI shares might
    take some time to liquidate and so did not abuse its discretion by deferring
    income from that asset for a reasonable time. But the court erred by failing
    to attribute some income earning potential to the other "less liquid" assets
    that could be presently generating interest income. See 
    Deatherage, 140 Ariz. at 320
    .
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    ¶28           Husband also contends the superior court failed to properly
    consider Wife's earning ability in determining spousal maintenance. See
    A.R.S. § 25-319(B)(3), (5), and (9). Husband presented a vocational expert
    report indicating that Wife had the ability to earn an annual salary of
    $20,000 to $30,000 and Husband could earn $50,000 to $65,000. The court,
    however, did not attribute any income from employment to either Husband
    or Wife, finding they both reasonably chose not to work. Husband argues
    the court erred by failing to attribute income from employment to Wife.
    ¶29           When "determining whether to use actual income or earning
    capacity to calculate spousal maintenance when voluntary reduction of
    income issues are raised[,]" courts should consider the following factors:
    (1) The reasons asserted by the party whose conduct is at
    issue; (2) The impact upon the obligee of considering the
    actual earnings of the obligor; (3) When the obligee's conduct
    is at issue, the impact upon the obligor of considering the
    actual earnings of the obligee and thereby reducing the
    obligor's financial contribution to the support order at issue;
    (4) Whether the party complaining of a voluntary reduction
    in income acquiesced in the conduct of the other party; and
    (5) The timing of the action in question in relation to the
    entering of a decree or the execution of a written agreement
    between the parties.
    Pullen v. Pullen, 
    223 Ariz. 293
    , 297-98, ¶¶ 15, 18 (App. 2009). The court did
    not expressly consider these factors, but the evidence supports the decision
    not to impute income to either spouse.
    ¶30           Wife had not worked since 2005. Husband contends he
    retired due to health concerns and could otherwise support himself with
    his separate property assets. There was, however, no evidence that
    Husband had health issues that would preclude employment. Imputing
    income would increase Wife's income by $2,083, assuming she could earn
    an annual income of $25,000, and increase Husband's income by $4,583 per
    month. Neither party had worked in the recent past, and there was no
    evidence suggesting that the timing of the retirement was related to the
    divorce or that either party retired over the objection of the other. After
    considering the Pullen factors, we find the superior court did not err in
    failing to impute income to either party.
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    MOYER v, MOYER
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    C.     Wife's Contribution to Husband's Earning Ability.
    ¶31            The superior court gave no "substantial weight" to the fact
    that Wife maintained the household so that Husband could further his
    career. A.R.S. § 25-319(B)(6). Husband argues his current earning ability is
    a result of his substantial separate property assets and that the court failed
    to consider that Wife did not contribute to his current earning ability.
    Because the court did not give significant weight to this factor, we fail to see
    how Husband was prejudiced. There is no authority for finding that
    Husband should pay less spousal maintenance simply because his wealth
    consists of separate property.
    ¶32            Finally, contrary to Husband's claim regarding his earning
    ability, the evidence showed that Husband will receive more monthly social
    security benefits ($2,505) than Wife ($612) in the future.
    ¶33           We reverse the award of spousal maintenance and remand for
    the court to reconsider the income potential of the "less liquid" assets in
    determining how much support Wife needs to meet her reasonable needs.
    IV.    The Superior Court Did Not Err in Allocating Heritage Bank
    Account.
    ¶34           The superior court equally divided Heritage Bank account
    7942 as of the date of service. The court also denied Husband's claim that
    he should be reimbursed for paying the parties' 2015 and 2016 tax
    obligations on the grounds that Husband did not show that he paid this
    debt with his separate property. Husband argues these rulings are
    inequitable because he paid the parties' tax obligations from Heritage Bank
    account 7942 after the date of service. We review the court's allocation of
    property for an abuse of discretion. 
    Bell-Kilbourn, 216 Ariz. at 523
    , ¶ 4.
