Write a paper addressing conflict intervention and recommendations for the Patton family conflict that is at least 700 words. Before starting the paper, the team will have to identify the issues facing the Patton family. You may use the case study found in the Week Two materials as a resource.
Use Ch. 14, 15 and 16 of The Mediation Process to help guide the responses to the following statements and questions in your paper.
The Patton family case study is attached
The Patton Family Learning Team Case Study
BSCOM/4
6
5 Version 3
University of Phoenix Material
The Patton Family Learning Team Case Study
Robert Dennis Patton, age 46
Denise Renee Patton, age 43
Leigh Kay, age 15
Arnold Robert, age 6 1/2
Robert and Denise have known each other since high school. They married 23 years ago, when Robert was 23 and Denise was 20. Both were in college at the time.
The first few years of their marriage, Robert and Denise focused on career building. Robert became a licensed real estate broker while Denise became a software designer, receiving her BS in information sciences from a major university.
When Denise was 28 and Robert 31, Leigh was born. Denise took six weeks off from her job at a bank and then returned to work. After six months, she found it too difficult to work full time and be a parent. She left the bank, and since then, she has worked a series of part-time jobs. At first she looked for work in her field, but it was difficult for her to find work that fit her busy schedule as a parent. About eight years ago, she was laid off from her last software job when her firm downsized. Her career devolved into odd jobs and then into volunteer work. Denise has not had a paying job for about five years, and her last job was a brief three-month stint as a receptionist for Robert’s real estate business, filling in for an employee on medical leave. A number of her volunteer posts have involved some pretty heavy computer programming.
Robert is another story. He has built a successful real estate brokerage and does well financially. Of course, a benefit of being a real estate broker is that Robert gains knowledge of emerging real estate opportunities. He has purchased several properties, including one he acquired jointly with his father and his father’s wife (his stepmother).
Leigh, the Patton’s older child, is in her first year of high school and is doing well. An easygoing and accommodating child, Leigh is an avid equestrian, and two years ago the Pattons bought her Midnight, a retired hunting gelding. Midnight is kept at a local stable under an equi-lease agreement by which the family receives discounted boarding in return for lending Midnight out to other riders at the stable.
Arnie, Leigh’s younger brother, is another story. Arnie is in kindergarten at the local public school. Since he was a toddler, Arnie has been different from Leigh. Arnie has boundless energy and cannot sit still, even by kindergarten standards. Denise has talked to the educational team several times about Arnie’s adjustment. He appears to be very bright, but he is falling behind in his readiness skills. He is finding it hard to get along with other children and is constantly in trouble. There has been a great deal of friction in the family over Arnie’s troubles, which have been evident since preschool. He is becoming increasingly oppositional at home, and Denise monitors him constantly to try to keep him out of trouble and to guide him through his homework.
Denise says that Arnie obviously has a neurological difference that makes him incapable of conforming to the school’s environment, and she wants him evaluated by a neuropsychologist. Robert has never taken much stock in shrinks and says that they are a waste of time and money. Denise, on the other hand, feels that she is dyslexic, and she has a close relative with manic depression, so she has interacted closely with mental health professionals.
Over the past three years, Denise has become more and more absorbed in trying to deal with what she characterizes as Arnie’s special needs. At first, Robert and Denise engaged in screaming matches over how best to parent Arnie. Then they both withdrew, with Robert sleeping on the couch and neither speaking much to the other. Denise, who has always struggled with her weight, gained 40 pounds.
One morning about six months ago, Robert arrived at the breakfast table with a suitcase and announced that he would not be returning home in the evening. “The marriage is over,” he explained to a shocked Denise. Since that time he has periodically returned home to pick up personal items and to see Arnie, but otherwise he has refused to communicate with Denise. He never did speak much with Leigh and has not really had an opportunity to do so since leaving, except to briefly greet her in passing.
Both Robert and Denise sought legal consultation. They were each asked to fill out the accompanying financial statements.
I’m 43 years old and live in Anytown, USA, with my two dear children, Leigh, age 15, and Arnie, age 6 1/2. My life fell apart six months ago when my husband, Rob, suddenly walked out on us.
Rob and I were high school sweethearts, and I couldn’t imagine life with anyone else. We married in college. I became a computer programmer, and Rob went into real estate. I worked for a while in a bank, but when we had Leigh, it was like a revelation. I realized that being a mother was more important to me than anything in the world. I’ve been a stay-at-home mom since Leigh was small, and I’m glad. Leigh has grown up into a wonderful young woman, and I have been needed at home because of Arnie’s special problems.
