IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
December 5, 2000 Session
BILLIE MAE MANIS v. DONALD RALPH MANIS
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sevier County
No. 96-405-II Hon. Richard R. Vance, Judge
FILED JANUARY 25, 2001
No. E1999-01927-COA-R3-CV
Wife sought a divorce after 41 years of marriage on grounds of inappropriate marital conduct. With
Husband acting pro se, the parties filed a Marital Dissolution Agreement. After retaining counsel,
Husband withdrew the agreement and filed a counterclaim for divorce, also alleging inappropriate
marital conduct. The Trial Court appointed a Special Master, who conducted two hearings and filed
a lengthy and comprehensive Special Master’s Report. Both parties filed Objections to the Report,
and the Special Master held a third hearing addressing the issues raised in the parties’ objections.
Husband filed Objections to the Special Master’s Amended Report. Wife had no objections to the
Amended Report. The Trial Court held a fourth hearing, at which arguments of counsel and
Husband’s offer of additional proof were made. The Trial Court’s Final Judgment adopted the
Report of the Special Master, as amended, and affirmed the findings of fact and conclusions of law
of the Special Master with minor exceptions. Husband raises ten issues, primarily involving the
Special Master’s valuation and distribution of marital assets and the amount of alimony he was
ordered to pay. Wife contests the amounts awarded to her for periodic alimony and for her interest
in the marital estate, and also claims that the Trial Court erred in not placing more restrictions on
Husband’s future business transactions so as to more fully protect her interest in her marital share.
We affirm the judgment of the Trial Court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Trial Court Affirmed; Case Remanded.
D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS , J., and
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., joined.
F. D. Gibson, Maryville, Tennessee, for Appellant Donald Ralph Manis.
Scarlett Beaty, Knoxville, for Appellee Billie May Manis.
OPINION
Background
Ms. Billie Mae Manis (Appellee, hereinafter “Wife”) and Mr. Donald Ralph Manis
(Appellant, hereinafter “Husband”) had been married for 41 years when Wife filed for divorce on
the grounds of inappropriate marital conduct. Husband and Wife both are 68 years old. Wife has
worked outside the home for less than two years during her married life, at stores such as K-Mart,
and in Mr. Manis’ businesses. Husband has owned and managed various businesses in Sevier and
surrounding counties, including pawn shops and horseback riding enterprises, throughout the
marriage. He testified that he retired from salaried work in those businesses during the course of this
litigation. The record shows, however, that he still controls these businesses and receives income
from them.
When Wife filed her Complaint for divorce, Husband was not represented by counsel.
Four days after the Complaint was filed, the parties filed a Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”)
with Husband still unrepresented. The MDA provided that Wife would be granted a divorce based
on Husband’s inappropriate marital conduct. The property settlement portion of the MDA provided
that Wife would receive the marital home in Powell, Tennessee, and would assume the mortgage
thereon, as well as another house in Powell, and a one-half interest in a residence in Sevier County,
which each of the parties would have the use of for six months each year. Four other parcels of real
estate were to be held jointly by the parties, and if any of these were sold, the proceeds were to be
divided equally. Husband was to pay $8,000 monthly in alimony “until [Wife] dies or remarries and
for as long as the Husband makes a gross income of $200,000 per year.”
One year later the Trial Court permitted Wife’s counsel to withdraw because Wife
refused to prosecute and apparently had abandoned the case. The Trial Court ordered Wife to obtain
new counsel within thirty days. Five days later Wife, represented by new counsel, filed a second
Complaint for divorce in Knox County, which was later dismissed. Husband retained counsel and
filed a Counterclaim for divorce in which he charged that Wife was guilty of inappropriate marital
conduct. Husband asked the Court to enforce the MDA or, in the alternative, upon a hearing, to
make a fair and equitable division of the Parties’ real and personal property. Husband, however,
soon moved to withdraw the MDA. Wife did not oppose the withdrawal of the MDA. The Trial
Court granted Husband’s motion to withdraw the MDA and appointed a Special Master to review
the personal and business financial situations of the parties, conduct an accounting, and submit
findings to the Court. The Trial Court also ordered Husband to pay Wife $5,500 per month as
alimony pendente lite.
