[Cite as Thompson v. Thompson, 2013-Ohio-3752.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO
CHERYL L. THOMPSON :
Plaintiff-Appellee : C.A. CASE NO. 2013 CA 1
v. : T.C. NO. 07DR226
ROBERT R. THOMPSON : (Civil appeal from Common
Pleas Court, Domestic Relations)
Defendant-Appellant :
:
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OPINION
Rendered on the 30th day of August , 2013.
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LAURA KENDELL, Atty. Reg. No. 0072490, 262 James E. Bohanan Drive, Vandalia, Ohio
45377
Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee
CATHY J. WEITHMAN, Atty. Reg. No. 0002089 , 201 West Court Street, Urbana, Ohio
43078
Attorney for Defendant-Appellant
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FROELICH, J.
{¶ 1} Robert R. Thompson appeals from a judgment of the Champaign
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County Court of Common Pleas, which ordered that an outstanding Ohio tax liability be
shared equally by Mr. Thompson and his former wife, Cheryl L. Thompson, and credited
each party for amounts already paid toward the debt. Mr. Thompson challenges the amount
he was credited with having paid. For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court
will be affirmed.
{¶ 2} The current dispute involves tax obligations owed to the IRS and the State
of Ohio from a business operated during the parties’ marriage. The apportionment of the
outstanding federal tax debt between the parties was resolved in proceedings related to the
2007 dissolution of their marriage. Pursuant to the separation agreement incorporated into
the dissolution decree, the parties made payments on the IRS debt for several years after the
dissolution of their marriage; Mrs. Thompson made monthly payments toward this debt to
Mr. Thompson, and Mr. Thompson made the payments to the IRS.
{¶ 3} After the dissolution of their marriage, the Thompsons learned of an
additional tax debt owed to the State. According to Mr. Thompson, the parties entered into
an additional agreement with the State for the payment of that debt at a rate of $200 per
month, and, in 2008, entered into a personal agreement that Mrs. Thompson would pay Mr.
Thompson $100 per month toward this Ohio debt (in addition to the amount she was paying
on the IRS obligation), which Mr. Thompson would then pay to the State..
{¶ 4} In July 2011, Mrs. Thompson stopped making payments to Mr. Thompson.
In August 2011, Mr. Thompson filed a motion to find Mrs. Thompson in contempt. In
March 2012, while the contempt motion was pending, Mr. Thompson filed a Motion to
Determine State Tax Lien Payment; Mrs. Thompson construed this motion as “essentially a
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60(B) motion,” and she opposed it. In July 2012, the trial court held a hearing on the
motions. In January 2013, the court concluded that the parties would share the Ohio tax
liability equally and that Mr. Thompson’s motion to hold Mrs. Thompson in contempt was
“moot;” it also determined the amount that each party would be credited for amounts already
paid toward the Ohio tax liability.
{¶ 5} Mr. Thompson appeals from the trial court’s decision, raising one
assignment of error. Mrs. Thompson did not file a brief.
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT
DEFENDANT-APPELLANT SHOULD NOT BE CREDITED FOR HIS
PAYMENTS TO THE STATE OF OHIO DELINQUENT TAX
OBLIGATION.
{¶ 6} On appeal, Mr. Thompson challenges the court’s failure to credit him for
payments he purportedly made toward the Ohio tax liability; he does not challenge the trial
court’s division of the Ohio tax liability, the amount it credited Mrs. Thompson with having
paid, or its finding that his motion for a finding of contempt related to the federal tax
obligation was “moot.” He contends that the State tax matter “should be sent back for a
determination of payments [he made to the State] * * * which would offset the amount he
owes on said obligation.”
{¶ 7} On factual issues and questions of credibility of witnesses, appellate courts
generally defer to the trial court’s findings. “The ‘rationale of giving deference to the
findings of the trial court rests with the knowledge that the trial judge is best able to view the
witnesses and observe their demeanor, gestures and voice inflections, and use these
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observations in weighing the credibility of the proffered testimony.’” In re J.Y., 2d Dist.
Miami No. 07-CA-35, 2008-Ohio-3485, ¶ 33, quoting from Seasons Coal Co., Inc. v.
Cleveland, 10 Ohio St.3d 77, 80, 461 N.E.2d 1273 (1984).
{¶ 8} The evidence presented at the hearing was as follows.
{¶ 9} In 2007, as a result of an IRS audit, the parties learned that they had an
outstanding tax debt from previous years related to the operation of their business,
Thompson Tire. The parties entered into an agreement with the IRS to pay $150 per month
for ten years in satisfaction of this debt.
{¶ 10} In October 2007, the Thompsons filed a Petition for Dissolution of their
marriage, to which they attached a separation agreement. The separation agreement
provided that each party would be responsible for half of the amount owed to the IRS. This
agreement was incorporated into the decree of dissolution, which was filed on December 27,
2007. Mrs. Thompson paid Mr. Thompson $75 per month toward this debt for several
years thereafter, and he made the $150 per month payment to the IRS.
{¶ 11} Some time after the dissolution of the parties’ marriage, they realized that
they had an additional outstanding tax obligation to the State of Ohio in the amount of
$49,141.53, also related to Thompson Tire for years during which they were married.
