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March 2008

Feb. 15, 2008 - KENTUCKY COURT OF APPEALS DECISIONS (2008:08)(C0A)

Feb. 15, 2008 -  KENTUCKY COURT OF APPEALS DECISIONS (2008:08)

TTD benefits issue was properly preserved and final and appealable by claimant: UNITED PARCEL SERVICE, INC. V. PETERSON (COA 2/15/2008)

UNITED PARCEL SERVICE, INC. V. PETERSON
WORKERS COMP:  TTD benefits issue was properly preserved and final and appealable
2007-CA-001479
PUBLISHED: AFFIRMING
PANEL:  THOMPSON, PRESIDING;  NICKELL, VANMETER CONCUR
COUNTY: WCB
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

The employer, United Parcel Service, Inc., petitions for review of an opinion of the Workers' Compensation Board affirming the Chief Administrative Law Judge's (CALJ) finding that Martina Stoudmire properly preserved as an issue whether she was entitled to additional temporary total disability benefits (TTD benefits). The Board further found, however, that the CALJ failed to address whether substantial evidence existed that, because of Stoudemire's left knee and low back conditions, she had not reached a level of improvement that would permit her to return to her customary employment. KRS 342.0011(11)(a). As a result, the Board remanded the case for additional findings.

The sole issue raised on this appeal is whether the Board correctly concluded that Stoudmire had properly preserved the issue of additional TTD benefits from July 16, 2004, through August 1, 2005. UPS contends that pursuant to 803 KAR 25:010 § 13, Stoudemire did not preserve the issue by raising it at the hearing or designating it as a contested issue. The regulation provides that the CALJ is to conduct a benefit review conference and, if the claim is not settled as a result of the conference, a summary stipulation of all contested and uncontested issues must be prepared and signed by the parties and the CALJ. The regulation further provides that only contested issues shall be the subject of further proceedings.

Although the issue of additional TTD benefits was not raised at the initial benefit review conference, the extent and duration of disability was specifically designated as a contested issue in the parties' stipulations. UPS's preservation argument ignores that the term “disability” as used in KRS 342.730, encompasses both temporary total disability benefits and permanent partial disability benefits. Moreover, the Supreme Court of Kentucky has recently rejected the argument now poised by UPS.

COA held the WCB's decision was final and appealable, and the claimant properly preserved issue whether she was entitled to additional TTD benefits.

Michael Stevens

Cash advance system for real estate commissions affirmed: KENTUCKY REAL ESTATE COMMISSION V. HILLIARD FINANCIAL, LLC (COA 2/15/2008)

KENTUCKY REAL ESTATE COMMISSION V. HILLIARD FINANCIAL, LLC
BUSINESS:  REAL ESTATE COMMISSIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
2007-CA-000861
PUBLISHED: AFFIRMING
PANEL: LAMBERT PRESIDING; VANMETER, KNOPF CONCUR
COUNTY: JEFFERSON
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

COA affirmed a declaratory judgment holding that the cash-advance business of Hillard Financial (d/b/a Commission Express) and Commission Express National, Inc., does not violate Kentucky's Real Estate Code following appeal by Kentucky Real Estate Commission.  The cash-advance business did not conflict with Real Estate Code provision prohibiting commission splitting or with Code provision prohibiting agents from receiving cash advances in consideration for the performance acts under the Code.

Commission Express is in the business of providing cash advances to real estate agents who have commissions pending from real estate transactions. In return for the advance, Commission Express takes an assignment of the agent's pending commission as well as a percentage of that commission. Commission Express characterizes its business as “factoring,” while one court has characterized it as a straight-forward consumer-lending business.

Michael Stevens

Status of brokerage account on death - tenancy in common vs. joint account with right of survivorship and prenup: ESTATE OF CHARLES SPENCER V. SPENCER (COA 2/15/2008)

ESTATE OF CHARLES SPENCER V. SPENCER
ESTATES:  Status of brokerage account on death - tenancy in common vs. joint account with right of survivorship and prenup 
2007-CA-000277
PUBLISHED: REVERSING AND REMANDING
PANEL:  THOMPSON PRESIDING; NICKELL, VANMETER CONCUR
COUNTY: MCCRACKEN
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

Despite having signed a prenuptial agreement, the husband retitled his brokerage account in his and his wife's name after they married. After he died, the widow claimed that the account was a joint account that passed by survivorship. The executor of his estate, however, claimed that the prenuptial agreement controlled. The Court of Appeals held that the couple owned the account as tenants in common. Therefore, the estate was entitled to the deceased husband's one-half interest in the account. The widow also retained her one-half interest in the account.

