Court Opinion

ID: 9946010
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-28 21:03:24.647122+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:25:20.544251
License: Public Domain

IN THE
                ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                               DIVISION TWO

                           IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF

                           ROBERT R. MCCULLOCH,
                     Petitioner/Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

                                     and

                          CAMERONE E. PARKER,
                    Respondent/Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

                        No. 2 CA-CV 2023-0026-FC
                         Filed February 28, 2024

           Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                           No. FN2020003777
                  The Honorable Ronda R. Fisk, Judge

                                AFFIRMED

                                 COUNSEL

Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix
By Leonce A. Richard and Aurora M. Walker
Counsel for Petitioner/Appellant/Cross-Appellee

Alongi Law Firm PLLC, Phoenix
By Thomas P. Alongi and Elizabeth A. Alongi
Counsel for Respondent/Appellee/Cross-Appellant
                  IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                         Opinion of the Court

                                OPINION

Vice Chief Judge Staring authored the opinion of the Court, in which Judge
Sklar and Judge O’Neil concurred.

S T A R I N G, Vice Chief Judge:

¶1            Robert McCulloch appeals from a divorce decree awarding a
2017 Mercedes SUV to Camerone Parker as her sole and separate property,
as well as the denial of his motion to alter or amend the decree challenging
that ruling. Camerone cross-appeals from the award of reimbursement to
Robert for her exclusive occupancy of his sole and separate property between
August 2020 and September 2022, as well as the finding that Robert had
reimbursed the community for its expenditures on improvements to his sole
and separate property. For the following reasons, we affirm.

                   Factual and Procedural Background

¶2             Before Robert and Camerone were married in September 2017,
they signed a premarital agreement in which they agreed that their sole and
separate property would remain as such. During the marriage, the parties
split their time between Robert’s sole and separate properties in Phoenix and
Sedona.

¶3            In August 2020, Camerone filed for an order of protection
against Robert in Cottonwood Municipal Court, alleging domestic abuse.
The court issued an ex parte order of protection granting her exclusive use
and possession of Robert’s sole and separate Sedona home for one year. The
order of protection was affirmed after an evidentiary hearing in July 2021.

¶4             Also in August 2020, Robert filed for divorce in Maricopa
County Superior Court. Separately, he sent Camerone a letter demanding
she vacate the Sedona home pursuant to the terms of their premarital
agreement. In the letter, Robert offered to accelerate spousal maintenance
payments Camerone was entitled to receive under the premarital agreement
if she agreed to vacate the home and “either quash[] her Order of Protection
or modif[y] it to remove” the home as a protected location. (Emphasis
omitted.) Camerone, however, remained in the home.

¶5           In October 2020, Camerone sought temporary orders for
spousal maintenance and “sole and exclusive use of either the Sedona or the

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                          Opinion of the Court

Phoenix residence” pending the decree, noting the order of protection she
had obtained against Robert. Robert responded that “there [was] no
legitimate basis” for the order of protection and that her exclusive use of
either residence for more than three months “constitutes more than the
permissible ‘limited time’ under” Rule 23(h)(2), Ariz. R. Protective Order P.
Additionally, Robert moved for a temporary order “directing that
[Camerone] immediately vacate his sole and separate Sedona residence.” He
argued that, pursuant to the parties’ premarital agreement, she was
prohibited “from claiming any right of continued occupancy in [his] separate
property residences” following the filing of a petition for dissolution. In
December, the trial court denied Camerone’s request for temporary spousal
support but granted her “temporary” and “exclusive” use of the Sedona
home, adding that she “shall have a law enforcement officer present on civil
standby while at the residence in order to comply with the order of
protection.”

¶6                In August 2021, upon expiration of the initial order of
protection, Camerone was granted a second order of protection, which
prohibited Robert from going “to or near” her “[r]esidence” for another
year.1 The order described Camerone’s residential address as “confidential.”
In October, the trial court adopted a “Stay Away Order” negotiated by the
parties, which provided that Camerone would “continue to have exclusive
use” of the Sedona home “pursuant to the Court’s Temporary Orders.” The
order also provided Robert would “be entitled to visit the [home] from time
to time . . . to inspect the progress of the construction work” so long as he had
no contact with Camerone during those visits. The order stated it would
expire after one year or upon entry of a divorce decree. Camerone agreed to
dismiss the second order of protection upon entry of the Stay Away Order.

¶7             In the joint pretrial statement, both parties claimed ownership
of a 2017 Mercedes SUV. Robert sought reimbursement for Camerone’s
exclusive use of his Sedona home, and Camerone sought community
reimbursement for spending by Robert on improvements to the Sedona
home. In the dissolution decree, the trial court awarded ownership of the
SUV to Camerone as her sole and separate property, finding Robert had
gifted it to her before the marriage. Further, as the premarital agreement
allowed Camerone, upon divorce, to select between having “the remaining

       1The record before us on appeal appears to contain only the first page

of the second order of protection, which does not include the date of
issuance or judge’s signature.

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

balance owed on automobile awarded to [her] in an amount up to $50,000”
or the purchase of a new car of equal value, she opted to receive $50,000 from
Robert after being awarded the SUV. The court also ordered Camerone to
pay Robert $200,000 for her exclusive use of his separately owned Sedona
home from August 2020 to September 2022 and denied her claim for
community reimbursement.