    ¶35            Husband raised the issue of the tax payments in the joint
    pretrial statement and at trial. Thus we reject Wife's contention that
    Husband waived this argument. Nevertheless, the record supports the
    court's ruling. At trial, Husband testified that he paid the community's 2014
    and 20152 tax obligation from the Heritage Bank Wall Street account, but he
    could not recall the source of the funds in that account. Absent evidence
    that the funds in the Heritage Bank Wall Street account were Husband's
    2      There is a discrepancy in the years at issue. The pretrial statement
    and decree refer to 2015 and 2016, but the trial testimony and Husband’s
    briefs refer to 2014 and 2015. Given our resolution, the discrepancy is
    irrelevant.
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    separate property, the superior court did not abuse its discretion by
    denying Husband's reimbursement claim. We affirm the allocation of
    Heritage Bank account 7942.
    V.    The Evidence Supports the Reimbursement Order for Wife's
    Withdrawals from the Community Wells Fargo Accounts.
    ¶36           The superior court found Wife withdrew a total of $199,999.96
    from two joint Wells Fargo bank accounts between May 2014 and the filing
    of the petition in November 2015. The court ordered Wife to reimburse
    Husband $99,499.98, rejecting Wife's claim that she used these funds for
    ordinary living expenses and attorneys' fees until the court ordered
    temporary spousal maintenance in December 2016. Wife contends the
    court's findings are contrary to the evidence. We will uphold the
    community property allocation absent an abuse of discretion. 
    Gutierrez, 193 Ariz. at 346
    , ¶ 5. We view the evidence in the light most favorable to
    upholding the court's findings and do not reweigh conflicting evidence or
    determine the credibility of witnesses.
    Id. at 346, 347, ¶¶ 5, 13.
    ¶37           When apportioning community property, the superior court
    has authority to consider a spouse's excessive or abnormal expenditures or
    concealment of community property. A.R.S. § 25-318(C). A spouse alleging
    waste has the burden to make a prima facie showing of waste. 
    Gutierrez, 193 Ariz. at 346
    , ¶ 7. If a prima facie showing is made, the burden shifts to
    the spending spouse to show the expenditures were reasonable.
    Id. ¶38 Wife admitted
    to withdrawing approximately $199,000 from
    community accounts and placing those funds into an account to which
    Husband had no access. Thus, Husband made a prima facie case of waste,
    and the burden shifted to Wife to show how she spent the money.
    Id. ¶39 Wife testified
    that she withdrew the funds because Husband
    threatened to leave her with nothing and that she spent the money on living
    expenses and attorneys' fees. Without citing any evidence, Wife argues on
    appeal that Husband was not contributing to her support at that time
    because they were living apart. There was no evidence that Wife could not
    continue to use the community accounts for living expenses before the
    petition was filed or that Husband denied her access to the funds at any
    time. In fact, Husband offered bank statements showing that the joint
    checking account continued to pay Wife's credit card expenses after she
    withdrew half of the funds from one account on October 30, 2015. Wife did
    not offer evidence to support her testimony that she spent these funds on
    reasonable living expenses due to a lack of access to community funds.
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    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    Thus, we affirm the finding that Wife failed to show her withdrawal of
    community funds was reasonable. See Aries v. Palmer Johnson, Inc., 
    153 Ariz. 250
    , 261 (App. 1987) (noting courts are not bound to accept as true the
    uncontradicted testimony of an interested party).
    ¶40          Wife also argues the superior court erred in concluding she
    unreasonably withdrew funds to pay her attorneys' fees because the court
    had previously entered an interim order awarding fees to Wife. Wife
    contends the prior fee award was a sanction and should not be factored into
    the waste determination. Because Wife does not cite to any evidence that
    she used the withdrawn community funds to pay her attorney as she
    claimed, the reimbursement order does not negate the impact of the
    sanction. Therefore, we cannot say the court abused its discretion in finding
    Wife's withdrawal of community funds was unreasonable. We affirm the
    order that Wife shall repay Husband for his share of those funds.
    VI.   The Superior Court Applied an Incorrect Legal Standard in
    Awarding Wife's Attorneys' Fees.