Along the way, the court noted that under Kentucky common law, the conjunctive "and" in an account title creates a tenancy in common. This result is in opposition to the majority of states, in which "and" creates a tenancy by the entirety. The Kentucky legislature has deliberately avoided bringing us in line with that majority view. However, KRS 391.315 does address certain multiple party accounts and directs that those accounts do pass by law to the survivor. The Court of Appeals, however, held that a brokerage account was not subject to KRS 391.315. Thus, the Court applied common law to reach the result that the brokerage account in the case at bar was owned by the couple as tenants in common. All in all, the case provides a nice review of an important area of law given the increasing prevalence of non-probate assets.

Jim Worthington

COA affirmed family court's award of attorney and expert fees, but vacates part of award re ownership interest in business and debt forgiveness as non-marital property: ALISON V. ALISON (COA 2/15/2008)

ALLISON V. ALLISON
FAMILY LAW: 
MARITAL/NONMARITAL CHARACTERIZATION OR PROPERTY AND DEBTS; ATTORNEY FEES
2006-CA-001967
PUBLISHED: AFFIRMING IN PART AND VACATING IN PART AND REMANDING
PANEL: BUCKINGHAM PRESIDING; THOMPSON, HENRY CONCUR
COUNTY: FAYETTE
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

Ex-Husband appealed from TC’s orders relating to marital/nonmarital nature of his family's business, the marital/nonmarital nature of a $66,714 debt allegedly owed by Ex-Wife to her mother, and the award of attorney and expert witness fees.

Ex-Husband and Ex-Wife were married on September 5, 1986. In the early 1970's, Ex-Husband's mother and father acquired all stock in an office-supply business. Ex-Husband owned all shares of stock in the business at the time of trial, which he claimed to be his nonmarital property. He claimed that prior to the marriage he entered into an agreement that gave him an 8% interest in the business in exchange for a promissory note from him for $32,000. Ex-Husband never paid the note, and TC found that his father had forgiven the debt. Ex-Husband contended that he owned this portion of the outstanding business shares as his nonmarital property because the forgiveness of the debt constituted a gift to him. Alternatively, he contended that this ownership interest is his nonmarital property because he acquired it before marriage.

As to the remaining shares of corporate stock, during the marriage, there was a stock redemption agreement between Ex-Husband's parents and the corporation whereby the parents sold their 84,800 shares of stock to the corporation for a sum that was paid to them over a ten-year period by corporate earnings. Ex-Husband claimed that these shares were also his parents' gift to him and that he never paid any money, from marital funds or otherwise, for the stock.

Ex-Husband ultimately argued to CA that he had at least an 8% nonmarital interest in the business due to the forgiveness of the payment for the stock by his father, citing KRS 403.190(2)(a) which expressly excludes property acquired by gift from the definition of “marital property” unless “there are significant activities of either spouse which contributed to the increase in value of said property and the income earned therefrom.” Alternatively, Ex-Husband stated that the 8% interest is nonmarital because it was acquired before marriage.

CA provided that if Ex-Husband acquired his ownership interest in exchange for the note, and that indebtedness was later forgiven, then the forgiveness of the indebtedness would be a gift to Ex-Husband and would constitute a nonmarital interest in the corporation. CA thus vacated TC’s determination that Ex-Husband did not have a nonmarital interest in the corporation and remanded the matter for TC to determine the extent of Ex-Husband's interest prior to the redemption agreement and whether such interest was marital or was proven by Ex-Husband to be nonmarital as a result of a gift or nonmarital as having been acquired before marriage.

CA further noted that if, on remand, TC determined that Ex-Husband's interest prior to the redemption was marital, then any increase in ownership interest because of the redemption agreement was also necessarily marital. If TC determined that Ex-Husband's interest prior to the redemption was nonmarital, then it must determine whether any increase in value was marital or nonmarital. CA noted that, in this regard, the case was one of first impression in Kentucky.

