Chafin v. Chafin , 250 N.C. App. 19 ( 2016 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA15-1152
    Filed: 18 October 2016
    Guilford County, No. 09 CVD 7159
    DENISE CHAFIN, Plaintiff,
    v.
    STEPHEN CHAFIN, Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant from judgment and orders entered 6 November 2014 by
    Judge Teresa H. Vincent in Guilford County District Court. Heard in the Court of
    Appeals 10 August 2016.
    Woodruff Family Law Group, by Jessica S. Bullock and Adam D. Furr, for
    plaintiff-appellee.
    Barry Snyder for defendant-appellant.
    ELMORE, Judge.
    After five years of litigation involving six different attorneys and abounding
    motions, the trial court ordered an equitable distribution of the parties’ marital and
    divisible property.   Defendant appeals, challenging the distribution of former
    company property and marital debt, his ability to pay a distributive award, and the
    trial court’s order for sanctions. We affirm.
    I. Background
    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Denise Chafin (plaintiff) and Stephen Chafin (defendant) were married on 20
    December 1988 and separated on 12 June 2008. During the marriage, defendant
    started a used car dealership, I Rush Auto Sales, LLC (Rush Auto), which sold mid-
    to low-end used cars purchased through a wholesaler known as Manheim. The
    Articles of Organization were filed 12 February 2007, naming defendant and his
    business partner, Peter Ault, as organizers. Their venture was short-lived. Mr. Ault
    was later removed as a member and replaced by defendant’s father, Robert Chafin.
    The company continued to operate through the date of separation until it was
    administratively dissolved on 8 August 2008.
    On 14 May 2009, plaintiff filed a complaint seeking, inter alia, an equitable
    distribution of the marital and divisible property. Pursuant to a pretrial scheduling
    order, plaintiff served her initial equitable distribution inventory affidavit on 29 July
    2010, followed by a second inventory affidavit attached and incorporated into her
    proposed pretrial order on 24 October 2011. In both affidavits, plaintiff listed the
    business interest in Rush Auto, valued at $10,000.00, and its associated bank
    accounts as marital property to be distributed to defendant. She filed an amended
    preliminary equitable distribution affidavit on 7 March 2012, this time including an
    itemized list of nine vehicles which plaintiff claimed were owned by Rush Auto on the
    date of separation.
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Upon additional discovery, plaintiff submitted her final inventory affidavit on
    10 April 2013, listing the following in “Schedule C Business or Professional Interests”:
    C1      I Rush Auto Sales, LLC                       ...      [No Value]
    I Rush Auto Sales, LLC
    C1(a) Bank of America Checking Account               ...     $11,110.13
    Account Number ending in -3001
    I Rush Auto Sales, LLC
    C1(b)                                                ...     $50,825.00
    Inventory (Vehicles)
    ....
    I Rush Auto Sales, LLC
    C1(d)                                                ...       $4,218.16
    Cash on Hand
    I Rush Auto Sales, LLC
    C1(e)   SunTrust Checking Account                    ...       $1,782.56
    Account Number ending in -8407
    I Rush Auto Sales, LLC
    C1(f)   SunTrust Checking Account                    ...            TBD
    Account Number ending in -9050
    Plaintiff alleged that each item was marital property, in possession of defendant, and
    should be distributed to defendant.
    The trial court ordered defendant to serve his equitable distribution inventory
    affidavit and to fill in his contentions on the pretrial order, but he failed to do so. He
    did serve an “affidavit in response to the proposed pretrial order” on 30 May 2013,
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    the day before the hearing on the pretrial order. As later described by the court,
    however, defendant’s affidavit “utterly ignored the Guilford County Local Rules with
    regard to equitable distribution” and “[did] not comply with pretrial order form
    required by the Guilford County Local Rules.”
