Frank Cuomo, Jr.
Wellsburg, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellant
William R. Metzner
Pro Se
CHIEF JUSTICE BROTHERTON delivered the Opinion of the Court.
JUSTICE NEELY dissents and reserves the right to file a dissenting
opinion.
1. "For purposes of equitable distribution, W.Va. Code,
48-2-32(d)(1) (1984), requires that a determination be made of the
net value of the marital property of the parties." Syllabus point
2, Tankersley v. Tankersley, 182 W.Va. 627, 390 S.E.2d 826 (1990).
2. "W.Va. Code, 48-2-33 [1984], requires a full
disclosure of one spouse's financial assets to the other spouse at
the time of divorce, and contemplates a meaningful hearing on the
subject of equitable distribution of property at which the spouse
submitting financial data may be cross-examined concerning the
nature, origin and amount of assets." Syllabus point 1, Hamstead
v. Hamstead, 178 W.Va. 23, 357 S.E.2d 216 (1987), overruled on
other grounds, Roig v. Roig, 178 W.Va. 781, 364 S.E.2d 794 (1987).
3. When a contingent fee contract is acquired during
marriage, it is "marital property" within the meaning contemplated
by West Virginia Code § 48-2-1(c)(1).
4. Accounts receivable are assets with a value that can
be ascertained as of the date of separation and are to be
considered marital property for purposes of equitable distribution.
5. Contingent and other future earned fees which an
attorney might receive as compensation for cases pending at the
time of a divorce should be treated as marital property for purposes of equitable distribution. However, only that portion of
the fee that represents compensation for work done during the
marriage is actually "marital property" as defined by our statute.
Because the ultimate value of a contingent fee case remains
uncertain until the case is resolved, a court must retain
continuing jurisdiction over the matter in order to determine how
to effectuate an equitable distribution of this property.
Brotherton, Chief Justice:
In this case, we are asked to determine whether the
compensation that an attorney might receive for contingent fee
contracts and other future earned fees for cases which are pending
at the time of a divorce is "marital property" within the meaning
contemplated by West Virginia Code § 48-2-1(c)(1): "property and
earnings acquired . . . during the marriage." The appellant,
Sydney O. Metzner, now appeals from the lower court's ruling that
only accounts receivable as of the date of separation are
considered as marital property subject to equitable distribution.
The parties herein, William R. and Sydney O. Metzner,
were married on September 6, 1965, in Ohio County, West Virginia.
They separated after twenty-four years of marriage on March 8,
1989, when Mrs. Metzner filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of
Ohio County seeking an absolute divorce, equitable distribution of
marital property, alimony, and allocation of marital debts. The
Metzners have two children, both emancipated.
Before we discuss the trial court's distribution of the
couple's assets, a brief overview of their employment and financial
histories is necessary. After graduating from law school at the
University of Cincinnati in June, 1965, Mr. Metzner worked as an
associate in two Wheeling, West Virginia, law firms from September,
1965, through December, 1969. He practiced law in a partnership with another attorney in Wheeling from January, 1970, through
September, 1981. In October, 1981, he became a solo practitioner.
Mr. Metzner states that low net profits in 1985 and 1986,
"coupled with extraordinary expenses for the children's educations,
the daughter's marriage, and the payment of the wife's 'secret'
debts," contributed to his inability to pay his tax obligations
until the following years. In 1987, the parties bought a home in
Morgantown, West Virginia, for their son to live in while attending
college, with the intention of procuring other tenants to reside in
the house and contribute rent. Mr. Metzner now describes this as
a "regrettable purchase" and states that the house's market value
declined because of the extensive damages it sustained during its
occupancy by his son and his friends. Liens for delinquent taxes
arose in 1988 and 1989.
