Court Opinion

ID: 6335081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-04-26 18:02:40.846061+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:48.098016
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
  UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
                  AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

                                     IN THE
              ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                                 DIVISION ONE

                              In re the Marriage of:

      BRENT JACOB GARDNER, Petitioner/Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

                                         v.

 CYNTHIA KATHLEEN GARDNER, Respondent/Appellant/Cross-Appellee.

                            No. 1 CA-CV 21-0135 FC
                                 FILED 4-26-2022

             Appeal from the Superior Court in Navajo County
                         No. S0900DO201900110
                The Honorable Michala M. Ruechel, Judge

                                   AFFIRMED

                                    COUNSEL

Davis Miles McGuire & Gardner, Tempe
By Douglas C. Gardner, Michael D. Girgenti
Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee/Cross-Appellant

Riggs Ellsworth & Porter PLC, Show Low
By Michael R. Ellsworth
Counsel for Respondent/Appellant/Cross-Appellee
                           GARDNER v. WHITE
                           Decision of the Court

                      MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Peter B. Swann delivered the decision of the court, in which
Judge David D. Weinzweig and Judge Paul J. McMurdie joined.

S W A N N, Judge:

¶1            Cynthia Kathleen Gardner (“Wife”) appeals from the decree
dissolving her marriage to Brent Jacob Gardner (“Husband”), who cross-
appeals. The disputes on appeal are limited to the valuation and division
of the parties’ dental practice and related accounts. We conclude that the
superior court considered adequate evidence to support its division of
property, and that its decisions fell well within the bounds of its discretion.
We therefore affirm.

                 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2            The parties married on August 17, 2007. In September 2016,
the parties purchased Winslow Dental for $870,000. They took out a
million-dollar loan to purchase the practice and the associated building.

¶3            Before purchasing the practice, Husband sometimes worked
for Winslow Dental as an associate dentist. The previous owner of the
practice made approximately one million dollars per year in revenue.
While working at the practice as an associate, Husband observed that many
patients had dental needs that were not being addressed in-house. The
previous owner often referred patients to Flagstaff or simply did not inform
them that they needed more complex dental procedures. Husband believed
he could increase revenue by conducting these procedures in-house.

¶4             In 2017—the first full year the parties owned Winslow
Dental—the practice’s revenue increased by $447,000 to $1,504,832. Since
then, Winslow Dental’s total income has consistently remained around $1.5
million per year. By April 2019, the parties owed approximately $120,000
on their loan.

¶5           Husband filed for dissolution in April 2019. On November
10, 2020, the superior court held a hearing to discuss the division of
community property and debts. Both parties hired experts to conduct
valuations of the practice. Husband’s expert, Mathew Porter, used a
combination of the Prior Transaction Method, the Direct Market Data

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Method, and the Capitalization of Earnings Method to reach a valuation of
$725,000. Wife’s expert, Derrick Doba, used the Discounted Cash Flow
Method to reach a valuation of $1,604,000.

¶6             After consideration of the experts’ reports and testimonies,
the court ultimately rejected both their opinions and valued the practice at
$741,000. The court then awarded Husband the practice and Wife $370,500
as her community interest. The court also awarded Wife $33,296.10 as her
interest in the business’s bank account. Wife appeals, and Husband cross-
appeals.

                               DISCUSSION

I.     THE SUPERIOR COURT DID NOT IMPROPERLY VALUE
       WINSLOW DENTAL USING THE 2016 PURCHASE PRICE.

¶7             Wife contends that the superior court erred by valuing the
practice as of the date of purchase rather than “valuing the business at its
present value, time of filing petition or time of dissolution of marriage.” It
is well settled that “the selection of a valuation date rests within the wide
discretion of the superior court and will be tested on review by the fairness
of the result.” Sample v. Sample, 152 Ariz. 239, 242–43 (App. 1996).

