Acurio v. Acurio

197 So. 3d 253, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1226, 2016 WL 3415747
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 2016
DocketNo. 50,709-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 So. 3d 253 (Acurio v. Acurio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acurio v. Acurio, 197 So. 3d 253, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1226, 2016 WL 3415747 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

PITMAN, J.

1 ¡Defendant Dr. Michael Thomas Acurio appeals the judgment on a motion in limine in favor of his ex-wife, Plaintiff Danielle Deon Dickerson Acurio (now, Cage), which declared that the prenuptial agreement between them was not admissible evidence in the trial on their property settlement because the trial court determined that it was not in authentic form and was not a duly acknowledged act under private sig[254]*254nature since the acknowledgment did not occur prior to the marriage. The judgment was certified by the trial court as an appealable judgment, and this appeal followed. For the following reasons, we reverse.

FACTS

Plaintiff and Defendant were married the first time on June 27, 1998, and of that marriage, one child, ACA, was born. They divorced in February 2000.

Two years later the couple decided to remarry. Four days before their second marriage, the parties executed a document entitled “Prenuptial Agreement.” Plaintiff drafted the agreement in its entirety.

The document contains some of the following pertinent provisions:

1. From on and after the date of their marriage, each party shall have the right to own, possess, control, sell, transfer, encumber, or dispose of his or her own separate real or personal property, now owned or hereafter acquired, independently of the other and as if they were not married.
2. Each party also hereby waives all rights to and covenants not to make any claim for the following in the event of the dissolution of the marriage or of legal separation:
A. Any interest in any of the separate property of the other party now owned or acquired hereafter.
[[Image here]]
3. It is the intention of the parties that in the event of the dissolution of the marriage or of legal separation each party shall have no more right, title or interest in the separate real or personal property of the other, now owned or hereafter acquired following their marriage, than if they had never been married.
4. Both parties agree that Michael Acurio shall maintain his business totally and completely separate from the marriage and all his business dealings. Both parties also agree that any business dealings that Danielle Dickerson may enter are also separate and apart from the marriage. These business dealings are separate and apart from any and all community property.
5. Both parties agree that should they desire, they may enter any business dealings, property arrangements, buildings, or any other affair as equal or partial partners in ownership or interest as they see fit and as defined in writing.
6. Both parties agree to maintain separate checking, saving, and retirement accounts both now and after the marriage occurs, not subject to any community property. Michael Acurio agrees to contribute to the retirement account of Danielle Dickerson each and every year of the marriage an amount to be decided on by the parties each year, but not to be less than $10,000.00. This would cease in the event of separation or dissolution of the marriage.

The document stated that both parties agree it is fair and reasonable and that they entered into it without any duress or coercion. It also stated that they reviewed the document in its entirety and had the opportunity to review it with legal counsel if they so desired. The document contained the language, “In witness whereof, the parties have executed this prenuptial agreement this 25th day of January, 2002,” and was signed by both parties in the presence of a notary and one witness.

Plaintiff and Defendant married four days later. Then.' second marriage pro[255]*255duced two children, JCA and CDA. While they were married, [3they conducted their financial lives under the separate property regime as they had agreed. They maintained separate bank accounts and retirement and pension plans. Defendant bought the home they lived in with his separate funds, as his separate property, and it was so stated in the deed. Plaintiff appeared and signed the deed and affirmed that the property was Defendant’s separate property. The couple did establish a business, MD Investments' of NWLA, LLC, which was considered a community enterprise.

Plaintiff filed a petition for divorce in June 2009. A judgment of divorce was rendered in Bossier Parish on September 30, 2010, and was signed and fííed on October 6, 2010, which stated that a community of acquets and gains existed between the parties and that it was terminated retroactive to the date of June 2, 2009. It also stated that, “IT IS FURTHER ORDERED,J ADJUDGED AND DECREED that any rights and/or claims involving a contract dated January 25, 2002, between the parties are reserved unto each party.” The judgment ordered the parties to file a detailed descriptive list of all property they believed constituted the community of acquets and gains.

A trial on property issues was scheduled for November 16, 2015; but, in July 2015, Plaintiff filed a “Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence of Invalid Matrimonial Agreement.” The motion sought to declare the prenuptial agreement invalid since it did not meet the requirements of form for an authentic' act, claiming it was not an act under private signature duly acknowledged.

14At the- hearing, at which Plaintiff did not appear, Defendant testified that the couple never merged any accounts and had separate checking accounts and credit cards, The only joint venture between the parties was the company he started, MD Investments. He also testified that all other accounts were totally separate and that they lived under the prenuptial agreement. Admitted into evidence were an excerpt from Plaintiffs deposition, in which she admitted signing the document, and the deed to the family home in which Plaintiff appeared and signed, acknowledging that Defendant was purchasing the property with separate funds and for the benefit of his separate estate. Two letters from Plaintiff, although typewritten and unsigned, were submitted into evidence indicating that she was no longer happy with the financial arrangement between them and that she wanted it to change.

At the hearing, the trial court found that the prenuptial agreement was not in authentic form and, further, that it was not “an act under private signature duly acknowledged prior to the marriage.” It also found that the first acknowledgment of the agreement was in “the deposition of Ms. Danielle Acurio, ... on July 8th of 2010.” Therefore, based on the lack of acknowledgment prior to the marriage, it granted the motion in limine and declared the agreement invalid.

Because the settlement of the property between Plaintiff and Defendant depends on the validity of the prenuptial agreement, the trial court certified the judgment granting the motion in limine as an appeal-able judgment. Defendant appeals.

J¿piSCUSSION

Defendant argues that the trial court erred in finding that the document did not qualify as an act under private signature duly acknowledged because the signatures were not acknowledged until after the marriage. Defendant points out that there is no time requirement ■ for acknowledgment of the signatures in a matrimonial [256]*256regime document and that the one at issue complies with all the requirements for acknowledgment found in the Louisiana Civil Code.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Acurio v. Cage
257 So. 3d 824 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)
Danielle Deon Dickerson Acurio v. Dr. Michael Thomas Acurio
224 So. 3d 935 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 So. 3d 253, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 1226, 2016 WL 3415747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acurio-v-acurio-lactapp-2016.