Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of                                  Apr 16 2013, 8:27 am
establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.




ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                              ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

CYNTHIA A. HOGAN                                     JANA K. STRAIN
Fort Wayne, Indiana                                  Indianapolis, Indiana




                                IN THE
                      COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

HAROLD M. BACCHUS JR.,                               )
                                                     )
        Appellant-Respondent,                        )
                                                     )
                vs.                                  )      No. 02A03-1203-DR-119
                                                     )
FAZIA DEEN-BACCHUS,                                  )
                                                     )
        Appellee-Petitioner.                         )


                       APPEAL FROM THE ALLEN SUPERIOR COURT
                         The Honorable James R. Heuer, Special Judge
                               Cause No. 02D07-0702-DR-153



                                           April 16, 2013


                 MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION


BARTEAU, Senior Judge
                              STATEMENT OF THE CASE

       Harold Bacchus (“Husband”) appeals the trial court’s disposition of marital

property following the dissolution of his marriage to Fazia Deen-Bacchus (“Wife”). We

affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

                                          ISSUES

       As an initial matter, Wife asks that we dismiss this appeal because Husband failed

to pay the filing fee set forth in Indiana Appellate Rule 9(E) before expiration of the

deadline to file an appeal. We decline to dismiss Husband’s appeal for the reasons set

forth below and thus address his claim that the trial court erred in its disposition of the

marital property. We then address Wife’s claim for appellate attorney’s fees.

                        FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       Husband and Wife married in September 1985 and have three children, two of

whom are now emancipated. Wife petitioned to dissolve the marriage on February 7,

2007. At the time, Wife was an attorney who had been admitted to practice just a few

years earlier, and Husband was an Air Force physician and an emergency room

physician. The parties also owned and operated a business, Med-I-Qwik.

       The trial court dissolved the marriage in January 2009 but left disposition of the

marital property pending. Later that year, Husband retired from the Air Force and his

contract as an emergency room physician was terminated.             A hearing regarding

disposition of the marital property was held over several days.           The trial court

subsequently entered an order in January 2011 identifying marital assets and debts,



                                               2
finding the net worth of the marital property to be $1,405,763, and giving Wife 55% and

Husband 45% of the property.

          Both parties filed motions to correct error. After a hearing over another several

days, the trial court entered an order in February 2012 reducing the net worth of the

marital property to $1,353,333 and dividing the property equally between the parties.

Husband now appeals.

                                    DISCUSSION AND DECISION

                            I. WIFE’S REQUEST TO DISMISS APPEAL

          The trial court issued its order on the respective motions to correct error on

February 17, 2012, and thus Husband’s notice of appeal was due March 19, 2012.

Husband timely filed his notice of appeal on March 14, 2012, but failed to include the

filing fee required by Indiana Appellate Rule 9(E).1

          On March 20, 2012, the Clerk of this Court noted on the docket that Husband had

not paid the filing fee. On March 28, 2012, this Court ordered Husband to file an

amended notice of appeal fully complying with Appellate Rule 9 within thirty days, and

Husband paid the filing fee on the same day. He then filed an amended notice of appeal

on April 13, 2012.




1
    Indiana Appellate Rule 9(E) provides in relevant part:

          The appellant shall pay to the Clerk the filing fee of $250. . . . The filing fee shall be paid
          to the Clerk when the Notice of Appeal is filed. The Clerk shall not file any motion or
          other documents in the proceedings until the filing fee has been paid.
                                                        3
      Wife filed a motion to dismiss the appeal in November 2012, arguing that

Husband should have paid his filing fee by March 19, 2012. A divided motions panel of

this Court denied the motion.

      Wife now asks that we revisit the issue of whether Husband’s failure to pay the

filing fee before the time to file his notice of appeal had expired warrants dismissal.

While reluctant to overrule orders decided by our motions panel, this Court has inherent

authority to reconsider any decision while an appeal remains in fieri. Miller v. Hague

Ins. Agency, Inc., 871 N.E.2d 406, 407 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). In addition, because we

prefer to decide cases on their merits, an appeal may be allowed where there has been a

good faith effort to substantially comply with our rules and where a minor violation is not

flagrant. Cox v. Matthews, 901 N.E.2d 14, 19 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), trans. dismissed.

