[¶ 1] Kelene Barrows appeals from a judgment entered in the Waldo County Probate Court (Longley, J.) finding that she waived her right to an elective share of the estate of her late husband, Timmy L. Barrows. Kelene contends that the Probate Court erred in finding that: (1) she and Timmy intended the premarital agreement to apply in the event of deаth; and (2) the agreement constituted an effective waiver of her right to an elective share that applied to property acquired by Tim
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] Kelene and Timmy entered into a premarital agreement shortly before their marriage in 1997. Kelene signed, in conjunction with the agreеment, an affidavit waiving the right to be informed of her spousal rights to Timmy’s estate.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
[¶ 3] Premarital agreements are contracts evaluatеd in accordance with standard rules of contract construction. Estate of Martin,
A. The Premarital Agreement’s Application in the Event of Death
[¶ 4] Contrary to Kelene’s contention, substantial evidence supports the Probate Court’s determination that Timmy intended the agreement to apply in the event of death. A former accountant for the family business testified that he advised Timmy a few weeks prior to his marriage to obtain a premarital agreement to protect Timmy’s brother, a co-owner of the family business, in the evеnt of death. Although a pre-existing buy/sell agreement already afforded a guarantee that Timmy’s brother would retain ownership of the business, Timmy could have concluded that
[¶ 5] Nor did the Probate Court clearly err in finding that Kelene also intended the agreemеnt to apply in the event of death. The court made extensive findings and ultimately found as follows:
[T]his Court finds it reasonable to determine that, given all these facts, Kelene evidently had read, understood and intended the Agreement to mean that “the business would be his and his brother’s” [ 1 not only “in case there was ever a divorce”[ 3 but also, as in the case at hand, upon Timmy’s death.
Additionally, Kelene admitted that she did not find confusing key portions of the agreement and attached affidavit.
B. Waiver of Right to an Elective Share
[¶ 6] The Probate Court also properly determined that Kelene, by intending the agreement to apply upon death, effectively waived her right to an elective share. As noted by Kelene, we have long recognized that a party “cannot properly be said to waive that of which he has no knowledge.” Jewell v. Jewell,
[¶ 7] The Legislature, however, explicitly condoned а more permissive approach with the elective share. Under the Probate Code, “a waiver of ‘all rights,’ or equivalent language” may serve as an effective waiver of this statutory right. 18-A M.R.S. § 2-204. Therefore, as we previously noted in dictum, see Barrows I,
[¶ 8] In this case, Kelene’s affidavit establishes thаt she knew of the possible existence of the “rights of a wife to the property of her husband, during marriage, in the event of a divorce, and after death ” at the time she signed the agreement. (Emphasis added). Cf Estate of Berzinis,
[¶ 9] Finally, although the parties described Kelene’s waiver of rights to Timmy’s premarital property using differеnt language than they employed to describe her rights to property acquired by Timmy during the marriage, the Probate Court did not err in determining that Kelene’s waiver extendеd to all property owned by Timmy. Although the use of different language to address analogous issues may imply a different approach, we do not pluck isolated words or phrases from an agreement and examine them alone; the meaning of different contract provisions must still be read in light of the contract as a whole. Taracorp, Inc. v. NL Indus., Inc.,
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The affidavit states, in pertinent part:
2. Prior to the execution of said Agreement, I have waived the right to have an attorney explain to me the rights of a husband to the property of his wife and the rights of a wife to the property of her husband, during marriage, in the event of a divorce, and after deаth, and to have an attorney explain to me the effect of the attached Agreement on all of those rights.
. The agreement’s preamble stated that it wаs the parties' "desire to fix and determine by this Agreement their mutual property rights and obligations during the marriage, in the event of their divorce, or upon the death of either of them.” (Emphasis added.) Cf. Estate of Berzinis,
