Sheryl Weitz v. Theodore Weitz
No. 2018-241
Supreme Court of Vermont
May 10, 2019
2019 VT 35
John W. Valente, J.
January Term, 2019. PRESENT: Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ., and Pearson, Supr. J. (Ret.), Specially Assigned. Sheryl Weitz, Pro Se, Brookline, Massachusetts, Plaintiff-Appellee. Wendy Fitzsimons of Tepper Dardeck Levins & Fitzsimons, LLP, Rutland, for Defendant-Appellant.
¶ 1. CARROLL, J. In this divorce proceeding, husband appeals an order denying his motion to reopen the case after wife‘s notice of voluntary dismissal, filed pursuant to
¶ 2. Wife filed a complaint for divorce from husband in the Family Division of the Vermont Superior Court in June 2016. They have two children and the marital estate contained
¶ 3. Over a sixteen-month period, the parties engaged in negotiations, discovery, and mediation. They reported to the court that the primary contested issue was the division of marital property, rather than the allocation of parental rights and responsibilities. During discovery, husband answered two sets of interrogatories and produced personal financial documents, wife gave a deposition, and the parties exchanged differing appraisals of their Vermont home. The court monitored the progress of the case by presiding over five status conferences, none of which lasted more than nine minutes. The parties never presented any substantive argument to the court nor was any testimony or other evidence offered. Husband never filed an answer to the complaint, nor did he file a motion for summary judgment on any issue raised by the complaint.
¶ 4. The court scheduled a final hearing for October 16 and 17, 2017. Before the hearing, the parties continued to engage in settlement negotiations, and on October 11, staff from wife‘s attorney‘s office emailed the court to alert it that the parties had signed a stipulation to resolve the case pursuant to
¶ 6. The trial court denied this motion.1 The court concluded that
¶ 8.
¶ 10. Additional language found in Vermont Rule 41 further supports this interpretation. Under
¶ 11. Here, husband never filed an answer nor moved for summary judgment. Therefore, wife retained the option to voluntarily dismiss the case by filing a notice of dismissal. We therefore affirm the trial court‘s decision to deny husband‘s motion to reopen. Indeed, husband does not even attempt to argue that the text of
¶ 12. Instead husband argues that because
¶ 13. However, this is not what that rule says.
¶ 15. Husband also could have avoided a voluntary dismissal of this proceeding through a method apart from those identified in
¶ 16. This case is unlike I.S.C. Holding AG v. Nobel Biocare Fin. AG, 688 F.3d 98 (2d Cir. 2012), which husband cites for the proposition that because an answer is not required and motions for summary judgment are not filed in divorce cases, notice of dismissal pursuant to
¶ 18. Generally,
(explaining that
¶ 19. Even if we were to entertain exceptions to
¶ 20. Last, husband argues that wife is forum shopping, seeking to litigate this matter in Massachusetts because of its purportedly advantageous child-support statute. He asserts that to permit such tactics through the literal reading of
Affirmed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