      Husband made a good faith effort to substantially comply with Appellate Rule 9

by timely filing his notice of appeal notwithstanding his failure to pay the filing fee.

Moreover, his payment of the filing fee on the same day this Court issued its order giving

him thirty days to fully comply with Appellate Rule 9 indicates that his error was not a

flagrant disregard of our rules. We therefore decline to dismiss Husband’s appeal.

                     II. DISPOSITION OF MARITAL PROPERTY

      Husband contends that the trial court erred by excluding and including certain

assets, ordering an equal division of the marital property, failing to credit him for funds

Wife removed and did not repay, and failing to consider other items.

      The parties agree that the trial court sua sponte issued specific findings of fact and

conclusions thereon. Where a trial court enters findings sua sponte, the specific findings

                                            4
control only as to the issues they cover, while a general judgment standard applies to any

issue upon which the court has not found. Brinkmann v. Brinkmann, 772 N.E.2d 441,

444 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002). We may affirm a general judgment on any theory supported by

the evidence adduced at trial. Id.

                              A. Exclusion/Inclusion of Assets

       Husband first contends that the trial court erred in its exclusion and inclusion of

certain assets. It is well-established in Indiana that all marital property goes into the

marital pot for division, whether it was owned by either spouse before the marriage,

acquired by either spouse after the marriage and before final separation of the parties, or

acquired by their joint efforts. Ind. Code § 31-15-7-4(a) (1997); Webb v. Schleutker, 891

N.E.2d 1144, 1149 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008).          The determinative date when identifying

marital property subject to division is the date the dissolution petition was filed. Webb,

891 N.E.2d at 1149. While the trial court may ultimately determine that a particular asset

should be awarded solely to one spouse, it must first include the asset in its consideration

of the marital estate to be divided. Id.

Account #1705

       Husband claims the parties stipulated that Account #1705 was marital property

and argues that the trial court erred by excluding it. At the hearing, however, Wife noted

that the parties were stipulating

       as to certain facts concerning the marital estate. With respect to certain
       assets about which the parties may not necessarily agree, they have in
       various instances stipulated the admissibility of respective exhibits the
       parties would otherwise intend to offer for purposes of the evidentiary
       proceeding and argument in this cause with regard to those assets

                                             5
        notwithstanding. But we have not come to an agreement as to the existence
        of value of variously these assets.

Appellant’s App. p. 84. Wife then recited a lengthy list of stipulations. Among them,

she stated, “With respect to [Account] #1705, while the parties do not stipulate the

ultimate fact, they do stipulate the admissibility of respective exhibits each intends to

offer concerning that particular item.” Id. at 85. At the end of Wife’s recitation, the

court asked Husband if he agreed with the stipulations. Husband responded, “Yes your

Honor, and I agree with the representations that have been made.” Id. at 88.

        The parties therefore did not stipulate that Account #1705 was marital property.

Instead, they stipulated only to the admissibility of any exhibit regarding the account.

See also Respondent’s Ex. FFF (Husband’s own balance sheet, which indicates

stipulation on Account #1705 only as to admissibility of exhibit).

        Husband nonetheless faults Wife for not objecting to admission of his exhibit

regarding Account #1705, Respondent’s Exhibit U.2                    Wife did not need to object,

however, as she had already stipulated to the exhibit’s admissibility.

        In any event, Respondent’s Exhibit U shows that Wife owned Account #1705 and

that its “Date of Initial Deposit or Last Maturity” was October 7, 2008, after Wife’s

February 2007 dissolution petition was filed. Absent any evidence that Account #1705 or

the funds within it existed before February 2007, the trial court did not err by excluding it

from the marital property.


2
  A label at the bottom of Respondent’s Exhibit U says that the stipulation covers the exhibit as an
“[a]sset, not value.” Regardless of the label, Husband points to nothing in the record supporting his claim
that Wife stipulated to Account #1705 as marital property.
                                                    6
Account #3776

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by excluding Account #3776. At the

hearing, the parties stipulated that the account was one of the children’s accounts:

              [WIFE]: [Account #]3776. The parties stipulate that, that is an asset
       which exists in the form of a Uniform Tr[ansfers to] Minor[s] Act account
       in the name of [one of the children]. As a result of which I believe it is the
       stipulation that, that account would be, would be more properly be placed
       on both parties[’] balance sheet of children’s assets.
              [HUSBAND]: We would agree, Your Honor.

