IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. COA22-111
Filed 06 June 2023
Mecklenburg County, No. 14 CVD 002667
ANDREA CROWELL, Plaintiff,
v.
WILLIAM CROWELL, Defendant.
Appeal by Plaintiff from order entered 16 July 2021 by Judge Christy T. Mann
in Mecklenburg County District Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 4 October 2022.
Law Office of Thomas D. Bumgardner, PLLC, by Thomas D. Bumgardner, and
Plumides, Romano & Johnson, PC, by Richard B. Johnson, for plaintiff-
appellant.
No brief filed for defendant-appellee.
MURPHY, Judge.
In Crowell v. Crowell, 372 N.C. 362, 368 (2019), a previous appeal in this case,
our Supreme Court held that the trial court may not specifically order Plaintiff to
liquidate items of separate property to satisfy a distributive award. However, the
previous holding did not prohibit the trial court from entering a distributive award
that incidentally or indirectly affects Plaintiff’s separate property. Where the trial
court entered a new order that did not directly affect Plaintiff’s separate property
rights, that order did not violate the law of this case.
CROWELL V. CROWELL
Opinion of the Court
However, a trial court may not reduce a distributive award to a money
judgment in an initial order. Here, where the end result of the previous appeal was
a total vacation of the appealed order, the trial court was not permitted to initially
reduce the distributive award in the new order to a money judgment on remand as
no proper grounds existed to do so. Accordingly, we partially vacate the new order
and remand for the entry of a proper distributive award.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff and Defendant were married on 11 July 1998, separated on 3
September 2013, and divorced in April 2015. As of the date of separation, Plaintiff
and Defendant had incurred a significant amount of marital debt. On 17 February
2014, Plaintiff filed a complaint against Defendant for equitable distribution,
alimony, and postseparation support. Defendant filed an answer to the complaint
and included a counterclaim for equitable distribution.
From 6 July 2016 to 8 July 2016, the issues of equitable distribution and
alimony were tried in Mecklenburg County District Court. The parties had stipulated
in the final pretrial order that 14212 Stewarts Bend Lane, 14228 Stewarts Bend
Lane, and 14512 Myers Mill Lane were all Plaintiff’s separate property, and the trial
court distributed the properties, along with their underlying debts, to Plaintiff. The
trial court also found the following:
As a result of this equitable distribution Defendant[] will
have more debt than property and Plaintiff[] will have to
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Opinion of the Court
liquidate her property to pay the distributive award. . . .
Neither party has any liquid marital property left. . . .
There was no choice but to distribute all the debts to
Defendant[] in his case which results in a heavy burden he
may never be able to pay before his death and a distributive
award owed by Plaintiff[] that she may never be able to pay
before her death.
On 15 August 2016, the trial court entered its equitable distribution judgment
and alimony order, denying alimony and specifically ordering Plaintiff to liquidate
14212 Stewarts Bend Lane and 14228 Stewarts Bend Lane to satisfy the distributive
award to Defendant. On 14 September 2016, Plaintiff appealed from the equitable
distribution judgment and alimony order; and, on 2 January 2018, this Court issued
a divided opinion. See Crowell v. Crowell, 257 N.C. App. 264, 285 (2018). The
Majority opinion held, in relevant part, that the trial court did not err by
“considering” Plaintiff’s separate property and ordering her to liquidate it to satisfy
a distributive award to Defendant. Id. However, on 16 August 2019, our Supreme
Court issued a unanimous opinion reversing this Court’s affirmation of the equitable
distribution judgment and order and remanding with further orders to remand to the
trial court. Crowell v. Crowell, 372 N.C. 362, 368 (2019). The Court concluded that
“the trial court distributed separate property . . . when it ordered Plaintiff to liquidate
her separate property to pay a distributive award” and that “there is no distinction
to be made between ‘considering’ and ‘distributing’ a party’s separate property in
making a distribution of marital property or debt where the effect of the resulting
order is to divest a party of property rights she acquired before marriage.” Id. Our
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Opinion of the Court
Supreme Court ultimately held the trial court could not order Plaintiff to liquidate
her separate property to satisfy the distributive award because “trial courts are not
permitted to disturb rights in separate property in making equitable distribution
award orders.” Id. at 370.