CA recognized that under the “source of funds” rule used by Kentucky courts to determine whether property is marital or nonmarital, property is considered to be acquired as it is paid for; thus, the shares of stock sold to the corporation in the stock redemption agreement were not “acquired”, within the meaning of KRS 403.190 and the determination of marital/nonmarital interest, until they were paid for. CA found that these shares were paid for during the marriage over a period of years by corporate earnings and therefore were “acquired” during the marriage and are presumed to be marital property. Ex-Husband attempted to avoid the presumption by arguing that he exchanged his 8% interest for a 100% interest when the stock redemption occurred. CA agreed with Ex-Husband that the value of his ownership interest did not increase at the time of the stock redemption because while the percentage of ownership interest increased, the value of the corporation decreased because of the debt liability created to pay Ex-Husband's parents for their shares. However, although Ex-Husband's ownership interest at the time of the redemption of his parents' shares increased, the value of Ex-Husband's shares did not. Rather, the value of Ex-Husband's shares increased during the marriage as the corporation gradually paid the debt to Ex-Husband's parents. CA provided that if Ex-Husband had a nonmarital interest in the corporation at the time of marriage, the value of that interest likely increased in time as the years passed and the corporation paid off the debt owed to Ex-Husband's parents. CA held that to the extent the increase was due to Ex-Husband's efforts as the primary operator of the business and Ex-Wife's efforts as homemaker, it was marital property. However, to the extent the increase in value was due to general economic conditions, the increase was not marital property.

Ex-Husband's second argument was that TC erred in finding that checks from Ex-Wife's mother written to Ex-Wife after she and Ex-Husband separated constituted a marital debt. After the parties separated, Ex-Wife was awarded $2,000 per month for temporary maintenance and $1,000 for child support. Thereafter, as power of attorney for her mother, Ex-Wife wrote checks totaling $66,714 on her mother's checking account. Some of the checks were written before the maintenance and child support awards to Ex-Wife, and some were written after the awards. Of this amount, $27,300 in checks apparently were written to Ex-Wife herself for cash. Ex-Wife claimed that all the checks were loans from her mother that were needed because she could not meet her living expenses despite her maintenance award of $3,000 per month. She claimed that much of the money went for home maintenance and repair and that the remainder went for living expenses for her and her daughter. Ex-Husband was not aware of the alleged loans, and he argued that the checks were likely to be gifts from Ex-Wife's mother and that Ex-Wife's testimony that the checks were loans and the notations of “loan” on some of the checks were insufficient to prove the existence of a loan. Ex-Wife testified as to the nature of the debts and had documentation in the form of checks from her mother that supported her testimony that there was actually a loan. TC accepted Ex-Wife's claim of indebtedness to her mother based on her testimony and copies of the checks and CA concluded that the evidence was sufficient to support the determination that the checks represented loans, not gifts. However, CA held that to the extent that Ex-Wife may have used loan proceeds for her personal expenses and expenses for her child after being awarded temporary maintenance and child support, those debts should be held to be Ex-Wife's personal debts. To do otherwise would be to increase Ex-Husband's temporary maintenance and child support obligations during that period of time.

Ex-Husband's third and final argument was that TC erred in ordering him to pay 25% of Ex-Wife's attorney fees and expert witness fees because there was not an imbalance in the financial resources of the parties. Ex-husband stated that the marital property was equalized but that the majority of his assigned marital property ($1.2 million) was the family business. Ex-Wife asserted that while Ex-Husband had a salary of over $100,000 per year, as well as potentially more due to retained corporate earnings not paid by the corporation, she was 55 years old at the time, had been out of the work force for 10 years, and had only a high school education, so although the marital property was divided equally, the financial resources of the parties were not balanced due to these additional facts. Ex-Husband also correctly stated that TC made no specific finding that there was an imbalance in the financial resources of the party, but that it appeared to base its award on Ex-Husband's obstructive tactics in failing to comply with discovery requests and orders of the court. Also, Ex-Husband argued that attorney fees may be awarded pursuant to KRS 403.220 only when there is an imbalance in the parties’ financial resources, even though attorney fees may be warranted otherwise under CR 37.01 due to obstruction tactics. CA found that it was not entirely clear whether TC based its award of attorney fees under KRS 403.220 on the financial resources of the parties as well as Ex-Husband's obstructive tactics. CA found that while TC did not specifically address the parties' financial resources prior to making the award, it did cite the statute, which requires the court to consider such resources. CA held that, in light of Ex-Husband's failure to seek a more specific finding from the court, and in light of the fact that a finding of disparity in the parties' financial resources due to the parties' respective incomes was supported by the evidence, TC did not abuse its discretion in awarding Ex-Wife 25% of her attorney fees and expert witness fees.

Digested by Michelle Eisenmenger Mapes, Diana L. Skaggs + Associates.

