In re the Marriage of Runge
No. 16CA1492
Colorado Court of Appeals
February 22, 2018
2018COA23
Boulder County District Court No. 10DR1467, Honorable Bruce Langer, Judge
The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division. Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.
SUMMARY
February 22, 2018
2018COA23
No. 16CA1492, In re the Marriage of Runge — Family Law — Civil Procedure — Court Facilitated Management of Domestic Relations Cases — Disclosures — Topical subject keywords
A division of the court of appeals considers whether wife‘s motion under
Court of Appeals No. 16CA1492
Boulder County District Court No. 10DR1467
Honorable Bruce Langer, Judge
In re the Marriage of
Barbara Runge,
Appellant,
and
David Allen Runge,
Appellee.
ORDER AFFIRMED
Division I
Opinion by JUDGE FURMAN
Richman, J., specially concurs
Taubman, J., dissents
Announced February 22, 2018
Robert E. Lanham, P.C., Robert E. Lanham, Boulder, Colorado, for Appellant
Litvak Litvak Mehrtens and Carlton, P.C., Ronald D. Litvak, John C. Haas, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Appellee
¶ 2 On appeal, wife challenges the district court‘s order. She contends that the district court erred by (1) not applying the “plausibility” standard, which was announced in Warne v. Hall, 2016 CO 50, when granting husband‘s motion to dismiss; and (2) ruling that she did not state sufficient grounds in her motion. She also contends that the court should have at least allowed her to conduct discovery to prove her allegations.
¶ 3 We conclude that the Warne “plausibility” standard does not apply to the dismissal of a motion under
¶ 4 As an initial matter, husband contends that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under
¶ 5
¶ 6 Because we affirm the court‘s dismissal of wife‘s motion, this opinion does not decide whether the court would have had jurisdiction to allocate assets if it had granted wife‘s motion. The separate concurring opinion of Judge Richman concludes that the district court retained jurisdiction to both rule on the motion and allocate assets if necessary. The dissent of Judge Taubman
I. The Separation Agreement
¶ 7 The parties, with assistance of counsel, entered into a separation agreement in 2011 to end their twenty-seven-year marriage. They requested that the district court find the agreement to be fair and not unconscionable, and incorporate it into the dissolution decree. The court did so.
¶ 8 Four years and 364 days later, wife moved to reopen the property division provisions of the agreement under
¶ 9 In response, husband moved to dismiss wife‘s request, arguing that she had not sufficiently alleged facts showing either material omissions or misrepresentations. He also argued in his reply that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under the rule because the five-year period during which it may reallocate assets expired the day after wife moved for such relief.
¶ 10 The district court rejected husband‘s jurisdictional argument, but it granted his motion to dismiss, ruling that wife had not made
II. C.R.C.P. 16.2
¶ 11 The purpose of
¶ 12 Regarding disclosure, the rule imposes a special duty of candor on divorcing spouses, which includes “full and honest disclosure of all facts that materially affect their rights and interests.”
¶ 13 And, as relevant here,
[i]f the disclosure contains misstatements or omissions, the court shall retain jurisdiction after the entry of a final decree or judgment for a period of 5 years to allocate material assets or liabilities, the omission or non-disclosure of which materially affects the division of assets and liabilities.
See Schelp, 228 P.3d at 156; Hunt, ¶ 17.
III. Warne Plausibility Standard
¶ 14 We first address wife‘s contention that the district court erred by not applying the “plausibility” standard, which was announced in Warne v. Hall, 2016 CO 50, when granting husband‘s motion to dismiss. We conclude that the Warne plausibility standard governing motions to dismiss under
¶ 16 Under the “plausibility” standard from Warne, a complaint must “state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face” to avoid dismissal under
¶ 17 First, husband did not cite
¶ 18 Second, by its express terms,
¶ 20 Accordingly, because wife‘s motion was not a pleading and husband‘s motion to dismiss was not pursuant to
IV. Wife‘s Allegations
¶ 21 We next address whether wife stated sufficient grounds in her motion to trigger an allocation of undisclosed or misstated assets under
¶ 22 We review de novo the district court‘s interpretation of
¶ 23 Wife contends that husband omitted certain business entities and interests from his sworn financial statements and the separation agreement. She also contends that he misrepresented (1) the value of his primary business interest, Tax Law Solutions, by stating that the value was “unknown“; and (2) the amount of
¶ 24 But, the record reflects that before the parties entered into the separation agreement, husband advanced funds for wife to hire an accounting expert to investigate their financial circumstances; he gave the accountant and wife, through her attorney, voluminous documents, including personal and business bank statements, trust documents, records concerning his offshore interests, and his own accounting expert‘s report; and he and his expert testified and were cross-examined at length at the temporary orders hearing.