During the years 1975-1979, Mrs. Metzner occasionally did
secretarial work for the law partnership. Her earnings in these
years were $1,700 (1975), $1,900 (1976), $2,100 (1978), and $3,100
(1979). In 1980, Mrs. Metzner began working full time as a
secretary for Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Company (Y & O). She was
terminated in 1986 for alleged insubordination. Mrs. Metzner's
gross earnings ranged from $9,759 in 1980 to $17,230 in 1985.
Early in 1986, she earned several thousand dollars at Y & O, and
Mr. Metzner paid her $3,000 for working in the law firm from June
through August, 1986. Her gross earnings in 1986 were $7,347. Also, during 1986 and for much of 1987, Mr. Metzner's elderly uncle
paid her $800 a month to fix his meals and provide him with
companionship. Mrs. Metzner testified that "then I had a lot of
cash." Mr. Metzner states that Mrs. Metzner received unemployment
benefits and her Y & O retirement fund ($6,500) during this time,
and he also indicates that, at his wife's request, he took over
payments on a Cadillac she bought in May, 1985, "the only so-called
'basic' bill on which she ever had paid."
Following their separation, the parties eventually agreed
on temporary relief for Mrs. Metzner, and an interlocutory order
was entered by the family law master on May 31, 1989. The order
awarded Mrs. Metzner temporary use and occupancy of the marital
home and directed Mr. Metzner to continue to pay the monthly
installments on two bank loans secured by liens against the marital
home and the residence in Morgantown (including real estate taxes
and casualty insurance for the marital home) and to continue to pay
for all of the utility services, except the telephone, used in the
marital home. According to the order, this temporary relief was to
expire on July 1, 1989. This order also provided for the exchange
by the parties of financial disclosures of assets and liabilities
within a reasonable time prior to July 1, 1989.
The final divorce hearing was held before the family law
master on December 19, 1989. Mrs. Metzner did not appear in person
or by counsel. Mr. Metzner presented evidence to support absolute divorce on grounds of irreconcilable differences, but requested
that the family law master reserve all economic issues, including
equitable distribution, for later decision.
Through a new attorney, Mrs. Metzner filed a petition on
December 27, 1989, setting forth her exceptions to the family law
master's recommended decision and seeking to disqualify both the
family law master and her husband's attorney from the case. Mrs.
Metzner's petition and motions were heard and argued before Judge
Tsapis on February 2, 1990.
Following this hearing, Judge Tsapis assumed jurisdiction
over this case and accepted the recommendations of the family law
master, awarding the parties an absolute divorce on grounds of
irreconcilable differences and reserving all other issues for later
decision. In addition, Judge Tsapis continued Mr. Metzner's
obligations to Mrs. Metzner under the May 2, 1989, interlocutory
order and added that Mr. Metzner was to pay any medical expenses
incurred by Mrs. Metzner that were not covered by her insurance.See footnote 1
On February 8, 1990, Mr. Metzner was served with combined
interrogatories and requests for production of documents. Mrs.
Metzner sought lists of all Mr. Metzner's work in progress, including contingent fee cases as of the date of separation, and
copies of all time logs, files, ledgers and other materials related
to such work. She also sought copies of all fee-splitting
agreements as of the date of separation, copies of all monthly
billings and accounts receivable since the date of separation, all
year-end financial accountings and tax returns for 1988 and 1989,
copies of all bank statements, deposit slips, and cancelled checks,
and a list of all fixed [tangible] assets used in his law practice,
and their market values, as of the date of separation. Mr. Metzner
objected to the discovery requests for a variety of reasons,
including his physical inability to perform the work necessary for
compliance after he had a heart attack on March 14, 1990.
On May 17, 1990, the trial court issued a memorandum
which directed Mr. Metzner to comply with Paragraph H of the
discovery requests (accountings and tax returns for 1988 and 1989),
requested a medical report from his doctor, and scheduled a hearing
for June 1, 1990, to determine the date of separation.
In a memorandum of opinion dated July 3, 1990, the trial
court stated that the separation date for purposes of equitable
distribution was March 8, 1989. The court also indicated that Mr.
