Angela Blake v. Damon Petrie
No. 2020-070
Supreme Court of Vermont
June Term, 2020
2020 VT 92
Thomas Carlson, J.
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109 State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made before this opinion goes to press.
Samantha V. Lednicky of Murdock Hughes Twarog Tarnelli Attorneys at Law, P.C., Burlington, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Jacob Oblak of Bergeron, Paradis & Fitzpatrick, LLP, Essex Junction, for Defendant-Appellant.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Robinson, Eaton, Carroll and Cohen, JJ.
¶ 2. The relevant procedural history is as follows. The parties were divorced on November 15, 2007, in an action which had been filed by Blake in 2006. The final divorce order incorporated the parties’ marital settlement agreement. The property-settlement portion of the agreement required Petrie to make both monthly and annual payments to Blake until the sum of $41,000 had been paid, with the first payment due on November 1, 2007. While Petrie could pay the balance of the $41,000 before it was due, the agreement “assumed” the payments would be completed by April 2011. The marital settlement agreement clearly established these payments as a portion of the parties’ property settlement. The parties do not dispute that the divorce order was a civil judgment. See
¶ 4. In August 2019, Blake filed another motion in the 2006 divorce action seeking enforcement of the delinquent property-settlement sum, along with interest and attorney‘s fees. This time, her motion sought enforcement of the October 2011 judgment as opposed to the one issued in 2007. She alleged no payments had been made since the October 2011 judgment and sought the unpaid balance of $17,500 plus attorney‘s fees—both those previously reserved in 2011 and for the current motion—and interest. In response, on October 25, 2019, eight years and three weeks after the 2011 judgment issued, Petrie filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that
¶ 5. Petrie alleged that the original judgment from 2007 controlled the statute-of-limitations calculation under
¶ 6. Relying primarily on
¶ 7. “We review a motion to dismiss using the same standard as the trial court.” Davis v. Am. Legion, Dep‘t of Vt., 2014 VT 134, ¶ 12, 198 Vt. 204, 114 A.3d 99 (quotation omitted); see also Prive v. Vt. Asbestos Grp., 2010 VT 2, ¶ 14, 187 Vt. 280, 992 A.2d 1035 (“[O]ur review of a motion to dismiss is de novo . . . .“). Thereunder, motions to dismiss are generally disfavored and rarely granted. Prive, 2010 VT 2, ¶ 14. We must “tak[e] all of the nonmoving party‘s factual allegations as true,” and consider whether “it appears beyond doubt that there exist no facts or circumstances that would entitle the plaintiff to relief. We treat all reasonable inferences from the complaint as true, and we assume that the movant‘s contravening assertions are false.” Alger v. Dep‘t of Labor & Indus., 2006 VT 115, ¶ 12, 181 Vt. 309, 917 A.2d 508 (citations and quotations omitted). Where, as here, the availability of relief turns on a question of statutory interpretation, our review of the trial court‘s conclusions is nondeferential and plenary. Marine Midland Bank v. Bicknell, 2004 VT 25, ¶ 3, 176 Vt. 389, 848 A.2d 1134 (observing in context of motion to dismiss that whether action on judgment is barred by
¶ 8. Vermont has a statute of limitations which applies to judgments rendered by a court. Title
¶ 9. Vermont has established a legislative policy setting a definite time in which a creditor can enforce payment of a debt by allowing the same amount of time for actions on a judgment or execution. Marine Midland Bank, 2004 VT 25, ¶ 10. The eight-year statute of limitations for actions on a judgment is also a specific exception to the general six-year limitation period for other civil actions set forth in
¶ 10. Blake asserts, and the trial court agreed, that her 2019 motion to enforce constituted a “new and independent action on the judgment” sufficient to renew the 2011 judgment, which she contends was a new judgment resetting the statute of limitations clock from the original 2007 judgment. We disagree.