Both parties were deposed. The Special Master conducted hearings on May 21st and
June 26th, 1998. Both parties and six other witnesses were heard and fifteen exhibits concerning the
parties’ financial situation were introduced. The witnesses included real estate appraisers, pawn
brokers, and James Shaver, CPA, who provides financial reporting services including tax returns for
Husband’s businesses. The exhibits included property appraisals, bank account records and monthly
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income and expense statements. By agreement of the parties, the Special Master also met informally
with Husband’s CPA.
On November 30, 1998, the Special Master filed a detailed and comprehensive 20-
page Special Master’s Report. That Report states that the witnesses’ testimony at the hearings “was
at many times conflicting, contradictory and irreconcilable, requiring the Special Master to make
difficult decisions regarding credibility.” He itemized the parties’ assets and meticulously described
the valuation methods used to prepare his Report. Applying the described valuation methods, the
Special Master determined, among other things, that Husband’s business Horsing Around, Inc., had
a value of $85,000. He also determined that Fortunes Untold, Inc., which operates four (now five)
pawn shops, had a value of $579,289, which he reduced by 30 percent to account for the 30 percent
of stock owned by the parties’ daughter, Donna Manis. He then discounted Donna Manis’ interest
by 25 percent because Husband retains the controlling interest, thus leaving a marital estate value
for Fortunes Untold of $448,949.28. The parties, through counsel, earlier had agreed that the Trial
Court should accept certain amounts as the marital estate values of their remaining real properties,
and the Special Master accepted the agreed values. This resulted in a total marital estate of
$847,949.
The Special Master then determined that the marital estate should be divided equally,
with Wife receiving a total award of $423,974.64. To accomplish the division of marital assets, he
awarded Wife the marital home on Della Drive in Powell, Tennessee, with equity of $120,000, and
onerated Husband with the mortgage. Wife was also awarded property on North Ridge Road, valued
at $100,000. To secure her remaining $203,974.64 share of the marital estate, the Special Master
granted her liens against Husband’s business properties and required Husband to deposit his shares
of stock in Horsing Around, Inc. and Fortunes Untold, Inc. with the Clerk of the Circuit Court as
security. Husband also was enjoined from issuing additional stock or otherwise divesting his 100
percent stock ownership in Horsing Around, Inc. or his 70 percent interest in Fortunes Untold, Inc.
without judicial approval. All sales of real estate owned by Husband were to be conditioned upon
and subject to Court approval, including price and the amount of the proceeds to be applied to
satisfaction of Wife’s equitable distribution award. The Special Master made other findings and
dispositions as to specific assets and liabilities.
Finally, the Special Master found that Wife is in need of alimony and Husband has
the ability to pay. He opined that, although public policy and the legislative intent in Tennessee
favors alimony in solido or rehabilitative alimony, Wife’s lack of earning ability, Husband’s high
earning ability, Husband’s fault, the 45 year marriage, and Wife’s need preponderate in favor of
periodic alimony in this case, payable until death or remarriage of Wife or death of Husband. The
Special Master found that Husband had been required to pay $1,000 per month in excessive alimony
from his first payment under the Court’s pendente lite award, and awarded Husband a credit for this
excess against any accrued alimony arrearage or against future alimony payments. He ordered
Husband to pay $2,327.67 in base alimony per month, plus $744.77 to extinguish the mortgage on
the marital residence and to pay, as alimony, the cost of two life insurance policies upon his life.
Husband also was ordered to make a payment on March 1 of every year to offset Wife’s tax liability
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for the alimony, to maintain health insurance for Wife, and to pay Wife’s unreimbursed medical and
medication expenses. Wife was awarded reasonable attorney fees, and fees of the Special Master
were taxed 2/3 to Husband and 1/3 to Wife. The Special Master ordered that “any further issues for
which the parties desire an explicit finding of fact or ruling may be raised within 15 days of this
opinion.”