¶8            After the denial of Robert’s motion to alter or amend the decree
to award him the SUV as his separate property, Robert’s timely appeal and
Camerone’s timely cross-appeal followed. We have jurisdiction under A.R.S.
§§ 12-120.21(A)(1) and 12-2101(A)(1), (2).

                                  Discussion

I.   Ownership of SUV

¶9             Robert argues the trial court erred in finding that he had gifted
the SUV to Camerone before the marriage and that it was her sole and
separate property. We review the court’s division of property for an abuse
of discretion,2 but the classification of property as separate or community is
a question of law we review de novo. Helland v. Helland, 236 Ariz. 197, ¶ 8
(App. 2014); Bell-Kilbourn v. Bell-Kilbourn, 216 Ariz. 521, ¶ 4 (App. 2007).
Whether a gift has been made is a question of fact, and we will not disturb a
court’s determination unless it is clearly erroneous. Bobrow v. Bobrow,
241 Ariz. 592, ¶ 11 (App. 2017). A finding of fact is not clearly erroneous if it
is supported by substantial evidence—that is, evidence sufficient for a
reasonable person to reach the same result. Castro v. Ballesteros-Suarez,
222 Ariz. 48, ¶ 11 (App. 2009).

¶10            As applicable here, gifts are valid if they are “in writing, duly
acknowledged and recorded,” or if “actual possession of the gift is passed to
and remains with the donee or some[]one claiming under him.” A.R.S.
§ 33-601. “A gift is valid under the actual possession provision of [§] 33-601
if the donee is able to establish that there was clear and unmistakable
donative intent by the donor, as well as actual possession and control of the
property by the donee.” Milner v. Colonial Tr. Co., 198 Ariz. 24, ¶ 13 (App.
2000). The donee has the burden of “establish[ing] the existence of a donative
intent” by clear and convincing evidence. O’Hair v. O’Hair, 109 Ariz. 236, 240
(1973). Although a donor’s intent to make a gift must be “clear, unmistakable

       2We review a court’s ruling on a motion to alter or amend for an

abuse of discretion. Stock v. Stock, 250 Ariz. 352, ¶ 5 (App. 2020).

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

and unequivocal,” it need not be express and can be inferred. In re Marriage
of Berger, 140 Ariz. 156, 162 (App. 1983). “Donative intent is ascertained in
light of all surrounding circumstances . . . .” Id.

¶11             Here, Robert claims Camerone failed to establish the necessary
donative intent because the vehicle had been titled “in his name at all times”
and he therefore retained sole legal ownership. He asserts he had merely
granted Camerone permission to use the vehicle. In support of his argument,
Robert relies on Cameron v. Cameron, 148 Ariz. 558 (App. 1985), contending
that the circumstances here are analogous despite the fact that the purported
gift at issue in that case was purchased during the parties’ marriage. Further,
Robert argues “no delivery of irrevocable ownership of the Mercedes SUV to
[Camerone] ever occurred,” pointing to his use of his own money to
purchase the vehicle and again asserting he was its legal owner because title
had remained solely in his name.

¶12            Cameron is not instructive here. It specifically addresses gifts
between spouses during a marriage and conversion of community property
into separate property. Id. at 559. On the record before us, we cannot
conclude the trial court erred in finding Robert had gifted the SUV to
Camerone prior to marriage and awarding it to her as her sole and separate
property. Camerone testified the vehicle was “a Christmas present,”
pointing to a December 2016 email sent to her by Robert titled “early
present,” which stated, “[L]ove my girl[,] here’s your present,” and included
a photo of the SUV with a large bow on its hood. Robert stated in the email
that the vehicle would be “deliver[ed] to [Camerone] at condo.” Robert also
registered the vehicle’s “Mercedes me” online account in Camerone’s name.
Thus, the evidence is sufficient to show Robert intended to gift the SUV to
her. See Milner, 198 Ariz. 24, ¶ 13; Lehn v. Al-Thanayyan, 246 Ariz. 277, ¶ 20
(App. 2019) (we do not reweigh evidence on appeal, instead deferring to trial
court’s determinations of witness credibility and weight given to conflicting
evidence).

¶13           The title in Robert’s name is not dispositive. Robert cites Armer
v. Armer, 105 Ariz. 284, 289 (1970), which references a general rule that a gift
requires “donative intent, delivery, and the vesting of irrevocable title upon
such delivery.” But the final provision of § 33-601, which codifies the
common law rule that a gift is valid if “actual possession of the gift is passed
to and remains with the donee,” does not require a formal transfer of legal
title.