    At the hearing, the parties agreed to entry of the pretrial order with the
    understanding that plaintiff would amend the inventory schedules to reflect
    defendant’s contentions.      In his affidavit, defendant objected to plaintiff’s
    classification of the business interests on the following grounds:
    Schedule C: Business or Professional Interests
    C1 Husband valued I Rush Auto Sales, LLC at -0- dollars.
    C1(a) Although bank account for Rush Auto may indicate
    deposits totaling $11,110.13 the debt service would at least
    equal this amount.
    C1(b) The inventory of vehicles amount [sic] does not take
    into account the value less any loans against the vehicles,
    that is, $50,825.00 does not represent the equity in the
    vehicles.
    ....
    C1(d) The amount of “cash on hand” represents the amount
    of money for which, at the point calculated, debts of the
    business had not been paid or taken into account.
    C1(e) The amount of funds in the Rush Auto banking
    account 8407 of $1,782.56 was owned by Pete Ault and is
    not part of the funds of Husband.
    C2(f) The amount of funds in the Rush Auto banking
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    account 9050 which is “TBD” is not known nor recognized
    by Husband.
    Defendant also agreed that “if anything new comes up at [plaintiff’s] deposition,”
    scheduled for June 2013, then “it will just be added onto whatever that file [sic]
    pretrial order may be.”
    After several continuances, the trial was peremptorily set for 9 and 10 January
    2014. On 13 January 2014, after the trial had begun, defendant filed a series of
    motions, including a motion to amend the pretrial order, a motion to preserve the
    record with excluded evidence and testimony, a motion to continue the trial, and three
    months later, a motion to set aside the pretrial order.       The trial court denied
    defendant’s motions, but did eventually allow his motion to preserve the record in
    which defendant offered evidence to show that not all vehicles listed in the pretrial
    order were on the Rush Auto lot on the date of separation.
    On 6 November 2014, the trial court entered its equitable distribution order,
    in which it made the following findings and conclusions relevant to defendant’s
    appeal:
    8. With regard to the items on Schedule C, the Court finds
    and orders the following:
    a. Item Cl, I Rush Auto Sales, LLC, is a marital asset
    distributed to the Defendant, but due to insufficient
    evidence, the Court cannot make a determination as to
    value.
    b. Item CI(a), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC Bank of America
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Checking Account, account number ending in -3001, is a
    marital asset distributed to the Defendant at a value of
    $11,110.13. Defendant failed to provide sufficient proof
    that the funds in the account were encumbered.
    c. Item C1(b), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC Inventory (Vehicles),
    is a marital asset distributed to the Defendant at a value
    of $36,350.00. This amount reflects the price Defendant
    paid for the vehicles that were on the car lot on the date of
    separation.     Plaintiff completed an inventory of the
    vehicles on the car lot on the date of separation.
    Defendant’s Manheim registry, which is a list of the
    vehicles purchased via the Manheim Finance Company,
    dated on or about the date of separation, is consistent with
    the models described by Plaintiff. However, there was
    insufficient evidence that Defendant was able to sell the
    vehicles for a profit. In fact, Defendant’s business was
    unprofitable and therefore closed down.
    ....
    e. Item CI(d), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC Cash on Hand, is a
    marital asset distributed to the Defendant at a value of
    $4,218.16.
    f. Item Cl(e), I Rush Auto Sales, LLC SunTrust Checking
    Account, account number ending in -8407, had a date of
    separation value of $1,782.56, but when the Defendant and
    his partner dissolved the business, Defendant left the
    funds in the account and Defendant’s partner took
    possession of the funds.
    ....
    14. With regard to the items on Schedule H, the Court finds
    and orders the following:
    h. Item H8, HFC Judgment (formerly Household Realty),
    is a marital debt distributed to the Plaintiff at a value of
    ($19,419.92). This amount represented a civil judgment
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    that appeared as a lien on the marital home and had to be
    paid at closing in order to sell the marital home. Although,
    this debt is associated with the mortgage and the Court
    would normally distribute it to the same party being
    distributed the marital home, the parties stipulated that it
    would be distributed to Plaintiff.