Arnie has always been a special and different sort of child. I knew right away that he was different. He was very high energy and curious as an infant—he crawled early, he walked early, he ran early, and he was always into everything. He never slept through the night, and even now, at age 6, I find him in bed with me every night. And he’s up at 4:30 a.m. every day, ready to rock and roll. It’s clear to me that Arnie has significant disabilities. He cannot control himself in the classroom. I’m constantly being called by that darn teacher about it. She has no insight! She has this shallow, authoritarian attitude—she recommends nothing but reward and punishment systems. I tried one of her behavior charts for about two weeks and it just made things worse. We have an uphill fight ahead of us to qualify him for an Individualized Educational Plan. I have had to devote more and more of my time to Arnie and taking care of him, managing his behavior, and so forth. It takes everything I have. The fight to get Arnie what he needs is being undermined by Rob’s ridiculous attitude. He thinks Arnie’s problem is that he’s spoiled.
Rob has gotten more and more distant since Arnie was born. He spends all of his free time at the office, and during the couple of years before he left, we barely spoke except to fight about Arnie. Rob is afraid of admitting that Arnie has problems. I think he feels it reflects badly on him to have a disabled son. When I suggested that Arnie needed to be evaluated, he flew into a rage. I’m sure that Rob’s attitude and distant behavior is making Arnie worse.
The last time Rob and I had a really substantial conversation, he berated me for paying more attention to my children than to keeping the house perfect. He called me a fat pig and said that I was responsible for all the problems in the family. Not only that, but he has all the money and he uses it to control me and keep me down. He’s an abuser, pure and simple, but I would take him back in a minute to save our family. If he won’t come back, I will need the house, and because I won’t be able to work, I will need for him to pay the mortgage, plus child support and alimony. He will probably need to pay for Arnie’s and the family’s therapy costs and the costs of special education for Arnie, unless I can succeed in my efforts to have the school pay. I won’t ask for much—just to keep the standard of living we have. Rob is super rich; he and his family have innumerable real estate properties, and they can just sell one of them to fund his child’s future.
Rob refuses to help out at all, except to pay the mortgage and to give me a little for groceries and other odds and ends. I have had to borrow from my parents just to make ends meet, and they can’t keep giving me money. Whenever Rob comes to see Arnie, he does nothing but criticize me. I feel like the world is coming to an end; I feel so disoriented and depressed. Sometimes I want to kill myself. But Arnie and Leigh need me.
I’ve finally had enough. I have been in this God-forsaken marriage for 23 years, and I’m tired of being the only oarsman on the boat. I work 65-hour weeks to provide for my family, and Denise just sits home and gets fat. She used to work and seem interested in life. Now it’s all just about Arnie’s alleged problems—Arnie has a learning disability, Arnie has a brain problem, etc. If she ever disciplined him, these supposed problems would evaporate. I spoke to the school, and that’s what they said; he just needs his mom to give him a good swift kick once in a while. Instead, she rewards his misconduct with attention. You’d think they were joined at the hip. When I would come into a room it wasn’t even “Hi, Rob, how was your day.” If she acknowledged me at all, it was usually something like, “Arnie really acted out today in school. We’ve got to get moving on his neuro whatchamacallit.” Usually she didn’t even look up. Well, if she thinks I’m going to support this sick approach to raising kids, she’d better think again. Now in my puny little apartment I suppose I’m lonely, but at least when I walk in the door there’s no one there ignoring me.
Now she’s making that big sucking noise—the noise that says, “You will need to cough up really big bucks to send Arnie to therapy, a special school, all that nonsense.” Not one cent is going to a shrink. Arnie is a normal active kid who just needs discipline. None of the effort I put into being a provider is appreciated in the least; she just wants to get more and more out of me. Meanwhile, she sits at home. As my cousin Frank says, good riddance.
My parents, after years of stupid arguments, split up a few months ago. I really don’t think any of this is fair. My dad has never paid any attention to me; he could care less whether I’m dead or alive, but my mom used to be really nice. The operative words here are used to. Since my brother came along, she has just gotten really screwed up. She stopped being interested in stuff. Lots of times I would come home and find her lying in her bed in the dark, or I’d find her crying. I would ask her what was wrong and what I could do about it, but she wouldn’t give me an answer, or she would say some stupid thing about Arnie and his needs. Now dad’s left altogether. I don’t really miss that cold fish, but he could have paid me the common courtesy of telling me he was going and explaining why.
