In the Matter of The Estate of Robert J. Wilson, Deceased. Osceola S. Turner, Appellant; Earlene Wilson, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York.
Stanley Hyman and Marvin Hyman for appellant.
Philip B. Matthews for respondent.
Judges JASEN, JONES and WACHTLER concur with Judge FUCHSBERG; Judge GABRIELLI concurs in a separate opinion in which Chief Judge COOKE and Judge MEYER concur.
*62FUCHSBERG, J.
This proceeding was brought pursuant to SCPA 1421 to test the validity of a widow's election to take a share against the provisions of her husband's will as provided by EPTL 5-1.1. The controversy centered on the enforceability of a waiver of the wife's right to elect incorporated in a separation agreement executed by the spouses. A dependent question, conditioned on a finding that the separation agreement was valid, treated with the legal impact on the waiver of an alleged reconciliation between husband and wife. A subsidiary issue, perhaps of paramount practical importance in light of the large increase in the number of marital dissolutions, deals with the severability of such a clause.
These matters come to us against the following background:
Robert J. Wilson and Earlene Wilson were married in 1959. What comes through as a rather checkered married existence led them to sign the separation agreement in 1966. Its preamble stated that "the parties have heretofore separated and are now from some time past living separate and apart from each other and since their separation have agreed to live separately and apart during the rest of their lives". Among other things, the contract's implementing clauses divided their real and personal property and waived each one's claims against the other's estate. It was also stipulated that any future modification had to be in writing. As relevant here, it was agreed too that "If any provision of this Agreement is held to be invalid or unenforceable, all other provisions shall nevertheless continue in full force and effect".
When, upon the probate of Robert Wilson's will following his death in 1975, Ms. Wilson filed her notice of election, Osceola Sampson Turner, a specific devisee, petitioned for a declaration that the widow had waived any right to do so. Setting out the allegations she expected to establish in support of her claim (see, generally, 3B Warren's Heaton Surrogates' *63 Courts [6th ed], § 305, par 2, subd [d]), Mrs. Turner's petition pleaded the existence of the separation agreement, the waiver it incorporated, and an assertion that the spouses had never reconciled. In her response, the widow, meeting these contentions head-on, averred that the agreement containing the waiver had become ineffective long before the decedent passed away because "in or about 1967 respondent and her husband * * * reconciled their marital differences and resumed their marital relationship and [thereafter] resided together as man and wife, in their marital domicile * * * continuously" until the husband's death.
But, while the issues thus seemed to be narrowly framed by the pleadings, at trial the parties, with at least the tacit acquiescence of the Surrogate, in fact plotted a much broader litigation course. In his opening remarks, as a prelude to the invocation of the long-standing, and continuing, policy which interdicts a separation agreement when it reasonably can be viewed as inducing, rather than merely recognizing, the disruption of a family unit (see Tirrell v Tirrell,
However, at the conclusion of the trial, the Surrogate focused only on the reconciliation contention. Acknowledging the considerable evidentiary basis for the widow's position on this issue, he rejected it, not because it was outweighed by evidence offered by petitioner or because its substance was shaken on cross-examination, but because he had formed the opinion that it was "rehearsed". As to the theory that the separation agreement was invalid because the parties were living as husband and wife when it was executed possibly because it was not embraced within the formal pleadings, or, perchance, because, applying the maxim falsus in uno falsus in omnibus, he decided to disregard anything to which Ms. Wilson and her witnesses subscribed, or, perhaps, for some other reason he preferred not to mention the Surrogate failed to address, much less determine, that question at all.