Tr. p. 158. The trial court accepted the stipulation, noting that Account #3776 should be

on the children’s balance sheet. Id. at 159.

       At the end of the hearing, the trial court left the record open for the limited

purpose of receiving a stipulation as to current values of investment assets. See id. at

205; Appellant’s App. p. 17. Over a month after the hearing, Husband filed a Notice to

the Court and Request for Value Determination, noting that Wife had not responded to

his communications regarding the joint stipulation of current values of investment assets

or his request for documentation of Account #3776. In paragraph 7, he gave current

balances of four accounts, and in paragraph 9, he stated, “[Husband] would request that

since [Wife] failed to provide proof of the type of account [Account] #3776 was, the

court find that the asset shall be included in the estate and distributed accordingly.”

Appellant’s App. p. 92.     The trial court subsequently entered an order stating that

paragraphs 7 and 9 “are findings of fact in these proceedings.” Id. at 96.

       The trial court’s final order, though, excluded Account #3776 from the marital

property. We cannot say this was error. Once parties enter into a stipulation and the


                                               7
court approves it, the stipulation is binding upon all involved. Ehle v. Ehle, 737 N.E.2d

429, 433-34 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000).      However, a stipulation may be modified if the

existence of fraud, mistake, or undue influence is proved. Id. at 434. Here, Wife and

Husband stipulated that Account #3776 was one of the children’s accounts, and the trial

court approved the stipulation. Husband’s Notice to the Court did not allege fraud,

mistake, or undue influence. Rather, Husband noted only that, after the stipulation, he

asked for documentation of the account and Wife failed to respond. Appellant’s App. pp.

91, 95. This was not enough to invalidate the stipulation. See Ehle, 737 N.E.2d at 434

(“In opting not to conduct her own discovery, but choosing instead to rely upon

Husband’s representations of the marital assets, Wife may not later assert that the

stipulation should be set aside upon the basis that assets were omitted.”). The trial court

thus did not err by excluding Account #3776 from the marital property.

Account #8160

       Husband argues in his opening brief that the trial court erred by excluding

Account #8160 from the marital property but then concedes in his reply brief that there

may not have been sufficient evidence of the account. Indeed, the only reference to

Account #8160 is on his marital balance sheet, Respondent’s Exhibit FFF, which

indicates that the exhibit showing the account is Respondent’s Exhibit AA. However,

Respondent’s Exhibit AA was apparently never offered or admitted into evidence. The

trial court therefore did not err by excluding Account #8160 from the marital property.

See Quillen v. Quillen, 671 N.E.2d 98, 103 (Ind. 1996) (trial court’s exclusion of

accounts presumed proper where no evidence was presented as to their balances).

                                            8
$10,500 in safety deposit box

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by excluding “funds held by Wife in the

safety deposit box in the amount of $10,500.00.” Appellant’s Br. p. 14. As Wife

provides no response on this point, Husband only needs to show prima facie error. Khaja

v. Khan, 902 N.E.2d 857, 868 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (appellant need only show prima facie

error where appellee fails to respond to an issue in appellant’s brief).

       It appears that this $10,500 is the same $10,500 in bonds and cash to which

Husband refers in his fact statement. Specifically, he cites Respondent’s Exhibit QQ,

which is a copy of Wife’s discovery responses stating that Husband and Wife share a

safety deposit box that includes $5000 in bonds “for” one child, $5000 in bonds “for”

another child, and $500 in cash. This evidence indicates that the bonds are property of

Husband and Wife, albeit with the parties’ intent to give them to the children, rather than

the children’s property outright. We thus conclude that Husband has made a prima facie

case that the bonds are marital property subject to division. Husband has also shown

prima facie error with regard to the $500 in cash. We remand with instructions to include

this asset in the marital property and to divide it accordingly.