COA affirms pro se defendant's conviction of stalking prosecutor

WINSTON JOHNSON V. COM.
CRIMINAL: Stalking First Degree
2006-CA-001264
PUBLISHED: AFFIRMING IN PART AND VACATING AND REMANDING IN PART
PANEL:  THOMPSON PRESIDING; NICKELL AND STUMBO CONCUR
COUNTY: MONROE
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

CA affirmed in part and reversed in part Defendant's convictions and sentence for 4 counts of stalking the local county attorney. The lack of a hearing to determine whether Johnson's activity was constitutionally protected was a consequence of his pro se representation and not a basis for reversal of the jury's verdict. There was ample evidence to support a reasonable conclusion that Johnson's conduct during the two-month period during his interaction with the county attorney constituted stalking in the first-degree as defined in KRS 508.130. He stood visibly outside the office holding threatening signs and wearing clothing with intimidating language directed at Stephens. As time passed, he became increasingly threatening toward Stephens to the point of standing directly in front of his office while armed with a gun. Stephens and his staff testified that Johnson's actions caused them to fear for their safety.

However, CA reversed and remanded convictions for 3 of the 4 stalking counts. Commonwealth stipulated that Jonson's conduct constituted a continuing course of action, and thus, counts 2-4 constituted violations of double jeopardy. CA remanded case for resentencing.

Digested by Scott C. Byrd
www.olginandbyrd.com

COA rejects ineffective assistance of counsel claim re claim of involuntary plea: VAUGHN V. COM. (COA 2/15/2008)

ROBERT VAUGHN V. COM.
CRIMINAL:  Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
2006-CA-000901
PUBLISHED: AFFIRMING
PANEL: ACREE PRESIDING; COMBS, TAYLOR CONCUR
COUNTY: JEFFERSON
DATE RENDERED: 2/15/2008

CA affirmed Circuit Court's denial of pro se Defendant's RCr 11.42 motion to vacate guilty plea to murder alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. Vaughn has not met his burden of proving that his guilty plea was involuntary merely because he could have gambled on a jury's willingness to find extreme emotional disturbance. Further, the decision of Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S.Ct. 2348, 147 L.Ed.2d 435 (2000), was not controlling as Vaughn was not sentenced to a penalty that exceeded the maximum penalty prescribed by KRS 532.030(1).

Digested by Scott C. Byrd
www.olginandbyrd.com

6th Cir. Decisions for Week of Mar. 17-21, 2008 (2 Pub. Ky decisions; 3 NPO)

6th Cir. Decisions for Week of Mar. 17-21, 2008 (2 Pub. Ky decisions; 3 NPO);  civil cases briefly digested; all published and nonpublished decisions for week listed with links to full text of decisions at official web site of US COA for Sixth Circuit.

Feb. 8, 2008 - KENTUCKY COURT OF APPEALS DECISIONS (2008:07)

Feb. 8, 2008 -  KENTUCKY COURT OF APPEALS DECISIONS (2008:07)

CRIMINAL: Reasonable suspicion of criminal activity found under totality of circumstances: STONE V. COM. (COA 2/8/2008)

STONE V. COM.
CRIMINAL:  Reasonable suspicion of criminal activity found under totality of circumstances
2006-CA-002569
PUBLISHED: REVERSING AND REMANDING
PANEL: TAYLOR PRESIDING JUDGE; COMBS, NICKELL CONCUR
COUNTY: JEFFERSON
DATE RENDERED: 2/08/2008

CA held TC erred by denying Stone's motion to suppress evidence gathered as a result of his seizure. Considering the totality of the circumstances, the officers did not possess reasonable suspicion of criminal activity necessary to justify Stone's seizure.

It is uncontroverted that Stone was seated in a legally parked vehicle in front of an apartment building around 8:30 p.m. According to the officer's testimony, they observed Stone in his motor vehicle parked in front of an apartment complex for a period of minutes. The vehicle's engine was not running, and the brake lights were illuminated. Stone was violating no law at that time. The apartment complex was located in a high crime area, but the officers did not observe anyone approach Stone's vehicle. The officers then decided to investigate and parked their police cruisers so as to block Stone's vehicle. Shortly thereafter, Stone attempted to exit his vehicle but was ordered to return to the vehicle. The undisputed facts indicated that both officers parked their police cruisers directly behind Stone's motor vehicle. With the positioning of these cruisers, Stone's motor vehicle was effectively blocked in its parking space. Shortly after the police cruisers parked behind his vehicle, Stone then attempted to exit the vehicle but was ordered to return to the vehicle by Officer Green. Considering these undisputed facts, CA concluded that Stone was “seized” at this time. With his vehicle blocked by police cruisers and upon being ordered by the police back into his vehicle, CA believed that a reasonable person would not feel free to leave at this point.

Digested by Scott C. Byrd
www.OlginandByrd.com