According to Mr. Thompson, the IRS agent with whom they worked had informed them that
the IRS’s findings would be reported to the State, and that there may be additional tax
consequences to the Thompsons; Mrs. Thompson claimed that she did not learn from the
IRS that there could be State tax consequences and that she first learned about the Ohio tax
liability after Mr. Thompson filed his motion for contempt.
[Cite as Thompson v. Thompson, 2013-Ohio-3752.]
{¶ 12} Mr. Thompson testified that he received Mrs. Thompson’s checks for $175
regularly at the beginning of the month from 2008 until July 2011, and that he paid $200 to
the State and $150 to the IRS each month. He stated that he continued to make these
payments, in full, even when Mrs. Thompson stopped making her payments to him.
However, he expressed uncertainty about when he became aware of the Ohio debt and began
paying on it.
{¶ 13} An August 2010 letter from the Ohio Attorney General was admitted into
evidence, which reflected an offer from the State to forego collection proceedings if the
Thompsons paid $200 per month toward the outstanding debt for the period of September
2010 through August 2011. No evidence was presented that this agreement – or other
agreements like it – had ever been executed. However, beginning in November 2008, Mrs.
Thompson increased her monthly payments to Mr. Thompson from $75 to $175, as
documented by her checking records. At the hearing, Mrs. Thompson claimed to have “no
clue” why she had increased her payment to Mr. Thompson, but he claimed that the
increased payment reflected their agreement to pay an additional $200 per month ($100
each) on the State tax liability.
{¶ 14} Both parties also testified that they had some tax refunds withheld by the
IRS.
{¶ 15} Mrs. Thompson claimed that she did not know about the additional debt
owed to the State until after Mr. Thompson filed his motion for contempt; thereafter, an
acquaintance of Mrs. Thompson who worked at a “tax agency” did some research for her
and uncovered a letter from the State to Mr. Thompson about the debt. Mrs. Thompson
testified that this was the first time she saw any documentation of the debt to the State.
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Although Mrs. Thompson claimed that she had been informed by an IRS agent several years
earlier about the possibility of innocent spouse relief, she apparently did not pursue that
possibility until after the contempt action was filed, when her acquaintance at the tax agency
agreed to look into it for her.
{¶ 16} Despite Mr. Thompson’s claims at the hearing that he had been making
payments to the State for several years, he did not present any evidence that he had entered
into a payment plan with the State. He also did not present any documentary evidence to
support his testimony that he paid $200 per month to the State beginning in 2008, such as
cancelled checks or a statement of the outstanding balance on the account. By contrast,
Mrs. Thompson provided documentation of the payments she made to Mr. Thompson, such
as cancelled checks and bank statements, although she denied that any portion of these
payments was for the State tax liability.
{¶ 17} In its January 2, 2012 judgment entry, the trial court found that the alleged
contempt for failure to pay $75 toward the IRS tax debt was “moot due to the parties’
agreement.”1 The court also found that the evidence was “insufficient” to conclude that the
parties had entered into a formal payment agreement with the State regarding that tax debt.
It found, however, that the Ohio tax debt should be shared equally by the parties, “in the
spirit with their agreement” regarding the IRS debt and in light of the fact that the Thompson
Tire business had been a marital asset. The court credited Mrs. Thompson with $8,305.96
toward the IRS debt attributable to federal tax refunds that were intercepted from 2001 to
1
Mr. Thompson has not appealed from this portion of the trial court’s judgment.
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2010, with having paid $7,651 toward the IRS debt prior to September 2011, and with
having paid $3,300 to Mr. Thompson toward the State tax liability, based on 33
supplemental monthly payments of $100 to Mr. Thompson. The court found that Mr.
Thompson had $1,200 in tax refunds intercepted by the IRS and had paid an additional $217
to the IRS, for a total credit toward the IRS liability of $1,417. The court found that Mr.
Thompson had failed to provide any evidence that he had made any payments toward the
State tax obligation.
{¶ 18} The trial court apparently credited Mr. Thompson’s testimony that Mrs.
Thompson had made payments to him toward the State tax liability – a claim that she denied
– but did not credit Mr. Thompson’s testimony that he had, in turn, made payments to the
State. The court concluded that Mr. Thompson was not entitled to any credit for payments
because he “failed to provide any evidence that he made payments to the State.” By
contrast, Mrs. Thompson’s payments to Mr. Thompson were documented, although their
purpose was in dispute. These determinations of credibility and facts were in the trial
court’s purview.
{¶ 19} Based on the record before us, we cannot conclude that the trial court
abused its discretion in reaching the conclusion that it did. In the absence of any specific
testimony or documentary evidence as to what amounts, if any, Mr. Thompson had paid, the
trial court could have reasonably concluded that no credit was due or that the amount of any
credit could not be accurately determined.
{¶ 20} The assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 21} The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed.
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FAIN, P.J. and DONOVAN, J., concur.
Copies mailed to:
Laura Kendell
Cathy J. Weithman
Hon. Brett A. Gilbert