Metzner's work in progress, including potential fees in contingent
fee cases, were not marital property subject to equitable
distribution. However, the court decided that his accounts
receivable as of the date of separation were marital property.
For this reason, the lower court sustained Mr. Metzner's
objections to paragraphs A through E of the discovery requests
(relating to work in progress, particularly contingent fee cases),
but directed him to respond to paragraphs F through J (fee-
splitting agreements, accounts receivable, accountings and tax
returns, bank account records, and fixed assets) within twenty
days. On July 23, 1990, Mr. Metzner served Mrs. Metzner with the
written, verified responses to the discovery requests with which he
was required to comply.
A trial of the economic issues was held on March 6, 1991,
after which the trial judge directed the parties to file their
proposed plans for equitable distribution within fifteen days of
her rulings on other matters. The trial judge also opined that the
division of marital debts, including Mr. Metzner's tax liabilities,
should be a part of any equitable distribution plan. At this
point, the trial judge also promised to reconsider her previous
rulings regarding what constitutes marital property subject to
equitable distribution and to consider the defendant's request that
he be granted some relief from what he described as his "protracted
obligation to maintain the gainfully employed plaintiff in the
marital home without any participation by the plaintiff in the
payment of the parties marital debts." The trial judge commented
that the defendant has "gone this far" so "he might as well swallow
the tail, too," but nevertheless recognized that "it isn't quite
fair for him to continue to pay her utilities . . ." much longer.
In a memorandum of opinion dated March 12, 1991, the
trial court reconsidered the marital property issue. The court
stated that "the only assets of the law practice subject to
equitable distribution are personal property, such as furniture,
appliances, and equipment; any other tangible or intangible
property, and all accounts receivable as of the date of separation.
Therefore, the interrogatories dealing with the caseload, future
expected fees, value of certain cases, etc., should not be
discoverable." (Emphasis added.)
The court also addressed Mrs. Metzner's assertion that
she was entitled to a portion of a fee from a particular case
because it should be considered as "accounts receivable." The
trial of this case resulted in a one-half million dollar verdict,
which was then appealed to this Court and subsequently overturned.See footnote 2
With respect to this case, the lower court noted that:
The defendant plans to do additional research,
write a brief, appear in Charleston for oral
arguments, etc. This court disagrees with
plaintiff's contention. The March 8, 1989
[separation date] deadline has long passed,
and the fee from the case being discussed was
not an account receivable on that date; nor do
we know if that verdict will stand or not.
Any value placed on this case would be pure
speculation, and would also represent, in
part, earnings of the Defendant after the
separation and even after the divorce.
The court concluded that "its ruling as to the law practice marital
assets is correct and should not be changed."
The trial court also relieved Mr. Metzner from the
obligation to pay Mrs. Metzner's utilities (beginning April 1,
1991), and her medical expenses (beginning March 15, 1991), but
continued his interlocutory obligations to pay the installments of
the parties' mortgages, taxes, and insurance on the marital home
until further order of the court.
On March 26, 1991, the circuit court declined to consider
a $6,400.00 contingent fee to be marital property in this case.
Mr. Metzner collected the fee after settling a personal injury case
which was still pending on the parties' separation date. According
to Mr. Metzner, the settlement of over $20,000.00 was only
tentatively agreed to as of the date of separation and did not
become firm until after the client's medical bills were negotiated
and the liability insurer of the alleged tortfeasors later agreed
with its attorney to make the tentative settlement firm. Although
Mrs. Metzner argued that this fee was marital property and should
be divided between the parties, the lower court disagreed:
"Adhering strictly to its ruling that all accounts receivable as of
the date of separation were marital property; and noting that the
settlement had not been agreed upon as of that date, this Court is
of the opinion that said fee should not be treated as marital
property."