    ¶41           The superior court found Wife was entitled to an award of
    attorneys' fees based on the substantial disparity in financial resources
    favoring Husband and the fact that neither party was unreasonable. After
    Husband objected to Wife's fee application, the court awarded Wife less
    than half of the fees she requested. In determining the amount of the fee
    award, the court took the total fee amount ($266,433.50) and divided it by
    the seven "categories over the course of litigation requiring significant
    attention by the court[.]" For each of the seven categories, the court
    awarded Wife a "percentage" of the fees based on her success regarding that
    issue.
    ¶42            We review an award of attorneys' fees for an abuse of
    discretion. 
    Gutierrez, 193 Ariz. at 351
    , ¶ 32. The superior court abuses its
    discretion when it commits a legal error in making a discretionary decision.
    In re Marriage of Williams, 
    219 Ariz. 546
    , 548, ¶ 8 (App. 2008). Husband
    argues the court erred by applying a prevailing party standard in awarding
    attorneys' fees to Wife. Wife contends the award was based on the disparity
    of financial resources.
    ¶43          Section 25-324 "does not establish a prevailing party standard
    for awarding fees and costs." Breitbart-Napp v. Napp, 
    216 Ariz. 74
    , 84, ¶ 39
    (App. 2007). An award of fees under § 25-324 is based on financial disparity
    and the reasonableness of the parties' positions. Although the court
    properly found that Wife qualified for an award of attorneys' fees based on
    13
    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    the disparity of financial resources and the reasonableness of her positions,
    the degree of Wife's success was irrelevant in determining the appropriate
    amount of the fee award. See Bobrow v. Bobrow, 
    241 Ariz. 592
    , 599, ¶ 31 (App.
    2017) (finding A.R.S. § 25-324 "allow[s] a spouse with limited resources to
    advance a legitimate though ultimately unsuccessful claim without being
    financially intimidated"). Accordingly, we reverse the award of attorneys'
    fees and remand for reconsideration.
    ¶44           The superior court also awarded Wife $14,093.60 in fees
    related to Husband's motion to set aside the decree. The court awarded fees
    based on the substantial financial disparity. Husband argues the court
    abused its discretion because it lacked updated financial information;
    therefore, there was no basis for finding Husband had superior financial
    resources. Wife contends the court had sufficiently recent information
    about the parties' finances and the parties were not required to file a new
    financial affidavit to support an award of fees based on the financial
    disparity.
    ¶45           The superior court ruled on the attorneys' fees related to
    Husband's motion to set aside nearly one year after the decree. We do not
    decide whether Arizona Rule of Family Law 91.6 required the parties to
    submit updated financial affidavits because we have reversed other rulings
    that, upon reconsideration, may impact the parties' financial resources.
    Therefore, we order the superior court to also reconsider the award of
    attorneys' fees related to Husband's motion to set aside. On remand, the
    parties shall provide updated financial affidavits relating to the time
    periods relevant to any fee request.
    VII.   Attorneys' Fees on Appeal.
    ¶46            Husband clams he is entitled to attorneys' fees and costs on
    appeal based on Wife's unreasonable positions. Wife bases her fee request
    on the significant financial disparity. See A.R.S. § 25-324. Neither party
    took unreasonable positions on appeal and we lack current financial
    affidavits to determine the extent of any financial disparity. Because we are
    remanding for resolution of other issues that may affect the parties'
    financial resources, we leave the issue of attorneys' fees and costs on appeal
    to the superior court's discretion upon final disposition of the case.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶47          We affirm the allocation of HGI shares originally gifted to
    Wife during the marriage and the allocation of the bank accounts. We
    reverse and remand for reconsideration of the allocation of the HGI shares
    14
    MOYER v, MOYER
    Decision of the Court
    Husband purchased during the marriage, the award of spousal
    maintenance, and the award of attorneys' fees. The superior court shall
    determine whether either party is entitled to an award of attorneys' fees and
    costs on appeal after receiving updated financial affidavits.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    15