Alleged $20,000 Canadian certificate of deposit

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by excluding “Wife’s $20,000.00

Canadian Certificate of Deposit.” Appellant’s Br. p. 14. Although he makes no further

argument or analysis, his fact statement sheds more light on the issue: Husband claims

that this certificate of deposit was not discovered until after the court’s initial order

distributing the marital property, when Husband collected personal belongings from the

                                              9
office of Wife’s counsel. He filed a second motion to correct error regarding that

certificate of deposit.

       Our review of the record shows that Wife’s counsel filed an unsworn response

informing the court that, earlier in the divorce proceedings, the contents of Wife’s storage

locker were sent to the office of Wife’s counsel for safekeeping and that Husband’s

counsel later inspected the contents. Appellee’s App. p. 6. Testimony at the hearing on

the motions to correct error was in the same vein. See Tr. pp. 188-90.

       The evidence thus shows that the certificate of deposit could have been discovered

by Husband before the final hearing. Moreover, the only evidence Husband cites for the

alleged asset is a 1987 deposit receipt from The Royal Bank of Canada and a Canada

Trust document showing that a certificate of deposit was issued in 2000 and had a

maturity date in 2001. Respondent’s Ex. F. This is not sufficient to show that the alleged

asset existed at the time the dissolution petition was filed in February 2007. The trial

court did not err by excluding it.

Account #9329

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by excluding Account #9329. The

evidence of who opened or owned this account, however, is ambiguous at best.

Respondent’s Exhibit DD includes an account inquiry for Account #9329 and a statement

for Account #6569, which is the parties’ joint savings account. The statement shows a

$5000 withdrawal from Account #6569 about one month before Wife filed her

dissolution petition, and the account inquiry shows that Account #9329 was opened the

same day with $5000. The exhibit does not show who made the withdrawal or who

                                            10
opened or owned Account #9329. Wife testified that she did not remember making the

withdrawal from the joint account or opening Account #9329. Tr. p. 177. In the absence

of any conclusive evidence that either Husband or Wife owned Account #9329, the trial

court did not err by excluding it.

Loan to Husband’s brother

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by including in the marital property

$28,800 in loans to his brother. As proof of this loan, Wife submitted Petitioner’s Exhibit

12, which is a 1994 notarized letter signed by Husband to his brother documenting

various loans totaling $28,800 made to his brother from 1986 through 1994. Before the

exhibit was offered and admitted, Husband said that his brother had never borrowed any

money from him.       Tr. p. 24.     The trial court was entitled to make a credibility

determination between Wife, who offered the exhibit as evidence of a marital asset, and

Husband, who denied ever making a loan to his brother in the face of a notarized letter

signed by him documenting a $28,800 loan. The trial court did not err.

                               B. Equal Division of Property

       Husband next contends that the trial court abused its discretion by equally dividing

the marital property. An equal division of marital property is presumed by statute to be

just and reasonable. Ind. Code § 31-15-7-5 (1997). This presumption may be rebutted by

a party who presents relevant evidence that an equal division would not be just and

reasonable. Id. Subject to the statutory presumption of equal division, the disposition of

marital property is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court. Augspurger v.

Hudson, 802 N.E.2d 503, 512 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004).

                                            11
       Husband’s main contention is that the trial court failed to consider that marital

assets were used to fund Wife’s legal education but that the parties separated before

Husband could benefit from her law degree. He cites In re Marriage of Coyle, 671

N.E.2d 938 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996), where the trial court found that the wife had dissipated

marital assets in transactions with her children from a former marriage.              Those

transactions included payments toward college expenses and used vehicles for one child

and failure to charge interest on the sale of a house to another child. This Court discussed

dissipation at length and remanded with instructions for the trial court to hear oral

argument and reconsider its findings of dissipation. Id. at 944.

       Coyle does not persuade us that Wife dissipated marital assets by pursuing a law

degree. In fact, we noted there that “the fact that one spouse or the marriage itself does

not benefit directly from an expenditure does not, standing alone, require a finding that a

dissipation of marital assets has occurred.” Id. at 943. The trial court did not err by

failing to consider the funding of Wife’s legal education as a dissipation of marital assets.

See Roberts v. Roberts, 670 N.E.2d 72, 76 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (funding of husband’s

law degree not dissipation even though wife did not receive any benefit), trans. denied.

