Chauncey v. Chauncey ( 2021 )


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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    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL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:
    KATHY CHAUNCEY, Petitioner/Appellant,
    v.
    THOMAS W. CHAUNCEY, II, Respondent/Appellee.
    __________________________________
    JAMES BLOMO, Intervenor.
    No. 1 CA-CV 19-0696 FC
    FILED 3-4-2021
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FN2017-002676
    The Honorable Justin Beresky, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Jeffrey G. Pollitt, P.C., Phoenix
    By Jeffrey G. Pollitt
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant
    Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix
    By Robert L. Schwartz, Leonce A. Richard III, Bradley A. Burns
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellee
    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Maria Elena Cruz delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge James B. Morse Jr. and Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined.
    C R U Z, Judge:
    ¶1            Kathy Chauncey (“Wife”) appeals from the family court’s
    judgment in this high-net-worth dissolution matter. She asserts the family
    court committed legal error in assigning Thomas W. Chauncey, II
    (“Husband”) certain assets as his separate property. After a thorough
    review of the sealed record, we find no abuse of discretion.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2            Husband and Wife met when Wife was training horses on her
    parents’ Arabian horse farm. The parties married in 1972. They had no
    children, and no pre- or post-marital agreements were sought or completed.
    The parties maintained separate bank accounts after the first year of
    marriage. Although Husband had numerous financial accounts, Wife was
    a signatory on only two: a donation account and an account for
    construction-related expenses on one of their ranches.
    ¶3             Husband, at the beginning of the marriage, worked in various
    capacities for radio and TV stations. After graduating from law school and
    for much of their marriage, Husband practiced law in Phoenix. By 1973 or
    1974 Wife did not work.
    ¶4           Husband is a person of significant personal wealth. Between
    1982 and 1996, Husband’s father (“Tom Sr.”) gave him several substantial
    gifts. After Tom Sr. died in 1996, Husband and two of his sisters each
    received one-third of Tom Sr.’s estate. Each sibling took their share as their
    separate property and continued to manage it that way.
    ¶5             The majority of Tom Sr.’s estate was held in a family limited
    partnership (“Partnership”). Through the development and appreciation
    of assets, the Partnership’s value tripled. Before it was closed in 2014, the
    Partnership made very significant distributions to each sibling.
    ¶6             Husband used his separate funds to acquire “dozens” of other
    assets, either with or without his sisters’ involvement. Those assets had
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    bank accounts solely in Husband’s name. Meanwhile, Husband also sold
    assets and used those funds to acquire new assets. While the four
    residential properties Husband purchased were gifted to the community,
    Wife was not associated with any other asset except one cattle entity.
    ¶7            In 2017, after more than 40 years of marriage, Wife filed for
    dissolution. Wife, at the time of trial, was 70 years old and disabled due to
    a chronic lung condition. Husband was 71 and still working as an attorney.
    ¶8            As Husband began to prepare for trial and, more specifically,
    for the tracing of his separate property, he realized that much of his
    recordkeeping over the years had been destroyed. Husband rigorously
    searched for documents from other sources including attorneys,
    accountants, various business partners, his employer, his siblings, and
    governmental records.
    ¶9            Husband hired Certified Fraud Examiner and Master Analyst
    in Financial Forensics Chris Gorman to trace the flow of his assets from
    acquisition to present. Wife hired Certified Public Accountant Josephine
    Giordano, of Kotzin Valuation Partners, to review and critique Gorman’s
    analysis. Expert reports were exchanged and updated as additional
    documents became available.
    ¶10           By the time of trial, Gorman had reviewed over 26,000 pages
    of documents and interviewed numerous witnesses. Gorman testified that
    while this case presented the most complex tracing of his career, he was
    “extremely” confident in his analysis and believed he had all the evidence
    needed to complete the tracing analysis. Gorman’s analysis purported to
    trace “the current assets held by [Husband] back to the point at which
    [Husband] received the separate property via inheritance.”
    ¶11            In their joint pretrial statement and at the evidentiary hearing,
    the parties reported reaching some property agreements. Husband agreed
    that certain pieces of real property, personal property, and certain financial
    accounts were community property. He further agreed certain jewelry, art,
    vehicles, and silverware were community property. Wife agreed certain
    property, including artwork, was Husband’s separate property. After these
    agreements, there remained a large amount of disputed property in various
    forms.
