This case, before us pursuant to a reservation and report by a judge of a Probate Court (G. L. c. 215, § 13), concerns the effect on a separation agreement of the death of one of the two parties seeking a divorce under the provisions of G. L. c. 208, § 1A, where the death occurred after the agree
The couple in question last lived together on February 27, 1981. A complaint for divorce was filed by the wife on My 16, 1982. A written separation agreement was executed on March 31, 1983. According to its terms, the agreement was to be incorporated and merged in the divorce judgment, if granted. It provided for alimony, custody, child support, payment of educational and medical expenses, maintenance of life insurance, division of the couple’s personal property, and disposition of the husband’s pension. It called for the husband to transfer a vehicle to the wife within one month of the agreement. The marital home in Chelmsford, owned by the couple as tenants by the entirety, was to be sold within two years of the date of the agreement, and the net proceeds were to be divided, 56% to the wife and 44% to the husband. Each party waived any claim to the estate of the other and released the other from past and future obligations. The agreement also provided that it was to be binding upon the heirs, representatives, and assigns of the parties. Nothing in the agreement suggested that the mutual promises the parties made were to be affected by the death of one or the other prior to the entry of a divorce judgment, except that the agreement did provide for the termination of the husband’s alimony payments upon the death of the wife.
After a hearing on March 31, 1983, a probate judge found that the marriage had irretrievably broken down. In accordance with G. L. c. 208, § 1A, he approved the agreement, ordered the parties to comply with it forthwith, and ordered that the agreement be “incorporated and merged and become part of the [¡judgment [njisi” which was to be entered six months later,
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on October 3,1983, without further action by the parties. At oral argument, the parties agreed that there had been partial performance of the agreement. Title to the vehicle was trans
Upon the wife’s death, the husband and one of the three children of the marriage filed a complaint seeking a declaration that the separation agreement was null and void and that, therefore, no part of the real or the personal property covered by the separation agreement was to be included in the deceased wife’s estate. A complaint was also filed by the other two children of the marriage, one of whom had been appointed administratrix of the deceased wife’s estate. The administratrix and her brother sought, in essence, to have the separation agreement enforced according to its terms. The cross complaints were consolidated for trial before a probate judge who, after a hearing, concluded that the husband was bound by the terms of the separation agreement. 5 Thus, according to the judge, although upon the wife’s death the husband had become the sole record title holder of the marital real estate, the husband was obligated to sell it within two years of the date of the execution of the agreement and to divide the proceeds with his wife’s estate according to the formula set forth in the agreement.
The husband contends on appeal that the judge should have concluded that the agreement was to be effective only if a divorce should actually be granted. At the outset, two propositions the husband urges are well-settled. First, the death of the wife abated the divorce proceedings.
Diggs
v.
Diggs,
The issue before us, whether the separation agreement was contingent upon the entry of a judgment of divorce nisi or whether it had full force and effect from the date it was executed, is governed by the intent of the parties. See
Moore
v.
Moore,
As of the date of the agreement, the parties had lived separately for over two years and their marriage, as found by a judge, had irretrievably broken down. There was no indication
There are no “countervailing equities” (see
Knox
v.
Remick,
371 Mass, at 436-437) arising out of the wife’s death such as to prevent the enforcement of the agreement. The decided cases have referred to two situations which may raise “countervailing equities,” neither of which is present here. See
Randall
v.
Randall,
The husband bases his contention that the agreement was to be effective only if a divorce judgment actually entered on two points. He relies first upon the fact that, on the form the judge used to enter his March 31, 1983, order, he crossed out the printed language stating that “by agreement of the parties” the separation agreement “may also remain as an independent contract.”
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The husband asserts, therefore, that the agreement was intended to be merged in the divorce judgment and to have no independent significance apart from the divorce proceedings, which, because of his wife’s death, could not proceed to their conclusion. The agreement itself is silent as to whether it was to have independent significance. In the absence of an express provision stating otherwise, a separation agreement is usually held to survive a subsequent divorce judgment incorporating its provisions. See
Surabian
v.
Surabian,
The husband also relies on certain language used by the parties in the agreement itself to support his contention that the agreement was contingent upon the granting of a judgment of divorce. The opening paragraph reads as follows: “Now come the parties and agree that if a divorce is entered in this matter the following terms and conditions may be incorporated and merged therein.” And a final section recites, “This agreement shall be incorporated and merged in the Divorce Decree, if granted. ” We read both clauses as stating the parties’ intention to have the final divorce judgment make the terms of the agreement judicially enforceable by contempt proceedings in the Probate Court, and not as suspending the effectiveness of the agreement until the actual entry of a divorce judgment. We do not suggest that the parties may not specifically agree that the death of either party before the judgment becomes absolute will render the agreement a nullity.
Absent some indication that a husband and wife did not intend that a separation agreement incorporating a permanent resolution of their mutual financial rights and obligations was to take effect as of the date of a court order under G. L. c. 208, § 1A, approving it, and absent any “countervailing equities,” we rule that such an agreement may be enforceable even if one of the parties to it should die before the entry of a judgment nisi or absolute. There is authority from other jurisdictions which is of similar import. See
Bruce
v.
Dyer,
Judgments shall enter in accordance with the findings and rulings entered in the Probate Court.
So ordered.
Notes
The waiting period for entry of judgment nisi has been reduced to thirty days. St. 1985, c. 691, § 2.
The judge’s findings related only to those provisions of the agreement which concerned the marital property, real and personal, and to the husband’s rights in his wife’s estate. Neither the trial judge nor any of the parties on appeal have addressed the question of what effect the wife’s death had on other provisions of the agreement such as those requiring the husband to pay child support and medical and educational expenses for one child of the marriage who was a minor when the agreement was signed. Since we are not called upon in this case to decide those issues, we decline to do so.
At the time that this divorce action and the separation agreement were before the Probate Court, G. L. c. 208, § 1A, inserted by St. 1975, c. 698, § 2, provided that the separation agreement “shall be incorporated and merged into [the court’s order], and by agreement of the parties it may also remain as an independent contract.”. General Laws c. 208, § 1A, as amended through St. 1985, c. 691, § 2, now provides that “[t]he agreement either shall be incorporated and merged into [the court’s] judgment or by agreement of the parties, it shall be incorporated and not merged, but shall survive and remain as an independent contract.”
