Lora Perry, App v. Kennet Phillipson, Resp ( 2019 )


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  • FlLED
    4r22f2019
    Court oprpeals
    Division |
    State of Washington
    lN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHlNGTON
    LORA PERRY ,
    DlVlSlON ONE
    Appe|lant,
    No. 77373-9-|
    v.
    UNPUBL|SHED OPlNlON
    KENNET PH|LL|PSON,
    Respondent. FlLED: April 22, 2019
    DwYER, J. _ Lora Perry brought this action to divide the assets of a
    committed intimate relationship (ClR), specifically a house, that she owned with
    Kennet Phillipson. The trial court found that a ClR existed and that 94 percent of
    the equity in the home was ClR community property1 The trial court found that
    the date of the parties’ separation was the most equitable date of appraisal for
    the house and further found that, on that date, the house was worth $560,000.
    Of that amount, $147,210 was equity, and $138,077 of the equity was community
    property of the ClR. The court evenly apportioned this to the parties, thus
    awarding Perry $69,038. Perry nevertheless appeals, contending that a later
    date of valuation should have been used and that Phillipson did not prove that
    6 percent of the home’s value was his separate property. Finding no error, we
    affirm.
    1 There is no true marital community in a ClR. Thus, the property is best described as
    “community-like" property Because this phrase is awkward, we will refer to it as community
    property, notwithstanding the imprecision.
    No. 77373-9~|/2
    l
    Lora Perry and Kennet Phillipson dated and lived together from 2011 to
    2015. The parties first lived in a rented unit. They then jointly purchased a
    house in Bellevue in l\/larch 2013. Their relationship ended upon Phillipson’s
    admission that he had been intimately involved with a former paramour for nearly
    the entire duration of his relationship with Perry. Perry moved out of their shared
    home on November 30, 2015.
    Before Perry and Phillipson began dating, Phillipson had been an
    associate attorney in the law firm of Fox Bowman Duarte. Upon this firm’s
    dissolution in December 2010, its partners paid Phillipson $50,000 to take on
    responsibility for several ongoing criminal cases, the fees for which had been
    paid up front. These fees were not held in trust but, rather, were Phillipson’s
    upon his receipt of them. The record contains no evidence as to how long
    Phillipson took to conclude the various cases. Phillipson deposited $35,000 of
    the money in a Bank of America money market savings account
    The parties purchased the house for $485,000 by means of a mortgage
    The down payment on the purchase, along with closing costs and mortgage
    insurance prepayment, totaled $58,558, of which $50,058 was contributed by
    Phillipson, $6,000 by Perry, and $2,500 by both parties through a joint checking
    account At least $30,000 of Phillipson’s contribution came from the payment
    made to him by Fox Bowman Duarte. /-\lthough both parties’ names were on the
    title to the house, Phillipson was the sole obligor on the mortgage
    No. 77373-9-|/3
    The parties’ joint checking account was used for the payment of shared
    expensesl such as rent, utilities, mortgage payments, and home repairs, during
    the period of their cohabitation Each party contributed to rental or monthly
    mortgage payments (based on a percentage of their monthly income) by
    depositing the needed funds in the joint account Perry ceased contributing to
    mortgage payments after she moved out of the house.
    Perry commenced this action on July 25, 2016. The only property at issue
    in the case was the ClR’s equity in the house. Phillipson, pointing to his infidelity
    and to disagreements between the parties, disputed that the parties had ever
    been in a committed intimate relationship Ultimately, the court ruled that a ClR
    had existed. Phillipson does not challenge this determination on appeal
    At trial, both parties offered appraisals of the home’s value; however, each
    appraiser selected a different date for the valuation of the home. Phillipson’s
    appraiser valued the house at $560,000 on November 30, 2015, the date on
    which Perry moved out; Perry’s appraiser valued the house at $630,000 as of
    September 2, 2016, and $701,000 as of l\/larch 24, 2017. The trial court ruled
    that the date of separation_November 30, 2015--was the most appropriate date
    for the valuation of the home, noting that Phillipson maintained sole responsibility
    for mortgage, upkeep, and repairs of the property after that date.