Both parties filed numerous Objections to the Special Master’s Report. Husband
objected to the amount of alimony awarded. Husband argued that the Special Master was appointed
in January 1998 but did not file his report until November 30, 1998, and in that interim, Husband
had retired, so that he no longer had an income sufficient to pay the amount of alimony ordered.
Further, Husband argued that he had voluntarily given Wife $8,000 each month from July 1995
through October 1, 1998 for her support, for a total of more than $300,000, and that the Special
Master should have considered these payments as part of Wife’s share of the marital estate or as
excess alimony. He sought credit against future alimony for those voluntary payments. Husband
further alleged that the Special Master had erred on virtually all of the findings of fact and
conclusions of law as to the valuation of marital property. Finally, Husband stated that he was in the
process of retaining new counsel, and he “specifically reserves the right to amend this pleading after
his new counsel has had an opportunity to review the pleadings and transcripts of this cause.”
Wife raised a dozen Objections and Requests for Clarification to the Special Master’s
Report. She complained about the Special Master’s acknowledgment that Donna Manis, the parties’
daughter, is one-third owner of Fortunes Untold, Inc. She sought an interest in the proceeds from
Husband’s recent sale of exotic animals, inquired about the value of a lot in Chalet Village,
requested that Husband be onerated with the expense of the property taxes on the marital home, and
complained about the Special Master’s deduction from the value of real property for Husband’s
potential obligations on a civil suit and a bond. Wife objected to the Special Master’s finding that
her pendente lite alimony was excessive and to the amount of permanent alimony awarded. Wife
asked that the remaining portion of her marital distribution be paid in increments of $50,000 on July
31, 1999 and $50,000 each six months thereafter, to be paid in full by December 31, 2001, plus the
statutory judgment rate of ten percent until paid in full. Finally, Wife asked the Special Master to
take into account Husband’s lack of credibility and determine that the estate valuation “be considered
an absolute minimum,” and that Wife’s share be increased because Wife “believes that the
Defendant has much more property, assets and cash than he acknowledged before the court.”
Husband retained new counsel and filed various motions, including a motion seeking
to reduce the alimony pendente lite and raising further Objections to the Special Master’s Report.
The Special Master held a third hearing to deal with seven issues, including Husband’s retirement
from active employment in his business enterprises, his sale of some exotic animals which had been
business properties, two business liabilities which had arisen, and Husband’s transfer to the parties’
daughter of additional stock of Fortunes Untold. The Special Master examined those transactions
and filed an Amended Special Master’s Report which adjusted the division of the marital estate in
accordance with some of them. He found that Husband’s retirement should not cause a reduction
in Wife’s alimony for various reasons.
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The matter was heard before the Trial Court on April 26, 1999, on the pleadings, the
record as a whole, including the Special Master’s Reports, and arguments of counsel. Husband
sought to introduce further testimony at the hearing, but the Trial Court held that the evidence should
have been presented to the Special Master. The Trial Court rendered a Memorandum Opinion
adopting the Report of the Special Master, as amended, and affirming the findings of fact and
conclusions of law of the Special Master with some exceptions. The Trial Court found that much
of the proof had been contradictory, convoluted, vague, uncertain, and incapable of reconciliation.
Neither party had produced accurate records of income and expenses, and the credibility of the
parties had been an issue from the beginning. The Trial Court opined that “ . . . given the
complexity, given the issues and the very thorough investigation by the Special Master, the Court
will adopt the report of the Special Master, as amended, and affirms the findings of fact and
conclusions of law of the Special Master with some exceptions . . . .”
The Trial Court granted Wife a divorce on grounds of inappropriate marital conduct.