Pursuant to our Supreme Court’s holding, the trial court held a hearing on 10
February 2021; and, on 16 July 2021, the trial court issued an Amended Equitable
Distribution Judgment and Alimony Order. The trial court concluded “Plaintiff[] has
the ability to pay the distributive award as outlined herein[,]” incorporated the bulk
of the 2016 order by reference, and entered the following distribution order:
1. Paragraph 6 (a) – (d) of the Decretal Section of the
Original Order is hereby amended as follows:
In order to accomplish the equitable distribution, Plaintiff[]
is required to pay a distributive award of Eight Hundred
Sixteen Thousand Seven Hundred Ninety-Four Dollars
and no/100 ($816,794[.00]) to be paid as follows:
a. A lump [sum] payment of Ninety Thousand Dollars
and no/100 ($90,000[.00]) within sixty (60) days from [10
February 2021].
b. A second lump [sum] payment of One Hundred
Thousand Dollars and no/100 ($100,000[.00]) within
ninety (90) days of [20 February 2021].
c. A third lump [sum] payment of Two Hundred Ten
Thousand Dollars and no/100 ($210,000[.00]) on or
before [10 February 2022].
d. The balance of Four Hundred Twenty-Four Thousand
Two Hundred Ninety-Four Dollars and no/100
([$424,294.00]) owed is reduced to judgment and shall be
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Opinion of the Court
taxed with post judgment interest and collected in
accordance with North Carolina law.
2. Except as specifically modified herein, the parties’
separate property, marital property, and divisible property
shall remain as it was previously classified, valued, and
distributed in the [15 August 2016 order].
3. Except as specifically modified herein, the [15 August
2016 order] shall remain in full force and effect.
(Marks omitted.) Plaintiff timely appealed.
ANALYSIS
In substance, Plaintiff makes two arguments on appeal: (A) that the trial
court’s 16 July 2021 order was erroneous because, in effect, the order required
Plaintiff to liquidate the same properties at issue in the first appeal and (B) the trial
court was not authorized under the Equitable Distribution Act to reduce the
distributive award in the 16 July 2021 order to a money judgment.1 For the reasons
stated below, the current order does not violate the law of this case; however, as the
trial court was not authorized to reduce the distributive award in the 2021 order to a
money judgment, we vacate and remand in part for the entry of a distributive award
consistent with this opinion.
1 Plaintiff also argues the trial court was without jurisdiction to enter injunctive relief while
the matter was on appeal. However, while the Record contains Defendant’s motion for injunctive relief
and Plaintiff’s response to that motion, nowhere does it appear that the trial court actually ruled on
the motion. It was Plaintiff’s duty and opportunity to supply an adequate record on appeal, and we
decline to opine on an order not presented to us. See N.C. R. App. P. 9(a)(1)(h) (2023) (“In appeals from
the trial division of the General Court of Justice, review is solely upon the record on appeal. . . . The
printed record in civil actions . . . shall contain[] . . . a copy of the judgment, order, or other
determination from which appeal is taken[.]”).
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Opinion of the Court
A. 2021 Order
Plaintiff first argues the trial court erred in entering the 16 July 2021 order
because the practical effect of the order was to require Plaintiff to liquidate the same
properties our Supreme Court held the trial court could not order her to liquidate
during the previous appeal, thus violating the law of this case. See Spoor v. Barth,
257 N.C. App. 721, 728 (2018) (citing Hayes v. City of Wilmington, 243 N.C. 525, 536
(1956)) (“Under the law-of-the-case doctrine, when an appellate court passes on a
question and remands the cause for further proceedings, the questions there settled
become the law of the case, both in subsequent proceedings in the trial court and on
subsequent appeal, provided the same facts and the same questions which were
determined in the previous appeal are involved in the second appeal.”). Plaintiff
breaks this argument into three distinct sub-arguments: first, because the trial
court’s finding that the only way Plaintiff could satisfy a distributive award was to
liquidate separate property was undisturbed in the previous appeal, the effect of the
distributive award in the 2021 order remains violative of our Supreme Court’s
previous holding; second, the 2021 order attempts to change the finding of fact that
Plaintiff was unable to satisfy the distributive award without liquidating the
properties; and, third, the trial court exceeded the scope of the previous holding by
including, without taking new evidence, that “Plaintiff[] has the ability to pay the
distributive award as outlined herein.”
Each of these arguments is predicated on a misreading of our Supreme Court’s
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holding. The original order was not overturned on the basis that it had some
propensity to affect Plaintiff’s separate property; rather, it was overturned because
“the trial court ordered [P]laintiff to use specific items of separate property to satisfy
marital debt, immediately affecting her rights in that property.” Crowell, 372 N.C.
at 369 (second emphasis added). Indeed, the Court’s opinion explicitly recognized
that a distributive award with a collateral effect on separate property is not only
permissible, but to be expected:
[W]here a marriage is in debt, it is difficult to envision a
scenario in which the making of a distributive award will
not affect a party’s separate property in some manner.
Nevertheless, within the confines of N.C.G.S. § 50-20, the
trial court in this case was only permitted to use that debt
in calculating the amount of the distributive award, not to
dictate how the debt was to be paid.
Id. at 371; see also id. at 369 n.4 (recognizing “a trial judge’s undoubted authority to
consider the amount of separate property held by each party in determining the
amount of marital property and debt that should be distributed to each party at the
conclusion of the equitable distribution process”).
