The judgment in this case is a consent judgment. A consent judgment incorporates the bargained agreement of the parties.
In re Will of Baity,
The trial court made extensive findings of fact regarding the judgment and the circumstances surrounding the entry of it in its order. There are no findings which would support a conclusion of fraud or lack of consent. Our examination of the record also failed to reveal sufficient evidence to support either claim. We focus our analysis, then, on the issue of mistake.
A contract may be avoided based on mutual mistake where the mistake is common to both parties and because of it each has done what neither intended.
Marriot Financial Services, Inc. v. Capitol Funds, Inc.,
The record before the trial court was insufficient to support a conclusion that each party had done what neither intended. Defendant altered the agreement from what was agreed upon at trial, as each side apparently did during several redrafts. There was no finding or evidence which would lead to a conclusion that this was inadvertent. Any mistake, then, was not mutual.
We also do not find a sufficient basis, either in the trial court’s findings of fact or our own review of the record to support a claim of unilateral mistake accompanied by fraud, imposition, or similar circumstances. There is no showing that defendant attempted to conceal the alteration of the formula, or that any pressure was applied to get plaintiff and her attorney to sign the judgment without being able to properly review it.
In
Fountain v. Fountain,
Blee v. Blee,
It is the policy of this State to promote certainty and finality in domestic dispute resolutions.
Goff v. Goff,
Vacated.