Based on specific findings of fact as to Wife’s age, education, health and other factors, the Trial
Court awarded her the amount of periodic alimony set by the Special Master. The Court modified
the Special Master’s findings so that Husband will receive a credit for any income tax liability he
is ordered to pay on Wife’s alimony and for any amount of Social Security benefits Wife may receive
in any year. The Court further modified the award of alimony by reversing the Special Master’s
finding that the amount of pendente lite alimony Wife received was excessive. Finally, the Court
reversed the Special Master’s award of Wife’s attorney’s fees and ordered that each party pay his or
her own attorney’s fees, and that the fees of the Special Master be divided equally between the
parties.
The Final Judgment values the marital estate at $884,997.94. The one-half of the
estate awarded to Wife is comprised of the aforementioned real property plus a judgment and lien
against the assets awarded to Husband for the remainder of her equitable division in the amount of
$221,249.49. After entry of the Judgment, Wife filed a Motion to Alter or Amend, asking the Trial
Court to order Husband to make lump sum payments of at least $50,000 every six months until the
judgment is satisfied and to encumber Husband’s businesses, as well as Husband’s personal interests
in those businesses, until the Judgment is satisfied. Husband responded that the Court was without
authority to encumber the corporations, that the Judgment provided adequate protection of Wife’s
interests, and that he was financially unable to make the demanded $50,000 payments. The Trial
Court denied Wife’s Motion.1
Husband appeals, raising ten issues concerning the Special Master’s valuation and
distribution of the marital estate, the amount of temporary and permanent alimony and the Trial
Court’s refusal to hear testimony on his objections to the Special Master’s Amended Report. Wife
complains of the valuation and distribution of the marital estate, the amount of permanent alimony
awarded, the Court’s refusal to order a lien on any dividends distributed to Husband from his
1
The record indicates that at this point, coun sel for both parties attempted to withdraw from representation of
their clients.
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corporations, the Court’s refusal to require Husband to obtain Court approval before selling any
corporate property, and the Court’s refusal to award Wife her attorney fees.
Discussion
The Trial Court’s order referring certain matters to the Special Master, the Special
Master’s Report, and the Trial Court’s Order adopting the findings and conclusions of the Special
Master affect our standard of review on appeal. A concurrent finding of a Special Master and a Trial
Court is conclusive on appeal, except where it is upon an issue not proper to be referred, where it
is based on an error of law or a mixed question of fact and law, or where it is not supported by any
material evidence. Long v. Long, 957 S.W.2d 825, 828 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997); Aussenberg v.
Kramer, 944 S.W.2d 367, 370 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996); Archer v. Archer, 907 S.W.2d 412, 415
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).
Husband raises ten issues in this appeal, which can fairly be summarized as:
1. Whether the Trial Court erred in the valuation and
distribution of the marital estate?
2. Whether the Trial Court erred in the amount of alimony
pendente lite or the amount of periodic alimony awarded or in
requiring Husband to pay Wife an additional sum for her
federal income tax obligation arising from alimony?
3. Whether the Trial Court erred in refusing to hear additional
testimony after the Special Master had conducted three
hearings in this matter?
Husband’s specific complaints about the Trial Court’s valuation of the marital estate
include: (1) the Special Master erred in accepting, with the concurrence of Husband’s first attorney,
Wife’s valuations on certain marital property; (2) the Special Master erred in determining that the
proceeds from the sale of exotic animals were marital property; (3) the Trial Court erred in refusing
to grant him “credit either in the property division or as an off-set of future alimony” for an estimated
$90,000 in voluntary support payments made to Wife after she filed for divorce but before alimony
pendente lite was ordered; and (4) the Special Master erred in refusing to reduce the value of the
marital estate by the amount of a note (“the Cameron Brubaker note”) alleged to be outstanding. As
stated, we must affirm the Trial Court’s Order adopting the findings of fact of the Special Master if
those findings are supported by any material evidence. Long, 957 S.W.2d at 828.
The Special Master and the Trial Court accepted Wife’s valuations of several pieces
of real property after Husband’s counsel agreed that those values should be accepted:
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The Court: Okay. Somewhere you all have stipulated to the
market value.