The trial court's final rulings on economic issues were
set forth in a memorandum of opinion on September 9, 1991. The court's conclusions regarding equitable distribution of the marital
property closely tracked the first of three alternative proposals
that Mr. Metzner submitted after the March 6, 1991, trial. Mr.
Metzner states that all three of his proposals revolved around the
sale or retention of the marital home by the parties, since the
plaintiff had expressed her desire to "live there and maybe have
something to leave to my children."
Mr. Metzner's first alternative proposal provided for the
sale of the marital domicile, the use of the proceeds of the sale
to pay off the balance of the first and second mortgages (at trial,
$5,837.00 and $18,421.78, respectively) and the balances of the tax
liens for 1988 and 1989 (at trial, $18,908.96 and $8,530.61
respectively), and the distribution of the remaining sale proceeds
(conservatively valued at trial at $8,302.15) to Mrs. Metzner.
The second alternative proposal provided for Mrs. Metzner
to retain the marital home (including the entire $8,302.15 equity
value) if she would pay the above-mentioned liens with the proceeds
of a bank loan.
The third alternative proposal called for retention of
the marital home by Mr. Metzner if he would pay Mrs. Metzner
$8,000.00 for the entire equity value and assume payment of all
liens (a total of $51,697.85 at time of trial).
Under all three proposals, Mrs. Metzner would retain her
separate property ($9,000.00), and Mr. Metzner would retain his
separate property ($1,925.00). All three proposals also contained
common terms for the division of other marital assets. Under each,
Mrs. Metzner would retain her 1984 Cadillac (separation date value
of $8,000.00), and take all household furnishings and appliances
($2,500.00), while Mr. Metzner would retain his 1984 Chevrolet
($5,500.00), his tangible law office assets ($4,961.00), his law
office accounts receivable (separation date net value $3,208.39),
his individual retirement account at New York Life Insurance
Company (net value of $5,965.00 when redeemed in June, 1990), and
his stock in Greyhound Corp. ($300.00).
Under each proposal Mr. Metzner would also assume sole
responsibility for paying the remaining liabilities ($5,750.20 at
date of trial) he incurred to bail his son out of numerous
financial problems, and he would not expect any partial
reimbursement for having paid his own charge accounts and credit
card accounts ($1,613.00) which had existed at the separation date.
These would be treated as separate liabilities, rather than marital
debts, so they would not factor into any equitable distribution of
marital assets.
In dividing the property along the lines suggested by Mr.
Metzner's first alternative proposal, the trial court expressly accepted as true, accurate, and complete the defendant's 1989
financial disclosures, the updated disclosures he presented at
trial, and his alternative proposals. Mrs. Metzner did not submit
any proposals or file any disclosure reports, in contravention
of the disclosure requirements set forth in W.Va. Code § 48-2-33
and prior court orders.
The trial court further found that if the net proceeds of
the directed sale of the marital home turned out to be less than
$8,000.00, the court "would still consider that [lesser]
amount equitable since the plaintiff had sole occupancy of that
house since at least the early part of 1989." Mr. Metzner had paid
$42,318.67 between the separation date and the trial date on the
parties' debts and toward maintenance of the marital home. The
trial court also rejected Mrs. Metzner's assertions that Mr.
Metzner had wasted substantial marital funds on alcohol and
gambling.
The trial court directed Mr. Metzner to pay the debts he
proposed to pay, but awarded no alimony, although it reserved to
Mrs. Metzner a right to alimony if circumstances changed and it was
needed in the future. The court explained that it ruled as it did
with regard to the payment of marital debts because Mr. Metzner's
earning capacity is greater than that of Mrs. Metzner and because
of "inequitable conduct" by Mr. Metzner, including unkind treatment
of Mrs. Metzner, unnecessary absences from home, and failure to participate in family activities. The trial court also ordered Mr.
Metzner to pay Mrs. Metzner $10,000.00 to reimburse her for "her
assistance to him while he studied law in Cincinnati and her
assistance to him in his law practice, such as typing, answering
the telephone, etc." In a later ruling, the trial court awarded
Mrs. Metzner counsel fees and expenses in the amount of $2,304.00.