And then there’s Arnie. What a pain in the backside. Mom lets him get away with murder. When I was 6, she would never let me do half the stuff she lets him do. I have had to stop going out in public with them. Sometimes he would do something horrible—like last month, when he kicked my friend and pulled him to the ground—and she doesn’t really punish him. She just talks to him sweetly about it and he just does it some more. I’m really mortified. It’s easier to just spend my days talking to my friends or riding Midnight, my horse.
And speaking of Midnight, this is where it really gets horrible. Mom says Arnie needs special schooling and therapy. I don’t know; maybe he does and maybe he doesn’t. She says that dad refuses to help pay for it, and if we don’t get some more money, she will have to sell Midnight. I just don’t think that’s fair. Both of them should just grow up. I have a boyfriend, but I refuse to get married—even when I am old enough to move out.
I am 6 years old and I go to Miss Mellon’s kindergarten class. My daddy went away because I was a bad boy and he doesn’t like me anymore. I want my daddy to come back and live with me. I promise not to be bad anymore. When I am bad it makes Mommy sad and then Daddy gets mad, and then they have a fight. It makes me sad when Daddy is not in my house at night, and it makes me cry. Also when I am in school I get really, really mad sometimes. School is stupid and I am stupid.
I love my mommy and my big sister. My sister has a black horse named Midnight. Sometimes I get to ride him. He is at the stables. But where is Daddy? Where is his bed? Does he have to sleep on the floor? Who feeds him? He should come home and then I would make him breakfast and he would be OK.
ASSETS
Real Property
Address: 123 Merry Lane, Anytown, USA
Name(s) on title: Robert and Denise Patton
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): Tenants by the entireties
Date acquired: 10 years ago
Purchase price: $200,000
Source(s) of down payment: Money on hand
Source(s) of mortgage payments: My salary
Current value: $350,000
When valued: Last month
How valued: Comparable sales
Address: 6 Frontage Drive, West Anytown
Name(s) on title: Robert Patton
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): My sole name
Date acquired: 6 years ago
Purchase price: $350,000
Source(s) of down payment: Home equity loan
Source(s) of mortgage payments: Proceeds of rentals received
Current value: $600,000
When valued: April of last year
How valued: Income capitalization
Address: 850 First Street, North Anytown
Name(s) on title: Robert, Edwin, and Tracey Patton (Edwin is my Dad and Tracey is his wife.)
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): Joint tenancy
Date acquired: 18 months ago
Purchase price: $500,000
Source(s) of down payment: Edwin put up the $50,000 down
Source(s) of mortgage payments: Proceeds of rentals received
Current value: $530,000
When valued: Last week
How valued: Comparable sales
Vehicles: Automobiles, Motorcycles, Boats, Trucks, etc.
Make, model, year: Lexus GS 430 Sedan 4D
Name(s) on title: Robert Patton
How title held: My sole name
Date acquired: 2 years ago
Purchase price: $40,000
Source(s) of down payment: Savings
Source(s) of installment payments: My salary
Current value: $31,000
When valued: Today
How valued: Online calculator
Make, model, year: Toyota Corolla DX Sedan 4D
Name(s) on title: Robert and Denise Patton
How title held: Joint tenants
Date acquired: 7 years ago
Purchase price: $25,000
Source(s) of down payment: Savings
Source(s) of installment payments: My salary (paid off now)
Current value: $7,000
When valued: Today
How valued: Online calculator
Personal Property (items of significant value):
Description of property: Midnight (horse)
In whose possession? My daughter
Date acquired: Not sure
Purchase price: Don’t remember – about $4,000
Source(s) of down payment: $500 from my daughter, the rest from me
Source(s) of installment payments: None
Current value: $3,500
When valued: Today
How valued: Just guessed
Bank Accounts
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 0033 4444 968
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Checking
Date established: 15 years ago
Current balance: $12,400
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: My wages
Name(s) on account: Robert and Denise Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): Joint
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 0035 9256 894
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Checking
Date established: 8 years ago
Current balance: $25,000
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: Rental and mortgage proceeds from real estate
Name(s) on account: Robert Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): N/A
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 5566 3344 112
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Passbook CD
Date established: 6 years ago
Current balance: $100,000
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: Some from my wages, some from corporate dividends, and some from rentals and mortgage proceeds. I didn’t keep track of how much from each.
