David J. McCARTER, Jr., Appellant, v. Deborah A. McCARTER (n/k/a Deborah A. Valdez), Appellee.
No. S-14640.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
July 5, 2013.
305 P.3d 509
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court‘s judgment on child custody and attorney‘s fees. On the issue of child support, we REMAND the case to the superior court for reconsideration and clarification of its findings.
1999) (stating that the case involves only questions of paternity and child support). Aaron also cites our refusal to extend the exception in B.J. v. J.D., but that case is markedly different: it involved the modification of a prior custody judgment and an award of custody to a non-biological parent. 950 P.2d 113, 118-19 (Alaska 1997). This is the initial litigation over John‘s custody. Were this an action seeking to modify an existing custody order, different standards would apply. See, e.g., id. at 119 (holding that when awarding attorney‘s fees in custody modification actions, the superior court must consider parents’ relative economic positions and good faith).
Richard W. Postma, Jr., Law Offices of Dan Allan & Associates, Anchorage, for Appellant.
Annmarie Billingsley, Foster & Rogers, LLC, Fairbanks, for Appellee.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, WINFREE, STOWERS, MAASSEN, and BOLGER, Justices.
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
This is an appeal from a judgment enforcing a property settlement agreement that had been earlier incorporated into a dissolution decree. The appellant claims that the superior court failed to make findings required by statute, erred in failing to vacate ambiguous provisions of the agreement or to allow its modification, and erred in rejecting his defenses. We affirm the superior court‘s judgment.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
David J. McCarter, Jr. and Deborah A. McCarter (now known as Deborah A. Valdez) married in 1988 and filed for dissolution in February 2007. Their dissolution petition incorporated a property agreement (“the Agreement“) that provided, among other things, that David would pay Deborah for her equity in a business, Dave McCarter Enterprises, Ltd., “in the amount of $2,000 per month for 320 months.” The Agreement further states, “Princip[al] amount is $300,000 at 5% interest due March 1, 2007 with 10 (ten days) grace. No penalty for early payoff of principal balance.” In April 2007 a superior court magistrate determined that David and Deborah understood the Agreement and were agreeing to it voluntarily, and the superior court thereupon issued a dissolution decree in which the Agreement was incorporated.
A few months later, in July 2007, David and Deborah entered into a new agreement entitled “General Release and Purchase Agreement between Deborah Valdez and Dave McCarter Enterprises, Ltd.” (“the Release“). The Release purported to release David and the business “from all actions, claims, demands, or damages,” to “cancel[ ] all previous contracts and agreements,” and to “outright purchase[] the note of $300,000.00 in the dissolution of marriage between [David and Deborah].” In exchange for this general release, David was to pay Deborah $15,000 in cash, pay off the loan on
B. Proceedings
1. 2008 motion for order to show cause
In June 2008 Deborah filed a motion for an order to show cause. Her motion did not mention the Release but alleged that David was about $8,000 in arrears on his monthly payments since the dissolution. Deborah claimed that because David defaulted, he should “pay her the entirety of the money [the $300,000 due under the Agreement] in one payment.” David responded by relying on the Release, contending that he had made all the payments that it required “until March 2008 at which time the business failed and is currently filing bankruptcy“; he alleged that he was filing for personal bankruptcy as well. His response also asserted that “the [b]usiness is valued far less than originally thought.” Deborah filed a reply in which she conceded the existence of the Release but asserted that David had not met its terms either, meaning that the Release‘s handwritten reverter clause had taken effect and returned the parties to the original Agreement.
David‘s bankruptcy triggered an automatic stay of proceedings on Deborah‘s motion. In August 2009 the superior court held, with Deborah‘s consent, that her motion was moot because she had presented the same issue to the bankruptcy court, where it was scheduled to be tried in an adversary proceeding.
2. 2010 motion for judgment
Deborah filed a motion for judgment in superior court in October 2010, asserting the same claim she had made in her 2008 motion for order to show cause and explaining that the bankruptcy action had been dismissed without prejudice. David failed to respond, and in November 2010 the superior court granted Deborah‘s motion. David was then allowed to file a late opposition in which he asserted a number of defenses, and the court vacated its order granting Deborah‘s motion and scheduled an evidentiary hearing.