¶ 11. The trial court felt that because the 2011 judgment—and presumably the 2007 judgment—were judgments issued in the family division, their renewal was governed by the Family Rules rather than solely by
¶ 12. We have had occasion to consider the requirements of
¶ 13. Our decisions under
Process to enforce a judgment for the payment of money shall be a writ of execution, unless the court directs otherwise. . . .
. . . Actions or motions to renew or revive judgments shall not be a prerequisite to issuance of a writ of execution as long as the eight-year [statute of limitations] period has not expired.
Russo, 2008 VT 66, ¶ 8 (alterations in original) (emphasis added) (quoting
¶ 14. Despite the language in Rule 69 suggesting a motion was a sufficient and appropriate way to renew a judgment, we rejected the contention that the rule authorized renewal by motion. Id. We also rejected several arguments that
question of whether a special procedural rule should be created to the Civil Rules Committee.3 Id.
¶ 12.
¶ 15. Following Russo, the Legislature amended
¶ 16. In Ayer v. Hemingway, we rejected the contention that a motion for possessory writ of attachment followed by a new, stipulated judgment order was sufficient to renew a 2001 judgment. 2013 VT 37, ¶ 12, 193 Vt. 610, 73 A.3d 673. In so holding, we stated, ”Russo plainly requires a new and independent suit initiated by the filing of a complaint, not the filing of something that is arguably akin to a complaint. Any other conclusion would reintroduce uncertainty into the judgment renewal process. We thus hold that the 2001 judgment was not properly renewed.”4 Id. ¶ 16.
¶ 17. Most recently, we reaffirmed Koerber v. Middlesex College‘s holding that once an original judgment has been properly renewed by a new and independent action, the date of the renewed judgment controls for purposes of calculating the statute of limitations. H&E Equip. Servs., 2017 VT 17, ¶ 12 (holding that ” ‘rendition of the judgment’ ” language in
limited to original judgment and observing that provision “specifically provides for the renewal of judgments; obviously, renewed judgments may be enforced or there would be no point in renewing them“); see also Koerber, 139 Vt. at 9, 383 A.2d at 1057 (“[I]f the statute of limitation period has almost run upon the judgment, the judgment creditor can start the limitation period anew by bringing an action upon the judgment and obtaining a new judgment.” (citation omitted)).
¶ 18. With the requirements of
¶ 19. As for compliance with the statute, the trial court noted that
¶ 20. The trial court‘s determination that an enforcement motion is a “new action” which complies with the requirements of
¶ 21. Although not argued by the parties below, the trial court relied on Family Rule 4.2 as providing the procedure for renewal of a judgment in this case. The trial court was correct that Rule 4.2 governs all post-judgment proceedings in actions for divorce, with certain exceptions not relevant here. If the property-settlement judgment against Petrie was still enforceable, Rule 4.2 would provide the procedure for filing an enforcement motion. But nothing in Rule 4.2 indicates it applies to an action for the renewal of a judgment or that the statute-of-limitations and renewal requirements of
¶ 22. Additionally, Family Rule 4.2 is limited by its own terms to post-judgment proceedings in an existing divorce action. See
satisfies the requirements of
¶ 23. The Legislature has seen fit to set forth the requirements for renewal of judgments to include a new and independent action on the judgment. The Legislature could have allowed a judgment creditor to renew a judgment by filing a motion to renew the judgment in the original action. If that procedure were permitted, in the context of a judgment in a family case, Rule 4.2 would mandate service as in a new action, affording notice and an opportunity to be heard before renewal was granted.6 However, the Legislature did not take that step, but rather amended
¶ 24. The parties dispute whether the 2007 or 2011 judgment is the operative one for purposes of this decision. Ayer and Flex-A-Seal each considered this issue outside of the family-division context, both holding the date of the original judgment was controlling. Flex-A-Seal, 2015 VT 40, ¶ 14; Ayer, 2013 VT 37, ¶ 18. However, based upon the record here we need not reach this issue. Assuming, without deciding, that the 2011 judgment order superseded the one issued in 2007, Blake did not file a new and independent action seeking renewal within the eight years following its rendition. Her 2019 enforcement motion was insufficient for that purpose and the statute of limitations therefore bars her attempt to seek enforcement under either judgment. The trial court should have granted Petrie‘s motion to dismiss.