Name(s) on account: Robert Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): N/A
Notes, Mortgages, Accounts Receivables OWED TO YOU
Debtor’s name(s): Howard and Nancy Ying
Type of debt: Purchase money mortgage
Original balance: $100,000
Current balance: $91,250
Account number (if any): N/A
Date established: 3 years ago
Date of retirement: In 12 years
Contractual monthly payment: $844
In default? (yes/no): No
Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds
(OTHER THAN retirement assets, such as IRAs or 401Ks)
Name or description: Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares
Account number (if any): 12345654321
Original purchase date: 4 years ago
Value: $25,820 (1,000 units)
Valuation Date: Today
Over what period of time has asset been purchased? Was purchased in lump sum with cash
Source(s) of funds: Half from checking account and half from savings account
IRA, 401K, and 403b Plans
Account Name: Patton Real Estate IRA (American Century)
Whose account? Robert Patton
Account number (if any): 204936
Constituent Funds
Name of Fund
Type of Fund
Value
Moderate strategic allocation
Diversified moderate-risk fund
$78,326
Inception date: 10 years ago
Valuation Date: Last week
Total value: $78,326
Source(s) of funds: Monthly withdrawals from my paycheck
Account Name: First Bank of Anytown — IRA
Whose account? Denise
Account number (if any): I9875937165
Inception date: 7 years ago
Valuation Date: Beginning of year
Total value: $16,000 approximately
Source(s) of funds: Checking account – my hard-earned wages
Defined-Benefit Pension, Retirement, Employee Profit-Sharing Plans
Fill out for EACH such plan in which you have an interest.
Title of plan: Patton Real Estate Defined-Benefit Plan
Employer through whom you would/will receive benefit: Patton Real Estate
Employee: Robert Patton
Account number (if any): Not sure
Type of plan: Traditional defined-benefit plan
Period of employment: for the past 18 years
Plan Administrator: Ellen Workwoman Associates
Address: Would have to look that up
City:
State:
Zip:
Telephone:
Is pension vested?
YES NO
If not, on what date would it vest?
Assuming that employee continued to work for present employer until retirement date, what benefits would employee receive upon retirement?
I will receive a percentage of the average of the three highest years of my salary.
Retirement Age
Monthly Benefit Without Death Benefit
Monthly Benefit with Death Benefit
55
20 percent of “high 3”
15 percent of “high 3”
60
25 percent of “high 3”
20 percent of “high 3”
65
33 percent of “high 3”
25 percent of “high 3”
Life Insurance (list ONLY insurance having cash value)
NONE – I have only term life insurance
Insurer:
Account number:
Insured:
Inception date:
Redemption Value:
Type of Insurance:
Primary beneficiary:
Secondary/Contingent beneficiary/beneficiaries
Current cash value:
Valuation date:
Source(s) of funds:
Business interests: On separate sheets of paper, please describe each business interest (other than that specified elsewhere in this form) that you or your spouse owns or co-owns. Include the following information:
1. Name of the business
: Robert Patton Real Estate, Inc
2. Nature of the business
: Real Estate Sales
3. Form of the business (i.e., partnership, sole proprietorship, corporation, etc.) and the nature of you or your spouse’s ownership interest: Closely held corporation. I am the sole stockholder.
4. Original date(s) you or your spouse began to hold an ownership interest
: Corporation was incorporated 16 years ago.
5. Source(s) of funds or other source used by you or your spouse to obtain the business interest
: We started with $3,000 from Denise’s father and the money we had in our checking account.
6. A list of the assets that make up the business, including goodwill, and an estimate of the value of each asset and liability
: See attached
7. The estimated value of the business
: I don’t have any idea what the business is worth.
Please furnish latest balance sheet, profit/loss statements, tax returns, and buy-sell agreements pertinent to valuing each business as well as your interest and your spouse’s interest in each business.
LIABILITIES
Mortgages and secured loans on real property, personal property, insurance policies, and pension plans. Include all secured loans here. Under “Security,” list the property that the loan is borrowed against. For example, if the loan is a mortgage on real property, list the real property. You must list an asset you listed previously.
Property borrowed against: 123 Merry Lane, Anytown, USA
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 123567
Original Loan Amount: $350,000
Current Balance: $346,000
Inception Date: 4 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,556/month
Interest rate (annual): 6.375%
Is loan past due?