       Husband then argues that the trial court’s equal division of the marital property

was an abuse of discretion because Wife’s earning potential is greater than his. As noted

above, the court’s initial order gave Wife 55% and Husband 45% of the marital property.

In his first motion to correct error and at the subsequent hearing, Husband challenged the

division, noting his retirement from the Air Force, the loss of his contract as an

emergency room physician, and Wife’s employment as an attorney. The court was

                                             12
apparently persuaded, as its order on the motions to correct error found that neither party

had rebutted the presumption of equal division and therefore gave each party 50% of the

marital property.

       Husband now presents a similar argument. He claims that, as an attorney who is

several years younger than him, Wife has a longer period of time to make a good living.

Without citation to the record, he also says that he is at the end of his career, has been

replaced with younger doctors, and is unable to maintain medical malpractice insurance.

       “When a party challenges the trial court’s division of marital property, he must

overcome a strong presumption that the court considered and complied with the

applicable statute, and that presumption is one of the strongest presumptions applicable to

our consideration on appeal.” Hatten v. Hatten, 825 N.E.2d 791, 794 (Ind. Ct. App.

2005) (quotation omitted), trans. denied. Here, the parties’ marriage lasted over twenty

years. Husband and Wife both contributed to the marriage, with Husband working as a

physician, Wife taking care of the children and managing the family finances, Tr. pp. 73-

74, and both working at Med-I-Qwik. We cannot say that the trial court abused its

discretion by equally dividing the marital property.

                      C. Credit for Funds Removed and Not Repaid

       Husband also contends that the trial court failed to credit him for funds Wife

removed after the dissolution petition was filed and did not repay. On this point, the trial

court found, “While [Wife] removed portions of intangible assets (accounts) during the

pendency, they were repaid in full.” Appellant’s App. p. 101.



                                            13
$500 for Wife’s withdrawal from Account #7143

      Husband argues that the trial court erred by failing to credit him for Wife’s

withdrawal of $500 from a joint account after the dissolution petition was filed. He cites

Respondent’s Exhibit J-7, which is a withdrawal slip indicating that Wife withdrew $500

from Account #7143 on February 17, 2007, just ten days after the dissolution petition was

filed. However, nothing on the exhibit indicates that Account #7143 was a joint account.

Husband’s claim therefore fails.

$500 for Wife’s withdrawal from Account #6569

      Husband argues that the trial court erred by failing to credit him for Wife’s

withdrawal of $500 from Account #6569 after the dissolution petition was filed. Wife

does not respond to the merits of Husband’s claim; instead, she says we should reject it

for Husband’s failure to provide citations to record. Regarding this claim, Husband does

not include any citations in his argument section, but he does cite Respondent’s Exhibit

SS in his fact section. We find this sufficient in this case. As Wife presents us with no

argument on the merits, Husband only needs to show prima facie error.

      Respondent’s Exhibit SS is a withdrawal slip and account inquiry indicating that

Wife withdrew $500 from Account #6569, a joint account of the parties, in May 2007,

three months after the dissolution petition was filed. This is prima facie evidence that

Wife took $500 from their joint account in May 2007. However, the trial court awarded

Account #6569 (as valued on February 1, 2007 at $3296) to Wife in its division of the




                                           14
marital property. See Appellant’s App. pp. 102, 108; Respondent’s Ex. DD. Wife’s

withdrawal from an account ultimately awarded to her presents no reversible error.3

$9974.99 for Wife’s withdrawals from business savings and checking accounts

       Husband argues that the trial court erred by failing to credit him for Wife’s

withdrawals of $9974.99 from their Med-I-Qwik savings and checking accounts. He says

that her withdrawals violated the trial court’s April 11, 2007 order, in which the court

stated, “[Husband] shall assume the sole management, control, and responsibility for the

day to day operation of Med-I-Qwik.” Appellant’s App. p. 43.

       Wife does not respond to the merits of Husband’s claim and says only that we

should reject it for failure to provide citations to the record. We find Husband’s reference

to the trial court’s April 11, 2007 order, which is included in the Appellant’s Appendix,

and his citation to Respondent’s Exhibits N-1, N-2, and N-3 sufficient.