    ....
    23. In order to effectuate the equitable distribution of the
    marital estate ordered herein, the Defendant shall pay a
    distributive award to the Plaintiff in the amount of
    $89,385.44 at the rate of $550.00 per month beginning
    November 1, 2014 and continuing on the first of each
    month thereafter until the balance is paid in full. The
    above distributive award is related to the cessation of the
    marriage.
    24. The Court finds that Defendant is presently employed
    and has adequate assets and income from said employment
    such that Defendant has the ability to pay the distributive
    award as set forth herein.
    The trial court also allowed plaintiff’s motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule
    11 and 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-21
    (e). The court ordered defendant to pay $10,000.00 in
    attorney’s fees based on its conclusions that defendant and his counsel unreasonably
    delayed the proceedings through “defendant’s numerous and frivolous motions,
    defendant’s discovery ‘tactics,’ and most recently defendant’s abuse of the pretrial
    order process.”     Defendant filed notice of appeal on 5 December 2014 from the
    judgment and order of equitable distribution and the order for sanctions.
    II. Discussion
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Our review is governed by the following principles of equitable distribution:
    Upon application of a party for an equitable distribution,
    the trial court “shall determine what is the marital
    property and shall provide for an equitable distribution of
    the marital property . . . in accordance with the provisions
    of [
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    ].” In so doing, the court must
    conduct a three-step analysis. First, the court must
    identify and classify all property as marital or separate
    based upon the evidence presented regarding the nature of
    the asset. Second, the court must determine the net value
    of the marital property as of the date of the parties’
    separation, with net value being market value, if any, less
    the amount of any encumbrances. Third, the court must
    distribute the marital property in an equitable manner.
    Smith v. Smith, 
    111 N.C. App. 460
    , 470, 
    433 S.E.2d 196
    , 202–03 (1993) (citations
    omitted) (quoting 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    ), rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    336 N.C. 575
    , 
    444 S.E.2d 420
     (1994).
    Equitable distribution is vested in the discretion of the trial
    court and will not be disturbed absent a clear abuse of that
    discretion.   Only a finding that the judgment was
    unsupported by reason and could not have been a result of
    competent inquiry, or a finding that the trial judge failed
    to comply with the statute, will establish an abuse of
    discretion.
    Wiencek-Adams v. Adams, 
    331 N.C. 688
    , 691, 
    417 S.E.2d 449
    , 451 (1992) (citations
    omitted).
    A. Distribution of Checking Account, Vehicles, and Cash on Hand
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant first argues that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to distribute the
    Bank of America checking account, vehicles, and cash on hand, because Rush Auto
    held legal title to these assets and was not joined as a party to the action.
    Defendant raises this argument for the first time on appeal and without
    evidentiary support.    At no point during this action did he object to plaintiff’s
    classification of these items as marital property: In his responsive affidavit, he
    contests only the value of each of these items. In his motions to amend and to
    preserve the record, he challenges plaintiff’s evidence as to which vehicles were on
    the Rush Auto lot on the date of separation. And in his motion to set aside the pretrial
    order, he actually concedes that any vehicle on the Rush Auto lot on the date of
    separation would be marital property. Defendant has therefore failed to preserve this
    argument for appellate review. See Quesinberry v. Quesinberry, 
    210 N.C. App. 578
    ,
    581–83, 
    709 S.E.2d 367
    , 371–72 (2011) (rejecting husband’s argument that the trial
    court lacked jurisdiction to distribute assets he claimed belonged to business where
    he made no prior objection and stipulated that assets were marital property); see also
    Weil v. Herring, 
    207 N.C. 6
    , 10, 
    175 S.E. 836
    , 838 (1934) (“[T]he law does not permit
    parties to swap horses between courts in order to get a better mount . . . .”); N.C. R.