On December 27, 1991, the trial court clarified its
reasons for directing that the 1988 and 1989 federal tax liens be
satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale of the marital home and
appointed a special commissioner to report a plan for the sale of
the marital home and hold the proceeds for division as previously
ordered. The court reiterated that all of Mr. Metzner's federal
and state tax debts for 1988 accrued before the parties' separation
and that, although only part of the 1989 federal tax debt accrued
as of the separation date, he paid the entire 1988 state tax debt
from his post-divorce funds in December, 1989, with interest of
$3,833.35, and in 1990 the sum of $8,200.66 (by levy of $7,546.74
on January 10, 1990, and by payment of $653.92 in June, 1990)
toward the 1988 federal tax debt. The court concluded that the
substitution, in essence, of the 1989 federal tax debt for the
greater sums paid by the defendant with his post-divorce funds to
reduce the 1988 marital tax debts was equitable.
The appellant, Mrs. Metzner, now argues that the trial
court abused its discretion and did not make the findings necessary to grant a fair and equitable distribution of the marital assets.
"For purposes of equitable distribution, W.Va. Code, 48-2-32(d)(1)
(1984), requires that a determination be made of the net value of
the marital property of the parties." Syllabus point 2, Tankersley
v. Tankersley, 182 W.Va. 627, 390 S.E.2d 826 (1990). In syllabus
point 1 of Hamstead v. Hamstead, 178 W.Va. 23, 357 S.E.2d 216
(1987), overruled on other grounds, Roig v. Roig, 178 W.Va. 781,
364 S.E.2d 794 (1987), this Court held that:
W.Va. Code, 48-2-33 [1984], requires a full
disclosure of one spouse's financial assets to
the other spouse at the time of divorce, and
contemplates a meaningful hearing on the
subject of equitable distribution of property
at which the spouse submitting financial data
may be cross-examined concerning the nature,
origin and amount of assets.
The appellant's primary argument in this case is that she
was entitled to an interest in accounts receivable as well as any
contingent fees that her husband may ultimately receive from his
pending cases. She also contends that the lower court should have
permitted her to have her husband's cases examined and audited by
an independent expert in order to determine their actual and
potential value.
The characterization of contingent fees for purposes of
equitable distribution is an issue of first impression in West
Virginia. Research indicates that several states have held that an
attorney's contingent fee cases should be treated as marital
property upon divorce, while several others have found just the opposite and concluded that contingent fees are not marital
property subject to equitable distribution. In some instances,
contingent fees are valued in the context of an examination of an
entire law firm's worth, and not for purposes of distribution.See footnote 3
Overall, only a handful of courts have addressed the specific issue
that is now before us, and there is no apparent bright line
majority rule.
For example, in Goldstein v. Goldstein, 262 Ga. 136, 414
S.E.2d 474, 476 (1992), the Supreme Court of Georgia held that
contingent fee agreements were "too remote, speculative and
uncertain to be considered marital assets in making an equitable
division of property." However, in a dissenting opinion in
Goldstein, one justice noted that "[p]ractically all jurisdictions
that have addressed the issue have determined that contingent fee
contracts constitute marital property." Id. at 476. He then cited
cases from four states: Colorado, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, and New York. The dissenting justice nonetheless concluded that
"because of the speculative nature of these contracts, I do not
disagree with the [Goldstein] majority that contingent fee
contracts, in and of themselves, should not be treated as marital
property subject to equitable distribution." Id.
In addition to the four states noted in the Goldstein
dissent, Arizona and Louisiana also appear to have decided that
contingent fee cases can be considered as marital property. In
Garrett v. Garrett, 140 Ariz. 564, 683 P.2d 1166, 1169 (Ariz.App.