¶8            Here, the superior court did not specify a valuation date.
Neither party requested the court make findings of fact or conclusions of
law. When neither party requests findings of fact and the superior court
does not make specific findings of fact, “we must assume that the superior
court found every fact necessary to support its [ruling] and must affirm if
any reasonable construction of the evidence justifies the decision.” Horton
v. Mitchell, 200 Ariz. 523, 526, ¶ 13 (App. 2001) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted).

¶9            There is evidence in the record that the court valued the
practice as of 2019. In the dissolution decree, the court found “[a]fter
considering all these factors and determining that the overall income of the
practice did not change significantly from 2017 to 2019, the court
determines that the appropriate value to put on the practice remains
$870,000.” The court used the 2016 purchase as a starting point for its
valuation, subtracted current debt, weighed market factors, and considered
whether the overall income of the practice had changed significantly from
2017 to 2019. Though the court did not state a specific valuation date, its
consideration of the practice’s income over a three-year period
demonstrates that the court did not simply accept the 2016 purchase price
as the business’s valuation for purposes of the dissolution case.

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II.    THE SUPERIOR COURT DID NOT ABUSE ITS DISCRETION IN
       VALUING WINSLOW DENTAL AT $741,000.

¶10            “We review the superior court’s valuation of a business in a
divorce proceeding for an abuse of discretion,” Schickner v. Schickner, 237
Ariz. 194, 197, ¶ 13 (App. 2015), and consider the evidence in the light most
favorable to upholding the superior court’s ruling, Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 193
Ariz. 343, 346, ¶ 5 (App. 1998). “A trial court abuses its discretion when it
commits an error of law or reaches a conclusion without considering the
evidence . . . or the record fails to provide substantial evidence to support
the trial court’s finding.” Schickner, 237 Ariz. at 197, ¶ 13 (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted). We will not disturb the superior court’s
factual determinations “unless clearly erroneous.” Id. We defer to the
weight the superior court gives to conflicting evidence and witness
credibility. Gutierrez, 198 Ariz. at 347, ¶ 13.

       A.     The Superior Court Did Not Err in Determining the Overall
              Income of The Practice Did Not Significantly Increase
              Between 2017 and 2019.

¶11           In the dissolution decree, the superior court stated that
“[a]fter considering all these factors and determining that the overall
income of the practice did not change significantly from 2017 to 2019, the
court determines that the appropriate value to put on the practice remains
$870,000.”

¶12           Wife argues the court’s finding was not supported by the
evidence. She claims Husband’s $240,000 salary, Porter’s testimony that
“the business had increased yearly revenue by approximately $500,000
annually,” Husband’s reinvestment in equipment, and the fact that in four
years, the parties paid off $850,000 of their nearly million-dollar business
loan is evidence that the overall income of the practice increased between
2017 and 2019. But Wife’s expert found the practice’s total revenues
between 2017 and 2019 to be as follows: $1,504,832 in 2017; $1,535,450 in
2018; and $1,419,277 in 2019. These figures do not demonstrate a significant
increase. Husband’s expert also determined the practice’s revenue from
2017 to 2019 remained around $1.5 million. Wife does not contest these
figures. We find both experts’ uncontested income figures sufficient
evidence to support the superior court’s finding.

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                           GARDNER v. WHITE
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       B.     There Is Sufficient Evidence in The Record to Support the
              Court’s Valuation of Winslow Dental.

¶13            The valuation of the practice is a factual determination. Kelsey
v. Kelsey, 186 Ariz. 49, 51 (App. 1996). Neither party requested findings of
fact, and we must therefore assume the superior court found every fact
necessary to support the decree “if any reasonable construction of the
evidence justifies the decision.” Stevenson v. Stevenson, 132 Ariz. 44, 46
(1982). Wife argues that the record does not support the superior court’s
valuation of Winslow Dental. We disagree.

              1.     Expert Valuations.

¶14           Both parties hired experts to conduct valuations of the
practice. Husband’s expert, Mathew Porter, testified that he used both the
income approach and the market approach to calculate the value of the
dental practice. The income approach focuses on historical financial data
to estimate future income of the practice without regard for qualitative
factors such as location, patient base, technology, photos of the practice, and
competitive market analysis. The Capitalization of Earnings Method
(“CEM”) is a method within the income approach that divides a business’s
projected cash flow for one year by a capitalization rate. Using the CEM
with a 32.80% capitalization rate and a 40% marketability discount, Porter
determined the value of the practice to be $750,000.