¶14            Although “[a] prima facie presumption of ownership arises
from a certificate of title,” this presumption may be rebutted. In re One 1983

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                    IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                           Opinion of the Court

Toyota Silver Four-Door Sedan, VIN No. JT2MX63E4D0004378, 168 Ariz. 399,
402 (App. 1991). We have previously reasoned that “‘ownership’ exists
independent of a certificate of title,” Reinke v. All. Towing, 207 Ariz. 542, ¶ 16
(App. 2004), and the lack of an official registration in the donee’s name does
not invalidate a gift if actual possession has passed to the donee and the gift
remains in their possession, see Milner, 198 Ariz. 24, ¶¶ 13-14. Robert does
not dispute that the vehicle itself was delivered to Camerone and that it
remained in her possession. Therefore, the lack of official title in Camerone’s
name is not alone sufficient to conclusively establish Robert intended to
retain legal ownership of the vehicle rather than gift it to her.

II. Reimbursement for Camerone’s Exclusive Use of Sedona Home

¶15              On cross-appeal, Camerone argues the trial court erred in
ordering her to reimburse Robert for her exclusive occupancy of his Sedona
home. The court has “broad discretion in determining what allocation of
property and debt is equitable under the circumstances,” and we will not
disturb this determination “absent a clear abuse of discretion.” In re Marriage
of Inboden, 223 Ariz. 542, ¶ 7 (App. 2010). “An abuse of discretion exists when
the record, viewed in the light most favorable to upholding the trial court’s
decision, is devoid of competent evidence to support the decision.” State
ex rel. Dep’t of Econ. Sec. v. Burton, 205 Ariz. 27, ¶ 14 (App. 2003). To the extent
the court’s decision was based on an “interpretation and application of the
law, we review its decision de novo.” Dabrowski v. Bartlett, 246 Ariz. 504, ¶ 17
(App. 2019).

¶16            Below, Robert argued he was entitled to reimbursement for
Camerone’s exclusive use of the Sedona home pursuant to Paragraph 9 of the
parties’ premarital agreement. That paragraph provided that “the fact that
the Parties may reside in one Party’s sole and separate residence shall, under
no circumstance, give the non-owning Party any right or interest in the
residence, including, but not limited to, any right to continued occupancy.”
It further provided that “[i]n the event that the Parties are residing together
in one Party’s sole and separate residence upon the filing of a petition for
dissolution of marriage,” the “non-owning Party shall vacate the residence
within a reasonable amount of time after receiving a written request to vacate
(but no longer than 30 days).” Robert asserted that, despite his written
request in September 2020 that Camerone vacate the Sedona home, as well
as his offer to begin paying her spousal maintenance, she had continued to
“improperly squat[] on the property.” Thus, he argued, Camerone was
required to pay him “at least the minimum . . . that he has paid out to
maintain the Sedona home” during her exclusive occupancy, which, at the

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                          Opinion of the Court

time of trial, was approximately $380,000. Alternatively, Robert asserted
Camerone was required to pay him between $440,000 and $550,000,
representing the “full rental value of the home” during that time period.

¶17            In response, Camerone asserted she had been granted
exclusive use of the Sedona home in August 2020 pursuant to the initial order
of protection, which had been upheld following an evidentiary hearing. She
also pointed to the trial court’s temporary orders awarding her exclusive use
of the home. Further, she challenged Robert’s argument regarding the
home’s rental value, asserting that “because of the ongoing construction
projects and maintenance work, the Sedona Home was in no condition to be
rented.”

¶18           In dividing the parties’ assets, the trial court awarded Robert
the Sedona home as his sole and separate property. The court then turned to
Robert’s argument that he was entitled to reimbursement from Camerone
“for her exclusive use of the . . . Home . . . during the pendency of the
dissolution petition.” It first recited the language of the premarital
agreement providing that, upon the filing of a petition for dissolution, a party
was required to vacate the other party’s sole and separate residence “within
a reasonable amount of time after receiving a written request to vacate (but
no longer than 30 days).” After noting that Camerone had obtained an order
of protection in Cottonwood Municipal Court granting her exclusive use of
the Sedona home in August 2020—and that Robert “did not immediately
seek a hearing” challenging that order—the court discussed Robert’s
September 2020 written demand that Camerone vacate the home. The court
found Robert’s offer to accelerate Camerone’s spousal maintenance
payments “in exchange for [her] vacating the Sedona Home was reasonable.”
The court concluded that, pursuant to the premarital agreement,
“[Camerone] had an obligation to vacate . . . by no later than October 4, 2020.”

¶19            The trial court acknowledged the December 2020 temporary
order issued in the divorce proceedings granting Camerone exclusive use of
the Sedona home, as well as the court’s affirmation of the initial order of
protection following a hearing and issuance of a second order of protection.3

       3Although the trial court stated in the dissolution decree that “[u]pon

expiration of the First OOP, [Camerone] obtained [a] second Order of
Protection” awarding her “exclusive use of the Sedona Home,” she asserts
on appeal that the second order of protection, issued in August 2021, did
not specifically identify the Sedona home and instead stated that her

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

Further, it noted that the orders of protection and the Stay Away Order
negotiated by the parties were “silent on the issue of whether [Robert] would
be entitled to receive—or [Camerone] would be obligated to pay—an
offset/reimbursement for [her] exclusive use of [his] sole and separate
property.”