    ¶12          A bifurcated trial was held. The first four days consisted
    primarily of evidence aimed at characterizing the remaining disputed
    property as community or separate. Wife testified that Husband excluded
    her from most financial decision-making. She vacillated as to what and
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    when she knew about the gifts and inheritance but remembered the sale of
    some significant Partnership assets held by Husband and his sisters. Wife
    also knew Tom Sr. had not left her an inheritance.
    ¶13          Husband and Gorman each testified.1 Gorman testified at
    length. He traced Husband’s finances entity by entity and account by
    account and examined twenty-nine entities and over thirty financial
    accounts.
    ¶14           Husband had three “clearing accounts” in which he always
    deposited his community earnings.2 The majority of the funds in that
    account, however, were his separate property. Gorman looked at the
    detailed day-to-day input and output of the community monies and opined
    that commingling could not have happened because “at all times” the
    community earnings were insufficient to cover community expenses and
    had no time to build up. Wife testified she knew Husband’s earnings were
    not enough to pay their living expenses. After consideration of both
    Husband’s earnings and the community expenses, Gorman concluded that
    the community’s expenses dwarfed Husband’s community earnings and
    the “only possible source of this influx of funds was Husband’s separate
    property.”
    ¶15          In response, Giordano testified to alleged factual and legal
    problems in Gorman’s report. More specifically, Giordano asserted
    Gorman lacked a sufficient factual basis to “directly trace” Husband’s
    separate property. Giordano stated that
    The Gorman Report fails to properly acknowledge that
    missing bank activity, lack of adequate and reliable source
    documentation, reliance on Husband’s representations when
    source documentation [was] not available, and a “reasonable
    tie” to a funding source, impacts the reliability and
    1     Several other factual witnesses also testified for Husband. Those
    included attorneys and accountants who had been involved in assisting
    Husband, sisters, or Tom Sr. over the years.
    2      The clearing account operated much like a common checking
    account, meant to cover the day to day expenses of the community. Over
    time, there were three clearing accounts; with changes often caused by bank
    restructuring. Generally, only one clearing account was in use at a time.
    For ease of reference we refer to the clearing accounts collectively as
    “clearing account.”
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    supportability of the Gorman Report’s conclusions that
    certain assets were directly traced to Husband’s sole and
    separate property under Arizona law.
    She argued that once made, that flaw affected all downstream conclusions.
    Giordano concluded that “The tracing analysis performed in the Gorman
    Report does not appear to meet the requirements of Arizona law with
    respect to a direct and explicit analysis.” Giordano objected to the use of
    Husband’s testimony in lieu of physical records.
    ¶16           Gorman countered the claim that gaps in documentation
    nullified his entire analysis with the following quote from an American
    Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers article:
    Sometimes the best records that exist will leave gaps in the
    chain. Through no fault of the proponent each dot cannot be
    connected . . . . If generally accepted accounting procedures,
    GAAP, can identify the separate portion of an asset to a
    reasonable degree, that testimony should be sufficient to
    establish the separate nature of the property.
    Gorman stated the quote was consistent with accepted accounting practices
    for tracing monies and assets.
    ¶17           The court adopted Gorman’s tracing methodology and ruled
    that Husband presented clear and convincing evidence of the disputed
    property’s separate character. The court found the witness testimony
    credible and stated that “ample” documentation supported Husband’s
    claims, despite the gaps in documentation. Further, as required under
    Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 25-213(A), the increase in value
    in Husband’s share of the Partnership was found to be his separate property
    because it was “not the result of the individual toil, effort or community
    resources of Husband.” The community benefited from Husband’s
    separate property, which was used “to purchase various real property and
    certain entities and investments,” some of which was gifted to the
    community, enhanced the community’s value, and funded the parties’
    wealthy lifestyle.
    ¶18          The second portion of the trial divided the community
    property, spousal maintenance, and calculated the equalization payment
    due to Wife. The court found that although Wife was statutorily eligible for
    spousal maintenance under A.R.S. § 25-319(A), she had sufficient financial
    resources to support herself for the remainder of her life without
    exhaustion.
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    ¶19           Wife moved to amend the judgment. She challenged the
    court’s tracing methodology and the factual findings because the minute
    entry did not point out the witness testimony it relied on “in the absence of
    documentary evidence.” The court denied the motion without comment.
    A judgment was entered, and Wife was awarded partial attorneys’ fees
    pursuant to A.R.S § 25-324. Wife timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶20            On appeal, Wife asserts the family court abused its discretion
    in holding that Husband successfully and sufficiently traced his sole and
    separate property. She argues Husband failed to “substantiat[e] each
    transaction in the chain from his inheritance to the assets he claimed as
    separate property” and that the court must have erred “by employing an
    indirect tracing analysis to conclude Husband met his burden to the ‘highly
    probable’ and reasonably certain degree required under the standard.” We
    disagree with her legal argument and find sufficient findings of fact
    supported the court’s decision.