    App. P. 10(a)(1) (2016) (“In order to preserve an issue for appellate review, a party
    must have presented to the trial court a timely request, objection, or motion . . . .”).
    And as discussed in Part B, infra, the evidence ultimately supports the trial court’s
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    findings that the business interest, checking account, vehicles, and cash on hand, are
    marital property.
    B. Business Interest in Rush Auto
    In the alternative, defendant argues that if the trial court had jurisdiction, it
    nevertheless erred in distributing Rush Auto to defendant without assigning a value
    to the business interest.
    “In an equitable distribution proceeding, the trial court is to determine the net
    fair market value of the property based on the evidence offered by the parties.” Walter
    v. Walter, 
    149 N.C. App. 723
    , 733, 
    561 S.E.2d 571
    , 577 (2002) (footnote and citations
    omitted); see also 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    (c) (2015) (“There shall be an equal division
    by using net value of marital property and net value of divisible property . . . .”). “In
    valuing a marital interest in a business, the task of the trial court is to arrive at a
    date of separation value which ‘reasonably approximates’ the net value of the
    business interest.” Offerman v. Offerman, 
    137 N.C. App. 289
    , 292, 
    527 S.E.2d 684
    ,
    686 (2000) (quoting Poore v. Poore, 
    75 N.C. App. 414
    , 422, 
    331 S.E.2d 266
    , 272 (1985)).
    Rush Auto was organized during the marriage and still operating on the date
    of separation, making any business interest in the company marital property—as
    found by the trial court. See 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20
    (b)(1) (2015); see also N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 57D-5-01 (2015) (“An ownership interest is personal property.”); Hill v. Hill,
    
    229 N.C. App. 511
    , 518, 
    748 S.E.2d 352
    , 358 (2013) (“If the corporation was created
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    during the marriage, and it was owned and operated by the parties, it is a marital
    asset regardless of the stock ownership.” (citation omitted)). Specific assets of an
    LLC, on the other hand, are owned by the entity and are not the property of the
    interest owners. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57D-2-01(a) (2015) (“An LLC is an entity
    distinct from its interest owners”); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 57D-4-01, -5-05, -6-
    04(c)(1), -6-08 (2015). Although Rush Auto was dissolved after the date of separation,
    defendant correctly notes that dissolution alone does not transfer title to the
    company’s assets. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57D-6-07(e) (2015).
    By virtue of the business interest, however, defendant was entitled to a
    distribution of the remaining assets after dissolution and during the winding up of
    the company’s affairs. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 57D-4-03 (2015) (describing manner of
    “[d]istributions to interest owners before the dissolution and winding up of the LLC
    or, as provided in G.S. 57D-6-08(2), after the dissolution of the LLC”); N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 57D-6-08 (“During the winding up of an LLC, the LLC’s assets are to be applied
    . . . [f]irst to creditors, . . . [t]he balance to interest owners as distributions . . . .”); see
    also Hill, 229 N.C. App. at 518–19, 748 S.E.2d at 358 (holding that to the extent
    corporation was marital asset, post-separation distributions were marital property).
    This much is reflected in the trial court’s equitable distribution order: In particular,
    the court found that the Bank of America checking account, vehicles, and cash on
    hand, were marital property; Rush Auto was unprofitable and therefore closed down;
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    after dissolving the company, defendant’s business partner took possession of the
    funds in the SunTrust account; and defendant failed to prove that the Bank of
    America checking account was encumbered.
    While the trial court distributed Rush Auto without explicitly valuing the
    company, the findings ultimately reflect a reasonable estimate of the parties’ interest.
    In plaintiff’s initial inventory affidavits, she assigned a $10,000.00 valuation to the
    business based primarily on its inventory.          As additional assets were revealed
    through discovery, she listed them separately under the Rush Auto business interest,
    valuing each item individually and leaving blank the value of the company. The
    record shows no other former company property at stake, leading further to the
    conclusion that any interest in the dissolved company is represented by the aggregate
    value of the checking account, inventory, cash on hand, accounts payable, and
    accounts receivable—all of which were distributed to defendant. See Poore, 75 N.C.