¶20             The trial court concluded that, “[g]iven the language of . . . the
Premarital Agreement and the directives in § A.R.S. 25-318(A), [Robert] is
entitled to a reasonable reimbursement/offset for [Camerone]’s exclusive
use of the Sedona Home following the filing of the petition for dissolution of
marriage.” See § 25-318(A) (court shall assign each spouse’s sole and separate
property to that spouse). The court cited Cunnington v. Fisk, No. 1 CA-SA
22-0033 (Ariz. App. May 12, 2022) (mem. decision), for the proposition that
the “entry of either an order of protection or temporary order awarding the
first party exclusive use of the second party’s sole and separate property does
not entitle the first party to use the second party’s property without
reimbursement or offset.” As support, it pointed to language from
Cunnington stating that “because A.R.S. § 25-318(A) unambiguously directs
the court to assign each spouse’s sole and separate property to such spouse,
the superior court was limited in its temporary orders to assigning the
[home] to [Robert] as its owner.” Id. ¶ 7.

¶21           In determining the amount of reimbursement owed to Robert,
the trial court considered the fact that the home had been “under
construction much of the time [Camerone] occupied the property,”
concluding that Robert’s claim for “full rental value” was therefore
unreasonable. The court found “[t]he more reasonable amount” to be fifty
percent of the fixed expenses Robert had paid “out of his sole and separate
assets” between August 2020 and September 2022, noting that “[he] would
have incurred these expenses regardless of whether [Camerone] was
occupying the Sedona Home.” Accordingly, the court concluded that Robert
was entitled to a total of $200,000 from Camerone for the use of his property
and that this “equitable approximation” was “reasonable in light of the
parties’ agreement that [Camerone] would need $15,000/month in spousal
maintenance, which would cover the cost of housing and utilities.”

¶22           Camerone challenges the trial court’s articulated bases for
awarding reimbursement to Robert. Those bases include its reliance on the
language of the parties’ premarital agreement and citation to Cunnington, an

address was “confidential.” As discussed, the appellate record does not
contain the second page of the August 2021 order of protection.

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

unpublished memorandum decision. Specifically, she contends that
although the parties’ premarital agreement provided “a deadline for spousal
departure from a separately[ ]owned residence,” it “outlined no solution if
other circumstances,” such as the issuance of an order of protection,
“intervened.” And, Camerone asserts, the court’s reliance on Cunnington in
awarding Robert reimbursement for her exclusive use of the Sedona home
violated Rule 111(c)(1), Ariz. R. Sup. Ct.

¶23             Camerone contends the trial court should have instead looked
to the “plain and unambiguous” terms of the October 2021 Stay Away Order
in deciding whether to order reimbursement. Camerone argues the order’s
terms “said nothing of rental value, reimbursement, offset, or equalization.”
Moreover, she contends, although Robert “had every opportunity to bargain
for monthly rent or a ‘lump sum’ equalization payment as the price for [her]
future ‘tenancy,’” he requested reimbursement for the first time in the
parties’ joint “pretrial statement filed just three business days before the final
hearing.” This, she contends, deprived her of “fair notice” and altered the
agreed-upon terms of the Stay Away Order. Camerone asserts she “might
have declined” to enter into the agreement if she had known she would be
required to reimburse Robert for her occupancy of the Sedona home in the
amount of $200,000.

¶24            Additionally, Camerone argues Arizona’s order of protection
statute does “not authorize the assessment of ‘rent’ against a victim as
tradeoff for protective occupancy.” Thus, she asserts, because she was
occupying the Sedona home as a domestic abuse victim pursuant to orders
of protection, the trial court’s award of reimbursement to Robert undermines
the “letter and spirit” of A.R.S. § 13-3602, “which encourages victims to
prioritize their personal safety over financial considerations.”

¶25           Robert counters by pointing to the terms of the premarital
agreement providing that, following the filing of a petition for dissolution
and upon receipt of a written demand, Camerone was required to vacate the
Sedona home. And, he asserts, despite the provision in the agreement
prohibiting Camerone from receiving temporary spousal support, she
nevertheless received such support “by staying rent free in [his] sole and
separate residence while he continued to pay for the costs of the residence
for two years.”

¶26          Robert further maintains that “at no point prior to this appeal
did [Camerone] ever raise her current claim that [he] somehow intentionally
waived his reimbursement claim by not expressly preserving it in the Stay
Away Order.” He therefore contends we cannot consider it. Indeed, he

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

asserts, although the parties’ joint pretrial statement “directly addressed the
issue of [Robert]’s reimbursement claim for [Camerone’s] exclusive use of the
Sedona home, [she] devoted less than one page to stating her position on the
issue” and “made no argument whatsoever for waiver based on what she
now claims to be an implied agreement or ‘[un]fair notice.’” (Alteration in
original.) Similarly, Robert argues, Camerone failed to argue below that the
Stay Away Order “constituted a binding contract that somehow operated to
amend” the premarital agreement. In any event, he contends Camerone’s
arguments lack merit because the Stay Away Order’s “mere silence”
regarding reimbursement does not amount to an “affirmative waiver.”

¶27            Finally, Robert argues that although Rule 23(h)(2)(A), Ariz. R.
Protective Order P., permits exclusive use of a residence by a non-owning
party “for a limited time,” nothing in § 13-3602 prohibits reimbursement for
such use. Thus, he argues, nothing in the rule or statute, nor any authority
cited by Camerone, authorizes occupation of another’s property “free of
charge.”