    The trial court, relying on Phillipson’s appraisal, concluded that the house
    was worth $560,000 as of November 30, 2015. Subtracting the $412,790
    balance on the mortgage, the equity in the house on this date was, the trial court
    found, $147,210. The trial court further found that 94 percent of this amount,
    NO. 77373-9~|/4
    $138,077, was “an asset of the ClR.” The trial court premised this ruling on
    evidence that Phillipson contributed $30,000 of his separate funds to the
    purchase of the home Thus, the trial court reasoned, 6 percent of the home’s
    value was Phillipson’s separate property.
    For her part, Perry requested an award of 60 percent of the ClR equity in
    the house on the basis that she was the “economically disfavored partner.” The
    trial court ruled that, given the short duration of the relationship, an even split was
    more equitable Thus, Perry was awarded $69,038, half of the ClR equity in the
    house Because Phillipson had already paid Perry $10,000, the trial court
    entered a judgment in favor of Perry in the amount of $59,038. This judgment
    was satisfied in December 2017.
    Perry appeals, contesting the choice of valuation date and the finding that
    6 percent of the equity in the home was Phillipson’s separate property
    ll
    Perry first contends that the trial court should have adopted a later date to
    value the house than the date of separation Because the house appreciated in
    value after the parties separated, Perry avers that valuing the house as of the
    date of separation deprived the ClR of passive appreciation We disagree The
    choice of date of valuation was entirely within the trial court’s discretion, and that
    discretion was not abused
    A committed intimate relationship “is not the same as marriage.”
    Connell v. Francisco, 127 VVn.2d 339, 348, 
    898 P.2d 831
     (1995)., Thus, “the laws
    involving the distribution of marital property do not directly apply to the division of
    No. 77373-9-|/5
    property following a [ClR]." Connell, 
    127 Wn.2d at 349
    . “Once a trial court
    determines the existence of a [Cle, the trial court then: (1) evaluates the interest
    each party has in the property acquired during the relationship, and (2) makes a
    just and equitable distribution of the property.” Q_o__r_i_i_w_e_ll, 
    127 Wn.2d at
    349 (citing
    ln re l\/larriade of Lindsev, 
    101 Wn.2d 299
    , 307, 
    678 P.2d 328
     (1984)). ln
    _Q_Qn_r_iel_l, our Supreme Court limited the distribution of property following a
    meretricious relationship-that which is now known as a ClR--to property that
    “would have been characterized as community property had the parties been
    married,” thus specifically excluding property acquired prior to the relationship
    from distribution 
    127 Wn.2d at 350
    .
    A trial court’s division of property following a ClR is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion ln re l\/larriaqe of Bverlev, 183 Wn, App. 677, 684-85, 
    334 P.3d 108
    (2014). “/-\ trial court abuses its discretion when its decision is manifestly
    unreasonable or based on untenable grounds or untenable reasons.” M
    Parentinq & Support of L.H., 
    198 Wn. App. 190
    , 194, 
    391 P.3d 490
     (2016). A
    trial court’s decision is manifestly unreasonable if it is outside the range of
    acceptable choices considering the facts and applicable legal standard, it is
    based on untenable grounds if the factual findings are not supported by the
    record, and it is based on untenable reasons if it applies an incorrect standard or
    the facts do not meet the requirements of the correct standard L__.__ljl__, 198 Wn.
    App. at 194 (citing ln re l\/larriaqe of Littlefield, 
    133 Wn.2d 39
    , 47, 
    940 P.2d 1362
    (1997)).
    NO. 77373-9-|/6
    ln the same vein, courts evaluating ClR assets for the purpose of division
    have broad discretion to select a valuation date that is just and equitable Koher
    v. l\/lorgan, 
    93 Wn. App. 398
    , 404-05, 
    968 P.2d 920
     (1998) (citing Lucker v.
