OPINION
for the Court.
Bеfore this Court is an appeal by Marvin Lester Paul (Marvin) from a Family Court post-judgment order in favor of his former wife, Sharie Paul (Sharie). This case came before the Court for oral argument on December 2, 2009, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. After hearing the parties’ аrguments and considering the memoranda submitted on behalf of each of them, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown, and we proceed to decide this appeal at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the order of the Family Court.
I
Facts and Travel
In December 2005, after nearly ten years of marriage, Sharie filed a complaint *991 for divorce. 1 Just befоre trial was to begin, the parties completed a Marital Settlement Agreement (agreement). However, some last-minute haggling resulted in the parties making handwritten changes to the previously negotiated and typewritten agreement. Consequently, some parts of the agreement were lined out by hand, and other handwritten language was substituted for what had been typed. These holographic revisions concerned the disposition of the parties’ rather extensive real estate interests. After a hearing on the merit s, the trial justice granted both Shade’s complaint and Marvin’s counterclaim for an absolute divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable differences. The trial justice found that the hurriedly amended agreement divided the parties’ real and personal property and that, based on the testimony of the parties that they freely and voluntarily entered into the agreement and that they understood it and believed it to be fair and equitable, the trial justice approved the agreement. He ordered that it be incorporated, but not merged in the decision for divorce.
Critical to this case, the agrеement provides in paragraph twelve that Marvin will pay Sharie $500,000 as an equitable distribution. The agreement further specifies that that sum shall be paid on or before March 28, 2012. 2 The payments due Shar-ie were to be realized through the sale of specified real estate in which the parties had an interest. The agreement requires that Sharie receive 90 percent of the net proceeds received from the sale of any real estate delineated in the agreement, those proceeds to be applied toward the $500,000. Additionally, the agreement provides that if Marvin has not paid the $500,000 by March 28, 2012, “then in that event the Wife shall have the right to foreclose on any and all remaining properties covered by her mortgagе deed and note in order to satisfy the outstanding moneys due her.”
The nub of this dispute is focused on paragraph seven of the agreement. 3 Paragraph 7.A enumerates eight parcels of real estate in which title is held in Marvin’s name. As originally drafted, paragraph 7.B.l(b) states,
“The Husband shall take whatever steps are necessary in order to list for sale on the open markеt forthwith all of the above properties except the property at 199 Providence Street, West Warwick, RI; 130 Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, RI and 99 Vera Street, Providence, RI if this has not already been done.”
However, on the day their case was heard on the merit s, they amended paragraph 7.B.l(b) to read as follows:
“The Husband shall take whatever steps are necessary in order to list for sale on the open market forthwith all of the above properties except the property listed at 199 Providence Street, West Warwick, RI; ISO Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, RI and 110 Pilgrim Par[k]way Warwick RI. 99 Vera Street Warwick RI shall not be listed for sale until 4-2-2008.”
The record of the hearing is unclear as to the parties’ understanding of the handwritten amendments.
*992 The final judgment of divorce between the parties entered on August 27, 2007. In January 2008, Sharie filed a motion in which she requested that the court order the listing for sale, forthwith, the properties located at 199 Providence Street, West Warwick, R.I.; 130 Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, R.I.; 110 Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, R.I.; and 99 Vera Street, Warwick, R.I. Marvin objected to the motion. He maintained that he had fully complied with the agreement and that the request for the immediate sаle of all four properties and proceeds thereof would “constitute no more than a blatant attempt to have the Court rewrite the terms of the [Pjroperty Settlement Agreement.” The Family Court conducted a hearing on April 9, 2008, to resolve the dispute.