¶28            Both parties’ briefs lack citation to authority, and we are not
aware of any, establishing whether a trial court, in a dissolution proceeding,
may order a non-owner spouse to reimburse the other spouse for exclusive
occupancy of the other’s sole and separate property under the specific
circumstances present in this case, including Camerone’s orders of protection
against Robert. In our discretion, however, we decline to find waiver of the
parties’ respective arguments. See City of Tucson v. Tanno, 245 Ariz. 488, ¶ 22
(App. 2018) (court has discretion to decline to find waiver when considering
“issues of statewide importance” or “situations in which the public interest
is better served by having the issue considered”) (quoting Schoenfelder v. Ariz.
Bank, 165 Ariz. 79, 90 n.8 (1990)); Harris v. Cochise Health Sys., 215 Ariz. 344,
¶ 17 (App. 2007) (court has discretion to hear arguments first raised on
appeal). Although the court appears to have relied on Cunnington to support
its conclusion that reimbursement was warranted, this case does not address
whether compensation is owed for the exclusive use of another’s sole and
separate property. That case concluded only that exclusive use of another’s
sole property should not be granted through a temporary order during
divorce proceedings. No. 1 CA-SA 22-0033, ¶¶ 7-9.4

       4In the absence of pertinent legal authority, unpublished decisions

issued on or after January 1, 2015, may be cited “for persuasive value.”
Ariz. R. Sup. Ct. 111(c)(1)(C). Thus, although Cunnington is not particularly
instructive, the court did not err in citing to it in the decree of dissolution.

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                    IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                           Opinion of the Court

¶29             Further, to the extent Camerone suggests she lacked sufficient
notice of Robert’s reimbursement claim prior to the hearing, we disagree.
Because the issue of reimbursement was specifically included in the joint
pretrial statement, Camerone was given sufficient notice it could be
addressed by the court. See Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Dini, 169 Ariz. 555, 557
(App. 1991) (“The pretrial statement serves to narrow the scope of the legal
and factual issues to those which are truly legitimate, prevents surprises and
facilitates the trial of the case.”).

¶30            The parties contest whether the negotiated Stay Away Order
granted Camerone permission to stay in the Sedona home for free. As the
Stay Away Order was an agreement between the parties to replace an order
of protection, we review the trial court’s interpretation de novo. See Sowards
v. Sowards, 255 Ariz. 527, ¶ 8 (2023). When determining the meaning of a
written agreement, we look to the language used by the parties, and if it is
clear and unambiguous, we go no further. Goodman v. Newzona Inv. Co., 101
Ariz. 470, 472 (1966). Agreements between parties in family court, like other
contracts, “are to be read in light of the parties’ intentions as reflected by their
language and in view of all circumstances; if the intention of the parties is
clear from such a reading, there is no ambiguity.” Harris v. Harris, 195 Ariz.
559, ¶ 15 (App. 1999). We accept the trial court’s factual findings as to the
intent of the parties unless they are clearly erroneous. McNeil v. Hoskyns,
236 Ariz. 173, ¶ 13 (App. 2014); Chopin v. Chopin, 224 Ariz. 425, ¶ 7 (App.
2010); Ariz. R. Fam. Law P. 82(a)(5).

¶31           As discussed, the trial court determined the Stay Away Order
was “silent on the issue of whether [Robert] would be entitled to receive—or
[Camerone] would be obligated to pay—an offset/reimbursement for [her]
exclusive use of [his] sole and separate property.” The order stipulated that,
“pursuant to the Court’s Temporary Orders,” Camerone would continue to
have exclusive use of the Sedona home. Based on the plain language of this
provision, the intent was the continuation of the temporary orders that
awarded Camerone exclusive use in exchange for allowing Robert limited
access to the home to oversee construction. The text is unambiguous: the
continued occupancy was done in accordance with court orders.

¶32           There is no evidence Robert intended to permit Camerone’s
exclusive occupancy of the Sedona home. Robert attempted to have
Camerone vacate the home, offering early payment of spousal support as an
incentive. He also objected to her request for temporary orders granting her
exclusive use of the home. These actions establish Robert had no desire for
Camerone to remain in the home and her continued occupancy was based

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                          Opinion of the Court

solely on the court’s orders. On the record before us, we can find no error in
the trial court’s interpretation of the Stay Away Order.