YES NO
Sources of payments: My hard-earned salary
Property borrowed against: 6 Frontage Drive, West Anytown
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: C- 300567
Original Loan Amount: $320,000
Current Balance: $346,000
Inception Date: 4 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,480/month
Interest rate (annual): 6.0%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Rents
Property borrowed against: 850 First Street, North Anytown
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: C- 892365
Original Loan Amount: $460,000
Current Balance: $459,600
Inception Date: 18 months ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,500
Interest rate (annual): 4.0%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Rents
Property borrowed against: Lexus GS 430 Sedan 4D
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: A- 0006922857
Original Loan Amount: $36,000
Current Balance: $31,000
Inception Date: 2 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 6 years
Required payments (amount/period): $682
Interest rate (annual): 7%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Paid for by the corporation
Credit Cards
Name of bank/creditor: American Express
Type of card: NA
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-4567
Who can use card? Denise and I
Who are liable for debt? Denise and I
Annual Interest Rate: Variable
Current Balance: Balance paid every month
Required payments (amount/period): Balance
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
Name of bank/creditor: Anytown Federal Savings
Type of card: Visa
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-2222
Who can use card? Both of us, but Denise is the only one who uses it
Who are liable for debt? Denise and I
Annual Interest Rate: 18%
Current Balance: Don’t know
Required payments (amount/period): Don’t know
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
Name of bank/creditor: First USA
Type of card: Visa
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-9004
Who can use card? Denise and I
Who are liable for debt? Denise and I
Annual Interest Rate: 18%
Current Balance: $15,500
Required payments (amount/period): $870/mo
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
ASSET/LIABILITY SUMMARY
ASSET/LIABILITY
Self
Spouse
Joint
ASSETS
Cash On Hand
$500
Real property
$530,000
$950,000
Vehicles
$31,000
$ 7,000
$37,400
Personal property (Midnight & tack)
$6,000
Bank accounts
$137,400
Notes, mortgages, etc. owed TO you/to spouse
$91,250
Stocks, bonds, mutual funds
$25,820
IRAs, 401Ks, 403bs
$78,326
$16,000
Defined-benefit pension, retirement, etc.
$130,000
Life Insurance Cash Value
Business Interests
$280,000
Taxes Owed to You or Spouse
Other property
TOTAL ASSETS (sum above column)
$639,326
$29,000
$2,344,370
LIABILITIES
Secured loans, mortgages, etc.
$490,600
$692,000
Credit cards
$15,500
Other unsecured debt
Taxes owed by you/spouse
TOTAL LIABILITIES (sum above 4 items)
$506,100
-0-
$692,000
NET WORTH (total assets minus total liabilities)
$133,226
$29,000
$1,652,370
Health Insurance
Insurance Company Name
Blue Crisscross
Insurance Company Address
Policy Number
102030405060
Group Number
817263
Available through (specify employer if applicable)
Patton Real Estate
Primary insured
Robert Patton
Primary insured’s identification number
00001
Other family member insured and identification numbers
Denise, Leigh, Arnold 00002, 00003, 00004
Monthly premium paid by employee
$500
Portion of premium attributable to children
$300
Portion of premium attributable to spouse (if in addition to premium for children)
—
Annual deductibles
$250
Copayment for office visits
$25
Copayment for prescription medication
$18
Coverage for outpatient mental health services (if applicable)
35% of reasonable and appropriate
Coverage for inpatient services
100%
Other restrictions
Income or Expense Item
Monthly Amount
Attributable to Child/Children
INCOME
Salary (net)
$5,000
Wages
Commissions
Bonuses
Tips
Payments from retirement or pension plan
Royalties or rents
$6,000
Social security and SSI
—
Child support received on behalf of children NOT involved in this action
—
Alimony/spousal support received from former spouse NOT a party to this action
—
Other income (explain) (dividends)
$500
TOTAL INCOME
$11,500
EXPENSES
Mortgage or rent on home in which you live (rent on apt)
$1,800
Electricity
$150
Groceries
$250
Natural gas, coal, oil
$45
Water/Sewer
$10
Trash
$10
Telephone
$55
Cable television
$50
Internet service
$45
Gasoline
$100
Auto maintenance
$100
Auto insurance
$150
Health insurance
$500
Life insurance
$100
Homeowners or renters insurance (unless included in mortgage, above)
$50
Other insurance
Home repairs and maintenance
$50
Child care
Entertainment, recreation
$100
Health care not covered by insurance
Credit card payments
Car payments
$682
Tithing
$200
OTHER – explain
Management Frontage Drive
$500
Mortgage on Frontage Drive
$2,480
Management First Street
$500
Mortgage First Street
$2,500
TOTAL EXPENSES
$10,427
NET INCOME/EXPENSE
$1,073
ASSETS
Real Property
Address: 123 Merry Lane, Anytown, USA
Name(s) on title: Robert and Denise Patton
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): Tenants by the Entireties
Date acquired: 10 years ago
Purchase price: $200,000
Source(s) of down payment: Money on hand
Source(s) of mortgage payments: Husband’s salary
Current value: $300,000
When valued: Last week
How valued: Friend who sells real estate
Address: 6 Frontage Drive, West Anytown
Name(s) on title: Robert Patton
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): Husband’s name
Date acquired: 6 years ago
Purchase price: $350,000
Source(s) of down payment: Home equity loan
Source(s) of mortgage payments: Proceeds of rentals received
Current value: I have no idea
When valued:
Address: 850 First Street, North Anytown
Name(s) on title: Don’t remember – I think Rob and his father
How title held (e.g., tenants by entireties): Don’t know
Date acquired: 18 months ago
Purchase price: $500,000
Source(s) of down payment: Gift from my father-in-law to the family
Source(s) of mortgage payments: Proceeds of rentals received
Current value: I have no idea
When valued:
How valued:
Vehicles: Automobiles, Motorcycles, Boats, Trucks, Etc.