In light of a proper reading of the final holding in the previous appeal, each of
Plaintiff’s arguments fail. The trial court’s 2021 order does not require Plaintiff to
liquidate separate property, nor would she be required to do so if she were to obtain
the funds necessary to pay the distributive award from a different source. Even if we
were to take as fixed the trial court’s finding that Plaintiff will only have the means
to pay the current distributive award by liquidating the properties at issue in the first
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Opinion of the Court
appeal,2 such a finding does not itself transform the ensuing order into a command
“to use specific items of separate property to satisfy marital debt[.]” Id. at 369. And
the trial court’s new conclusion of law that “Plaintiff[] has the ability to pay the
distributive award as outlined herein” is entirely consistent with this distinction in
light of Plaintiff’s ability to liquidate the property if that is how she chooses to satisfy
the distributive award. Thus, the trial court’s 2021 order in no way violates the law
of this case.
B. Distributive Award as a Money Judgment
Plaintiff next argues the trial court erred by reducing the distributive award
to a money judgment. Although much of this argument is derivative of her position
that the 2021 order violates the law of the case, the bulk of it concerns the trial court’s
authority to reduce the distributive award to the form of a judgment. According to
Plaintiff, the trial court was not permitted to reduce the award to judgment. We
agree.
Under N.C.G.S. § 50-20, a distributive award is “payable either in a lump sum
or over a period of time in fixed amounts”; no specific statutory provision authorizes
payment in the form of a money judgment. N.C.G.S. § 50-20(b)(3) (2021). While we
2This proposition, we note, is based on an incorrect reading of the case’s procedural history.
The North Carolina Supreme Court’s holding was not limited to a narrow correction of the original
distribution order; rather, it reversed our partial affirmance of the trial court’s order, and the other
part of that mandate was to vacate. See Crowell, 257 N.C. App. at 285 (2018), rev’d, 372 N.C. at 371.
In other words, the end result of the previous appeal was to fully vacate the equitable distribution
order; the original findings of fact were not, as Plaintiff contends, “undisturbed on appeal.”
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Opinion of the Court
have previously suggested in dicta that, despite the lack of express statutory
authorization, past-due equitable distribution payments may be reduced to a money
judgment, see Romulus v. Romulus, 216 N.C. App. 28, 36-37 (2011), we only did so to
an extent commensurate with the analogous statutory provisions for past-due child
support and alimony payments. See N.C.G.S. § 50-13.4(f)(8) (2021) (“[P]ast due
periodic [child support] payments may by motion in the cause or by a separate action
be reduced to judgment which shall be a lien as other judgments and may include
provisions for periodic payments.”); N.C.G.S. § 50-16.7(i) (2021) (“[P]ast-due periodic
[alimony] payments may by motion in the cause or by a separate action be reduced to
judgment which shall be a lien as other judgments.”). However, our observation in
Romulus specifically concerned an action to enforce past-due payments and has never
been extended to initial distributive awards.
Here, the distributive award at issue was not past due. The 2021 order, despite
being informed by the same valuations used to create the order at issue in the first
appeal and nominally having been “amended,” was actually an entirely new order.3
And, while there is precedent for the ability for an award to be past-due on remand
where an award is partially, rather than fully, vacated, an appellate court must
clarify such a limitation on its holding in order for that rule to apply. See Quick v.
3For the reasons stated previously, the effect of the Supreme Court’s opinion in the previous
appeal was to fully vacate the original order and the distribution award it authorized. See supra fn.
2.
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Quick, 305 N.C. 446, 462 (1982) (“We have vacated only that portion of the trial court
order dealing with the amount of alimony. The parties’ stipulation that plaintiff
is entitled to alimony is in no way disturbed and remains in full force and effect for
the hearing on remand.”), superseded in part by statute, N.C.G.S. § 50-13.4(f)(9)
(1983).
Without any limitation on the previous order of our Supreme Court, the award
contained in the current order could not have been past due, and even the reasoning
in dicta in Romulus would not authorize its reduction to a money judgment. We
vacate the portion of the trial court’s 2021 order concerning the form and amount of
the distributive award—specifically, item (1) of the decretal section of the Amended
Equitable Distribution Judgment and Alimony Order—and remand for the entry of a
form of distributive award authorized by N.C.G.S. § 50-20.
CONCLUSION
As our Supreme Court’s opinion in the previous appeal did not prohibit the
entry of distributive awards with incidental effects on Plaintiff’s separate property,
the trial court’s Amended Equitable Distribution Judgment and Alimony Order did
not violate the law of this case. However, the trial court was not authorized to reduce
the distributive award in the 2021 order to a money judgment, and we vacate and
remand in part for the entry of a distributive award consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Chief Judge STROUD and Judge GORE concur.
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