¶ 25 Nothing in
¶ 26 In doing so, we conclude that Hunt, on which wife relies, is materially distinguishable from the present case. In Hunt, it was undisputed that the husband had failed to disclose certain specific items that are listed for mandatory disclosure in the appendix to
¶ 28 For example, at the February 14, 2011, temporary orders hearing, wife‘s attorney admitted while cross-examining husband that they had received “an awful lot of documents” from him, as had their accounting expert. Wife further described two boxes of
¶ 29 And, at the same 2011 hearing, wife‘s attorney acknowledged in opening statement that the parties’ dissolution case was going to be complicated because there were between thirty and fifty entities that husband owns or in which he has an interest. The attorney further stated that he planned to schedule “a couple of depositions” in order to “look into [husband‘s offshore] trust in much greater detail,” acknowledging that “I do have copies” of the trust documents. The attorney also stated, looking at husband‘s exhibit showing that Tax Law Solutions generated over $2 million in revenue in 2009 and $1.6 to $1.8 million in 2010, “[t]hat [it] is going to take a lot of time to value.” He also noted that the exhibit listed fifty-six other entities to which husband had some connection, that this was “not a simple case,” and that the case was “going to take a lot of time.”
¶ 30 Yet, with the extensive documentation husband provided in hand and armed with her own accounting expert to analyze that extensive documentation, wife nonetheless chose to enter into the separation agreement only a month after the temporary orders
¶ 31 We acknowledge that
¶ 32 Essentially, in her “motion regarding undisclosed assets,” wife requested to conduct the discovery into and analysis of husband‘s financial and business interests that her attorney had planned to do and the analysis that could have been done by her attorney and accounting expert in 2011 before the separation agreement was signed. We agree with the district court that
¶ 33 We must interpret the rules of civil procedure consistent with principles of statutory construction, according to the plain and
¶ 34 The remedy created by the
¶ 35 We are not persuaded by wife‘s arguments that husband‘s pre-decree disclosures of the value of Tax Law Solutions as “unknown” and of $1.4 million in mortgage debt on the marital
¶ 36 Again, the present situation is unlike that in Hunt, where the spouse had failed to disclose existing pre-decree appraisals of his business and loan applications stating a value for his interest in the business. See Hunt, ¶¶ 12-15. Wife instead merely speculates here that husband “likely” misrepresented the value of Tax Law Solutions because an appraisal done two years after the decree indicated that the business was worth nearly $5 million.
¶ 37
¶ 38 And, wife knew that the 2011 value of Tax Law Solutions was presented as “unknown” when she signed the separation agreement. At the temporary orders hearing just one month earlier, wife‘s own attorney had emphasized on the record the need to value that particular asset and the time it would take to do so. Thus, unlike the spouse in Hunt, wife is bound by her decision to enter into the separation agreement without ever obtaining a pre-decree valuation for husband‘s primary business. See Hunt, ¶ 19.
¶ 39 Regarding the mortgage on the marital home, the record reflects that wife was well aware before entering into the separation agreement that this mortgage was not an arm‘s length transaction because husband had an ownership interest in the mortgage company, Meridian Trust. Wife testified at the 2011 hearing that husband had told her that they “needed a mortgage deduction” so he had set up a trust to loan money to them. She described the mortgage as “not a real mortgage” because husband effectively
V. Conclusion
¶ 40 The district court correctly determined that wife did not allege a sufficient basis for it to allocate misstated or omitted assets under
¶ 41 The order is affirmed.
JUDGE RICHMAN specially concurs.
JUDGE TAUBMAN dissents.
¶ 42 I concur with Judge Furman that wife’s request to reopen the dissolution proceeding was correctly denied by the court. However, unlike Judge Furman, I believe we must consider husband’s argument that the court lost subject matter jurisdiction under
¶ 43 As noted by Judge Furman, wife filed her request to reopen four years and 364 days after the permanent orders were entered. Husband contends that the court lost jurisdiction when five years passed — the day after the motion was filed.
¶ 44 Husband’s argument relies on the particular language of the retention provision, specifically that “the court shall retain jurisdiction” for a five-year period after the decree.