¶15           The market approach considers market comparable sales
generated from recently completed transactions. Porter valued Winslow
Dental using two methods under this approach. First, Porter used the
Direct Market Data Method. This method values the business using
“benchmarks and multiples of recently completed transactions,” for
businesses of a similar type and size. In his report, Porter analyzed the sales
of eight Arizona dental practices with similar characteristics to Winslow
Dental. Porter then applied a marketability discount of 40% and came to a
value of $822,000.

¶16           The Prior Transaction Method uses previous transactions of
the subject company as an indicator of current value. Porter used the 2016
sale of Winslow Dental for $870,000 as a starting point. He applied a price
revenue factor of 87.6% to the trailing 12-month revenue prior to April 2,
2019, to reach a value of $1,249,230. Porter then added a marketability
discount of 45%. In deciding on a discount rate, he considered that two of
the largest employers in Winslow were either closing or reducing
operations, that the practice is only credentialed in-network with one

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insurance plan, that the practice is set up for a left-handed dentist, that
competition has significantly increased since 2016, and that the 2016 sale of
the practice was not an arms-length transaction. Using this method, Porter
came to an initial valuation of $602,000. After weighing the figures from
these methods, Porter came to a final valuation of $725,000.

¶17           Derrick Doba conducted a valuation of Winslow Dental at
Wife’s request. He used the Discounted Cash Flow Method, which falls
under the income approach. This method uses a discount rate to calculate
the present value of future expected net cash flows. As the parties had no
plans to sell the practice, Doba focused on the value of the practice to a
potential investor rather than the fair market value in an immediate sale.
Using this approach, Doba gathered the value of the practice’s assets
adjusted for market value, and subtracted what was owed to creditors to
estimate the practice’s total invested capital. He placed the value at $1.6
million.

¶18             The main difference between Porter’s and Doba’s approaches
is that Doba did not include any discount for a lack of marketability. A
marketability discount is a discount required to turn an illiquid asset, such
as Winslow Dental, into cash. Porter opined that the illiquidity of the dental
practice justified a marketability discount, because “if you need an illiquid
asset turned into cash quickly, it requires a discount to meet the price of the
market, supply and demand.” Porter used these figures because he
believed that as the practice is in Winslow, it would take 12 to 24 months to
sell. It took the previous owner 5 years to sell the practice.

              2.     The Court’s Valuation.

¶19          The court valued Winslow Dental at $741,000. Though the
court ultimately rejected both expert opinions in part, it found the market
approach to be a more equitable method of valuing the practice. There was
also evidence in the record that would have allowed the court to apply its
own discount. Porter testified that the industry standard discount for lack
of marketability is 25% to 40%, though the National Association of Certified
Valuators and Analysts handbook contains studies supporting up to a 45%
discount. Doba testified that Porter’s deductions were excessively high,
and that average deductions ranged from 20% to 30%.

¶20         There is evidence in the record to support the court’s
conclusion that Winslow Dental has decreased in value since 2016.
Husband testified that after purchasing the practice, he increased revenues
by tapping into a backlog of untreated dentistry among the practice’s

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                           GARDNER v. WHITE
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existing clients. These services, once completed, cease to be significant
sources of revenue because he cannot “keep on putting braces on the same
patients over and over.” In order to maintain revenue levels, Winslow
Dental would need a continuous stream of new patients.

¶21            Husband testified that increased competition contributed to
the practice’s decreased value. Since 2016, an area dentist who previously
worked two days per week is now operating 90% of the time, and the Indian
Health Service Clinic expanded from a trailer to a $2-million-dollar state-
of-the-art facility supporting eight dentists. Additionally, a new competitor
opened shop in January 2019. Husband opines that the value of the practice
has decreased in the face of these changing market factors. Porter and Kyle
Spencer—a business consultant who brokered the sale of Winslow Dental
to the parties in 2016—agreed that the practice was worth $150,000 less than
the purchase price despite the increase in revenue due to market factors and
the nature of the original transaction.