The issue before the Family Court was at what point in time the agreement required that the properties listed in pаragraph 7.B.l(b) be listed for sale. The bone of contention between the parties was how to construe the handwritten changes to paragraph 7.B. The parties agreed that the property at 99 Vera Street would be immediately placed on the market for sale. However, still in controversy was whether the agreement also required the three remaining properties (199 Providence Street, West Warwick, R.I.; 130 Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, R.I.; and 110 Pilgrim Parkway, Warwick, R.I.) to be listed for sale forthwith, or whether the Agreement exempted those three properties from being offered for sale at any particular time. Central to the dispute was the significance of a punctuation mark after the handwritten abbreviation for the state of Rhode Island set forth in the handwritten changes to the agreement. Sharie argued that the agreement required that the properties listed in paragraph 7.B.l(b) be given a one-year reprieve from being listed for sale until April 2, 2008, and thus they should have been listed for sale after that date. Marvin argued that the punctuation mark following “110 Pilgrim Par[k]way Warwick RI” was a period that ended a sentence, and therefоre only 99 Vera Street was affected by the one-year reprieve, and therefore he was not required to list the other three properties for sale on any specific date. The trial justice said in the record that his understanding of the agreement was that Marvin had agreed to pay Sharie $500,000 and the “mechanism” for producing that amount for her was through the sale оf the properties listed in the agreement.
On April 15, 2008, the Family Court issued a bench decision. The trial justice found paragraph 7.B.l(b) to be ambiguous, based on the parties’ arguments and his examination of the four corners of the agreement. Citing general contract principles, the trial justice ordered that all four properties be placed on the market for sale. Hе found that certain properties already had been foreclosed upon by creditors and that it was “iffy” whether the sale of the remaining properties would garner sufficient money to satisfy the equitable distribution due to Sharie. Further, the trial justice found that a contrary construction would place Marvin “in total control” over whether the properties ever were sоld. Thus, on May 23, 2008, the Family Court granted Shade’s motion to enforce and directed Marvin to place the properties at 199 Providence Street, 130 Pilgrim Parkway, 110 Pilgrim Parkway, and 99 Vera Street on the market for sale. From this ruling, Marvin timely appealed to this Court.
II
Issues on Appeal
The issues in this case arose from the parties’ opposing views on the impact of certain punctuation in their agreement, and how the interpretation of a period *993 point impacts their respective rights and obligations under the agreement. The primary issue on appeal is whether the trial justice erred as a matter of law when he found that the agreement was ambiguous on its face. Also at issue is whether the trial justice abused his discretion when he found that Marvin’s interpretation of paragraph 7.B.l(b) of the agreement was not the most equitable construction, and therefore construed the agreement as requiring the immediate listing for sale of the properties set forth in paragraph 7.B.l(b).
Ill
Standard of Review
The existence of ambiguity in a contract is a question of law.
Young v. Warwick Rollermagic Skating Center, Inc.,
IY
Discussion
A
The Family Court’s Ruling that the Agreement is Ambiguous
An ambiguity exists if the contract provision is “reasonably susceptible of different constructions.”
Andrukiewicz v. Andrukiewicz,
On appeal, Marvin argues that paragraph 7.B.l(b) “is clear and unambiguous on its face.” He contends that the рaragraph consists of two sentences: the first requiring the listing for sale of all the properties previously enumerated except for “the business property and the two condominiums” and the second stating that the 99 Vera Street property “need not be listed for sale until April of 2008” He points to the “style and grammar of the entire document,” specifically previous ab *994 brеviations of “RI” without any punctuation, to support his position.
On the other hand, Sharie argues that the handwritten punctuation that follows the abbreviation for the state of Rhode Island in the handwritten additions to paragraph 7.B.l(b), the paragraph “can reasonably be construed in two manners— it can be read as two separate sentences or it can be read as one sentence with a state abbreviation.” Therefore, she maintains that the Family Court correctly found that the agreement “was ambiguous on its face.” Additionally, in response to Marvin’s argument that his construction is consistent with the grammar and style of the agreement, Sharie counters that it does not so comport. She argues that although the typed references to “RI” do not сontain punctuation, the instances in which “RI” is handwritten are, in fact, set off with periods.
After reading the agreement and the disputed paragraph and giving the terms their ordinary and usual meaning, we agree with Sharie and hold that paragraph 7.B.l(b), containing handwritten changes, is reasonably susceptible to two different meanings and therefore ambiguous.
