These appeals come from an order to set aside the property provisions of a dissolution of marriage decree for fraud on the court of rendition in the procurement of the judgment. The husband appeals on the ground that the prior decree entered was on an agreed property settlement not unconscionable in terms and therefore beyond the power of a court of equity to affect. The wife appeals on the ground that the subsequent order was not just as a division of the marital property nor as allowances for maintenance and attorney fee.
The decree of dissolution found fraudulent was entered on a petition of the husband and the entry of appearance of the wife on waiver of personal service and consent to trial and judgment without further notice. The wife was without the advice of counsel throughout these proceedings. The separation agreement of the parties, drafted by counsel for the husband, was presented to the court for approval. The agreement undertook to apportion the personal property of the parties, provided for joint ownership as tenants in common of the townhouse after dissolution but for the use of the wife and minor son until the child left the home, acceded to the fitness of the wife for the custody of the son, and provided for support money of $40 per week on the basis of a net $217 weekly salary. The agreement made no mention of a military pension of $500.59 he received every month. The court found the settlement agreement was not unconscionable and that the interests of the parties in the marital property were determined by its terms and entered judgment accordingly. The wife let the proceedings and judgment go without contest.
After the lapse of some months, the wife brought a direct action to set aside the decree, except as to the dissolution of the marriage, on grounds that the judgment, separation agreement and waivers of appearance and contest were procured by fraud practiced upon her and upon the court. The wife contended that her actions were overborned by the husband who dominated her to such extent that she was forced to rely on his advice to waive her rights of contest and to have the court divide the marital property. She contended also that the nondisclosure of the military pension in the separation agreement was a fraudulent concealment from the court of a valuable marital asset and so was not adjudicated by the decree.
The evidence was that the marriage continued for twenty-four years. They married when he was nineteen and she only fourteen; she represented herself to be sixteen at his suggestion to avoid objection.
The husband filed petition for dissolution of the marriage on December 18,1974. The next day he took her to the office of his counsel to sign papers. There she was presented the separation agreement for the first time and was asked by counsel to read and sign the document. She had not discussed the terms with her husband; he had assured her she need have no worry because what was done was for her benefit. He had told her also that the lawyer represented both of them and would look after her interests — and expected her to rely on that assertion as “[s]he had relied on everything else [he] said for twenty years". At the office, counsel expressly requested that she read the document before she gave her signature. She was very upset and tearful, however, and so only feigned examination of the agreement and signed it without understanding. [The entry of appearance and waiver appear to have been executed also at that time.]
The separation agreement identified the marital property to include the townhouse, furniture, household goods, automobiles and bank account, to the total value of about $12,000. The agreement made no reference to the $500 monthly military pension which then had an actuarial value of $64,491.
While the petition pended, the husband suggested a reconciliation, so he returned to the home and they resumed intimacy. Two days later he moved out again in anger. The wife assumed that because of resumption of the marital relation the dissolution hearing would be rescheduled on further notice, but the cause was heard about two weeks later without her knowledge or presence.
The husband appeared in person at the dissolution hearing and gave evidence to prove the cause of action but made no mention of the military pension he received regularly. In response to examination by his counsel the husband testified:
Q. Now, Mr. Daffin, in relationship to this separation agreement, you have made disposition of all your marital and non-marital property, is that correct?
A. Yes.
On this evidence the court found the marriage irretrievably broken and ordered dissolution. The custody of son Michael and $40 per week for his support was awarded the wife. The court further found the separation agreement set apart to the parties the property of each and was not unconscionable and, as such, was “determinative of all property interest owned or claimed by both parties hereto.” No maintenance was awarded.
The action to set aside the uncontested judgment for fraud on the court in the procurement followed some months later. The court vacated the judgment [except as to dissolution of the marriage] and, as amended, divided the marital property [except for the military pension] substantially as delineated by the separation agreement, declared son Michael an emancipated person, ordered the parties to sell the townhouse and share the proceeds at such time
These orders rest on the determination that a husband who procures a judgment on the basis of a separation agreement presented to the court for approval as not unconscionable and who at the same time withholds from the court knowledge of the single largest marital asset [the military pension] — commits a species of fraud.
The husband contends here that the court had neither legal nor equitable cause to vacate the original judgment which found the separation agreement not unconscionable and adjudged the disposition of the property according to its terms. The husband means by these contentions that the prior judgment entered some months before, and from which no appeal was taken, had since become final and was conclusive. Rule 75.01. The husband means also that, whether the proceeding to vacate that judgment was intended as a writ of error coram nobis or as an action in equity for fraud in the procurement — as alternatively proposed by the wife — the evidence was not sufficient to support the remedy awarded.
The common law allowed remedy to challenge the validity of a judgment already rendered by means which included the writ of error coram nobis and a proceeding in equity to vacate the judgment for fraud in the procurement. The remedy used was determined by whether the challenge to the judgment invoked the law or equity jurisdiction of the court.
Simms v. Thompson,
The coalescence of the two traditional forms of action, law and equity, into the single form, the civil action, prompted a rule of law — of apparent logic — which used coram nobis by direct motion to the court of rendition as a means for the equity power to vacate the judgment procured by fraud.