¶22           Finally, the court may have based its valuation on the
Industry Formula Method. Porter and Doba agreed that an industry rule
of thumb for valuations, often referred to as a sanity check, is based on 65%
of the last 12 months’ revenue. Using Doba’s figures, 65% of Winslow
Dental’s 2019 revenue, less liabilities, is approximately $800,000.

¶23           We do not know which method the superior court used,
because neither party requested findings of fact or conclusions of law.
However, as the court’s final valuation lay between both expert opinions
and was supported by evidence in the record, we hold that the court did
not abuse its discretion in its valuation of Winslow Dental.

III.   THE DIVISION OF THE WINSLOW DENTAL BANK ACCOUNT
       WAS PROPERLY BEFORE THE SUPERIOR COURT.

¶24           As of April 1, 2019, the business account held $66,592.19. By
the date of the trial, however, those funds increased to $600,000. The
superior court found that the funds in the account as of April 1, 2019, were
community assets and awarded Wife $33,296.10 as her one-half interest.
Wife argues that the court erred in refusing to consider the increase in its
division of community assets. We disagree. Under A.R.S. § 25-211(A)(2),
funds Husband acquired after service of the dissolution petition are his sole
and separate property.

¶25           On cross-appeal, Husband asserts that the superior court
erred in awarding Wife one-half of the business bank account because Wife
failed to raise the issue in her pretrial statement and her inventory of

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properties and debts. The purpose of a pretrial statement is “to avoid unfair
surprise at trial.” Bobrow v. Bobrow, 241 Ariz. 592, 598, ¶ 28 (App. 2017).
Wife contends that Husband was on notice of the need to divide the
business bank account. In her pretrial statement, Wife requested that the
court “award the parties an equitable division of any and all community
property, to include, but not limited to, the business interest in Winslow
Dental.” Husband claims he was ambushed at trial because he did not have
an opportunity to adequately prepare for questioning regarding the bank
account. We disagree.

¶26            In Leathers, we determined that the issue of the husband’s life
insurance was not properly before the superior court because it was not
listed as a contested issue in the parties’ pretrial statement nor their closing
arguments. Leathers v. Leathers, 216 Ariz. 374, 378, ¶¶ 18–19 (App. 2007).
The wife only raised the issue in her post-trial proposed decree, but argued
that the husband was on notice of her position because the issue had been
raised in her temporary order papers and her settlement conference
memorandum. Id. We found those pretrial mentions insufficient to meet
the wife’s procedural duties. Id. at ¶ 19.

¶27           Here, Husband agreed that the bank account was an asset of
the business. Husband’s expert included the business account in his
valuation of the business. Husband receives his salary in the form of draws
from the account. The parties conducted extensive discovery concerning
both their and the practice’s finances. The record contains sufficient
evidence that Husband was on notice of Wife’s position regarding the
business bank account.

¶28           Husband argues that because the bank account is an asset of
the dental practice that contributes to its value, dividing the account
resulted in a windfall to Wife. We disagree. There is no evidence in the
record that the superior court included the bank account funds in its
valuation of the practice. The fact that the superior court awarded Wife half
of the bank account after concluding its valuation itself weighs against
Husband’s contention.

¶29            The superior court carefully considered factors concerning
the valuation of the business. We cannot say on this record that its
treatment of the business and the bank account did not represent a cogent
approach to its overall responsibility to divide the assets equitably. We
therefore affirm.

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                          GARDNER v. WHITE
                          Decision of the Court

¶30           Husband has requested attorney’s fees pursuant A.R.S. § 25-
324 and ARCAP 21. After consideration of the parties’ respective financial
resources and the reasonableness of their positions, we decline his request
in the exercise of our discretion.

                              CONCLUSION

¶31          For the foregoing reasons, the decree is affirmed.

                         AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
                         FILED: AA

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