Burns v. Burns

2018 NY Slip Op 5411
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 25, 2018
Docket399 CA 17-01854
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 NY Slip Op 5411 (Burns v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns v. Burns, 2018 NY Slip Op 5411 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Burns v Burns (2018 NY Slip Op 05411)
Burns v Burns
2018 NY Slip Op 05411
Decided on July 25, 2018
Appellate Division, Fourth Department
NeMoyer, J., J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided on July 25, 2018 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department
PRESENT: CENTRA, J.P., NEMOYER, CURRAN, AND TROUTMAN, JJ.

399 CA 17-01854

[*1]ELEANOR MCQUILKIN BURNS, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,

v

ANDREW MCINTOSH BURNS, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.


BARNEY & AFFRONTI, LLP, ROCHESTER (FRANCIS C. AFFRONTI OF COUNSEL), FOR PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT.

BURNS & SCHULTZ LLP, PITTSFORD (ANDREW M. BURNS OF COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.



NeMoyer, J.

Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Monroe County (Richard A. Dollinger, A.J.), entered June 13, 2017. The order, among other things, denied plaintiff's motion to hold defendant in contempt.

It is hereby ORDERED that the order so appealed from is unanimously affirmed without costs.

Opinion by NeMoyer, J.:

According to the Domestic Relations Law and its common-law antecedents, the concept of spousal maintenance is limited to payments made to an unmarried ex-spouse. If divorcing spouses wish to vary this definition and provide for post-remarriage maintenance, they must do so clearly and unambiguously. In this case, nothing in the parties' agreement reflects an intent to depart from the statutory definition of maintenance with the clarity required by the governing caselaw. Consequently, as Supreme Court properly determined, defendant husband's maintenance obligation ended when plaintiff wife remarried.

FACTS

The parties were married in June 1992. In September 2004, the husband vacated the marital residence; shortly thereafter, the wife sued for divorce. The parties subsequently executed a divorce settlement agreement pursuant to Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (3). In the agreement, the parties specified that "[a]ll matters affecting interpretation of this [a]greement and the rights of the parties [t]hereto shall be governed by the laws of the State of New York."

The agreement obligated the husband to pay "rehabilitative maintenance" to the wife pursuant to the following schedule:

"(a) From December 1, 2007 - November 30, 2012: $5,500.00 Per Month = $66,000.00 Rehabilitative Maintenance Per Annum

(b) From December 1, 2012 - November 30, 2014: $2,916.00 Per Month = $34,992.00 Rehabilitative Maintenance Per Annum

(c) From December 1, 2014 - November 30, 2015: $2,500.00 Per Month = $30,000.00 Rehabilitative Maintenance Per Annum

(d) From December 1, 2015 - November 30, 2020: $2,200.00 Per Month = $26,400.00 Rehabilitative Maintenance Per Annum."

The foregoing constitutes the entirety of the agreement's maintenance provision. Critically, the agreement is silent regarding the effect, if any, of the wife's remarriage upon the husband's maintenance obligation. The agreement was subsequently incorporated, but not merged, into a judgment of divorce rendered by Supreme Court (Doyle, J.) in July 2008. The judgment includes a verbatim reproduction of the agreement's maintenance provision.

The wife remarried in December 2015. In April 2016, the husband emailed the wife to inform her that he would stop paying maintenance as a result of her remarriage. The husband's last maintenance payment was made that month.

The wife then moved to, inter alia, recover a monetary judgment for the amount outstanding and hold the husband in contempt for ending the maintenance payments. According to the wife, "a plain reading of . . . the agreement[] leads to only one conclusion: [the husband's] rehabilitative maintenance obligation survives [her] remarriage." That was so, the wife continued, because "[o]ther than November 30, 2020, no termination events are identified in the agreement. Since none can be implied and the Court cannot rewrite the parties' agreement, this Court must conclude [that the husband's] obligation to pay maintenance survives not only the wife's remarriage, but also her death and his death. The maintenance obligation ends on November 30, 2020 and no other time."

The husband opposed the wife's motion. Noting that the agreement contains no provision entitling the wife to continued maintenance payments upon her remarriage, the husband argued that the "fact that the parties did not expressly provide in the Agreement that maintenance payments would continue if [the wife] remarried establishes that the parties intended that [the husband's] obligation to pay [the wife] maintenance terminated upon her remarriage."

Supreme Court (Dollinger, A.J.) denied the wife's motion in its entirety. In a well-reasoned and thorough decision, the court held that, in light of the agreement's silence on the subject, the wife's remarriage ended the husband's obligation to pay maintenance. The wife now appeals.

DISCUSSION

The friction point here is easily stated: the wife says that the husband's maintenance obligations are unaffected by her remarriage; the husband says that his maintenance obligations do not extend beyond the wife's remarriage. For the reasons that follow, we agree with the husband.

I

A divorce settlement agreement is a contract, subject to standard principles of contract interpretation (see Rainbow v Swisher, 72 NY2d 106, 109 [1988]; Gurbacki v Gurbacki, 270 AD2d 807, 807-808 [4th Dept 2000]). The agreement at issue does not explicitly define the term "maintenance," and it is silent regarding the effect of the wife's remarriage upon the husband's maintenance obligation. Thus, the plain text of the agreement — which the Court of Appeals says is the best source of the parties' intent (see Goldman v White Plains Ctr. for Nursing Care, LLC, 11 NY3d 173, 176 [2008]) — is not conclusive of the question on appeal.

"Nevertheless, it is basic that, unless a contract provides otherwise, the law in force at the time the agreement is entered into becomes as much a part of the agreement as though it were expressed or referred to therein, for it is presumed that the parties had such law in contemplation when the contract was made and the contract will be construed in the light of such law" (Dolman v United States Trust Co. of N.Y., 2 NY2d 110, 116 [1956]; see Ronnen v Ajax Elec. Motor Corp., 88 NY2d 582, 589 [1996] [applying Dolman]). The Dolman rule is of longstanding vintage, and the "principle embraces alike those [laws in force at the time of a contract's execution] which affect its validity, construction, discharge, and enforcement" (Von Hoffman v City of Quincy, 71 US 535, 550 [1866] [emphasis added]). By virtue of the Dolman rule, when [*2]parties enter into an agreement authorized by or related to a particular statutory scheme, the courts will presume — absent something to the contrary — that the terms of the agreement are to be interpreted consistently with the corresponding statutory scheme (see e.g. Mayo v Royal Ins. Co. of Am., 242 AD2d 944, 945 [4th Dept 1997], lv dismissed 91 NY2d 887 [1998]; Matter of Andy Floors, Inc. [Tyler Constr. Corp.], 202 AD2d 938, 938-939 [3d Dept 1994]).

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Bluebook (online)
2018 NY Slip Op 5411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-burns-nyappdiv-2018.