JULIE RIVET, Appellant, v. LOUIS HOPPIE, Appellee.
No. 20181018-CA
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
Filed February 13, 2020
2020 UT App 21
First District Court, Logan Department
The Honorable Brian G. Cannell
No. 164100697
Marlin J. Grant, Attorney for Appellant
Paul H. Gosnell, Attorney for Appellee
JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES KATE APPLEBY and JILL M. POHLMAN concurred.
¶ 1 During a years-long relationship, and after four marriage proposals, Julie Rivet and Louis Hoppie never formally married. Toward the end of the relationship, Rivet petitioned the district court to recognize a common-law marriage between her and Hoppie. After three hearings, the district court ruled that Rivet “failed to establish a common-law marriage under
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 Rivet and Hoppie began their relationship in 2009. In September 2015, the parties “ceased cohabitating” but did not officially terminate the relationship until sometime in 2017. In December 2016, Rivet petitioned the district court to recognize the relationship as a common-law marriage.
¶ 3 During the first evidentiary hearing, Rivet moved to admit two contested exhibits: (1) an affidavit from Rivet‘s former attorney concerning statements made by Hoppie in their discussion on how to resolve the petition (Exhibit 2) and (2) a collection of written statements by members of the parties’ community expressing their opinions regarding the parties’ relationship status (Exhibit 10). Hoppie challenged the exhibits as hearsay. Rivet conceded the statements contained in the exhibits were hearsay, but suggested that the hearing was informal and that the statements could be considered. The court asked Rivet‘s counsel if there was “something . . . that says I can rely on [the] documents,” explaining that if there was support for their admission, the court would allow it. Rivet did not engage with the court on the question or provide a theory under which the exhibits could be admitted. The court excluded the exhibits as hearsay. Later, during the same hearing, Rivet referenced Exhibit 2 to refresh the recollection of a witness, prompting an objection from Hoppie. The court interjected, “I haven‘t received [Exhibit 2] as evidence. . . . [I]t refreshed [the witness‘s] recollection.” Rivet then stated she sought to introduce Exhibit 2 only for that purpose, after which the court reiterated, “I‘m not going to receive [Exhibit 2] at this stage.” Rivet simply responded, “Okay.” The court further indicated that Rivet‘s former attorney could be called to testify at a later hearing. But Rivet never called her former attorney to testify.
¶ 4 Rivet also sought to introduce Exhibit 10, comprising the responses of several individuals to the query: “In your opinion
¶ 5 For the duration of the hearing, the parties presented conflicting evidence concerning the nature of the relationship, including testimony from their friends. At the conclusion of the hearing, Rivet asked whether she needed to call the individuals represented in Exhibit 10 as witnesses. The court responded, “It‘s your burden. I‘m not going to tell you how to present it to me. . . . You‘re going to have to put on your case and live with it.”
¶ 6 During the second evidentiary hearing, Rivet called only one of the seventeen individuals identified in Exhibit 10 to testify. Additional testimony was offered by Hoppie‘s son, Hoppie‘s insurance agent, and the parties themselves.
¶ 7 Also during the second hearing, Rivet twice tried to reference a portion of Exhibit 2. Both times, the court told Rivet it would not admit the exhibit, and the court later explained that its decision to exclude Exhibit 2 was based on
¶ 8 During the third hearing, the court heard additional argument from Rivet and Hoppie and acknowledged receiving a
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 9 On appeal, Rivet contends that the district court‘s “findings were insufficient to support [Hoppie‘s] position” that there was no common-law marriage.1 In substance, Rivet does
ANALYSIS
¶ 10 Rivet contends that certain of the court‘s findings are clearly erroneous because of how the court weighed the evidence. Although Rivet enumerates several findings as clearly erroneous, she substantively challenges only a few of those. See Hahn v. Hahn, 2018 UT App 135, ¶ 20, 427 P.3d 1195 (declining to address inadequately briefed issues under
¶ 11 This court has indicated that a partial or divided reputation of marriage is insufficient to meet the requirements of section 30-1-4.5(1)(e). See Hansen v. Hansen, 958 P.2d 931, 936 (Utah Ct. App. 1998). A partial or divided reputation of marriage may be shown when “the parties’ closest friends [do] not consider the [parties] married” and the parties are “not consistent in holding themselves out as married to the rest of the world.” Id. Such circumstances “negate[] the establishment of the statutory requirement that the couple acquire[] a uniform and general reputation as husband and wife.” Id. (cleaned up).
¶ 12 The district court made unchallenged findings that negated the establishment of section 30-1-4.5(1)(e). In particular, the court found the following:
7. During the course of the relationship the parties held themselves out as being in a committed relationship, however, they did not hold themselves out as husband and wife, nor did they acquire a uniform or general reputation as husband and wife . . . .
12. . . . [Rivet‘s witness] also stated . . . that neither party wore wedding rings . . . and that the parties never referred to each other as “husband” or “wife” but instead referred to each other by the first names. . . . [The witness] while testifying claimed that they held themselves out as husband and wife. However, when pressed for examples of the parties holding themselves out as a married couple he could provide none, and admitted that his belief they were married was based merely on an assumption.
13. [Hoppie‘s] witnesses each testified that they knew the parties were not married . . . [and n]ever observed either party refer to themselves as “husband,” “wife,” or “spouse.”
14. [Another witness] testified that [Hoppie] never requested changing his status to married . . . or listing [Rivet] as a spouse. . . . [H]e did not believe [Hoppie] had a reputation of being a married individual. . . . [H]e did not believe the parties were married because of discussions they had with him in his office, and . . . [Hoppie] was always opposed to bringing [Rivet] onto other legal documents or referring to her as a spouse.
¶ 13 The unchallenged findings indicate at least some of the parties’ friends and family did not consider them to be married and the parties did not consistently represent themselves to be husband and wife. Those facts negate the establishment of the statutory requirements under Hansen. Accordingly, the unchallenged findings adequately support the district court‘s conclusion that Rivet “failed to establish a common-law marriage under
CONCLUSION
¶ 14 The district court correctly concluded that Rivet failed to establish a common-law marriage in light of its findings indicating that the parties did not hold themselves out as, and did not acquire a uniform and general reputation as, husband and wife. We therefore affirm the district court‘s dismissal of the petition.3
20181018-CA 8 2020 UT App 21