1983), the Court of Appeals of Arizona stated that "an attorney's
contingency fee contract is a valuable property right, though the
contingency upon which it is based has not been fulfilled. The
question then becomes whether the community is entitled to an
interest in that property right and if so, the value of that
community interest."
The Garrett court rejected a per se rule that property is
separate or community based upon when the contract was made. "The
community is not entitled to the services expended by one of its
partners either before marriage or after the marriage has
terminated . . . However, the community is entitled to such labors
expended during marriage." Id. at 1170 (citations omitted).
The court then stated that ". . . it is clear that the
attorney's services performed during the marriage in fulfillment of the contract are community property and the community is entitled
to what the percentage of the time expended as community labor
bears to the time expended in reaching the ultimate recovery." Id.
(citations omitted). The court approved of the trial court's
continuing jurisdiction over the case to monitor the value of the
services: "The contract sets the value of the services. Depending
upon subsequent circumstances, the value of the services may be
worth nothing, may be worth only a reasonable hourly fee, or may be
worth the full value of the contract." Id.See footnote 4
Similarly, in Due v. Due, 342 So.2d 161, 163 (La. 1977),
the Supreme Court of Louisiana stated that "[i]ncluded among the
assets of the community, thus subject to inventory and spouses'
joint ownership at the community's dissolution, are obligations
based upon the right to receive money to become due in the future,
even though this right is contingent upon the happening of an event
at a future time." That court concluded that "the attorney's
interest in pending contingent fee contracts constitutes a
patrimonial asset which, if the contract is acquired during the
marriage, forms part of the community insofar as its value is based upon the attorney's services performed during the marriage."See footnote 5 Id.
at 165-66.
In a personal injury case, Hanify v. Hanify, 403 Mass.
184, 526 N.E.2d 1056, 1059 (1988), the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts stated that:
[a] pending legal claim is distinguishable
from an expectancy. The husband in this case
has an enforceable, ripened, and pending claim
for money damages. The damages include claims
for income and assets lost during marriage.
The loss affected both parties. Recovery of
this loss should be considered an asset under
[General Laws c. 208] § 34, because such
recovery replaces monies that would have
benefitted both spouses had the alleged legal
wrong not occurred. The fact that the pending
lawsuits are of uncertain value does not
require their exclusion from the marital
estate.
In a separate case decided that day, the Massachusetts court relied
upon Hanify and held that "like the interest of a litigant in a
pending lawsuit, the interest of an attorney in a contingent fee
arrangement constitutes property under § 34." Lyons v. Lyons, 403
Mass. 1003, 526 N.E.2d 1063 (1988).
In Weiss v. Weiss, 122 Wis.2d 688, 365 N.W.2d 608
(Wis.App. 1985), an attorney was involved in a stock buy-out of his
interest in the law firm. In partial consideration for his sale of
his interest, the lawyer was to receive "periodic payments
representing contingent fee contracts in effect at the time of
sale." Id. at 612. The wife argued that the trial court
improperly classified those payments as income to consider in
determining a maintenance award, rather than as a marital asset
subject to division. The Court of Appeals of Wisconsin agreed:
As to the contingent fee receivables, we
recognize that it was impossible to establish
a present value. The fact that an asset is
impossible to value on the day of divorce,
however, is not sufficient reason to ignore
the asset when dividing the marital estate
. . . Rather, it is within the discretion of
the trial court to determine the appropriate
division . . . .
Since the amount which Daniel will
realize relative to the contingent fee
accounts receivable is unknown and not
ascertainable, but yet remains an asset in
existence at the time of divorce, it would
appear that the only context in which these
accounts can be addressed is within that of a
property division . . . .
Id. at 613 (footnote omitted).
Colorado classifies contingent fee cases as marital
property. In In Re Marriage of Vogt, 773 P.2d 631 (Colo.App.
1989), the husband was a partner in a law firm and, as such, he was
entitled to receive a share in contingency attorney fees in five or
six cases handled by the firm during the marriage. Undisputed evidence showed that, in the event of his death, his estate would
be entitled to his interest in the fees.