Ms. Beaty: Yes and I have written those down. I went through
her deposition to see what those were, and Della
Drive was $120,000, North Ridge Road was
$100,000, the 14 acres on North Ridge Road at
$40,000, 1816 Chapman Highway at $150,000, 6140
Clinton Highway at $250,000, 4208 Airport Road at
$150,000, 7216 Old Clinton Highway at $40,000.
Ms. Meador: Your Honor, just for clarification, we accept Ms.
Manis’ valuations on the property, which is not to say
exactly that we are stipulating that those are the
amounts. We agree to accept those as the values for
your purposes in determining the assets.
After Ms. Meador withdrew as Husband’s attorney, his new attorney decided that Ms. Meador’s
agreement to “accept those as the values for [the Court’s] purposes in determining the assets” should
be withdrawn. Husband’s CPA testified that the total value of the listed properties was between
$825,000 and $905,000. (Transcript, Vol.VI, Exhibit 2). Wife testified that the total value of the
same properties was $850,000. (Transcript, Vol. VI, p. 295). Wife’s estimates, therefore, are within
the range of Husband’s estimates. Wife’s estimates are somewhat lower than Husband’s on several
pieces of property and somewhat higher than his on others. We find there is material evidence in
the record to support the Trial Court’s adoption of the Special Master’s determination that the values
as agreed by the parties should be used in determining the marital assets.
Husband complains about the determination of the Special Master that proceeds from
the sale of certain exotic animals were marital property. The record shows that on December 3,
1997, during the pendency of this litigation, Husband sold $71,366.84 worth of exotic animals and
horses, and that the sale of exotic animals accounted for $45,000 of the proceeds. At the time of the
sale, an injunction against the sale of marital assets was in force. Husband paid himself $36,548.65
of the proceeds from the sale. It was his customary business practice to sell horses before winter to
avoid wintering costs. He testified that he sold the exotic animals because the petting zoo was losing
money. Husband deposited only $35,318.93 of the proceeds back into Fortunes Untold, and kept
$36,548.65 for his personal use. The Special Master found that Wife was entitled to one-half of this
amount as her marital share. We find there is material evidence in the record to support the Special
Master’s finding as adopted by the Trial Court.
Husband argues that the Special Master erred in refusing to grant him credit in the
property division or as an off-set of future alimony for voluntary support payments made to Wife
after she filed for divorce but before alimony pendente lite was ordered. Wife testified that she used
the funds for her support and that none of the funds remained in her possession at the time of trial.
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There was no contrary testimony. Marital property is to be valued “as of a date as near as reasonably
possible to the final divorce hearing date.” Tenn Code Ann. § 36-4-121(b)(1)(A). Husband argues
that the payments were not a gift or voluntary because they were “memorialized and paid pursuant
to a contract prepared by the attorney for Appellee.” Not surprisingly, Husband does not suggest that
the funds he used for his own support during that same time period be returned to the marital estate
for distribution. Moreover, when asked why he had given Wife the monthly support payments
before the Court ordered him to do so, Husband testified, “Because at one time I loved the damn
woman, okay? That’s why.” He went on to state that when the Court ordered him to make the
payments, they became “blood money . . . it used to be voluntary money. I wanted her to have the
money . . . .” We find there is material evidence in the record to support the Special Master’s finding
that the payments Husband made to Wife before the Court ordered alimony pendente lite were
voluntary and not part of a division of marital property.
Husband argues that the Special Master erred in refusing to reduce the amount of the
marital estate by $100,000 to account for an alleged outstanding note which he owes to a Mr. Jim
Cameron or a Mr. Jim Brubaker. The Special Master found:
The witnesses’ testimony was at many times conflicting,
contradictory and irreconcilable, requiring the Special Master to make
difficult decisions regarding credibility.