Make, model, year: Lexus Sedan 4D
Name(s) on title: Robert Patton
How title held: His name only (he uses this car for his business)
Date acquired: 2 years ago
Purchase price:
Source(s) of down payment: Our family savings
Source(s) of installment payments: We pay this auto loan out of funds on hand
Current value: $31,000
When valued: Recently
How valued: Rob says he used a website to value the car.
Make, model, year: Toyota Corolla DX Sedan 4D
Name(s) on title: Robert and Denise Patton
How title held: Together
Date acquired: Almost 8 years ago
Purchase price: We paid $25,000 new
Source(s) of down payment: Savings
Source(s) of installment payments: We used family funds and paid it off 2 years ago
Current value: $7,000
When valued: Today
How valued: Rob says he used a website calculator.
Personal Property (items of significant value):
Description of property: Midnight (Leigh’s horse) and tack
In whose possession? In equi-lease at the horse farm
Date acquired: 3 1/2 years ago
Purchase price: Midnight was $4,200 and we’ve spent about $3,000 more on supplies and tack.
Source(s) of down payment: Leigh put up the first $500 and we paid the rest.
Source(s) of installment payments: Cash
Current value: Unsure – altogether about $5,000
When valued: Today
How valued: Guesstimate from owner of horse farm
Bank Accounts
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 00334444968
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Our family checking account
Date established: About 15 years ago
Current balance: $9,800
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: Everything goes into the checking account.
Name(s) on account: Robert and Denise Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): Joint
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 00359256894
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Checking account for Rob’s real estate
Date established: About 8 years ago
Current balance: Don’t know — $20,000 when I last saw it
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: Proceeds from mortgages and rentals
Name(s) on account: Robert Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): Don’t know
Name of bank: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 55663344112
Account Type (checking, savings, money market, etc.): Passbook CD
Date established: About 6 years ago
Current balance: Don’t know – around $80,000–$110,000
Source(s) of funds and how much from each: Don’t know – Rob handles this one!
Name(s) on account: Robert Patton
How held (joint, in common, etc.): Don’t know
Notes, Mortgages, Accounts Receivables OWED TO YOU
Debtor’s name(s): The Yings
Type of debt: Mortgage back for sale of house
Original balance: $100,000
Current balance: About $90,000
Account number (if any): Doesn’t have one
Date established: About 3 years ago
Date of retirement: 12 years from now
Contractual monthly payment: $844
In default? (yes/no): No
Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds
(OTHER THAN retirement assets, such as IRAs or 401Ks)
Name or description: Vanguard mutual fund
Account number (if any): Don’t know—Rob has this information.
Original purchase date: About 4? years ago
Value: $30,000 last time I checked
Valuation Date: 6 months ago
Over what period of time has asset been purchased? We bought it with some cash Rob got from a real estate deal.
Source(s) of funds: See above.
IRA, 401K, and 403b Plans
Account Name: Rob’s corporation’s IRA plan
Whose account? Rob’s as corporate president
Account number (if any): Don’t know—ask Rob
Constituent Funds
Name of Fund
Type of Fund
Value
American Century
Strategic asset allocation
$85,000
Inception date: About 10 years ago
Valuation Date: Last year
Total value: $85,000
Source(s) of funds: Paid for out of family funds and direct deposit from paycheck starting about 6 years ago
Account Name: First Bank of Anytown – my IRA
Whose account? Denise Patton
Account number (if any): I9875937165
Inception date: A little over 7 years ago
Valuation Date: End of last year
Total value: $15,800
Source(s) of funds: We put money into this plan whenever we can.
Defined-Benefit Pension, Retirement, Employee Profit-Sharing Plans
Fill out for EACH such plan in which you have an interest.