¶33              The trial court considered the evidence before it, including the
effects of the temporary order and the Stay Away Order on possession of the
Sedona home, the language of the premarital agreement, and the statutes
involved in awarding sole property in a divorce decree, concluding Robert
was entitled to reimbursement for his loss of possession during Camerone’s
stay. See Twin City Fire Ins. Co. v. Burke, 204 Ariz. 251, ¶ 10 (2003) (We will
affirm the factual findings of the trial court “so long as they are supported by
reasonable evidence.”); cf. Grant v. Ariz. Pub. Serv. Co., 133 Ariz. 434, 456
(1982) (abuse of discretion occurs where “conclusion was reached without
consideration of the evidence” or where “there is no substantial basis for the
trial court’s discretionary finding”). Further, nothing in § 13-3602 suggests
that an order for exclusive possession alters the separate or community
character of a residence or any contractual relationship between the parties.
Nor does such an order imply a right to possess property in which the other
party also has a right to possession without reimbursement. An order for
exclusive use of a residence does not preclude a family court from ordering
reimbursement for a party’s exclusion from a marital or separate home.
Cf. Ferrill v. Ferrill, 253 Ariz. 393, ¶¶ 11, 16 (App. 2022) (“In deciding whether
a party may be liable for a portion of rent for occupying the community home
after a dissolution petition has been served, courts frame the issue as
dependent upon whether one spouse has denied the other’s right to occupy
the marital home.”). We find no abuse of discretion and affirm the award of
reimbursement. See In re Marriage of Gibbs, 227 Ariz. 403, ¶ 16 (App. 2011)
(We will “affirm the trial court if its ruling was correct for any reason.”); see
also Tena v. Yorgulez, 24 Ariz. App. 311, 313 (1975) (“[W]e must presume the
trial court found the necessary facts to support its judgment, providing there
is evidence in the record to support it.”).

III. Community Reimbursement

¶34            Additionally, Camerone argues the trial court erred in
“withholding any credit” for community funds spent on renovations to the
Sedona home. Specifically, she contends the court “chose an outcome that
seemed ‘equitable’” rather than “impos[ing] the mandatory consequences
required” by the premarital agreement for Robert’s “mishandling” of the
parties’ joint checking account. We review a court’s interpretation of a
premarital agreement de novo. See Dunn v. FastMed Urgent Care PC, 245 Ariz.
35, ¶ 10 (App. 2018) (“Contract interpretation is a question of law we review
de novo.”). And we view the evidence “in the light most favorable to

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                  IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                         Opinion of the Court

upholding the court’s rulings.” Dabrowski v. Bartlett, 246 Ariz. 504, ¶ 17
(App. 2019). We construe a contract between parties to determine and
enforce the parties’ intent, considering the plain meaning of the words in the
context of the contract as a whole. See Dunn, 245 Ariz. 35, ¶ 10.

¶35           Here, the parties’ premarital agreement states, in relevant part:

                  14. Joint Household Account; Payment of
              Normal and Routine Community and
              Household Living Expenses; Monthly Stipend
              to WIFE. During their marriage, the Parties
              shall open and maintain a joint household
              account for purposes of paying their
              community and reasonable, normal, and
              routine household living expenses.         The
              following conditions/restrictions shall govern
              the use of the Parties’ incomes and joint
              household account:

                     a. During the marriage, HUSBAND
              shall deposit all of his community income and
              earnings . . . directly into the joint household
              account.

                     ....

                     b. Each Party shall be free to voluntarily
              contribute, at his or her sole discretion, his or
              her sole and separate funds to the joint
              household account. Except as specifically
              provided in subparagraph (c) below, under no
              circumstances shall either Party ever be
              obligated to contribute his or her sole and
              separate funds to the joint household account
              and the fact that a Party may have contributed
              his or her sole and separate funds to the joint
              household account in the past shall not in any
              way obligate him or her to contribute any
              further or additional sole and separate funds to
              the account at any time.         Irrespective of
              Paragraphs 15 and 20 below, and except as
              provided in subparagraph (c) below, any sole
              and separate funds contributed to the joint

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    IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
           Opinion of the Court

household account shall be deemed gifts to the
community and the Party contributing said
funds to the account shall not be entitled to any
refund or reimbursement of those monies.

       c. During the Parties’ marriage,
HUSBAND shall pay all of the Parties’ normal
and routine joint and community living
expenses.      HUSBAND shall utilize his
community income and earnings as well as any
other community monies deposited into the
joint household account to pay the Parties’
normal and routine joint and community living
expenses. In the event that his community
income and earnings are insufficient at any time
to cover the Parties’ normal and routine joint
and community living expenses and there are
insufficient funds in the joint household
account to cover these expenses, then
HUSBAND shall be obligated to utilize his sole
and separate funds to pay these expenses. . . .
[U]nder no circumstances shall HUSBAND ever
be obligated to use his sole and separate funds,
his community income and earnings, or any
funds in the joint household account, to pay
WIFE’S sole and separate expenses; nor shall
HUSBAND be entitled to use his community
income and earnings, or any funds in the joint
household account, to pay his own sole and
separate expenses.

       ....

       e. In addition to the foregoing,
HUSBAND shall pay to WIFE the sum of $5,000
each month from his sole and separate funds to
do with as she pleases. This money shall
constitute WIFE’S sole and separate funds once
received.

       ....

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    IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
           Opinion of the Court

    15. Right       to     Reimbursement        for
Expenditure of Joint, Community, or Separate
Funds. The Parties acknowledge that, from
time to time, certain of their joint, community,
or separate property or funds may be
voluntarily used or contributed to benefit their
joint, community, or separate property or to pay
joint, community, or separate liabilities. In such
cases, the Parties agree to the following rights of
reimbursement:

        a. Joint or Community Property Used to
Benefit Separate Property. Except as otherwise
set forth in this Agreement, whenever the
Parties’ joint or community property or funds
are used to maintain, repair, improve, or benefit
any separate property or to satisfy any separate
liability of a Party, the community shall be
entitled to an automatic right of a dollar for
dollar reimbursement for the joint or
community funds or property so used.