1
Subsequent authority, however, restored the distinction between the common law function of coram nobis and the remedy by equity to avoid a judgment procured by fraud
[Simms v. Thompson,
The petition upon which the judgment before us rests alleges fraud in the procurement of the orders for disposition of the property. The judgment entered upon that petition recites fraud as the ground of adjudication. The pleadings and judgment call for an exercise of jurisdiction not compatible with the office of a writ of error coram nobis.
Schneider v. Schneider,
The evidence is not in question: the husband was the beneficiary of a vested military pension for a twenty year service. This stipend of $500 per month had been paid him regularly for the five years which preceded the uncontested judgment and, according to the best evidence of the wife, had an actuarial value of $64,491 at the time of dissolution. Nor is there doubt that the separation agreement made no mention of the pension benefit, nor that the husband affirmed to the court in response to inquiry by counsel that the separation agreement made disposition of all the property, both marital and non-marital. The contentions the husband propounds on appeal are that the wife executed the separation agreement with awareness of the benefit and that it was not mentioned as an item of property in the agreement, and so his conduct was not fraudulent and, in all events, the pension was not a marital asset subject to the property judgment of a court under § 452.-330.
The Dissolution of Marriage Act imparts a power to the courts to order division of marital property which the former procedure withheld. An agreement on separation between the husband and wife as to their property was valid under the former practice even without oversight by the court.
Reiner
v.
Miller,
Concealment of a material fact of a transaction, which a party has the duty to disclose, constitutes fraud as actual as by affirmative misrepresentation.
Beil
v.
Gaertner,
The husband acknowledges the power to equity to nullify a judgment procured by fraud, but contends that the misconduct must relate to the manner whereby the judgment was concocted, and not to the merits of the issues actually adjudicated. It is the rule that equity will not annul a
It has been the insistence of the husband throughout that the military pension, as a matter of law, was a personal asset not subject to division with the spouse. From all that appears, that conviction prompted the husband not to mention the pension in the separation agreement. That does not explain his response to the court, however, that the agreement made disposition of all the marital and non-marital property. One very purpose of § 452.330 that “the court shall set apart to each spouse his property and shall divide the marital property” is that the court determine — where there is dispute — what the law accords to both as property of the marriage and what the law sets apart to each as separate property. To that end, the procedures of § 452.330 postulate full disclosure by the husband and wife to the court of all the property held by either or both of them. The determination of interest and ownership under the Act is for the court as an incident of division by decree or adjudication of fairness of an agreed disposition. §§ 452.325 and 452.330.
The wife was prevented from a just consideration of her claim to the pension under circumstances of breach of faith as would make the court an instrument of injustice should that judgment be allowed effect. The relationship between husband and wife entails the highest trust and confidence and justifies their mutual reliance.
Linders v. Linders,
The claim by the husband to the military pension as his separate property is without merit. Section 452.330.3 treats “[a]ll property acquired by either spouse subsequent to the marriage and prior to a decree of legal separation” presumptively as marital property. The military service which earned the pension emolument was virtually coterminous with the conjugal span — it began when they married and was fully earned before they separated. The husband attempts to avoid the plain statutory language by arguments that the wife expressly relinquished her right to claim the pension — a contention the evidence discredits — and that the record does not suffice to attribute value to the benefit. As to the latter, the pension was vested and payable as long as the husband should live, and the judgment which treats the pension benefit — then $175 per month — as an asset of the marriage is soundly based. The military pension acquired subsequent to the marriage was a present interest, not subject to divestment, and falls within the marital property definition of the statute.
In re Marriage of Powers,
The husband cites a number of decisions which bear neither by analogy or as precedent.
Robbins v. Robbins,
The wife contends on her separate appeal that the court neither made just division of the marital property nor determined the issue of maintenance in accordance with the statutory factors, §§ 452.330 and 452.335. In more exact terms, she contends that the military pension was inequitably apportioned. We conclude, rather, that the order which adjudges the wife $175 “partially as a division of [the husband’s] vested retirement pay . . . and partially as periodic maintenance” does not express a division of property. The award adjudges but does not separate the two disparate property interests accorded the wife in the pension benefit. Statutory maintenance is for support, is conditioned
The cause- is remanded for the entry of a definite and certain disposition of the pension fund asset. In this disposition the trial court will heed the prescription of § 452.-335.1 which conditions the award of maintenance on the consideration that the spouse favored with such allowance “[l]acks sufficient property, including marital property apportioned to [her], to provide for [h]er reasonable needs.” The trial court will consider also that the pension benefit, by its terms, varies according to the cost of living and that such adjustable asset is most aptly allocable on a percentile basis. The award on this asset shall accrue as of December 1, 1976, the date of the trial court judgment.
The cause is remanded according to these directions and is in all other respects affirmed.
Notes
. The rationale which prompted
Cross v. Gould,
. While coram nobis may not be used as a pleading in equity to set aside a judgment for fraud in the procurement, contemporary practice allows the equity action by direct motion as well as by the traditional independent proceeding.
J. R. Watkins Company v. Hubbard,