* * *
[Husband] testified that he borrowed $100,000 from Jim Cameron
and Jim Brubaker, as evidenced by Exhibit 6 to the hearing. The
amount of money actually borrowed is unknown, but was definitely
less than $100,000 since the $100,000 to be repaid included interest.
The note was secured by a deed of trust dated September 21, 1996
and notarized by Donna Manis. This deed of trust was later released
by Jim Cameron who testified that he was no longer owed any money
by Don Manis. Don Manis testified that Jim Cameron only sold his
interest in the note to Mr. Brubaker, as opposed to simply releasing
the lien as indicated by the deed of release. Mr. Brubaker was not
called to testify on either hearing date, and the issue of the
genuineness of this debt became apparent to all counsel and parties
during the first day of hearing. Mr. Cameron did not testify he sold
his interest to Mr. Brubaker. The Special Master specifically finds
this debt was extinguished and is not a marital debt.
When a Trial Court has seen and heard witnesses, especially where issues of credibility and weight
of oral testimony are involved, considerable deference must be accorded to the Trial Court's factual
findings. Seals v. England/Corsair Upholstery Mfg. Co., Inc., 984 S.W.2d 912, 915 (Tenn. 1999)
(quoting Humphrey v. David Witherspoon, Inc., 734 S.W.2d 315, 315 (Tenn.1987)). We find
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material evidence in the record to support the finding that the debt was extinguished and is not a
marital debt.
Husband’s issues concerning alimony are: (1) the amount of temporary alimony; (2)
the amount of periodic alimony; (3) the failure of the Trial Court to offset from alimony vested social
security benefits due to Wife; and (4) the Trial Court’s order that Husband make an annual payment
to Wife representing the amount Wife pays as federal income tax on her alimony. We first note that
the Trial Court did grant Husband a credit toward his obligation to reimburse Wife for her tax
liability for any amount of Social Security benefits Wife received the prior year.
There are no hard and fast rules for spousal support decisions. Kinard v. Kinard, 986
S.W.2d 220, 234 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). Trial judges have broad discretion to determine whether
spousal support is needed and, if so, its nature, amount and duration. Garfinkel, 945 S.W.2d at 748.
Appellate courts are generally disinclined to second-guess a trial judge’s spousal support decision
unless it is not supported by the evidence or is contrary to the public policies reflected in the
applicable statutes. Kinard, 986 S.W.2d at 234. The purpose of long-term spousal support is to
provide support to a disadvantaged spouse who is unable to achieve some degree of self-sufficiency.
Id. Spousal support decisions hinge on the unique facts of the case and require a careful balancing
of the factors in Tenn Code Ann. § 36-5-101(d)(1). In virtually every case, the two most important
factors are the demonstrated need of the disadvantaged spouse and the obligor’s spouse’s ability to
pay. Kinard, 986 S.W.2d at 235.
Wife is 68 years old and has an eleventh grade education. The Special Master found
that she has health problems, including high blood pressure, a hiatal hernia, stomach and thyroid
ailments. He further found that she has no savings account, no retirement account, no money market
accounts. She virtually has never worked outside the home during the parties’ 45-year marriage.
She has no source of income or support aside from her Husband, who owns a number of successful
business enterprises and remains well able to accommodate his personal income needs despite his
recent decision to retire from salaried employment in those businesses. The Special Master carefully
reviewed Wife’s affidavit of income and expense, allowing some of the items and disallowing
others. He ordered that $744.77 of Wife’s monthly alimony payments would cease when the
mortgage payment in that amount on the marital home was extinguished, either by monthly payments
or by Husband’s paying off the mortgage. He also ordered Husband to make an annual alimony
payment on March 1st to reimburse Wife for the income tax liability she will incur as a result of
receipt of her monthly alimony payments. It appears the Special Master awarded Wife a monthly
alimony amount that closely tracks her reasonable monthly expenses, and therefore the annual
payment for her income tax liability is necessary as she will not be able to accumulate income from
which to pay this expense. Considering the familiar factors set forth in Tenn Code Ann. § 36-5-
101(d)(1),2 we find the Trial Court did not err in the amount of alimony awarded to Wife.