    I.     The Controlling Dissolution Statutes and Our Standard of Review
    ¶21           Two primary statutes control the character of property in a
    marital dissolution. The first statute is the general community property
    presumption that all property acquired during a marriage is presumed
    community property except for property that is “acquired by gift, devise or
    descent.” A.R.S. § 25-211(A)(1). In other words, the property passed to a
    husband or wife due to the death of another person or received as a
    personal gift is that spouse’s separate property. Id.; see also A.R.S. §§ 14-
    1201(14) (devise), -2101(A) (succession is controlled by statute unless
    modified by a written instrument). The second statute regarding the
    character of property in a marital dissolution clarifies that any increase in
    the value of that separate property is also that spouse’s separate property.
    A.R.S. § 25-213(A).
    ¶22           On appeal, the property’s characterization is a question of
    law, which we review de novo. Helland v. Helland, 
    236 Ariz. 197
    , 199, ¶ 8
    (App. 2014). We view the facts in the light most favorable to upholding the
    family court’s decree. See Bell-Kilbourn v. Bell-Kilbourn, 
    216 Ariz. 521
    , 522,
    ¶ 2 n.1 (App. 2007); Bowser v. Nguyen, 
    249 Ariz. 454
    , 456, ¶ 8 (App. 2020);
    Thomas v. Thomas, 
    142 Ariz. 386
    , 392 (App. 1984).
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    II.    Transmutation and Husband’s Burden of Proof
    ¶23            Our review here is limited to the property left disputed after
    consideration of the parties’ prior concessions. The nature of property as
    separate or community is established at the time of its acquisition and can
    only be changed by agreement or operation of law. Bender v. Bender, 
    123 Ariz. 90
    , 92 (App. 1979). Husband received the 1996 inheritance as separate
    property. Given the presumption in A.R.S. § 25-211(A)(1), Husband bears
    the burden to show by clear and convincing evidence that the property was
    never transmuted into community property by agreement, gift, or
    commingling. See In re Marriage of Cupp, 
    152 Ariz. 161
    , 164 (App. 1986). To
    this end, Wife argues Arizona law requires “nearly conclusive evidence” of
    the separate nature of the property. Wife overstates the legal standard.
    A.     Not Transmuted by Agreement or Gift
    ¶24           We need not address whether the parties agreed to convert
    any additional disputed property into community property because Wife
    did not raise that argument below. See Trantor v. Fredrikson, 
    179 Ariz. 299
    ,
    300 (1994). The court found Husband conceded gifting some of his separate
    property to the community—particularly in the form of real property—and
    those gifts increased the value of the community and were subject to
    division. The community gifts do not affect the separate property nature of
    the remainder of Husband’s assets. See Battiste v. Battiste, 
    135 Ariz. 470
    , 473
    (App. 1983).
    B.     Not Transmuted by Community Effort
    ¶25            Wife does not present an argument on appeal as to how the
    community contributed to the value of Husband’s separate property. See
    Tester v. Tester, 
    123 Ariz. 41
    , 44 (App. 1979). The court found no evidence
    of community involvement. Neither do we.
    C.     Not Transmuted by Commingling
    ¶26           Husband’s clearing account is the only specific asset Wife
    challenges. She asserts Husband unilaterally managed the community’s
    income and assets and commingled funds “without maintaining detailed
    and contemporaneous records.” But separate property does not lose its
    separate character, even if commingled with community property, so long
    as the separate property is identifiable.      Cupp, 
    152 Ariz. at 164
    .
    Commingling only transmutes separate property when the identity of the
    property is lost. 
    Id.
     As Gorman’s analysis shows, such was not the case.
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    ¶27          Wife was responsible for paying community expenses.
    Husband reimbursed her only from his clearing account. The clearing
    account regularly required “significant” contributions from Husband’s
    separate funds to cover their community expenses. There is no evidence
    Husband ever used any other account. “[A]t all times,” the community
    spending exceeded the community’s contributions.
    ¶28            Finally, we are not persuaded by Wife’s assertion that
    Husband had to prove all the clearing account transactions were
    “unclouded by community funds.” The correct legal standard is clear,
    satisfactory, and convincing evidence, which Husband met. See Bourne v.
    Lord, 
    19 Ariz. App. 228
    , 231 (1973).