       ....

      e. Burden of Proof. It shall be the
burden of the Party claiming a right of
reimbursement hereunder to establish such
right and the amount thereof by credible
evidence admissible in a court of law.

       ....

    20. Commingling of Accounts. Except as
otherwise specifically provided herein, the
intentional or inadvertent pooling or
commingling of the Parties’ respective separate
monies into any joint or community account or
accounts during marriage shall not convert the
deposited funds into “community” or “marital”
property for any reason.         Similarly, the
intentional or inadvertent pooling or
commingling of joint or community monies into
a Party’s sole and separate account or accounts

                        15
                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

              shall not convert the separate account or
              accounts or the monies therein into
              “community” or “marital” property for any
              reason. Rather, all such pooled or commingled
              monies shall constitute and retain their original
              character as sole and separate property or
              community property. In the event that any
              pooled monies become so commingled that they
              cannot be readily identified as being separate or
              community monies, then the commingled
              monies in the account shall constitute separate
              and community property in the proportion that
              the overall value of the respective total
              contributions of separate and community funds
              to the account over the account’s lifetime bear to
              one another.

¶36           Below, Camerone argued the community was entitled to
approximately $680,000 as reimbursement for funds spent from the parties’
joint account to improve the Sedona home. She acknowledged that Robert
had earned approximately $1,200,000 in community income during the
parties’ marriage and that a total of $2,400,000 had been deposited into their
joint account.5 However, Camerone asserted that because Paragraph 14(b)
of the premarital agreement provided that “any sole and separate funds
contributed to the joint household account shall be deemed gifts to the
community” and the contributing party “shall not be entitled to any refund
or reimbursement of those monies,” any funds in excess of the community
earnings deposited into the parties’ joint account constituted a gift. She also
suggested Robert had failed to provide accounting showing “correlation . . .
with what got spent on the Sedona property and what got put into the joint
account.”

¶37           Robert countered that he had reimbursed the joint account
with his sole and separate funds for money spent on improvements to the
Sedona home and that there had been “no net contribution of community

       5Despite the provision in the premarital agreement requiring Robert

to deposit “all of his community income and earnings . . . directly into the
joint household account” during the parties’ marriage, Robert testified at
trial that his employment earnings were “deposited into [his] main account,
and then [he] put monies into the joint account.”

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

monies to [Robert]’s sole and separate Sedona home.” Robert’s expert
witness in forensic accounting testified that only $529,324 had been paid out
of the joint account on improvements to the Sedona home. She further
testified Robert had earned a net community income of $1,221,387 during the
parties’ marriage and deposited a total of $2,443,763 into the parties’ joint
account, pointing to the fact that, “in the aggregate,” more money had been
“transferred out of the sole and separate account into the joint account than
the community funds that went in.” Additionally, Robert’s expert testified
the total deposits into the joint account had exceeded his $2,375,000 “total
obligation of disbursements” consisting of “all of the community expenses,
plus the separate expenses, plus all the payments he was required to make
to” Camerone. And she explained she had “tied out” all transfers between
Robert’s separate bank account and the parties’ joint account and had
concluded the community was reimbursed for all expenses related to
improvement of the Sedona home “under an accounting.”

¶38            In the decree of dissolution, the trial court acknowledged that
“[t]here were occasions when funds from the Joint Accounts were used to
pay for . . . improvements to the Sedona Home,” finding that the total
amount of those expenses was approximately $529,000. The court concluded
“[a]ll amounts spent on the improvements of the Sedona Home were paid by
[Robert] from his sole and separate accounts” because he had “either prepaid
or reimbursed the Joint Accounts for all improvements from his sole and
separate accounts.” It further concluded Robert’s “practices . . . fulfilled the
‘plain meaning of the words used and the manifest intent and purposes of
the Parties’” set forth in the premarital agreement.

¶39          On cross-appeal, Camerone maintains that, pursuant to the
terms of the premarital agreement, “money that became marital property
through subsequent deposit into the joint account” constituted a gift to the
community and “could not then also serve as reimbursement for other marital
money already pulled out to serve [Robert]’s sole and separate purpose.”6
(Emphasis in original.) Further, she argues, Robert “abjectly failed to
demonstrate the sort of accounting that would” support the trial court’s

       6Although Paragraph 14 of the premarital agreement provided that

the parties shall, “[d]uring their marriage,” “open and maintain a joint
household account,” Robert and Camerone testified at trial that they had
instead continued to use a joint account opened before marriage. The court
concluded this account had “served the same purpose” as the joint account
referenced in the parties’ premarital agreement.

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

conclusion, pointing to the lack of evidence that deposits into the joint
account matched disbursements. Accordingly, Camerone contends the
community has not yet been reimbursed for the approximately $529,000
spent to improve Robert’s Sedona home.