    App. at 419, 
    331 S.E.2d at 270
     (instructing courts to consider the following
    components in valuation of a business: “(a) its fixed assets including cash, furniture,
    equipment, and other supplies; (b) its other assets including accounts receivable and
    the value of work in progress; (c) its goodwill, if any; and (d) its liabilities”). If there
    was an error in the distribution of Rush Auto, therefore, it was the trial court’s
    decision to itemize the assets separately from the interest in the company. See 1
    Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 5:16, at 311 (3d ed. 2005) (“[T]he
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    value of the corporate assets is included in the value of the corporation’s stock, and
    any stock owned by the parties would of course be marital property.”). Accordingly,
    we see no reason to remand and extend this action any longer.
    C. Classification and Value of Vehicles
    Next, defendant challenges the trial court’s finding that the vehicles are
    marital property worth $36,350.00. Specifically, defendant contends that there is no
    competent evidence that the nine vehicles listed in plaintiff’s affidavit were “presently
    owned” on the date of separation.
    “In appellate review of a bench equitable distribution trial, the findings of fact
    regarding value are conclusive if there is evidence to support them.” Crutchfield v.
    Crutchfield, 
    132 N.C. App. 193
    , 197, 
    511 S.E.2d 31
    , 34 (1999) (citing Chandler v.
    Chandler, 
    108 N.C. App. 66
    , 73, 
    422 S.E.2d 587
    , 592 (1992)). “ ‘This Court is not here
    to second-guess values of marital and separate property where there is evidence to
    support the trial court’s figures.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Mishler v. Mishler, 
    90 N.C. App. 72
    ,
    74, 
    367 S.E.2d 385
    , 386 (1988)).
    In plaintiff’s amended preliminary equitable distribution affidavit, she listed
    the make, model, year, and value for each of the nine vehicles claimed to be marital
    property. Plaintiff testified during a deposition that she visited the Rush Auto lot
    with defendant on the date of separation and took note of which vehicles had not been
    sold. Upon comparison with Rush Auto’s vehicle registry, the vehicles listed by
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    plaintiff are consistent with those purchased by the company from Manheim before
    the date of separation.
    Plaintiff also testified that she valued each of the vehicles by consulting the
    National Automobile Dealers Association. She arrived at a total date of separation
    value of $52,825.00, as shown in the inventory affidavit submitted with her proposed
    pretrial order and the schedules attached to the pretrial order. In the trial court’s
    equitable distribution order, however, it valued the vehicles at $36,350.00 to reflect
    the price paid by Rush Auto for the vehicles, evidenced by checks written to Manheim,
    because “there was insufficient evidence that Defendant was able to sell the vehicles
    for a profit.” Based on the foregoing, the trial court’s classification and valuation of
    the vehicles are supported by competent evidence.
    Relatedly, defendant argues that the court improperly denied him the
    opportunity to offer evidence of which vehicles were on the Rush Auto lot on the date
    of separation. In defendant’s response to the pretrial order, he raised only one
    objection to the vehicles: “The inventory of vehicles amount [sic] does not take into
    account the value less any loans against the vehicles, that is, $50,825.00 does not
    represent the equity in the vehicles.” Because defendant had an opportunity to
    contest the accuracy of the inventory but failed to do so until after the trial had begun,
    the court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s request to offer evidence.
    In any event, the record shows the trial court allowed defendant’s motion to preserve
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    the record with excluded evidence and testimony, and that it ultimately considered
    the evidence in its order for equitable distribution.