    ¶29           As stated above, the clearing account is the only specifically
    challenged source. Wife conceded or failed to challenge the other assets
    and accounts with specificity.3 The identity of Husband’s other separate
    property once established by Gorman and accepted by the court, therefore,
    could not be lost via commingling. See, e.g., Guthrie v. Guthrie, 
    73 Ariz. 423
    ,
    426 (1952). We find no error in the family court’s decision that Husband’s
    assets were not commingled to the point of transmutation.
    III.   Gorman’s Tracing of the Disputed Property
    ¶30           Tracing is the crux of Wife’s argument. Wife never challenged
    the veracity of any of Husband’s fact witnesses, his expert’s qualifications,
    or the validity of Husband’s documents. Instead, her position rests on the
    theory that Husband’s evidence contained legally insurmountable gaps in
    the tracing of his separate property. That argument has both a factual and
    a legal element, although neither persuades us.
    A.     The Factual Element
    ¶31           In support of Husband’s factual assertions, Gorman testified
    to his review of over 26,000 pages of documentation. His analysis included
    estate and personal “tax-returns, K-1s, bank records, brokerage statements,
    canceled checks, personal ledgers, recorded documents, various
    agreements, and records of the entities.” Husband’s Social Security
    statements were introduced to show the range of Husband’s community
    earnings over the life of the marriage and help determine the extent the
    community expenses exceeded or affected those earnings. The result,
    according to Gorman, was that community expenses exceeded earnings by
    3       Wife’s expert admitted that Gorman successfully traced five pieces
    of real property and some municipal bonds.
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    up to 500 percent. Gorman concluded that Husband’s earnings were de
    minimis when considering the totality of the clearing account. The court
    agreed, and we accept the court’s conclusion that the evidence was
    “abundant” as to the role of Husband’s separate property in the clearing
    account. See Porter v. Porter, 
    67 Ariz. 273
    , 282 (1948).
    ¶32            We review rulings on the admissibility of evidence for an
    abuse of discretion. Link v. Pima County, 
    193 Ariz. 336
    , 338, ¶ 3 (App. 1998).
    We find the superior court did not err in considering the evidence or the
    reasonable inferences made by Gorman. See Thomas, 
    142 Ariz. at 392
    . The
    court, as the ultimate factfinder, was free to adopt Gorman’s opinion when
    it determined the credibility and weight to give the conflicting expert
    opinions. See Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 
    193 Ariz. 343
    , 347, ¶ 13 (App. 1998).
    B.     The Legal Element
    ¶33            For decades Arizona law has required the explicit tracing of
    proof of origin for any commingled property claimed as separate. See
    Porter, 
    67 Ariz. at 281
    ; Cooper v. Cooper, 
    130 Ariz. 257
    , 259 (1981). The court
    determines, depending on the circumstances of each case, what level of
    specificity in the evidence is required to show that separate property has
    remained so. In re Marriage of Molloy, 
    181 Ariz. 146
    , 150 (App. 1994).
    ¶34           Gorman stated he used a direct-tracing methodology, a
    standard accounting practice, to trace Husband’s separate property.4 Direct
    tracing uses testimony and documents to tie a matched asset to its prior
    property source.5 While it is true that Gorman also used two indirect
    tracing methods—recapitulation and “marital-assets-out-first”—the
    indirect methods were used to confirm the reasonableness of his
    conclusions. Ultimately, the court found Gorman’s tracing methodology
    met the “direct and explicit tracing” standard. It agreed with Gorman’s
    4     During his testimony Gorman clarified that “direct tracing” is an
    accounting term. “Explicit tracing” is a legal term.
    5      There are two direct tracing subtypes: single-instance direct tracing
    and serial and compound direct tracing. Gorman used both in tracing
    Husband’s assets. Single-instance direct tracing is the simplest form of
    tracing and occurs when one asset is directly linked to another. Serial and
    compound direct tracing occurs when there are a series of transactions that
    are interrelated and increasingly complex.
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    conclusions and found Husband had proved his assets’ separate nature by
    clear and convincing evidence.
    ¶35           Wife criticizes Gorman’s Report and his methodology. She
    argues the court committed legal error in its alleged use of indirect tracing
    methods. Wife argues Gorman could not have conducted a “direct tracing”
    as he claims because there were “multiple years of missing documentary
    evidence for the most relevant of all the accounts [the clearing account]
    during the 46-year marriage.” (Emphasis in original.) The cases cited by
    Wife do not support a rigid requirement that explicit tracing requires paper
    documentation to trace every transaction, dollar-for-dollar, over a forty-
    year marriage. See Cooper, 
    130 Ariz. at 260
    ; Roden v. Roden, 
    190 Ariz. 407
    ,
    411 (App. 1997) (superseded in part by statute on other grounds); Porter, 
    67 Ariz. at 279
    .
