Before Richard Henry Quarles (Husband) and Suzanne Elizabeth Quarles (Wife) were married in 2000, they entered into an agreement wherein, among other things, the parties waived any and all rights to alimony in the event of divorce. In 2007, Husband filed a complaint for divorce, and Wife counterclaimed for divorce in her answer. Husband then filed a motion for partial summary judgment, seeking to enforce the prenuptial agreement.
After a hearing, the trial court found that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to the enforceability of the agreement. The trial court then entered an “Order on the Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment,” finding that the prenuptial agreement satisfies all of the prerequisites to enforceability set forth in
Scherer v. Scherer,
The denomination, procedural context, and language of the trial court’s order clearly show that the court was ruling on the motion for partial summary judgment and, although the order did not expressly so state, its effect was to grant partial summary judgment in favor of Husband. See
Howell Mill/Collier Assoc. v. Pennypacker’s,
The first prong of the Scherer test requires that the party seeking enforcement “demonstrate that . . . the antenuptial agreement was not the result of fraud, duress, mistake, misrepresentation, or nondisclosure of material facts . . . Blige v. Blige, supra at 67 (2). In this case,
[i]t is . . . undisputed that the agreement fails to disclose Husband’s income and that Wife waived her right to seek alimony as part of the agreement. Husband’s income, therefore, was material to the antenuptial agreement and would have been a critical factor in Wife’s decision to waive alimony. [Cit.]
Corbett v. Corbett,
Citing
Mallen v. Mallen,
reading of Mallen turns Scherer’s disclosure requirement on its head. . . . [W]e have repeatedly recognized that Scherer imposes an affirmative duty of full and fair disclosure of all material facts on parties entering into an antenuptial agreement. [Cits.] ... In short, the “duty of inquiry” envisioned by [Husband] is incompatible with the duty of full and fair disclosure recognized by Scherer and its progeny. Finally, in Mallen, we did not rest our decision upholding the trial court’s enforcement of the antenuptial agreement on [the wife’s] failure to inquire into [the husband’s] financial status prior to execution of the ante-nuptial agreement.
Blige v. Blige, supra at 70-71 (2). Husband further argues that Wife had sufficient information, specifically the parties’ spending habits while dating, during which time Wife was unemployed, to have given her a general idea of the character and extent of Husband’s assets and income. On the record before us, however, we cannot say as a matter of law that “the parties’ standard of living before the marriage . . . would have put Wife on notice that Husband failed to disclose material facts so as to render the nondisclosure immaterial. [Cits.]” Corbett v. Corbett, supra. See also Blige v. Blige, supra at 71 (2) (distinguishing the “unique circumstances” oí Mallen where the parties lived together for four years before execution of the ante-nuptial agreement and the wife was well aware that the husband was a wealthy man with substantial income from his business and other income-producing assets).
Because there was a genuine issue of material fact as to the first prong of the Scherer test, we conclude that the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment in favor of Husband.
“(A) trial court’s grant of summary judgment will not be sustained if there is any genuine issue of material fact, however imbalanced it may appear.” (Emphasis in original.) [Cit.] “Since issues of fact remain, summary judgment is inappropriate, and the trial court’s ruling must be reversed.”
Georgia Canoeing Assn. v. Henry, supra. Accordingly, it is not necessary to consider whether the trial court erred in holding that the parties’ prenuptial agreement met the remaining portions of the Scherer test or whether the agreement was void as asserted by Wife. See Corbett v. Corbett, supra at 371 (2). Because of the differences *765 between appellate review for abuse of discretion and review of the grant or denial of summary judgment, as outlined above, we remind the bench and bar that, “ ‘while summary judgment may be a prompt, inexpensive, and fair means of resolving many controversies at law, it can become otherwise’ ” in matters of equity. Georgia Canoeing Assn. v. Henry, supra at 79.
Judgment reversed.
