This case concerns (1) the consequences of entering into a separation agreement under duress and coercion, (2) the legal ramifications of multiple separation agreements, and (3) the effect of reconciliation upon a separation agreement.
The first question presented on appeal is whether the district court judge properly granted summary judgment barring plaintiff’s action to have the 1988 separation agreement set aside due to duress and coercion. To answer this question we must first determine if there is a material issue of fact surrounding the circumstances under which plaintiff entered into the 1988 separation agreement. Defendant contends summary judgment was properly granted because the evidence raised no material issue of fact, but only a question of law: did plaintiff sign the separation agreement under duress and coercion.
Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact. N.C.R. Civ. P., Rule 56(c). “It is a drastic remedy, not to be granted ‘unless it is perfectly clear that no issue of fact is involved and inquiry into the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law.’ ”
Carlton v. Carlton,
74 N.C.
*401
App. 690, 691,
In this case, each party submitted affidavits. Plaintiffs affidavit states that she was forced to sign the agreement under duress and coercion. Defendant denied this allegation. Taking plaintiff’s affidavit as true, we find there is a genuine issue of material fact on the question of duress and coercion concerning the 1988 separation agreement.
Furthermore, when examining whether both parties freely entered into a separation agreement, trial courts should use considerable care because contracts between husbands and wives are special agreements.
Courts have thrown a cloak of protection about separation agreements and made it their business, when confronted, to see to it that they are arrived at fairly and equitably. To warrant equity’s intervention, no actual fraud need be shown, for relief will be granted if the settlement is manifestly unfair to a spouse because of the other’s overreaching.
Johnson v. Johnson,
“Duress is the result of coercion.”
Link v. Link,
Factors relevant in determining whether a victim’s will was actually overcome include “the age, physical and mental condition of the victim, whether the victim had independent advice, whether
*402
the transaction was fair, whether there was independent consideration for the transaction, the relationship of the victim and alleged perpetrator, the value of the item transferred compared with the total wealth of the victim, whether the perpetrator actively sought the transfer and whether the victim was in distress or an emergency situation.”
Curl v. Key,
The effect of the 1988 separation agreement upon the 1983 agreement is the second question presented. Any analysis of the construction and effect of a separation agreement will at least begin by applying the same rules used to interpret contracts generally.
Lane v. Scarborough,
The 1988 separation agreement provides for the distribution of the parties’ property. Neither party contends that the agreement is ambiguous or unclear. Specifically, the 1988 agreement contains an “Entire Agreement” provision which states: “[t]his agreement contains the entire understanding of the parties, and there are no representations, warranties, covenants, or undertakings other than those expressly set forth herein.” Also, the agreement states that its purpose is to provide “for a final settlement of all marital and property rights.” In addition, the 1988 agreement makes no reference to the 1983 separation agreement. “It is a well-settled principle of legal construction that ‘[i]t must be presumed the parties intended what the language used clearly expresses, and the contract must be construed to mean what on its face it purports to mean.’ ”
Hagler v. Hagler,
Finally, the third question we must decide is whether the 1983 separation agreement is itself an enforceable contract in the event that the 1988 agreement is declared void. On this point defendant first argues that in determining the intended effects of *403 the 1983 separation agreement it is necessary to separate the property settlement provisions from the marital/support components of the separation agreement. It is his contention that even if the four-year reconciliation voided the marital/support provisions of the agreement, the property provisions of the document are still in effect. We disagree.
Defendant cites
Buffington v. Buffington,
North Carolina courts have long recognized a distinction between separation agreements and property settlements. A “pure” separation agreement is a contract in which the husband and wife agree to live apart. Most separation agreements provide for support for the wife and custody and support for minor children. 2 R. Lee,
N.C. Family Law
§ 187 (4th ed. 1980). The traditional view, and the one followed in North Carolina, is that separation agreements are void as against public policy unless the parties are living apart at the time the document is executed or they plan to separate shortly thereafter. Furthermore, reconciliation of the parties voids the executory provisions of a separation agreement.
In re Estate of Adamee,
In 1981, the General Assembly enacted N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20(d), which provided that before, during, or after marriage the parties may provide by agreement for the distribution of their “marital property.” In
Buffington,
a couple executed a separation agreement but then lived together for eighteen days.
Id.
at 484,
The misuse of these two terms threw into doubt the longstanding North Carolina rule that separation agreements are valid only if executed after the parties are separated or when separation is imminent. We do not believe that
Buffington
should be read to mean, or that the Legislature intended, that G.S. § 50-20(d) authorizes couples to execute separation agreements during mar
*405
riage. In our view,
Buffington
only stands for the proposition that G.S. § 50-20(d) allows parties to execute property settlements before, during or after marriage. If
Buffington
must be read in a broader context, it is only that separation agreements entered into while the parties are still living together but planning to separate may still be valid.
See Carlton,
Because in the end
Buffington
is easily distinguishable from the case
sub judice
our view on that opinion’s continued validity is not critical to a resolution of the matter before us. Nevertheless, our analysis is important because
Buffington
partially set the stage for the emergence of a rule that we believe conflicts with established principles of North Carolina law. In two opinions last year, this Court, in effect, held that the marital/support provisions of a separation agreement should be bifurcated from the property provisions of the same agreement for the purposes of determining the effects of reconciliation.
See Small v. Small,
In
Small,
the parties signed a post-nuptial agreement in which they waived alimony and released all rights in the real and personal property then owned and afterwards acquired by the other party.