The trial court awarded the husband any interest in all
contingency fees except the Westbury fee and the Fairview fee.
With respect to these two fees, the court found: "The contingency
fees are marital property to the extent that [husband] performed
the work entitling him to such fees during the marriage."See footnote 6 Id. at
632. The trial court then awarded the wife one-half of the
husband's interest in those two fees.
The Westbury suit was settled just before the divorce was
granted. The fee vested and matured during the marriage, although
it was not collected. In the Fairview suit, a substantial verdict
was obtained on behalf of the client of the husband's firm.
Judgment was entered during the parties' marriage, but was on
appeal when the court entered permanent orders. In its findings,
the trial court recognized that the judgment could be reversed and
that the case could require additional work before any fee was
received.
On appeal, the Colorado Court of Appeals decided that
"[d]eferred compensation earned during marriage but payable after dissolution constitutes marital property subject to division." Id.
at 632 (citations omitted). The court found the Arizona Court of
Appeals decision in Garrett persuasive and concluded that the trial
court had properly included the husband's interest in both fees as
marital assets subject to division.
The Court of Appeals found that settlement of the
Westbury suit during the marriage removed the contingent nature of
the fee and converted it into an account receivable. Thus, the
husband's interest was subject to division as marital property.
As to the Fairview fee, the Court of Appeals concluded
that the trial court had erred in part: ". . . the trial court
should have limited its order to the portion of the husband's
interest in the fee attributable to work done during the marriage."
Id. at 633.
In the case now before us, the trial court relied in part
upon our reasoning in Hoak v. Hoak, 179 W.Va. 509, 370 S.E.2d 473
(1988), and refused to consider contingent fee cases as marital
property because their ultimate value is merely speculative. In
Hoak, we held that a professional degree or license is not marital
property subject to equitable distribution, explaining that "the
value of a professional degree is the value of the enhanced earning
capacity of the degree-holder. Not only is that value speculative, but also it represents money or assets earned after dissolution of
the marriage." Id. at 476-77.
The appellant argues that contingent fee cases should be
treated like pension plans and be subject to equitable distribution
as marital property. In Butcher v. Butcher, 178 W.Va. 33, 357
S.E.2d 226, 233-34 (1987), this Court explained that "[s]ince a
pension benefit is an economic resource acquired with funds that
would otherwise have been utilized by the parties during their
marriage to purchase other assets, it constitutes marital property.
This determination is made without regard to the possibly
contingent nature of the pension, whether or not it has vested or
matured." Quoting Flynn v. Flynn, 341 Pa.Super. 76, 491 A.2d 156,
160 (1985). In spite of their "possibly contingent nature," we
find that when a contingent fee contract is acquired during
marriage, it is "marital property" within the meaning contemplated
by W.Va. Code § 48-2-1(c)(1).
Although the issue arose under different circumstances,
this Court briefly discussed the value of services rendered by an
attorney in a contingent fee case in Hardman v. Snyder, 183 W.Va.
34, 393 S.E.2d 672 (1990):
"Where an attorney has been discharged,
without fault on his part, from further
services in a suit just begun by him under a
contract for payment contingent upon
successful prosecution of the suit, his
measure of damages is not the contingent fee
agreed upon, but the value of his services
rendered; and in the absence of evidence of the reasonable value of such services, no
recovery can be had." Syllabus, Clayton v.
Martin, 108 W.Va. 571, 151 S.E. 855 (1930).
Id. at syllabus. In Hardman, we noted that this was the general
rule in other jurisdictions and cited the Arizona case discussed
earlier in this opinion, Garrett v. Garrett, 140 Ariz. 564, 683
P.2d 1166 (Ariz.App. 1983). In Garrett, the Court of Appeals of
Arizona held that "it is clear that the attorney's services
performed during the marriage in fulfillment of the contract are
community property and the community is entitled to what the
percentage of the time expended as community labor bears to the
time expended in reaching the ultimate recovery." Id. at 1170.