       N-1 is a withdrawal slip showing that Wife withdrew $3908.82 from Med-I-

Qwik’s savings account on June 29, 2007. N-2 is a withdrawal slip showing that Wife

withdrew $5000 from Med-I-Qwik’s checking account on June 29, 2007. N-3 is a

withdrawal slip showing that Wife withdrew $1066.17 from Med-I-Qwik’s savings

account on July 3, 2007.4           Also in evidence are bank statements verifying these

withdrawals. See Petitioner’s Ex. 11.



3
  To the extent Husband claims he is entitled to the $500 because “the funds were from a deposit made by
the husband on February 23rd, 2007 from his military pay,” Appellant’s Br. p. 9, the claim is waived for
failure to provide any citations to the record.
4
 Husband actually argues that he should be credited for Wife’s withdrawals of $9968.99. However, the
sum of her withdrawals is $9974.99.
                                                  15
      This is sufficient to show prima facie error. The trial court ultimately awarded

Med-I-Qwik’s savings and checking accounts to Husband. We therefore remand with

instructions to order Wife to give Husband $9974.99.

$7700 for Wife’s advances against home equity line of credit

      Husband argues that the trial court erred by failing to credit him for Wife’s three

advances against the marital residence’s line of credit after the dissolution petition was

filed. At the final hearing, Husband presented evidence that Wife advanced $9700 from

Account #6581 against their home equity line of credit in August 2007 but repaid only

$9000 in October 2007. See Respondent’s Ex. E-1, E-2; Tr. pp. 118-19. He further

presented evidence that Wife advanced $4000 in March 2009 and $3000 in May 2009

from Account #6581 against their home equity line of credit. See Respondent’s Ex. L-1,

L-2, L-3; Tr. pp. 123-24.

      Wife does not respond to Husband’s claims regarding the $4000 and $3000

advances. As to the $700 not repaid from the $9700 advance, Wife points to the trial

court’s finding that she fully repaid assets she removed during the pendency of the

proceedings but fails to cite any evidence to support it.        Husband has therefore

demonstrated prima facie error. Because the trial court’s order held Husband liable for

Account #6581, see Appellant’s App. p. 105, we remand with instructions to order Wife

to give Husband $7700.




                                           16
                                     D. Other Items

      Husband finally contends that the trial court erred by failing to consider other

items: maintenance payments to Wife, payments toward college expenses, his military

pension, and financial burdens allegedly imposed by the court’s disposition.

Husband’s maintenance payments to Wife

      While disposition was pending, the trial court ordered Husband to make

maintenance payments to Wife from February 2007 through July 2009.                  When

distributing the marital property, the trial court credited Wife for Husband’s maintenance

arrearage of $24,880. See Appellant’s App. pp. 102, 142; Petitioner’s Ex. 25.

      Husband claims error in two regards. First, he argues the court should have

credited him for all maintenance payments he made to Wife. See Appellant’s Br. p. 15.

He presents no cogent argument or citations to authority regarding why he should be

credited for these payments. The issue is therefore waived. See Ind. Appellate Rule

46(A)(8)(a); Khaja, 902 N.E.2d at 871 (waiving issues for failure to present cogent

argument or provide adequate citation to authority).

      Second, he argues the court improperly calculated his maintenance arrearage by

failing to account for over $3000 in payments he made in 2009. See Appellant’s Br. p.

17. Although he provides no citation to the record in his opening brief, his reply brief

cites a page in the Appellant’s Appendix showing a page of Respondent’s Exhibit DDD.

That page indicates he wrote Med-I-Qwik checks to Wife for over $3000 in 2009. See

Appellant’s App. p. 196. However, the entire exhibit includes copies of the checks,

whose memo lines refer not to maintenance but to her services as Med-I-Qwik’s

                                            17
president, tax forms, and IRS duties. See Respondent’s Ex. DDD. It was not error for the

trial court to exclude these checks as maintenance payments.

Husband’s payment of college expenses

         The trial court’s order also credited Wife for Husband’s failure to contribute to

one of the children’s college expenses in the amount of $8651. See Appellant’s App. pp.