    D. Ability to Pay Distributive Award
    Next, defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering a
    distributive award without considering defendant’s ability to pay. In its equitable
    distribution order, the trial court specifically found “that Defendant is presently
    employed and has adequate assets and income from said employment such that
    Defendant has the ability to pay the distributive award as set forth herein.” Because
    this finding is also supported by competent evidence showing that defendant has
    sufficient liquid assets to pay the award, we reject defendant’s argument. See Allen
    v. Allen, 
    168 N.C. App. 368
    , 376–77, 
    607 S.E.2d 331
    , 336–37 (2005).
    F. Stipulation as to HFC Judgment
    Next, defendant argues that there is no evidence to support the trial court’s
    Finding of Fact No. 14(h), in which the court found that the parties stipulated to the
    distribution of the HFC Judgment to plaintiff.
    Along with plaintiff’s contentions for an unequal division, the HFC Judgment
    appears in plaintiff’s final equitable distribution inventory affidavit and the
    schedules to the pretrial order. In defendant’s response to the proposed pretrial
    order, he appears to contest plaintiff’s accusation that the $19,000.00 debt was
    attributable to necessary repairs to the marital home after defendant allowed the
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    home to deteriorate. But apart from shifting blame for the debt or vaguely objecting
    to its value, defendant did not contest that the HFC Judgment was a marital debt
    that should be distributed to plaintiff. In light of this evidence and defendant’s “abuse
    of the pretrial order process,” we cannot accept defendant’s argument that the
    stipulation resulted in an admission of a fact which clearly was intended to be
    controverted. See Rickert v. Rickert, 
    282 N.C. 373
    , 380, 
    193 S.E.2d 79
    , 83 (1972)
    (citations omitted). The evidence supports the trial court’s finding that the parties
    stipulated to the distribution of the marital debt to plaintiff.
    G. Rule 11 Sanctions
    Finally, defendant challenges the trial court’s order for Rule 11 sanctions. In
    cursory fashion, defendant contends that “not every finding of fact and law can be
    addressed in this brief but all are contested and denied.” Because he offers no reason
    or argument to support his broad contentions, they are deemed abandoned. N.C. R.
    App. P. 28(b)(6) (2016). In defendant’s only developed argument, he defends his
    decision to file motions to amend and to set aside the pretrial order, which were a
    fraction of the grounds supporting the trial court’s nine-page order for sanctions.
    Defendant nevertheless maintains that these motions were filed in good faith and “to
    prevent manifest injustice.”
    We review de novo the trial court’s decision to impose mandatory sanctions
    pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 11(a) (2015).
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    In the de novo review, the appellate court will determine
    (1) whether the trial court’s conclusions of law support its
    judgment or determination, (2) whether the trial court’s
    conclusions of law are supported by its findings of fact, and
    (3) whether the findings of fact are supported by a
    sufficiency of the evidence. If the appellate court makes
    these three determinations in the affirmative, it must
    uphold the trial court’s decision to impose or deny the
    imposition of mandatory sanctions under N.C.G.S. § 1A-1,
    Rule 11(a).
    Turner v. Duke Univ., 
    325 N.C. 152
    , 165, 
    381 S.E.2d 706
    , 714 (1989).
    There is sufficient evidence in the record to support the trial court’s finding
    that defendant filed the challenged motions in an attempt to delay the hearing of this
    equitable distribution matter. Contrary to defendant’s assertion, he had more than
    ample opportunity to refute plaintiff’s evidence concerning the inventory of the
    vehicles. He failed to do so during the pretrial order process, at the pretrial order
    hearing, or within a reasonable time after plaintiff’s deposition. Instead, defendant
    elected to file his motions after the equitable distribution hearing had begun and
    without prior notice to plaintiff. Because the sufficiency of the evidence supports the
    findings, the findings the conclusions, and the conclusions the judgment, the trial
    court properly ordered Rule 11 sanctions against defendant.
    III. Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and order of
    equitable distribution and its order for sanctions.
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    CHAFIN V. CHAFIN
    Opinion of the Court
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges DAVIS and DIETZ concur.
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