The Court rejected the husband's argument that the value of the
community services should be based upon a reasonable hourly rate:
This overlooks the very nature of the contract
-- an all or nothing proposition. It is as
unfair to require the attorney/spouse to pay
the other spouse for reasonable services
rendered when ultimately no fee is earned
because the litigation was lost as it would be
to require the non-attorney/spouse to accept a
sum based upon an hourly fee when the
attorney/spouse receives compensation far
exceeding that amount. The contract sets the
value of the services. Depending upon
subsequent circumstances, the value of the
services may be worth nothing, may be worth
only a reasonable hourly fee, or may be worth
the full value of the contract. In this
regard, we approve of the trial court's
continuing jurisdiction over this matter to
monitor the value of the services.
We have held that only that portion of
the labor expended during marriage in
fulfillment of the contract is to be
considered community property.
Id.
We conclude that accounts receivable are assets with a
value that can be ascertained at the date of separation and are
considered to be marital property for purposes of equitable
distribution. Contingent and other future earned fees which an
attorney might receive as compensation for cases pending at the
time of a divorce should also be considered as marital property for
purposes of equitable distribution. However, only that portion of
the fee that represents compensation for work done during the
marriage is "marital property" as defined by our statute. Because
the ultimate value of a contingent fee case remains uncertain until
the case is resolved, a court must retain continuing jurisdiction
over the matter in order to determine how to effectuate an
equitable distribution of this property.
Next, the appellant argues that the trial court erred in
refusing to find Mr. Metzner solely responsible for delinquent
federal and state income taxes which allegedly resulted from his
substantial waste of marital income on gambling and recreation.
Addressing the payment of marital debts in its September 9, 1991,
opinion, the trial court concluded that "the evidence did not
support, to this Court's satisfaction, the plaintiff's contentions
that the defendant wasted considerable money on gambling and the
use of alcoholic beverages."
Upon review of the record, we find nothing to support the
appellant's assertion that the trial court erred on this point.
The appellant offered no evidence to support her assertion that she
"had shown clear evidence that marital expenses on an annual basis
were approximately $20,000.00 per year" and that "there was a lack
of accounting by the husband as to where he spent the money he
earned from his law practice." Actually, it appears as though Mr.
Metzner was the only party who provided the trial court with any
accountings whatsoever, as that court repeatedly noted that Mrs.
Metzner did not file any types of financial disclosure reports.
Finally, in a cross-assignment of error, the appellee,
Mr. Metzner, claims that the trial court erred when it ordered him
to pay Mrs. Metzner $10,000.00, payable in two equal installments,
to "reimburse" her for "her assistance to him while he studied law
in Cincinnati and her assistance to him in his law practice, such
as typing, answering the telephone, etc."
The record contains limited testimony on this issue. Mr.
Metzner claims that most of the testimony was untrue, but that he
did not rebut it. He points out that "Mrs. Metzner admitted that
she had been paid wages for part-time work in the law partnership
and the defendant's law office."
Our concern with this $10,000.00 award is that the trial
court did not explain why it was ordering Mr. Metzner to pay this amount of money. Instead, the trial court seems to have picked an
arbitrary figure and ordered that the appellee pay it, without
specifying the evidentiary basis for the so-called reimbursement.
Was this $10,000.00 to be viewed as reimbursement alimony, or
perhaps as an attempt to remedy what the trial court believed was
a previously inequitable distribution of the marital assets?
We find that the trial court may have abused its
discretion in this instance. On remand, the circuit court may
reconsider whether this type of award is appropriate. If so, the
court should explain its authority and rationale for making the
award, as well as its method of calculating the award.
For the foregoing reasons, the September 9, 1991, order
of the Circuit Court of Ohio County is reversed, and this case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.