¶40             Robert contends that if any extra money deposited into the
parties’ joint account automatically became a “gift” that could not be credited
toward reimbursement, it would be impossible to reimburse the community.
Instead, he argues, because he “contributed $1,222,376 in excess monies into
the parties’ joint account over and above the community earnings he was
required to deposit” under the premarital agreement, he “fully complied”
with the express terms of the agreement “in reimbursing the community for
his use of community funds to pay separate expenses.” He asserts “[t]hese
extra funds were over twice the amount of the . . . community funds that
[Camerone] complains [he] spent on sole and separate expenses.” In support
of his argument, Robert points to the agreement’s lack of a “mandated
method or set protocol” for reimbursement and the court’s duty to
“reasonably harmonize” all of its terms.

¶41             In ascertaining the intent of the parties, we “look to the plain
meaning of the words as viewed in the context of the contract as a whole.”
United Cal. Bank v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 140 Ariz. 238, 259 (App. 1983).
As discussed, Paragraph 14(b) of the premarital agreement states that
“[i]rrespective of Paragraphs 15 and 20 below, . . . any sole and separate funds
contributed to the joint household account shall be deemed gifts to the
community.” (Emphasis added.) The definition of “irrespective of” is
“[w]ithout consideration of” or “regardless of.” Irrespective of, The American
Heritage Dictionary (5th ed. 2011); see also Centerpoint Mech. Lien Claims, LLC
v. Commonwealth Land Title Ins. Co., 255 Ariz. 261, ¶ 45 (App. 2023) (In
construing a contract, “we ‘give words their ordinary, common sense
meaning’” and “we may consider dictionary definitions to assist in
determining the ordinary meaning of words.” (quoting A Tumbling-T Ranches
v. Flood Control Dist. of Maricopa Cnty., 220 Ariz. 202, ¶ 23 (App. 2008))). Thus,
this portion of Paragraph 14(b) ordinarily should be understood as follows:
Regardless of “Paragraphs 15 and 20 below, . . . any sole and separate funds
contributed to the joint household account shall be deemed gifts to the
community.”

¶42          However, interpreting Paragraph 14(b) strictly as worded
would render Paragraphs 15 and 20 unnecessary because their application
would always be overruled by Paragraph 14(b). See Taylor v. State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co., 175 Ariz. 148, 158 n.9 (1993) (“[A] contract should be

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

interpreted, if at all possible, in a way that does not render parts of it
superfluous.”). Therefore, we conclude Paragraphs 15 and 20 establish
specific exceptions to Paragraph 14(b)’s general rule that all sole and separate
funds become gifts. See Gfeller v. Scottsdale Vista N. Townhomes Ass’n, 193
Ariz. 52, ¶ 13 (App. 1998) (“We will, if possible, interpret a contract in such a
way as to reconcile and give meaning to all of its terms, if reconciliation can
be accomplished by any reasonable interpretation.” (emphasis added)). As
such, the agreement excludes all of Paragraph 15, including community
reimbursement funds, from Paragraph 14(b)’s classification of funds
deposited into the parties’ joint account as gifts. Accordingly, any separate
funds deposited into the joint account to reimburse the community for
expenditures benefitting a party’s separate property do not constitute gifts to
the community.

¶43            Moreover, the premarital agreement does not specify how,
when, or in what form community reimbursement was to be made, aside
from being “dollar for dollar.” The agreement merely reflects that when
community funds are spent to benefit a party’s sole and separate property,
the community is entitled to reimbursement. Likewise, the agreement is also
silent on what, if any, accounting is necessary to qualify a deposit as a
reimbursement, or where reimbursement payments could be made if not to
the joint account. We will not assume such requirements exist absent express
language in the agreement. See Emps. Mut. Cas. Co. v. DGG & CAR, Inc.,
218 Ariz. 262, ¶ 24 (2008) (court will not “add something to the contract
which the parties have not put there” (quoting D.M.A.F.B. Fed. Credit Union
v. Emps. Mut. Liab. Ins. Co., 96 Ariz. 399, 403 (1964))). As such, Camerone’s
argument that Robert did not properly account for his reimbursements fails.

¶44            The parties do not dispute that Robert deposited into the joint
account from his sole and separate account an amount of approximately
twice his employment-related earnings during the marriage. Robert testified
he had “never spent a penny out of that account that wasn’t reimbursed.”
Robert’s expert witness testified that when Robert deposited money into the
joint account, “some of it was to reimburse the account for sole and separate
expenses.” And, as discussed, she testified the community had been
reimbursed for all expenses related to improvement of the Sedona home
“under an accounting” because the total deposits into the joint account had
exceeded his $2,375,000 “total obligation of disbursements” consisting of “all
of the community expenses, plus the separate expenses, plus all the
payments he was required to make to” Camerone. Thus, the trial court did
not err in concluding Robert had already reimbursed the community for

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                   IN RE MARRIAGE OF MCCULLOCH
                          Opinion of the Court

expenditures on his sole and separate property as required under the terms
of the premarital agreement.

                                 Disposition

¶45            For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s rulings.
Camerone requests an award of attorney fees and costs on appeal. In our
discretion, after considering the relative financial resources of the parties and
the reasonableness of their positions on appeal, we deny Camerone’s request.
See A.R.S. § 25-324(A).

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