2
Those factors include: (A) The relative earning capacity, obligations, needs, and financial resources of each
party, including inco me from p ension, pro fit sharing or retirement plans and all other sources; (B) The relative education
(continued ...)
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Husband’s tenth and final issue is whether the Trial Court erred in refusing to permit
him to present witnesses at the hearing on his objections to the Special Master’s Report after all of
the testimony had been concluded before the Special Master. The record in this case shows Husband
changed counsel after hearings before the Special Master but before the matter came before the Trial
Court. With new counsel, Husband had different complaints and theories about the marital estate and
wanted to present additional witnesses. The Trial Court stated, “I thought I made it very clear before
that this was not going to an evidentiary hearing. That should have been done before the Special
Master.” Husband’s new counsel objected, “ . . . I was not the lawyer and I don’t want to second-
guess the other lawyer, but they didn’t . . .” The Trial Court responded:
All that should have been presented to the Special Master. We waste
our time if we don’t present our evidence to the Special Master . . . .
if you don’t present your proof to the Special Master, the Special
Master does not have the benefit of that evidence in arriving at his
opinion, and basically what we have to do, is to do it all over again.
The Trial Court had the benefit of two lengthy previous hearings before the Special Master and a
third hearing on the parties’ objections by the Special Master and thought that was enough. The
Rules of Civil Procedure provide that “[T]he Court after hearing may adopt the [Special Master’s]
report or may modify it or may reject it in whole or in part or may receive further evidence or may
recommit it with instructions.” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 53.04(2). Accordingly, the Trial Court has
discretion to receive or refuse further evidence. Trial courts are given wide discretion in the conduct
of trials, and testimony which is repetitive or cumulative may be excluded. See Bowers v. Bowers,
956 S.W.2d 496, 499 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997); Cordell v. Ward School Bus Mfg., Inc., 597 S.W.2d 323
(Tenn. Ct. App. 1980). We have carefully reviewed the record and find no abuse of discretion in the
Trial Court’s refusal to receive further evidence.
Wife is not satisfied with the distribution of marital property in several specific
respects: (1) the Special Master’s decreasing the value of the marital estate in Fortunes Untold
because the parties’ daughter owns some of the stock; (2) the failure of the Special Master to give
2
(...continued)
and training of each party, the ability and opportunity of each party to secure such education and training, and the
necessity of a party to secure further education and training to impro ve such pa rty’s earning cap acity to a reaso nable
level; (C) The duration of the marriage; (D) The age and mental condition of each party; (E) The physical condition of
each party, including, but not limited to, physical disability or incapacity due to a chronic debilitating disease; (F) The
extent to which it wou ld be und esirable for a party to seek e mployme nt outside the home because such party will be
custodian o f a minor child of the marriag e; (G) T he separa te assets of each party, both real and personal, tangible and
intangible; (H) The provisions made with regard to the marital property as defined in § 36-4-121; (I) The extent to which
each party has made such tangible and intangible contributions to the marriage as monetary and homemaker
contributions, and tangible and intangible contributions by a party to the education, training or increased earning power
of the other party; (K) T he relative fault of the parties in c ases where th e court, in its discre tion, deem s it approp riate to
do so; and (L) Such other factors, includin g the tax cons equence s to each party, as are necessary to consider the equities
between the parties.
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Wife a lien on any dividends distributed to Husband from the Corporations and to require Husband
to obtain prior Court approval before Husband consents to sales of any corporate property; and (3)
the Trial Court’s reducing Wife’s share of the marital estate by contingent liabilities which may
never materialize. In addition, Wife complains generally that Husband has not revealed all of his
assets and has dissipated assets, and that the Special Master’s valuation was “at the very low end of
the range of evidence.”