The case having reached the Appellate Division in this posture, that court, upon its own examination of the record, concluded that there had been no proof that the Wilsons were physically separated when the agreement was entered into. Reversing on the facts and on the law, and expressly arriving at an assessment of the witnesses' credibility diametrically opposed to that reached by the Surrogate, it found that the agreement in its entirety was void from the inception and that, hence, there had never been a valid waiver of the right of election (
For our part, being called upon, inter alia, to decide in this nonjury proceeding between sets of factual findings and inferences so at odds with one another (see Bernardine v City of New York,
Indeed, whatever significance, if any, is to be attached to the agreement's boilerplate recital of an ongoing separation (see Dowie v De Winter,
Having thus made our choice on the factual controversy, we now turn to explore the legal effect that the invalidity of the separation agreement had on the waiver of the spousal right to elect. Petitioner insists, as did the dissenters at the Appellate Division, that the mutual waiver provision is self-standing and need not fall with the rest of the agreement, all the more so in light of the severability clause.[2]
Of course, whether the provisions of a contract are severable depends largely upon the intent of the parties as reflected in the language they employ and the particular circumstantial milieu in which the agreement came into being (see Christian v Christian,
Most relevant to the circumstances surrounding the genesis of the agreement in the present case is the obvious fact that it, and all its provisions, were intended to govern as between separated spouses. Common experience teaches that, when marital property arrangements are made part of such an agreement, the separation is not merely the occasion but the underlying raison d'etre for the dispositions. Once the partners to the union renounce their incipient state of separation in favor of maintaining their coupled status, absent any indication to the contrary, it is to be assumed that, writing on a clean slate, they intended that all vestiges of the agreement that was to serve to memorialize their separation also fall (see Zimmer v Settle,
It is interesting to observe that the force of this principle is so pervasive that it applies whether the separation agreement is one rendered void ab initio by reason of the parties' failure to live separate and apart or whether it is one abandoned later on because the spouses have effected a reconciliation. In either case, the conduct of the spouses may be understood to manifest an intention to void the agreement in its entirety. (See Matter of De Francesco,
Thus, in marked contrast to the present case are the cases relied upon by petitioner in which individual provisions in separation agreements including ones providing for the waiver of claims against a spouse's estate have been held enforceable notwithstanding that the agreement itself has *67 been wholly invalidated (see Stahl v Stahl,
For all these reasons, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
GABRIELLI, J. (concurring).
I concur in the result reached by Judge FUCHSBERG, because the separation agreement was impliedly and completely revoked either ab initio due to the absence of any actual separation, or subsequently upon the reconciliation of the parties thereto. And I agree that either a reconciliation or a failure to actually separate after entering into a separation agreement cancels the unexecuted portions of the agreement. The principle that a reconciliation or failure to actually separate constitutes an implied revocation of the agreement in its entirety and a cancellation of the unexecuted parts thereof, is founded upon the judicial sensitivity to the reasonable and legal expectations of contracting parties that a separation agreement will continue in effect only while they are actually separated.
The general rule that a reconciliation or failure to separate will revoke the agreement and cancel any unexecuted portions thereof is, of course, as applicable to a waiver of the right of election as it is to the transfer of title to property while the parties were still separated (see 2 Foster and Freed, Law and the Family, § 28.50). This rule is grounded, however, upon the presumed intent of the parties, and should not be applied when a contrary intent is clear. More importantly, in many cases such an implied revocation of the agreement should also be deemed a cancellation of any property transfers made pursuant to the agreement. In the case before us, of course, there was no request that the widow's assertion of her right of election be conditioned upon her returning to the estate properties transferred to her pursuant to the separation agreement, but, in an appropriate case, and with due regard to any rights of third parties, a court may quite properly grant such relief.[*]
*68Accordingly, I concur and vote to affirm the order appealed from.
Order affirmed, with costs to all parties appearing separately and filing separate briefs payable out of the estate.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Moreover, the parties own appellate course invites no different analysis. In the Appellate Division, the opening point of the widow's brief was devoted to an extensive exposition of her position that there was no separation at the time of the agreement, with specific emphasis on the testimony which buttressed that contention. Yet the issue was wholly ignored in the opposing brief. Nor, on this appeal to us, is there raised any procedural or substantive obstacle to the widow's argument that the disposition below should be affirmed on this rationale. Rather, petitioner's brief completely ignores the issue.
[2] It is not disputed that the waiver notice in its formal aspects complied in all respects with the requirements of EPTL 5-1.1 (subd [f], pars [2], [3]).
[3] We have no occasion here to examine the rights of the parties with respect to real estate that had been conveyed to the wife pursuant to the terms of the agreement at about the time of the execution. No claim with respect to such property was made or proved at nisi prius and we note that the parties have not raised any question as to the validity of the transfers in this appeal. Nor observing also that there is nothing in the record to suggest an intention by the spouses to nullify the conveyances despite the invalidity of the agreement, is there need to concern ourselves with the effect of the substantial passage of time and possible intervention of the rights of third parties. (See Coccaro v Coccaro,
[*] I note that it is, of course, impossible to determine the practical result of such an inquiry in any given case without a full record. In the instant case, for example, it seems that the property settlement resulted in three houses being transferred to the wife and three houses being transferred to the husband. It may well be that all six houses were owned by the parties as tenants by the entirety, in which case it might well be that the wife should not be required to return the three houses to the estate in this case. If the three houses she received were approximately equal in value to her real interest in the properties owned by the couple at the time, it might well be improper to require her to return the property. Such a determination, however, can only be made on a full record and after a fair exposition of the facts.
