Barganier v. Barganier
Decision Date | 20 October 1995 |
Citation | 669 So.2d 933 |
Parties | Judy Harrison BARGANIER v. Ronald T. BARGANIER. 2940470. |
Court | Alabama Court of Civil Appeals |
Judy Harrison Barganier, pro se.
David B. Byrne, Jr. of Robison & Belser, P.A., Montgomery, for appellant.
Joe Espy III of Melton, Espy, Williams & Hayes, Montgomery, for appellee.
The wife appeals from an order granting in part her post-judgment motion to amend certain provisions of a divorce judgment. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Judy Harrison Barganier and Ronald T. Barganier were divorced on December 7, 1994. The divorce judgment incorporated the terms of a negotiated settlement agreement between the parties that had been read into the record in open court. Among other things, the parties agreed that the wife was to receive $12,000 of the proceeds from the sale of an office building owned jointly by the parties. On December 13, 1994, during a telephone conversation with the parties' accountant, the wife learned that the husband had utilized an accelerated depreciation schedule in the computation of the taxes on his business, and that the accelerated depreciation had resulted in the creation of a tax liability upon the sale of the building that far exceeded the proceeds received in the sale.
The property at issue, the building that formerly housed the husband's dental practice, was sold in August 1994. The husband and wife received $20,996.20 in cash from the sale; that money was held in escrow by the closing attorney's law firm pending the resolution of the parties' divorce. In late October 1994, the husband learned from the accountant that because of the accelerated depreciation schedule used for the building, the cash received from its sale was insufficient to pay the taxes due upon the sale. In fact, the tax liability was almost double the amount that had been received by the husband and wife.
During discovery, the wife asked the husband to produce, among other things, the following:
The husband produced the parties' 1991, 1992, and 1993 tax returns, the 1993 return bearing a completion date of October 12, 1994. These returns contain forms on which deduction expenses for depreciation are listed. The listing of deduction expenses includes not only the depreciation of the building, but also the depreciation of equipment used in the husband's dental practice. They do not contain, however, a separate detailed depreciation schedule for the building. The husband also produced the listing agreements for the sale of the office building and the closing statement from that sale. Those documents indicate the sales price for the building and the cash proceeds placed into escrow, but do not contain any information about the effect of the depreciation schedule on the building's tax liability.
During the hearing on December 7 in which the husband's attorney read into the record the agreement reached by the parties, the attorney stated that all of the parties' liabilities were individual debts with the exception of a joint debt of approximately $52,000 to Union Bank. The husband's attorney then asked the husband whether there were any other joint debts. The husband answered, "No," and his attorney stated to the trial court that he believed that was correct. The husband's attorney then informed the court that the parties had agreed that the wife would receive $12,000 of the proceeds from the sale of their jointly owned office building, with the husband to receive the balance, and that each party would be responsible for his or her share of the taxes due on the proceeds. The divorce judgment stated:
1
At no time after the husband learned of the tax liability created by the sale of the property did he inform the wife or the court that the taxes due on the property would be far more than the cash proceeds that had been received.
After the wife's conversation with the parties' accountant, she filed a post-judgment motion requesting that the court alter, amend, or vacate the judgment of divorce. After a hearing, the trial court amended paragraph 13 of the divorce judgment as follows:
The dispositive issue on appeal is the wife's contention that the husband failed to comply with the discovery obligations imposed upon him by the Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure. Our supreme court discussed the rules of discovery in Ex parte Dorsey Trailers, Inc., 397 So.2d 98 (Ala.1981). Although Dorsey Trailers involved interrogatories, we find its discussion equally applicable to requests for production.
"
Dorsey Trailers, 397 So.2d at 103 (emphasis added).
The husband argues that the wife did not ask about the tax basis of the office building or how the building was being depreciated. We disagree. Given the "purpose and broad scope of discovery," Dorsey Trailers, 397 So.2d at 104, the wife was entitled to the information about the depreciation of the building that would enable her to know the truth about the worth of the building. The wife specifically asked the husband to produce all appropriate forms and schedules in connection with the parties' tax returns; her request was broad enough to include the depreciation schedule on the office building. She also asked him for documents relative to his net worth and the net worth of his business, and she asked him for evidence of debts, either individual or joint; both of those requests were broad enough to encompass information about the tax basis...
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