The trial judge’s goal is to divide the marital property in an essentially equitable
manner. A division is not rendered inequitable simply because it is not precisely equal, or because
each party did not receive a share of every piece of marital property. Kinard v. Kinard, 986 S.W.2d
220, 230 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). Dividing a marital estate is not a mechanical process but rather is
guided by considering the factors in Tenn Code Ann. § 36-4-121(c). Trial judges have wide latitude
in fashioning an equitable division of marital property, and appellate courts accord great weight to
a trial judge’s division of marital property. Id. Thus, we will ordinarily defer to the trial judge’s
decision unless it is inconsistent with the factors in Tenn Code Ann. § 36-4-121(c) or is not
supported by a preponderance of the evidence. Id. In this case, where the Trial Court has adopted
the findings of a Special Master, we will defer to the Trial Court if there is any material evidence to
support its findings. Long, 957 S.W.2d at 828.
We next address Wife’s concerns about the Trial Court’s valuation, i.e., the
consideration of stock owned by the parties’ daughter, the consideration of contingent business
liabilities, and Wife’s insistence that “Husband has not revealed all of his assets and has dissipated
assets, and that the Special Master’s valuation was ‘at the very low end of the range of evidence.’”
All of these issues are complaints about decisions made carefully and after much consideration of
the evidence by the Special Master and then adopted by the Trial Court. We are convinced that the
Trial Court achieved an assessment of the parties’ marital assets which is as accurate as could be
hoped for under all of the circumstances, and there is material evidence to support the findings of
fact.
Wife complains about the failure of the Special Master to give her a lien on any
dividends distributed to Husband from the Corporations or to require Husband to obtain prior Court
approval before consenting to sales of any corporate property until Husband has paid Wife for her
interest in the marital estate. All of the parties’ income, including Wife’s permanent alimony, is
derived from Husband’s business operations. We are not inclined to hamper those operations
because we do not think such a course of action is required or wise. It appears the Special Master
and Trial Court found Wife’s interests to be sufficiently protected by the measures ordered, including
placing Husband’s stock in the custody of the Trial Court and placing liens against Husband’s real
property until Wife’s marital distribution has been completed. We agree. Tenn Code Ann. § 36-4-
121(e)(2) permits the Trial Court to “impose a lien upon the marital real property assigned to a party
as security for the payment of spouse support or payment pursuant to property division.” This is
what the Special Master and the Trial Court did, and we think it is sufficient.
Wife also raises the issue of whether the Trial Court erred in not requiring Husband
to pay her attorney fees. Trial Courts have wide discretion in awarding attorney’s fees, and the
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appellate court will not interfere unless there clearly has been an abuse of that discretion. Garfinkel
v. Garfinkel, 945 S.W.2d 744, 748 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996). In this case, Wife was awarded $443,000
in marital assets, including a judgment and lien for $221,249.49 against Husband’s assets. We find
the Trial Court did not abuse its discretion in holding that Wife was able to pay her own attorney
fees. For those same reasons, we also decline to award Wife her attorney fees related to this appeal.
One final issue remains to be addressed in this case. Husband filed a Motion to
Consider New Facts in this Court asking that we consider the fact that Wife sold the North Ridge
property for $130,000. The Special Master’s finding of fact as to the value of the property was
made on November 30, 1998, and that finding of fact was adopted by the Trial Court on June 21,
1999. The Special Master and the Trial Court accepted the stipulated value of that property as being
$100,000. The sale of the property for $130,000 was on February 10, 2000. The fact that the
property was valued at $100,000 in November 1998 but ultimately sold for $130,000 in February
2000 does not change our opinion that the overall marital estate was properly valued and distributed
by the Trial Court at the date of the final Judgment of Divorce, June 21, 1999.
Conclusion
The judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed and this cause is remanded to the Trial
Court for such further proceedings as may be required, if any, consistent with this Opinion, and for
collection of the costs below. The costs on appeal are assessed equally against Donald Ralph Manis
and Billie Mae Manis, and their sureties, if any.
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D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JUDGE
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