¶ 45 We review de novo the legal issue of whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction to consider wife’s motion. See Egelhoff v. Taylor, 2013 COA 137, ¶ 23.
¶ 46 “A court’s acquisition of subject matter jurisdiction depends on the facts existing at the time jurisdiction is invoked, and a court ordinarily does not lose jurisdiction by the occurrence of subsequent events, even if those events would have prevented acquiring jurisdiction in the first place.” Thomas v. Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., 255 P.3d 1073, 1081 (Colo. 2011); see Secrest v. Simonet, 708 P.2d 803, 807 (Colo. 1985) (jurisdiction once acquired over a defendant was not then lost after he was removed from the territory). But cf. People in Interest of M.C.S., 2014 COA 46, ¶¶ 14-17 (holding that because juvenile court jurisdiction is limited by
¶ 47 The district court’s jurisdiction to reallocate the parties’ assets under
¶ 48 In support of this conclusion, I note that in Schelp, the supreme court commented that the jurisdiction retention provision
¶ 49 Husband’s proposed interpretation of
¶ 51 Although Goldberg, the case cited by Judge Taubman to support the use of a nunc pro tunc judgment, overruled Mark, it did not address Dill. And in People v. Sherrod, 204 P.3d 466, 469 (Colo. 2009), the supreme court cited Dill in discussing “whether nunc pro tunc orders can cure jurisdictional defects,” but ultimately did not decide that question.
¶ 53 In my view, the threshold — and dispositive — question in this case is whether the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction under
¶ 54 Barbara and David Allen Runge divorced in 2011. The decree of dissolution was entered on April 22, 2011. One day shy of five years later, on April 21, 2016, wife filed a motion to reopen the property portions of the dissolution decree under
¶ 55 “[S]ubject matter jurisdiction concerns the court’s authority to deal with the class of cases in which it renders judgment, not its authority to enter a particular judgment in that class.” Minto v. Lambert, 870 P.2d 572, 575 (Colo. App. 1993). “Whether a court possesses . . . jurisdiction is generally only dependent on the nature of the claim and the relief sought.” Trans Shuttle, Inc. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 58 P.3d 47, 50 (Colo. 2002). “[I]n determining whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction, it is important to distinguish between cases in which a court is devoid of power and those in which a court may have inappropriately exercised its power.” SR Condos., LLC v. K.C. Constr., Inc., 176 P.3d 866, 869-70 (Colo. App. 2007). If a court acted when it was devoid of power, it acted without jurisdiction and any judgment rendered is void. In re Marriage of Stroud, 631 P.2d 168, 170 (Colo. 1981).
¶ 57
¶ 59 On appeal, husband asserts that
¶ 60 Rules of statutory construction apply to the interpretation of rules of civil procedure. Watson v. Fenney, 800 P.2d 1373, 1375 (Colo. App. 1990). Thus, the primary task in construing a rule is to ascertain and to give effect to the intent of the adopting body. Id. To discern that intent, a court should look first to the language of the rule, giving words and phrases their plain and ordinary meanings. See People v. Dist. Court, 713 P.2d 918, 921 (Colo. 1986). If the language of a rule is clear, there is no need to resort to other rules of construction. Watson, 800 P.2d at 1375.
¶ 61 I consider the meaning of
¶ 62 Although Judge Furman appears to apply a plain meaning interpretation of
¶ 63 I have three concerns about Judge Furman’s interpretation. First, it does not alert litigants that the five-year period in
¶ 64 Third, Judge Furman’s construction of
¶ 65 While Judge Richman concludes that the district court had jurisdiction because wife filed her motion within five years of the date of the decree, I disagree with that interpretation as well, for several reasons. First, as I have already noted, the plain language of
¶ 66 Second, when we consider the meaning of rules, “inclusion of certain items implies the exclusion of others.” Beeghly v. Mack, 20 P.3d 610, 613 (Colo. 2001). I would conclude that the express inclusion of the word “jurisdiction” in
¶ 67 Third, I believe that reading
¶ 69 Moreover, in my view, the supreme court has set forth an appropriate remedy for situations in which a district court does not decide a matter within the jurisdictional window despite being given sufficient time to do so. In Robbins v. A.B. Goldberg, the supreme
¶ 70
¶ 71 Finally, I disagree with wife’s contention, made during oral argument, that the use of the term “jurisdiction” in
¶ 72 Accordingly, I would vacate the district court’s order dismissing wife’s motion on the basis that the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider the motion. Because I would vacate the order rather than affirm on the merits, I respectfully dissent.
