Carla Ellen Skaates v. Nathan Kayser

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 16, 2020
Docket346487
StatusPublished

This text of Carla Ellen Skaates v. Nathan Kayser (Carla Ellen Skaates v. Nathan Kayser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carla Ellen Skaates v. Nathan Kayser, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CARLA ELLEN SKAATES, FOR PUBLICATION July 16, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:00 a.m.

v No. 346487 Marquette Circuit Court NATHAN KAYSER, Family Division LC No. 16-055134-DO Defendant-Appellant.

Before: MURRAY, C.J., and METER and K. F. KELLY, JJ.

MURRAY, C.J.

Defendant appeals by right a judgment of divorce and an order determining that a postnuptial agreement was enforceable. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND1

The parties met and began cohabitating in 2003. Plaintiff is a dentist who operates her own practice, while defendant has engaged in a number of business ventures and occupied various positions over his life. Beginning in 2006, after plaintiff purchased her own dental practice, defendant began working as the practice’s business manager.2

In 2011, plaintiff and defendant began discussing marriage. The parties had lived together for years, but each had their own separate businesses and assets. Thus, leading up to their 2012 marriage, the parties negotiated the terms of what was to be a prenuptial agreement. Plaintiff and

1 These facts are taken from the evidentiary hearing held on the validity of the postnuptial agreement. 2 The parties disputed defendant’s role in this position as well as his role in acquiring the practice. However, there was no dispute that plaintiff utilized an outside company that specialized in the sale and purchase of dental practices or that plaintiff financed the acquisition entirely with her own funds. -1- defendant e-mailed back and forth, and discussed an agreement for approximately 16 months before its execution.

Although the agreement was supposed to be a prenuptial agreement, it turned into a postnuptial agreement because of time constraints. In other words, despite working on it for 16 months and agreeing to the major provisions, the agreement was not signed prior to the marriage. Plaintiff testified that, after they were married, defendant indicated that he was not going to sign the agreement, which greatly frustrated her. Nonetheless, after reviewing the document and obtaining advice from separate legal counsel, the agreement was eventually executed on September 19, 2012, which was approximately one month after the marriage.

At the outset the parties set forth the purpose of the agreement:

The parties want to define and clarify their respective rights in each other’s property and in any jointly owned property they now own or might accumulate after today and to avoid interests that, except as provided by this agreement, they might otherwise acquire in each other’s property as a consequence of their marriage relationship.

The parties agreed that plaintiff’s preexisting dental practice would remain plaintiff’s individual property and, if divorce occurred, that she would be awarded the asset completely. On the other hand, if plaintiff died before defendant, then he was permitted to sell the practice and retain the proceeds. Before the marriage plaintiff created a limited liability company (LLC) that owned the building in which the dental practice operated. Through the agreement, plaintiff transferred to defendant a 25% ownership interest in this company, and the building was designated a marital asset. If divorce occurred, the property would be divided according to the parties’ ownership interest, with plaintiff having the option to buy out defendant’s interest. As with the dental practice, if either party died before the other, the survivor would have 100% ownership. For his part, defendant owned before the marriage “3D Heli-Hub, LLC,”3 which under the agreement would continue to be defendant’s individual property; if divorce occurred, he would solely be awarded the company. If defendant died before plaintiff, then she could sell the company and retain the proceeds.

The parties had equal ownership of “Lady Lab-Coats, LLC,”4 and the parties agreed that, if divorce occurred, the company would be divided equally, with plaintiff having the option to buy out defendant’s interest. Again, if one party died before the other, then the survivor would have 100% ownership. The agreement also provided that plaintiff would transfer to defendant a 50% interest in the marital home, and if divorce occurred the parties would divide the property based on their ownership interests at the time of the divorce, with plaintiff having the option to buy out

3 3D Heli-Hub, LLC was a hobby store that defendant had opened and operated for a number of years. 4 Lady Lab Coats, LLC was a corporation created to pursue plaintiff’s idea about making a more “feminine version” of the traditional “white lab coat,” but the venture “never really went too far.”

-2- defendant’s interest. As with other property, if one party died before the other, then the survivor would receive 100% ownership.

As to each of their respective bank, investment, and retirement accounts, as well as life insurance policies, annuities, and other similar assets, the parties agreed that they would remain separate property and would not be subject to division if divorce occurred. Similarly, the parties agreed that any inheritances would be separate property, and that defendant would remain a beneficiary of two of plaintiff’s life insurance policies so long as the parties remained married, with defendant remaining a beneficiary “at a level equal to or greater than forty percent” as long as the policies were in effect.

Additionally, the agreement provided that the parties would dissolve their tenancy in common for the camp property and, in its place, would create a tenancy by the entireties between them. Each party would have equal ownership, and it would be marital property. If divorce occurred, defendant would have the option to buy out plaintiff’s interest. 5 All other property not mentioned in the agreement was to remain separate property with neither party having a claim to the other’s property.

Importantly, the parties agreed on a “cooling off” provision, a procedure to be used when contemplating divorce. Specifically, if one party desired to file for divorce, the parties agreed to wait four months before doing so. In this way, the parties had a “cooling off” period to work out marital issues. Consistent with that goal, the parties also agreed to attend a minimum of three joint marital counseling sessions during this period.

In October 2016, plaintiff filed for divorce without waiting four months and before attending any counseling sessions. Plaintiff subsequently filed a motion to enforce the agreement. Defendant opposed the motion, and asked the court to void the agreement, arguing: (1) the agreement went against public policy because it was made in contemplation of a future divorce and left plaintiff in a more attractive financial position in the event of that divorce; (2) he signed the agreement under duress, which resulted from uneven bargaining power, financial pressures, and a threat of divorce; (3) plaintiff materially breached the agreement by failing to follow the cooling off provision, which prevented her from now seeking to enforce the agreement; and (4) plaintiff failed to fully disclose her assets, specifically certain gold coins that plaintiff had possessed and sold. The trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the issue of enforceability, where the parties’ presented their own testimony and offered exhibits into evidence.

The trial court issued a written decision granting plaintiff’s motion. In its opinion, the trial court noted that the parties had discussed the terms of the agreement for a period of 16 months, and that each party had been represented by counsel throughout this period, and up to the

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Bluebook (online)
Carla Ellen Skaates v. Nathan Kayser, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carla-ellen-skaates-v-nathan-kayser-michctapp-2020.