The superior court heard evidence and argument over three days in July 2011 and issued a written decision in November. The court rejected David‘s argument that he was entitled to relief from the Agreement pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 60(b), on grounds that he had waived such relief, and it determined that the interpretation and enforcement of the parties’ obligations were governed by contract law instead. The court held that the Release‘s reverter clause took effect when David missed the payments that the Release required, and that the Agreement therefore controlled. The court found that the Agreement was ambiguous in that the monthly payment schedule ($2,000 per month for 320 months) did not match the stated principal and interest ($300,000 at five percent). Resolving the ambiguity, the superior court found that the parties’ inclusion of a 320-month payment schedule was a mistake due to the haste with which they drafted the terms, and that what they intended was that David pay Deborah $300,000 in monthly payments of $2,000 at five percent annual interest until paid in full; the total amount due to Deborah was thus $471,869.47. The court rejected what it termed David‘s “unclean hands” defense, i.e., that he should be excused from performance on grounds that Deborah‘s actions in filing suit against him had caused his bankruptcy; the court found that there was no causal connection between Deborah‘s conduct and David‘s financial problems. Lastly, the court held that the Agreement did not allow for acceleration of the principal and that Deborah was entitled to judgment only for the amounts past due.
David filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied. David now appeals.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review for abuse of discretion the superior court‘s enforcement of a property settlement agreement incorporated in a dis-
We review questions of law de novo.5 We decide de novo “whether relief requested by a former spouse constitutes enforcement or modification of a property settlement agreement.”6
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion In Granting The Motion For Judgment.
David contends that the superior court, in granting Deborah‘s motion, abused its discretion in two respects: first by failing to make findings required by
1. Alaska Statute 25.24.230 does not govern Deborah‘s motion for judgment.
David made this statutory argument for the first time in his motion for reconsideration, and it is therefore waived.8 We review it for plain error and find none.9 The statute‘s requirement that the court make factual findings is limited to the grant of a final decree of dissolution and “other relief as provided in this section“; it is irrelevant to subsequent enforcement of the decree.10 We have repeatedly held that the superior court does not have statutory authority to modify terms of incorporated property agreements.11 “The provisions of a decree adjudicating property rights, unlike provisions for child support, child custody or alimony, constitute a final judgment not subject to modification.”12 “[I]f a party to a property settlement seeks relief from a dissolution decree into which the settlement is
David also relies on
2. The superior court was not required to vacate ambiguous provisions.
David argues that the superior court erred in failing to vacate the portions of the agreement that it found to be ambiguous. He also contends that the superior court in effect amended the parties’ agreement in violation of
As with any contract, the goal in interpreting a financial agreement “is to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties.”16 This means that the court must attempt to resolve ambiguities.17 In doing so it should examine the language of the disputed provisions, “relevant extrinsic evidence, and case law interpreting similar provisions.”18 This process, properly applied, leads a court not to the amendment of the parties’ agreement but to the implementation of the agreement that they intended all along.
The superior court found the provision on David‘s payments to be ambiguous because it was open to several reasonable interpretations: whether the parties intended monthly payments of $2,000 for 320 months (regardless of the total sum paid); monthly payments of $2,000 until the principal amount of $300,000 plus five percent interest had been paid (regardless of the number of months this required); or monthly payments of $1,699.13, which over 320 months would equal $300,000 plus five percent interest. As required, the superior court determined the parties’ expectations by looking to case law, relevant provisions in the agreement, and the parties’ negotiations. The superior court rejected as not credible David‘s contention that the 320-month period was intended to give him 80 months of grace, i.e., 80 months when he was entitled to skip payments entirely. The superior court found credible Deborah‘s testimony that the 320 month period was the result of hasty drafting, that the parties’ negotiations focused instead on the amount of the monthly payment, and that they agreed on $2,000 because it was what she needed to meet her monthly expenses.
B. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Refusing To Modify The Dissolution Agreement.
1. David was not statutorily entitled to modification.
In another argument based on the dissolution statutes, David relies on
Alaska Statute 25.24.160(a) provides the statutory authority for a court to adjudicate property rights. However,AS 25.24.160(a) does not authorize a court to dispose of assets on a piecemeal basis where, as here, the parties’ property rights have been purportedly adjudicated and in-corporated into a final judgment. As this is not an initial adjudication of the parties’ property rights, relief may be granted only within the parameters of Civil Rule 60(b).21
Again, in the absence of a Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment, the superior court‘s task was to interpret and enforce the Agreement by reference to principles of contract law, which it did.
2. The superior court did not clearly err in finding that David waived any right to relief under Rule 60(b).
David argues that his reliance below on the statutory factors in
David never filed a Rule 60(b) motion to set aside the Agreement. When the superior court first granted Deborah‘s motion for judgment as unopposed, David cited Rule 60(b)(1), (3), and (6) in support of his request to stay the order. The request to stay was mooted by the court‘s decision to allow David to file a tardy opposition to Deborah‘s motion. His opposition relied on bankruptcy law and on the dissolution statutes to support his argument that he was entitled to modify the Agreement. At trial, the superior court advised David‘s counsel that if he was “arguing that the entire property settlement
Apparently having second thoughts, David‘s counsel submitted a letter after the first day of trial pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 77(l) citing to supplemental authority, including provisions of the dissolution statutes and cases granting relief from dissolution decrees under Rule 60(b)(6). David still did not bring a Rule 60(b) motion, however, and Rule 77(l) is not a substitute for substantive briefing or motion practice.22 In closing arguments counsel for both parties addressed Rule 60(b), with Deborah‘s counsel presenting various reasons why David had no valid claim for modification under the Rule and David‘s counsel for the first time contending expressly that David was entitled to relief under Rule 60(b)(6).