Reversed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
¶ 25. ROBINSON, J., concurring. I agree with the majority that a motion to enforce a judgment for property division filed in the family division does not
¶ 26. Although the express terms of
¶ 27. In enacting the “new and independent action” requirement, the Legislature was not focused on the impact of that requirement in the family division. The Legislature added the requirement that a party seeking to renew a judgment to avoid the eight-year statute of limitations file a “new and independent action” in 2010, in the context of a bill establishing a required mediation program in foreclosure proceedings. See Act Summary, 2009, No. 132 (Adj. Sess.), https://legislature.vermont.gov/Documents/2010/Docs/BILLS/H-0590/ACT0132%20Act%20Summary.htm [https://perma.cc/5HUA-N7HF]. Although the bill focused on the mediation program and requirements, it included a number of provisions relating to real property that “essentially clean up the provisions from amendments passed in prior legislative sessions.”
¶ 28. A critical rationale underlying the Court‘s decision in Russo does not apply in the context of post-judgment motions in the family division. In a case involving a post-judgment attempt to renew a judgment in the civil division by motion, the Russo Court concluded that the reference in
[W]e have recognized on numerous occasions that notice and an opportunity to be heard are indispensable to the provision of due process. In the present case, plaintiff‘s use of a motion to renew and
failure to provide notice of the filing deprived defendant of the opportunity to raise any defenses to the motion. If, instead, plaintiff had been required to commence a new, independent action to renew, defendant would have received proper notice and an opportunity to be heard. The use of an action to renew plaintiff‘s judgment therefore would have guaranteed greater protection of defendant‘s constitutional rights.
Id. ¶ 10 (citations omitted). The Court‘s reasoning makes a lot of sense in the civil division, where a party who files a post-judgment motion to enforce is not required to serve the other party using the more exacting requirements that apply to service of initial process. Compare
¶ 29. Moreover, applying the “new and independent action” requirement to final divorce judgments in the family division potentially adds unnecessary cost and confusion to the post-judgment enforcement process. A party may seek to enforce all financial aspects of a final divorce judgment—including property division, spousal maintenance, and child support—in the family division. See
¶ 30. This isn‘t just a theoretical concern; the arrangement has unfortunate impacts on access to justice for some Vermont litigants. Some divorce judgments include a property division award payable in installments over a period of time—in some cases, many years—as well as child-support or spousal-maintenance orders. This is a case in point. The family division‘s October 2011 judgment resolving Blake‘s prior contempt and enforcement motion reflects that Petrie had a child-support delinquency in excess of $12,000, and a property-settlement delinquency of $17,500. Requiring a party in Blake‘s shoes to initiate separate proceedings in two different courts in order to protect her various rights after eight years creates a high risk of confusion and imposes unnecessary burdens on the litigants. The complicated
¶ 31. In addition, this framework burdens courts by requiring two separate proceedings where one would make more sense. That framework not only imposes greater costs on the court system, it forces both courts—the civil division and family division—to adjudicate the respective issues directed at each in isolation, without the flexibility to craft a remedy that makes the most sense in the context of the full set of outstanding financial issues between the parties.
¶ 32. Amending
¶ 33. Ultimately, as the majority rightly notes, the policy decision regarding whether and how to require parties to a divorce to renew the property award in a final divorce judgment as a prerequisite to enforcing it beyond the eight-year limitations period, is one for the Legislature. Ante, ¶ 23. Because it is not clear that the Legislature has expressly considered the
¶ 34. I am authorized to state that Chief Justice Reiber joins this concurrence.
Associate Justice