Small,
*406
In upholding the lower court, the Court in
Small
declared that the property settlement provisions should be severed from the remainder of the agreement and “analyzed with reference to those rules which pertain to property settlements rather than separation agreements.”
Id.
at 622,
While this rationale obviously applies when the agreement involved is a pure property settlement, when the agreement is a separation contract where the property provisions and the marital/support provisions are negotiated as “reciprocal consideration” for each other, such logic not only creates inequitable results but also runs contrary to precedent. In our view, Small and the later opinion, Tucci, advocate a position which fails to recognize that provisions of a separation agreement labeled support may, and often do, constitute reciprocal consideration for property provisions in the same agreement. In such an agreement, the provisions are so interdependent that the execution of one portion of the agreement requires the execution of the other part. Conversely, if one section of the agreement fails or is declared invalid — for example, if the support provisions of an agreement are terminated because the parties reconcile — other provisions of the agreement negotiated with that support provision in mind, in fairness must also fail.
Professor Sally Sharp, perhaps the leading commentator on domestic law in North Carolina, recently wrote, “[t]he assumption that the ‘separation agreement’ portions and ‘property division’ portions of a single agreement can be severed from one another is contradicted by common sense, common experience, and —most critically — by the still viable concept of reciprocal consideration.” Sharp, supra, 69 N.C. L. Rev., Issue 2 (forthcoming). In a recent article discussing this topic, Professor Sharp quotes Professor Homer Clark, “the leading commentator on domestic law in the nation,” who has written:
A property settlement is just that portion of the separation agreement dealing with the property of the spouses. The divi *407 sion of property bears a close relation to the agreement concerning alimony, so that . . . [i]t is therefore both misleading and unhelpful to talk as if there were two different kinds of agreement and as if the impact of reconciliation upon one should be different from the impact on the other. Specious distinction of this kind ought to be abandoned ....
Id. (quoting 2 Clark, The Law of Domestic Relations in the United States, Practitioner’s Edition § 19.7 (2d ed. 1987)).
Two months after
Small, In re Estate of Tucci,
In attempting to establish this “severance” rule,
Tucci
relies heavily on
Small,
and both opinions rely on two earlier cases,
Jones v. Lewis,
In
Jones,
the parties executed a separation agreement in which the wife conveyed an interest in realty to the husband. The conveyance was executed and the parties subsequently reconciled for
*408
one night.
Jones,
It is well settled in this State that a conveyance from one spouse to the other of an interest in an estate held by the entireties is valid as an estoppel. . . . We concur in the ruling of the court below to the effect that the conveyance from the petitioner . . . was in all respects regular, having been executed in conformity with the laws of this State at the time of the execution thereof, and that she is estopped to deny the title of the respondent. . . .
Jones,
The second opinion,
Tucci,
pushed the severance rule one step further. It held that in determining what effect reconciliation has on a property provision of a separation agreement, “[i]t is immaterial whether Mr. Tucci’s release was executory at the time the Tuccis reconciled.”
Tucci,
Tucci
also relies on
Love v. Mewborn,
Although, technically the payments were executory, it was clear in
Love
that the husband’s agreement to make the payments was reciprocal consideration for the wife giving up her right to certain marital property. The wife had performed, that is she had executed her half of the bargain by giving up the property, but the husband’s performance had remained unfulfilled. Thus, the Court required him to execute his half of the agreement — a technically executory provision.
Tucci
mistakenly characterizes the husband’s payments in
Love
as “executory,” and then cites the opinion as support for its position that reconciliation does not affect executory provisions of a separation agreement.
Tucci,
While it is our impression that
Tucci
misinterpreted prior case law, in the case
sub judice,
defendant’s reliance on that opinion is misplaced for another reason. In
Tucci,
the separation agreement in question contained the following paragraph: “[s]hould at any time in the future the parties resume marital cohabitation in any respect . . . the provisions of this Separation Agreement and Property Settlement are and shall remain valid and fully enforceable, and of full legal force and effect.”
Tucci,
Finally, we take issue with the claim in
Tucci
that the case
Carlton v. Carlton,
*411 In the case before us, the Stegalls’ 1983 agreement is clearly a separation agreement. From the terms of the agreement and the circumstances of its execution, it is obvious that the parties intended to create a separation agreement. The agreement itself states: “[t]he parties shall henceforth live separate and apart . . . free from all interference, authority and control, direct or indirect, by the other, as fully as if each party were unmarried . . . .” In his motion for summary judgment, defendant submitted an affidavit which refers to the 1983 agreement as a “separation agreement” and never mentions “property settlement.” After their 1983 reconciliation, the Stegalls kept joint bank accounts, took vacations together, shared all their property and income and filed joint tax returns for more than four years after the first separation agreement. Accordingly, we hold that any executory provisions of the 1983 separation agreement were terminated upon the parties’ reconciliation.
Furthermore, even if the trier of fact determines that the provisions of the 1983 agreement were executed prior to the parties’ reconciliation, equitable distribution may still be allowed if “the evidence shows an intent to cancel those provisions of the separation agreement.”
Carlton,
“[T]he effect of reconciliation should be governed by the circumstances in which it is asserted. If, as an aspect of reconciliation, the parties by their words or their conduct express the intention of rescinding the separation agreement in whole or in part, effect should be given to their action. This is just an ordinary application of contract principles.
Clark, supra, § 19.7.
“[Rescission of a separation agreement requires proof of a material breach— a substantial failure to perform.”
Cator v. Cator,
We therefore reverse the order of the trial court granting summary judgment for defendant and remand this cause to the district court for such further proceedings as are consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