Title of plan: Patton Real Estate Defined-Benefit Plan
Employer through whom you would/will receive benefit: Rob’s corporation
Employee: Rob
Account number (if any): Don’t know if it has one
Type of plan: Traditional defined benefit
Period of employment: from 18 years ago to now
Plan Administrator: Don’t know any of this information
Address:
City:
State
Zip
Telephone
Is pension vested?
YES NO (I think so)
If not, on what date would it vest?
Assuming that employee continued to work for present employer until retirement date, what benefits would employee receive upon retirement?
Retirement Age
Monthly Benefit Without Death Benefit
Monthly Benefit with Death Benefit
55
15% of high 3
60
20% of high 3
65
25% of high 3
Life Insurance (list ONLY insurance having cash value)
Don’t have any
Insurer:
Account number:
Insured:
Inception date:
Redemption Value:
Type of Insurance:
Primary beneficiary or beneficiaries:
Secondary/Contingent beneficiary or beneficiaries:
Current cash value:
Valuation date:
Source(s) of funds:
Business interests: On separate sheets of paper, please describe each business interest (other than that specified elsewhere in this form) that you and/or your spouse owns or co-owns. Include the following information:
See Rob’s asset and liability statement.
1. Name of the business
2. Nature of the business
3. Form of the business (i.e., partnership, sole proprietorship, corporation, etc.) and the nature of your ownership or your spouse’s ownership interest
4. Original date(s) you or your spouse began to hold an ownership interest
5. Source(s) of funds or other source used by you or your spouse to obtain the business interest
6. A list of the assets that make up the business, including goodwill, and an estimate of the value of each asset and liability
7. The estimated value of the business
Please furnish latest balance sheet, profit/loss statements, tax returns, and buy-sell agreements pertinent to valuing each business as well as your interest and your spouse’s interest in each business.
Other Significant Property Not Listed
Description of property: My furniture
In whose possession? The family
Date acquired: Given to me by my mother on our wedding day
Purchase price: Don’t know
Source(s) of down payment: N/A
Source(s) of installment payments: N/A
Current value: $25,000
When valued: ?
How valued: Just what I see around
Description of property: Rob’s tools
In whose possession? In the garage
Date acquired: Various
Purchase price: Don’t know – at least $5,000
Source(s) of down payment: Paid cash from family funds
Source(s) of installment payments: N/A
Current value: Don’t know – about $2,000
When valued:
How valued: I guessed
LIABILITIES
Mortgages and secured loans on real property, personal property, insurance policies, and pension plans. Include all secured loans here. Under “Security,” list the property that the loan is borrowed against. For example, if the loan is a mortgage on real property, list the real property. You must list an asset you listed previously.
Property borrowed against: 123 Merry Lane, Anytown, USA
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: 123567
Original Loan Amount: $350,000
Current Balance: $346,820
Inception Date: 4 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,556/month
Interest rate (annual): 6.375%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Family funds
Property borrowed against: 6 Frontage Drive, West Anytown
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: C- 300567
Original Loan Amount: $350,000
Current Balance: About $300,000
Inception Date: 4 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,480/month
Interest rate (annual): 6.0%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Pays for itself — rental
Property borrowed against: 850 First Street, North Anytown
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: C- 892365
Original Loan Amount: $460,000
Current Balance: $459,600
Inception Date: 18 months ago
Term of Loan (time): 30 years
Required payments (amount/period): $2,500
Interest rate (annual): 4.0%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Pays for itself — rental
Property borrowed against: Lexus
Lender: First Bank of Anytown
Account Number: A- 0006922857
Original Loan Amount: $36,000
Current Balance: $31,000
Inception Date: 2 years ago
Term of Loan (time): 6 years
Required payments (amount/period): $682
Interest rate (annual): 7%
Is loan past due? YES NO
Sources of payments: Paid for by the corporation
Credit Cards
Name of bank/creditor: American Express
Type of card: N/A
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-4567
Who can use card? Both of us
Who are liable for debt? Both of us
Annual Interest Rate: variable
Current Balance: -0-
Required payments (amount/period): Must be fully paid
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
Name of bank/creditor: Anytown Federal Savings
Type of card: Visa
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-2222
Who can use card? Both of us (family card)
Who are liable for debt? Both of us
Annual Interest Rate: 18%
Current Balance: $18,350
Required payments (amount/period): $963
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
Name of bank/creditor: First USA
Type of card: Visa
Account number: xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-9004
Who can use card? Both of us
Who are liable for debt? Both of us
Annual Interest Rate: 18%
Current Balance: $15,500
Required payments (amount/period): $870/mo
Is Balance Past Due? YES NO
Write notes here as to any special circumstances concerning taxes due, such as pending disputes or litigation.