    Lucker, 
    71 Wn.2d 165
    , 167-68, 
    426 P.2d 981
     (1967)). The trial court, in its
    conclusions of law concerning the characterization and value of the house,
    stated:
    Considering all of the circumstancesl the court has determined that
    the date of the termination of the ClR is the appropriate date for the
    appraisal. See l\/lorqan v. lBrinevl, supra.lz] At all times, Phillipson
    had sole legal responsibility for the mortgage and, after November
    30, [2015]l he, alone, paid the mortgage and was responsible for all
    upkeep on the property-including substantial damage caused by
    trespassers
    Perry does not dispute that Phillipson paid all mortgage and upkeep
    expenses after the termination of their relationship The trial court acted on
    reasonable and tenable grounds in selecting November 30, 2015 as the date of
    valuation
    The cases cited by Perry do not support the proposition that a trial court is
    required to account for passive appreciation to a CIR asset lnstead, these
    opinions stand for the proposition that the trial court may consider a variety of
    factors in arriving at the most equitable valuation date § Koher, 93 Wn. App.
    at 404; ln re l\/larriaqe of Sedlock, 69 Wn. App. 484l 490, 
    849 P.2d 1243
     (1993);
    ln re l\/larriage of Hurd, 
    69 Wn. App. 38
    , 46, 
    848 P.2d 185
     (1993). Thus, courts
    may award passive appreciation by choosing a valuation date after the parties’
    separation; they also may choose not to do so. l\/lorgan, 200 Wn. App. at 396.
    2 200 Wn. App. 380l 396, 
    403 P.3d 86
     (2017), review denied, 
    190 Wn.2d 1023
     (2018).
    No. 77373-9-|/7
    Here, the trial court considered the array of circumstances presented to it. lt
    properly exercised its discretion in utilizing a valuation date that it believed
    produced the most equitable result
    lll
    Perry next contends that the $50,000 in fees paid to Phillipson upon the
    dissolution of his former employer, Fox Bowman Duarte, should not have been
    found to be Phillipson’s separate property. This is so, she asserts, because the
    fees represented payment for work Phillipson had not, at that time, completed,
    and that at least some of that work was completed during the period of time
    encompassed by the ClR.
    The $50,000 paid to Phillipson represented flat fees for specified legal
    services in criminal cases. Thus, pursuant to Washington’s Rules of Professional
    Conduct, the money was Phillipson’s property at the time he received it3 The
    applicable rule provides:
    A lawyer may charge a flat fee for specified legal services, which
    constitutes complete payment for those services and is paid in
    whole or in part in advance of the lawyer providing the services lf
    agreed to in advance in a writing signed by the client, a flat fee is
    the lawyer’s property on receipt . . . .
    RPC 1.5(f)(2).
    That Phillipson was obligated to perform some ongoing legal work after
    receiving these fees, and that some of this work may have been performed
    during the time Phillipson and Perry were in a ClR, did not alter the status of the
    3 Washington’s Rules of Professional Conduct may be considered in civil cases so long
    as the purpose is not to determine malpractice liability. Cotton v. Kronenberg, 
    111 Wn. App. 258
    ,
    265, 
    44 P.3d 878
     (2002) (citing Simburq, Ketter, Sheppard & Purdvx l_l_P v. Olshan, 
    97 Wn. App. 901
    , 909, 
    988 P.2d 467
     (1999)).
    No. 77373-9-|/8
    money as Phillipson’s separate property. Property is characterized as separate
    or community as of the date it is acquired ln re l\/larriaqe of Shannon, 
    55 Wn. App. 137
    , 140, 
    777 P.2d 8
     (1989). l-lere, the $50,000 was acquired prior to the
    commencement of the ClR. Thus, it plainly was separate property.
    Perry’s assertion that Phillipson must have worked on some of these
    cases after the ClR commenced raises an issue-it does not prove a fact Perry
    introduced no evidence that Phillipson did, in factl work for no compensation to
    the ClR on any particular case or cases. She neither presented evidence of such
    work nor introduced evidence from which the value of such work could be
    quantified Thus, the trial court’s correct categorization of the funds as
    Phillipson’s separate property remained unrebutted
    lV
    Finally, Perry avers that the trial court abused its discretion by determining
    that 6 percent of the equity in the house was Phillipson’s separate property This
    is so, she contends, because the finding that Phillipson had adequately traced
    this equity to his separate funds was not supported by substantial evidence We
    disagree Phillipson provided documentary evidence demonstrating that
    approximately $30,000 of the funds put toward the purchase of the horne came
    from money that had been in his separate account before the ClR commenced
    “[l]ncome and property acquired during a [Cle should be characterized in
    a similar manner as income and property acquired during marriage Therefore,
    all property acquired during a [CIR] is presumed to be owned by both parties.”