Based on this history, however, the superior court found in its written order that “[t]o the extent that David seeks Rule 60(b) relief from judgment, he has waived it in this motion practice.” It concluded that it would be unfair to allow David to raise Rule 60(b) “mid-hearing” given his reliance, up to that point, on only the dissolution statutes as the basis for modification.
We review the superior court‘s factual finding that waiver has occurred under the “clearly erroneous” standard.23 The superior court‘s finding of waiver was firmly grounded in the procedural history of the case and was not clearly erroneous.
3. The superior court did not allow Deborah to modify the agreement.
David contends that he was treated unfairly because the superior court, while denying him Rule 60(b) relief, “effectively granted [Deborah] Rule 60(b)(6) relief by excusing her from her obligations under the [d]ecree to transfer real estate and refinance debts.” We find no merit to this argument. The parties presented no arguments about Deborah‘s reciprocal obligations under the Agreement and the superior court did not rule on them.
C. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Rejecting David‘s Frustration Defense.
1. The court did not err in deciding the defense as depending on proof of wrongdoing by Deborah, since that is how David presented it.
One of David‘s primary defenses to payment under the Agreement was that his financial difficulties were caused in large part by Deborah‘s own conduct. He contended that she “killed the golden goose” by filing the 2008 motion for order to show cause and demanding acceleration of the principal due, because this conduct made it impossible for him to get the credit necessary to keep his business afloat. The superior court labeled this an “unclean hands” defense and rejected it on the facts, finding that Deborah had committed no wrongdoing because David‘s decision to file bankruptcy was unrelated to any conduct of Deborah‘s.24 The court noted
On appeal David frames this defense as one more properly characterized as “frustration of purpose,” a defense available under contract law and one that the superior court should not have limited by the requirement that David also prove unclean hands. David argues that when his business failed, “the fundamental, underlying assumption of the dissolution agreement [was] destroyed,” citing Schofield v. Schofield25 and Juelfs v. Gough.26 But both of those cases were decided on Rule 60(b), not contract law, grounds. And the superior court decided the issue in this case as David consistently framed it below: as one that hinged on proof of wrongdoing on Deborah‘s part.27 Though relying on the dissolution statutes (which are not controlling, as explained above), David argued in his opposition to Deborah‘s motion
for judgment that, by analogy, “[i]f this were a business dispute between partners under ordinary principles of contract law, [Deborah‘s] efforts to drive [David] and Dave McCarter Enterprises into bankruptcy would operate as an affirmative defense known as ‘frustration of purpose.‘” David‘s attorney made a few vague references to a “frustration” defense at trial, but he asserted consistently that it was based on Deborah‘s wrongdoing.
The court thus decided the issue as David had presented it, as one requiring a determination of whether Deborah had committed any wrongdoing and, if so, whether it was her wrongdoing that caused the business to fail. A “frustration of purpose” argument that is independent of Deborah‘s alleged wrongdoing was not asserted below and is therefore waived.28
2. The superior court‘s findings are not clearly erroneous.
Finally, David contends that in analyzing his “frustration of purpose” and “unclean hands” defenses, the superior court failed to consider his testimony that Deborah had violated the Agreement herself in 2007 by failing to timely sign over title to a parcel of real estate which David could have leveraged for cash and by failing to transfer some debts out of David‘s name, which would have improved his credit.29 David argues that these failures “caused him to file for bankruptcy.” But David‘s testimony does not
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment of the superior court.
Notes
- the length of the marriage and station in life of the parties during the marriage;
- the age and health of the parties;
- the earning capacity of the parties, including their educational backgrounds, training, employment skills, work experiences, length of absence from the job market, and custodial responsibilities for children during the marriage;
- the financial condition of the parties, including the availability and cost of health insurance;
- the conduct of the parties, including whether there has been unreasonable depletion of marital assets;
- the desirability of awarding the family home, or the right to live in it for a reasonable period of time, to the party who has primary physical custody of children;
- the circumstances and necessities of each party;
- the time and manner of acquisition of the property in question; and
- the income-producing capacity of the property and the value of the property at the time of division.