See Andmlciewicz,
B
The Family Court’s Finding of Most Equitable Construction
Marvin argues that the Family Court overlooked the “spеcific provisions of the scheme fashioned by the parties” when it found that an exemption of the properties in 7.B.l(b) from listing for sale would allow Marvin to avoid his obligation to pay Sharie the equitable distribution of $500,000. He maintains that his obligations to Sharie are “highly leveraged and the consequences of his failure to do so are quite serious.” Consequently, Marvin argues that a requirement for the listing for sale of all of the property actually affords Sharie “greater leverage than was negotiated between the parties.”
Sharie argues that the trial justice did not misconceive the evidence or abuse his discretion when he found that Marvin’s interpretation of the ambiguous provision was not the most equitable. She asserts that the trial justice’s conсlusion is supported by his finding that some of the properties already had been foreclosed upon and “it would appear that it is very iffy even with the remaining properties *995 that the plaintiff will receive the total amount of the funds due her.” Sharie contends that not requiring Marvin to immediately list the properties for sale would risk additional foreclosures before she is able to enforce her rights with respect to the remaining properties herself in March 2012. 5 Thus, potentially, she would have no means to recover the $500,000 that Marvin had agreed to pay to her. Finally, Sharie argues that eliminating Marvin’s obligation to sell these three properties gives him “an unconscionable advantage” and “flies in the face of the intent of the agreement * * * to sell the property so as to satisfy [Marvin’s] $500,000 obligation to [her].”
A property settlement agreement “that is not merged into a divorce judgment retains the characteristics of a contract.”
Riffenburg v. Riffenburg,
When he does so, the trial justice “should adopt that construction which is most equitable and which will not give to one party an unconscionable advantage over the other.”
Donelan v. Donelan,
This Court affords great deference to the trial justice’s findings of fact that support his conclusion that Sharie’s interpretation of the ambiguous paragraрh was the most equitable in light of the parties’ intentions under the agreement.
See Horton,
We hold that the findings of the trial justice are supported by the record, and we decline to disturb them on review. He *996 found that the agreement directed “certain properties that were marital assets” to be sold and Sharie should receive the “net proceeds * * * until she receives the sum of $500,000.” This finding is supported by the agreement’s provision that directs Marvin to pay to Sharie the amount of the equitable distribution and then sets forth in detail the mechanism through which this distribution will be reаlized, specifically, the sale of “any parcel of real estate identified in [the] Agreement.” The trial justice based his conclusion on the fact that several of the properties already had been foreclosed upon, thus making it likely that the remaining properties could not generate the amount that Marvin had agreed to pay Sharie unless they were listed for sale immediately. It is our opinion that this is a logical conclusion supported by the record, and thus is not clearly wrong.
Further, the trial justice was not clearly wrong when he found that Marvin’s interpretation of the ambiguous provision would give him an unconscionable advantage over Sharie by affording Marvin an inordinate amount of control with respect to disposition of the рroperty and, consequently, over his obligation to pay her $500,000. See
Donelan,
V
Conclusion
We affirm the order of the Family Court, to which we remand the record in this case.
ATTACHMENT
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Notes
.Sharie filed a complaint for separate maintenance without commencement of divorce proceedings in June 2005. In December 2005, she moved to amend the original complaint to a complaint for divorce. The case was reached for trial on April 2, 2007.
. As of the time of oral argument, Sharie had received $15,000 of the $500,000 to which she is entitled under the agreement.
. Attached as an addendum is page three of the agreement, which contains the disputed paragraph.
. We wish to express our concern that the parties hastily disposed of approximately $1 million in real property in what appears to be a slapdash manner as the trial was about to begin. Property settlement agreements such as the one at issue here are intended to clearly and amicаbly distribute the assets and liabilities of a divorcing couple, while at the same time minimizing rancor and personal animus. Obviously, there was a failure to accomplish that goal here, and the result was the very type of judicial interpretation that the parties sought to avoid.
. Sharie holds a mortgage on four other properties designated as part of the marital estate but not referred to in the disputed paragraph seven of the agreement.
