David Lynn Hathaway appeals the summary judgment granted to Jeannette M. McKoon in her action to quiet title to real property awarded to her in a divorce decree. We affirm.
I.
BACKGROUND
Just prior to their mаrriage in 1988, McKoon and Hathaway purchased a residence on five acres of land with a physical address of 15605 W. Frost Road, Worley, Idaho. This served as the marital home until November 1990, when McKoon filed for divorce. Hathaway did not answer or appear in the divorce action, and McKoon was awarded, as requested in the complaint, “community property accumulated during the marriagе as follows: ... the real property located at Route 2, Box 32A, Worley, Idaho and all obligations associated therewith.” Route 2, Box 32A, Worley, was the address for a rural mailbox where the couplе’s mail was delivered, which was located on a farmer’s field a half mile from the marital residence. Neither McKoon nor Hathaway had an interest in this field.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. The District Court’s Interpretation of the Divorce Decree is Supported by Substantial and Competent Evidence
On review of an order granting summary judgment, we apply the same legal standard as that used by the trial court.
Friel v. Boise City Hous. Auth.,
This case hinges on the interpretation of the provision in the divorce decree awarding McKoon “the rеal property located at Route 2, Box 32A, Worley, Idaho and all obligations associated therewith.” The interpretation of decrees or judgments is generally subject to the same rules applicable to construction of contracts.
Toyama v. Toyama,
Here, the district court held that the decree unambiguously awarded the five-acre parcel with the family residence, not merely a mailbox. The court аlso ruled in the alternative that even if the decree was ambiguous, the evidence and reasonable inferences
We cannot agree with the district court’s first determination-that the decree is unambiguous. To reach its determination that the decree disposed of the residence, the court found it necessary to consider evidence outside of the words of the decree itself, including the fact that the address stated in the decree referred only to a mailbox, not to any land оwned by the parties, and that this mailbox was the point of mail delivery for the residence a half mile away. If reference to extraneous evidencé is required in order to explain a provision in a dеcree, the provision itself cannot be unambiguous.
We readily find support, however, for the district court’s alternative finding that this term in the divorce decree referred to the family residence. The languаge in the decree referring to the mailbox address as “real property” and referencing the “obligations” associated with it strongly indicates that the provision was intended to address the residencе and any related encumbrance. A mailbox is not an item that persons ordinarily would refer to as “real property” or that, standing alone, would ordinarily be encumbered by a mortgage, a lien, or the like. The parties’ actions after the divorce are consistent with this interpretation of the decree; McKoon occupied the home for sixteen years following the divorce and paid the obligations related to the property, while Hathaway took no action indicating that he was claiming an ownership interest in it.
Hathaway’s claim that he believed the divorce court had awardеd only the mailbox to McKoon does not preclude summary judgment. Strictly speaking, Hathaway’s intent at the time of the divorce is not relevant. Although some Idaho appellate decisions addressing the intеrpretation of divorce decrees have approached that task as one of determining the intent of the parties,
see Puchner v. Allatt,
Hathaway next argues that the divorce decree was insufficient to convey a property right because it contained no sufficient legal description of the property. He correctly notes that a judgment that affects an interest in real property should describe the boundaries with such certainty that rights and liabilities are clearly fixed. Thus, Idaho appellate courts have often remanded cases for correction of judgments that inadequately described the property at issue.
See Palmer v. Fitzpatrick,
Hathaway next аrgues that the divorce decree did not meet the requirements of the statute of frauds and that the district court should not have considered extrinsic or parol evidence in determining the meaning of the рrovision at issue.
The statute of frauds is Idaho Code § 9-505, which provides in part:
In the following cases the agreement is invalid, unless the same or some note or memorandum thereof, be in writing and subscribed by the party charged, or by his agent. Evidence, therefore, of the agreement cannot be received without the writing or secondary evidence of its contents:
4. An agreement for ... the sale, of real property, or of an interest therein.
By its plain language, this statute governs contracts or agreements, not court judgments such as a divorce decree. Its purpose is to prevent false or fraudulent cоntract claims by forbidding disputed assertions of certain types of contracts without any written memorandum of the agreement.
Kelly v. Hodges,
Hathaway has shown no errоr in the district court’s determination that the 1990 divorce decree awarded the residence at 15605 W. Frost Road and associated acreage to McKoon.
B. Attorney Fees
McKoon requests attorney fees оn appeal, but she cites to^ no legal authority by which such an award would be authorized. Our courts have repeatedly held that no consideration will be given to a request for attorney fees on аppeal that is not supported by legal authority or argument.
VFP VC v. Dakota Co.,
III.
CONCLUSION
The trial court’s interpretation of the ambiguous provision in the divorce decree is supported by substantial and competent evidence. We therefore affirm the judgment quieting title in favor of McKoon. Costs on appeal to McKoon.