    Connell, 
    127 Wn.2d at 351
    . This presumption may be overcome “by establishing
    No. 77373-9~|/9
    by ‘clear and convincing proof’ that the property is separate i.e., by tracing with
    some degree of particularity the separate source of funds used for the
    acquisition.” Chesterfield v. Nash, 
    96 Wn. App. 103
    , 111l 
    978 P.2d 551
     (1999)
    (quoting M, 
    127 Wn.2d at 350-51
    ), rev’d on other grounds bv ln re l\/larriaqe
    of Pennington, 
    142 Wn.2d 592
    , 
    14 P.3d 764
     (2000).
    “[O]nly when money in a joint account is hopelessly commingled and
    cannot be separated is it rendered entirely community property.” n re l\/larriage
    of Skarbek, 
    100 Wn. App. 444
    , 448, 
    997 P.2d 447
     (2000) (citing ln re l\/larriage of
    Pearson-l\/laines, 
    70 Wn. App. 860
    , 866, 
    855 P.2d 1210
     (1993)). “lfthe sources
    of the deposits can be traced and identified, the separate identity of the funds is
    preserved." §__k_a_rb_e_k_, 100 Wn. App. at 448 (citing Pearson-l\/laines, 
    70 Wn. App. at 867
    ).
    “‘Commingling’ of separate and community funds may give rise to a
    presumption that all are community property. This is not commingling in the
    ordinary sense, however; it must be hopeless commingling Unlike the foregoing
    presumptions, this one is conclusive arising only after the effort at tracing proves
    impossible.” ln re l\/larriaqe of Schwarz, 
    192 Wn. App. 180
    , 190, 
    368 P.3d 173
    (2016) (footnote omitted).
    At trial, Phillipson testified as to his use of the $50,000 he received in fees
    upon Fox Bowman Duarte’s dissolution First, in January 2011, he deposited this
    money into a checking account After writing a $10,000 check to his new firm, he
    transferred $35,000 into his savings account and left the remaining $5,000 in his
    checking account
    No. 77373-9-|/10
    As of February 28, 2013, his bank statement showed a balance of
    $30,694.32. Following two deposits, this balance increased to $48,619.41.
    Phil|ipson then transferred $25,000 to his checking account on April 16. Three
    days later, a $25,000 check from Phillipson was deposited by Stewart Title. On
    l\/lay 9, 2013, Phillipson transferred the remainder of the funds in his savings
    account to his checking account That same day, he made a transfer of
    $25,058.58 from his checking account to Stewart Title.
    There is no evidence that the deposits of $17,724 and $200 between
    February 28 and l\/larch 29, 2013, effected a hopeless commingling of community
    and separate funds. Before the home purchase, Phillipson had just over $30,000
    in his savings account He proved that this money was received from his former
    employer. He also proved that all of this money went toward the purchase of the
    house.
    Phillipson was required only to trace the funds “‘with some degree of
    particularity,”’ and upon his doing so, he established a presumption that these
    funds remained separate property. MQL, 200 Wn. App. at 390 (quoting wl
    v._l'::e_r_o_l, 
    37 Wn.2d 380
    , 382, 
    223 P.2d 1055
     (1950)). “[T]he property retains the
    character of the funds used to purchase it. lf one partner purchases property
    with separate funds during the ClR, the property is that partner’s separate
    property.” _l\_/l_o_rg_a_r_i, 200 Wn. App. at 390 (citing l\/lerritt v. Newkirk, 
    155 Wash. 517
    , 520-21, 
    285 P. 442
     (1930)). Accordingly, the portion of the down payment
    made with Phillipson’s separate funds gave Phillipson a separate property
    10
    NO. 77373-9-|/11
    interest The trial court acted within its discretion in finding that 6 percent of the
    equity in the home was solely Phillipson’s.
    Affirmed
    %G M /
    11