    ¶36           Courts are permitted to look at both direct and circumstantial
    evidence to arrive at whether an asset has maintained its identity as
    separate property, so long as the separate nature of the asset is proven by
    clear and convincing evidence. See Bourne, 19 Ariz. App. at 231. Paper
    documentation serves as direct evidence in tracing funds, and over 26,000
    documents were produced in this case. But where documentation had been
    lost or destroyed, the court could rely on “witness testimony which clearly
    and convincingly establishes a fact in the absence of documentary
    evidence,” as it found the evidence “to be acceptable and reasonable in
    supporting the tracing of a particular asset or to bridge a gap that is
    buttressed by ample documentary evidence.” See Kingsberry v. Kingsberry,
    
    93 Ariz. 217
    , 223-24 (1963) (court found the husband had explicitly traced
    his separate funds through his testimony and documentary evidence).
    ¶37            “On appeal, we do not reweigh the evidence but defer to the
    family court’s determinations of witness credibility.” Lehn v. Al-Thanayyan,
    
    246 Ariz. 277
    , 284, ¶ 20 (App. 2019). Because the family court is in the best
    position to assess and resolve conflicting evidence, we accept its factual
    findings absent clear error. Kelsey v. Kelsey, 
    186 Ariz. 49
    , 51 (App. 1996).
    The court properly exercised its discretion in weighing the experts’
    opinions and considering the different methodologies they used. 
    Id.
     (“If an
    expert fails to calculate the value of an asset according to standard
    methodology, that failure goes to the weight of the expert’s opinion, not the
    admissibility.”). The court may even, in its discretion, “adopt portions of
    the evidence from different witnesses.” CSA 13-101 Loop, LLC v. Loop 101,
    LLC, 
    233 Ariz. 355
    , 362-63, ¶ 25 (App. 2013) (internal quotation omitted).
    The court found Gorman credible and rejected Giordano’s requirements as
    too restrictive.
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
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    ¶38           We have reviewed the sealed record and find no abuse of
    discretion by the family court. Between the years of 1996-2016, Husband
    earned a total of $3.3 million in community income, compared to the about
    $32.2 million he received in sole and separate distributions. During that
    same period, the community expended about $14.4 million. In any given
    year, the community expended over two times, and often, more than five
    times as much as Husband earned in community income. The superior
    court found that in many years, the community expenses exceeded
    Husband’s annual income within only the first couple months of the year.
    Clearly, Husband’s “salary was at all times inadequate for the maintenance
    of community expenses” and as a result, he drew from his separate funds
    “to meet the deficiency of the household needs.” See Porter, 
    67 Ariz. at 277
    .
    “Where separate and community property are confused or blended so that
    the separate property cannot be identified, the presumption in favor of the
    community casts the whole into community.” 
    Id.
     But such confusion does
    not arise when the community component of the intermixture is
    comparatively small, as is the case here. See 
    id.
    ¶39          There was competent evidence in the record—including
    Husband’s testimony—and reasonable inferences therefrom to support the
    family court’s conclusion that the disputed property was clearly and
    unambiguously traced back to Husband’s sole and separate property. For
    these reasons, the family court is affirmed.
    IV.   The Court’s Findings of Fact Were Sufficient
    ¶40            Finally, Wife argues that the family court failed to provide
    sufficient findings of fact to support its result pursuant to Arizona Rule of
    Family Law Procedure 52. We disagree. The court provided a sufficiently
    detailed analysis when it cited and adopted Gorman’s Report. See Kelsey,
    
    186 Ariz. at 51
     (“It must be clear from the findings how the court actually
    did arrive at its conclusions.”).
    ATTORNEYS’ FEES ON APPEAL
    ¶41           On appeal, Wife requests attorneys’ fees pursuant to A.R.S.
    § 25-324. Section 25-324 requires us to examine both the financial resources
    and the reasonableness of each party’s positions. Although Husband has
    significantly more resources, Wife is in no way destitute. Like the court, we
    find Wife’s position on the tracing of separate property unreasonable. To
    require near transaction-by-transaction documentation over a forty-year
    marriage is overly rigid. For these reasons, we deny Wife’s request and
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    CHAUNCEY v. CHAUNCEY
    Decision of the Court
    order each party to bear its attorneys’ fees. Husband is awarded his costs
    on appeal after compliance with ARCAP 21.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶42           For the above-stated reasons, we affirm.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
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