Our younger child, Arnie, has learning disabilities and may have neurological deficits that are hampering his adjustment in school. We really need to set aside substantial funds for his evaluation and treatment. It will cost about $2,000 to have him evaluated by a neuropsychologist. Following that, he should be given a neurological and brain evaluation. This generally runs around $10,000. He will certainly need special accommodations in school, and I may need to homeschool him for the foreseeable future. The entire family will require therapy, probably for several years, and our health plan covers only about a third. This expense could easily exceed $800 per month.
ASSET/LIABILITY SUMMARY
ASSET/LIABILITY
Self
Spouse
Joint
ASSETS
Cash On Hand
$200
Real property
$1,050,000
Vehicles
$38,000
Personal property Furniture, tools, Midnight, and tack
$25,000
$2,000
$5,000
Bank accounts
$130,000
Notes, mortgages, etc. owed TO you/to spouse
$90,000
Stocks, bonds, mutual funds
$30,000
IRAs, 401Ks, 403bs
$101,000
Defined-benefit pension, retirement, etc.
????
Life Insurance Cash Value
Business Interests
????
Taxes Owed to You or Spouse
Other property
TOTAL ASSETS (sum above column)
$25,000
$2,000
$1,444,200 + ?????
LIABILITIES
Secured loans, mortgages, etc.
$1,137,420
Credit cards
$33,700
Other unsecured debt
Taxes owed by you/spouse
TOTAL LIABILITIES (sum above 4 items)
$1,171,120
NET WORTH (total assets minus total liabilities)
$273,080 + pension & business
Health Insurance
Insurance Company Name
Blue Crisscross
Insurance Company Address
Policy Number
102030405060
Group Number
817263
Available through (specify employer if applicable)
Patton Real Estate
Primary insured
Robert Patton
Primary insured’s identification number
00001
Other family member insured and identification numbers
Denise, Leigh, Arnold 00002, 00003, 00004
Monthly premium paid by employee
$500
Portion of premium attributable to children
$300
Portion of premium attributable to spouse (if in addition to premium for children)
—
Annual deductibles
$250
Copayment for office visits
$25
Copayment for prescription medication
$18
Coverage for outpatient mental health services (if applicable)
35% of reasonable & appropriate
Coverage for inpatient services
100%
Other restrictions
There’s a maximum of 45 hours of outpatient mental health services after which we have to pay 100%. Also, we don’t know what insurance will decide is “reasonable and customary.”
Income or Expense Item
Monthly Amount
Attributable to Child/Children
INCOME
Salary
-0-
Wages
-0-
Commissions
-0-
Bonuses
-0-
Tips
-0-
Payments from retirement or pension plan
-0-
Royalties or rents
-0-
Social security and SSI
-0-
Child support received on behalf of children NOT involved in this action
-0-
Alimony/spousal support received from former spouse NOT a party to this action
-0-
Other income (explain)
-0-
TOTAL INCOME
None of my own
EXPENSES
Mortgage or rent on home in which you live
$852
$1,704
Electricity
$100
$200
Groceries
Natural gas, coal, oil
$33
$67
Water/Sewer
$4
$8
Trash
$4
$8
Telephone
$30
$60
Cable television
$16.67
$33.33
Internet service
$15
$30
Gasoline
$50
$100
Auto maintenance
$8
$16
Auto insurance
$35
$70
Health insurance Rob pays this
-0-
Life insurance
-0-
Homeowners or renters insurance (unless included in mortgage, above)
-0-
Other insurance
-0-
Home repairs and maintenance
$40
$80
Child care nanny
-0-
$800
Entertainment, recreation
$20
$80
Health care not covered by insurance anticipated therapy plus other expenses
$50
$800
Credit card payments
$321
$642
Car payments
-0-
Tithing Rob handles this
-0-
OTHER – explain
Special school for Arnie ($21,000 tuition)
$1,750
TOTAL EXPENSES
$1,578.67
$6,448.33
NET INCOME/EXPENSE
($1,578.67)
($6,448.33)
(Fiscal year ending June 30)
Assets
Cash on hand $ 30,000
Accounts receivable 180,000
Fixed assets (net of depreciation) 500,000
Equipment 50,000
Total assets $ 760,000
Liabilities
Accounts payable $ 80,000
Mortgage 400,000
Retained earnings 280,000
Total liabilities $ 760,000
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