102, 142; Petitioner’s Ex. 46 (showing Husband owed $8651.11 for 2008 college

expenses). Husband argues the court did not credit him for over $6000 he paid toward

these expenses. By his own accounting, all these payments except for one are for 2009

and 2010 expenses, not 2008 expenses, see Respondent’s Ex. DDD, and he provides us

with no way to tell whether the court already considered these payments in its

calculation. See Barth v. Barth, 693 N.E.2d 954, 956 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (“[W]e are

unwilling to sift through a record to locate error so as to state an appellant’s case for

him.”), trans. denied. As for his alleged payment for “[s]upplies and books” in 2008, the

proof of this payment is a bank online account activity printout showing he spent some

$600 on December 27, 2008 at a Kohl’s department store. The court was within its

discretion in concluding this payment was not for supplies and books. There is no error.

Husband’s military pension

         Husband argues in his opening brief that the trial court abused its discretion by

giving him his military pension, valued at $218,056, instead of dividing it between the

parties. Although he notes several inequities, his main contention appears to be that he is

forced to bear the risk that he will not survive long enough to realize the full value of the

asset.    Wife responds that this risk has already been considered in determining the

                                             18
pension’s value. Wife is correct. “Determining the present value of [a] pension would

require actuarial evidence, based on the probability that the employee spouse will live to

the date of vesting and that she will remain in the pension plan until that time.”

Schueneman v. Schueneman, 591 N.E.2d 603, 609 (Ind. Ct. App. 1992) (quotation

omitted).   Here, the court valued Husband’s military pension based on the parties’

stipulation as to its present actuarial value. See Appellant’s App. p. 86 (“With regard to .

. . Respondent’s Military Pension, the parties stipulate the present actuarial value of that

asset to the estate as $218,056.00.”).

       Husband concedes in his reply brief that “if this was Husband’s the [sic] only

argument, the allocation of the full amount of the asset would not appear to be

inappropriate.” Appellant’s Reply Br. p. 8. However, he claims the allocation of the

pension to him is not just and reasonable in light of all his other claims of error. We fail

to see his logic. The allocation of an asset cannot be error merely because there are other

potential trial court errors. In any event, we have separately addressed his other claims.

Husband has shown no error with regard to his military pension.

Financial burdens allegedly imposed by the court’s disposition

       Finally, Husband argues that the trial court failed to consider “the financial

burdens of the unliquidated tangible assets” and that he will incur substantial fees and

expenses when he sells the marital home. Appellant’s Br. p. 18. Considering the costs to

sell the home, however, would have been an abuse of the trial court’s discretion. See

Dowden v. Allman, 696 N.E.2d 456, 458 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998) (“Although it may be

appropriate for a trial court to include the costs of sale that are a direct result of the

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disposition of property, where such costs are speculative in nature, we hold that including

such costs in the valuation of property constitutes an abuse of discretion.”). As to the

unliquidated tangible assets, he offers no further analysis or any citation to authority or to

the record. The issue is therefore waived.

                         III. APPELLATE ATTORNEY’S FEES

       As a final matter, Wife requests appellate attorney’s fees pursuant to Indiana

Appellate Rule 66(E), which provides in pertinent part, “The Court may assess damages

if an appeal . . . is frivolous or in bad faith. Damages shall be in the Court’s discretion

and may include attorneys’ fees.”        The Court of Appeals uses extreme restraint in

awarding appellate damages because of the potential chilling effect upon the exercise of

the right to appeal. In re Estate of Carnes, 866 N.E.2d 260, 267 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007).

Husband’s sparse citations to the record have caused some difficulty in evaluating his

claims, particularly where the trial record fills eight volumes; however, these deficiencies

do not rise to a flagrant disregard of our appellate rules. Further, we cannot say that

Husband’s appeal is frivolous where he has successfully shown trial court error. We

therefore decline to award appellate attorney’s fees.5

                                      CONCLUSION

       We therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions to issue

an order consistent with this opinion.

KIRSCH, J., and VAIDIK, J., concur.


5
  Wife has also filed a Motion for Damages Pursuant to App. R. 66(E), making the same argument
presented here, which we deny by separate order issued contemporaneously with this opinion.
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