In this action for damages arising out of the parties’ dissolution of marriage proceeding, Gerda Gavrilis (wife) appeals the summary judgment entered in favor of Theofanis Gavrilis (husband). We affirm.
The parties were married for nearly thirty years. In the last five yеars of their marriage, the parties instituted three separate dissolution of marriage proceedings. In efforts to reconcile with one another, they abandoned the first two proceedings, in which they had each been represented by counsel. In the third and final proceeding, neither party retained counsel, and they agreed that husband would prepare all necessary paperwork associated with the petition, including financial affidavits for both parties, а separation agreement, and a decree incorporating that agreement.
In March 2000, the trial court accepted, as not unconscionable, the parties’ separation agreement and incorporated it intо the decree dissolving the parties’ marriage. A month later, while at an accountant’s office to *1273 sign tax returns for the final year of the parties’ marriage, wife discovered an approximately $870,000 discrepancy between the incоme husband reported on the tax return and what he reported on his financial affidavit in the dissolution proceeding.
Wife did not seek to re-open the judgment entered in the dissolution proceeding under C.R.C.P. 60(b). Instead, in October 2001, she filed the present action for damages against husband, asserting claims for fraud, outrageous conduct, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and negligence arising from misrepresentations he allegedly made in the dissolution proceeding regarding thе parties’ income and property.
In her complaint, wife averred that, in the dissolution proceeding, husband had (1) grossly underreported his income and (2) grossly overvalued the assets allocated to her and grossly undervalued the assets allocated to him.
Regarding husband’s income, the record reveals, and wife admits, that husband had attached to his financial affidavit a pay stub reflecting his income, including bonuses, for the first nine months of the year. The pay stub accounted for all but approximately $288,000 of the $870,000 discrepancy in income; the remaining $288,000 had been paid to husband in the final three months of the year and after the submission of the financial documents in the dissolution proceeding. Wife necessarily became aware оf this remaining amount during the tax preparation process, which occurred a month following entry of the dissolution decree.
Regarding the assets, in the trial court, wife disputed the reported valuations of particular assets, but did not contest that husband had disclosed the existence of all the parties’ assets.
Upon husband’s motion, the trial court granted summary judgment in his favor. The trial court concluded that: (1) although wife’s complaint asserted only claims for damages, it attacked a judgment рreviously entered in the dissolution case and consequently had to be viewed as an independent equitable action attacking a facially valid decree; and (2) wife could not, as a matter of law, prevail because, among other things, the type of fraud alleged here would not support an independent equitable action.
Wife contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment. We disagree.
We review de novo the trial court’s summary judgment ruling.
Aspen Wilderness Workshop, Inc. v. Cоlo. Water Conservation Bd.,
Here, because the facts material to the issues on appeal are undisputed, the question is solely one of law.
Wife acknowledges that, under
In re Marriage of Gance,
Claim preclusion (otherwise known as res judicata) bars litigation of matters that were decided, as well as matters that could have been raised but were not, in a prior proceeding. “For a claim in a seсond judicial proceeding to be precluded by a previous judgment, there must exist: (1) finality of the first judgment, (2) identity of subject matter, (3) identity of claims for relief, and (4) identity or privity between parties to the actions.”
Argus Real Estate, Inc. v. E-470 Pub. Highway Auth.,
In this case, only the third element — identity of clаims — is at issue. In analyzing whether there is an identity of claims, we do not focus on the specific claim asserted or the name given to the claim; rather, we examine the injury for which re
*1274
lief is requested. Claim preclusion bars litigation “not only of all claims actually decided, but of all claims that might have been decided if the claims are tied by the same injury.”
Argus Real Estate, Inc. v. E-470 Pub. Highway Auth., supra,
Here, wife asserts that husband’s misrepresentations about his income and the value of marital assets deprived her of a fair and equitable share of the couple’s property. Because achieving а fair and equitable division of property is one of the primary objectives of a dissolution proceeding, wife’s claims here are integrally tied to those she asserted, or could have asserted, in the dissolution proceeding. Thus, we cоnclude these claims are now barred.
Our conclusion is supported by case law in this and other jurisdictions.
In
Rieger v. Rieger,
Likewise, in
Nederlander v. Nederlander,
Similarly, in
Dean v. Dean,
We recognize that some courts have permitted independent damages actions for wrongs committеd in dissolution proceedings.
See Bates v. Bates,
We are persuaded by Rieger v. Rieger, supra, and decisions in other jurisdictions precluding collateral attacks on dissolution decreеs. Thus, we hold that here claim preclusion bars wife’s independent damages action for wrongs allegedly committed by husband in the dissolution proceeding.
Under C.R.C.P. 60(b)(2), wife had six months following entry of judgment in the dissolution proceeding to seek relief from that judgment bаsed on husband’s alleged fraud. Cf. C.R.C.P. 16.2(e)(10) (motions alleging fraud in disclosures and seeking relief from dissolution judgment, which are filed on or after January 1, 2005, now subject to five-year limitation). She may not use a damages action to achieve the same result.
Wife’s reliance on
Simmons v. Simmons,
In this case, husband had disclosed to wife, in the dissolution proceeding, the existence of all assets and, on an attachment to the financial affidavit, all of his income received as of the timе he filed the financial affidavit. At issue here is whether husband misrepresented the value of the parties’ assets. Also at issue is whether husband misrepresented his income, by failing to (1) report on the affidavit itself the figures from the pay stub attached to the affidavit and (2) disclose a subsequently paid bonus and salary. Because these matters could have been discovered with reasonable diligence and litigated wdthin the dissolution proceeding or the applicable six-month period thereаfter for seeking relief from judgment, wife is barred from pursuing the present damages action against husband.
Finally, to the extent that wife makes additional arguments about hidden and/or improperly valued assets, we do not consider them because they were not presented either to the trial court,
see Crum v. April Corp.,
The judgment is affirmed.
