Dennis Jack Horner v. Marcia (Horner) Carter

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2012
Docket34A02-1111-DR-1029
StatusPublished

This text of Dennis Jack Horner v. Marcia (Horner) Carter (Dennis Jack Horner v. Marcia (Horner) Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis Jack Horner v. Marcia (Horner) Carter, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION FILED Jun 13 2012, 9:12 am

CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

DAVID W. STONE, IV BRENT R. DECHERT Stone Law Office & Legal Research Kokomo, Indiana Anderson, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

DENNIS JACK HORNER ) ) Appellant-Petitioner, ) ) vs. ) No. 34A02-1111-DR-1029 ) MARCIA (HORNER) CARTER, ) ) Appellee-Respondent. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE HOWARD CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Lynn Murray, Judge Cause No. 34C01-9803-DR-168

June 13, 2012

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

VAIDIK, Judge Case Summary

Seven years after Dennis Jack Horner (“Husband”) and Marcia (Horner) Carter

(“Wife”) reached a mediated settlement agreement during dissolution proceedings,

Husband sought to modify the terms of that agreement on the basis of mistake. The trial

court denied his request. Husband now appeals, contending that the trial court should

have allowed him to offer extrinsic evidence—specifically, communications that

occurred during mediation—to show that there was a mistake in the drafting of the

agreement. We conclude that Alternative Dispute Resolution Rule 2.11 and Indiana

Evidence Rule 408 allow the introduction of mediation communications to establish

traditional contract defenses. We also find that the trial court correctly determined that

the agreement in this case provided for a property settlement that survived Wife’s

remarriage. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

Husband and Wife were divorced in 2005 after thirty-eight years of marriage.

During dissolution proceedings, the parties reached a mediated settlement agreement,

which the trial court incorporated into the decree of dissolution. The five-page settlement

agreement contains four sections, entitled “Real Estate,” “Other Property Distribution,”

“Maintenance/Support,” and “Further Agreements.”

In the section entitled “Real Estate,” the parties agreed that they would sell the

marital residence, and Husband would use the proceeds to purchase a new residence for

Wife. Specifically, the section provided that Husband

will purchase, lease, purchase with lease option or in some other form acquire new residence upon the sale of the marital residence of the parties.

2 [Husband] agrees to pay the sum of $550.00 per month (taxes and insurance included) towards the purchase of new residence. New residence shall be titled in [Husband’s] name alone but [Wife] shall have exclusive possession of the new residence. [Husband] agrees to grant to [Wife] a life estate in the new residence . . . .

Until such time as the marital residence is sold, [Husband] shall be responsible for the mortgage/utility payments . . . .

Appellant’s App. p. 20-21. The “Maintenance/Support” section of the agreement

provided, in relevant part:

Upon the entry of the Decree of Dissolution, [Husband] agrees to pay to [Wife] as permanent maintenance: (a) The sum of $500.00 per pay period for twelve (12) consecutive months[.] (b) The sum of $600.00 per pay period for the thirteenth (13th) month forward until and unless otherwise modified by the Court or the death of the [Wife].

Id. at 22. The parties also agreed that the permanent maintenance order was subject to

modification and listed circumstances where modification might be necessary, such as

job loss, retirement, “or the re-marriage of [Wife].” Id. The agreement also disposed of

other marital property, including Husband’s employee savings account and pension

through Chrysler, where he had been employed for nearly forty years. The parties agreed

to divide the employee savings account equally between them, but Wife disclaimed her

interest in Husband’s pension.

The parties were unable to sell the former marital residence, and Husband entered

into a contract with Wife’s boyfriend, Billy Carter, to sell the residence to Carter. The

contract required Carter to pay Husband $660 per month. When Wife married Carter in

2007, the parties filed an agreed-upon entry that terminated Husband’s monthly

3 maintenance obligation to Wife. Husband did not seek modification of his obligation to

make monthly housing payments to Wife at that time.

Carter and Wife lived in the former marital residence and Carter continued to pay

Husband $660 each month until sometime in 2010. Meanwhile, Husband paid the

mortgages, taxes, and other financial obligations on the property in excess of $800 each

month.1 By early 2011, Carter had fallen many months behind in his monthly payment,

and Husband evicted Carter and Wife. In April 2011, Wife filed a motion for rule to

show cause alleging that Husband had failed to make the $550 monthly housing

payments to Wife. In his answer, Husband claimed he had fulfilled his obligation to

Wife by selling the former marital residence to Carter and by paying the mortgage, taxes,

and other bills associated with the property. Husband also filed a motion to modify the

settlement agreement and terminate his monthly housing payments to Wife. The trial

court held a hearing on the parties’ motions in August 2011.

At the hearing, Husband argued that there was a mistake in the settlement

agreement because his obligation to make housing payments to Wife was actually

maintenance, which terminated upon Wife’s remarriage. Husband stated, “[I]t says in the

divorce decree once she’s married everything stops; everything, and that’s the way I put

it to the mediator.” Tr. p. 12. Twice more he stated that there was a mistake in the

agreement: “My understanding was that it was all maintenance,” and “Actually I thought

everything was supposed to stop when she got married.” Id. at 19, 23. When Husband

again attempted to testify as to what he told the mediator, Wife’s counsel objected. The

1 At one point, Husband was paying two mortgages on the former marital residence in the amount of $1280 per month. After refinancing, the mortgage payment was $825 per month. 4 trial court sustained the objection, “[c]learly anything that was said in mediation is clearly

inadmissible.” Id. at 23. Nonetheless, Husband later elaborated:

Well, my understanding was that when [Wife] got married everything stopped. I mean why wouldn’t it. That’s common sense. I don’t know. That was my understanding. That’s the way I made it clear to the mediator. If it didn’t get in the agreement properly then we need to talk to my two attorneys at the time, or the three attorneys at the time. I had an attorney, she had an attorney . . . .

Id. at 29. Wife, however, explained that she had agreed to relinquish her interest in

Husband’s pension because Husband had agreed to pay her housing expenses, and for

this reason, she believed the monthly housing payments were not affected by her

remarriage. Id. at 34, 39.

In October 2011, the trial court entered an order, in which it framed the issue as

“whether the Settlement Agreement terms that required [Husband] to purchase and

maintain a life-estate residence for [Wife] was a division of property or an award of

maintenance[.]” Appellant’s App. p. 14. The court then described the provisions in

dispute:

14. Here, the property settlement agreement clearly provided for two distinct sections that obligated [Husband] to provide funds to [Wife] after the dissolution. . . . 15.

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

Related

Bernel v. Bernel
930 N.E.2d 673 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2010)
Gast v. Hall
858 N.E.2d 154 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2006)
Deel v. Deel
909 N.E.2d 1028 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2009)
Fackler v. Powell
891 N.E.2d 1091 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Dennis Jack Horner v. Marcia (Horner) Carter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-jack-horner-v-marcia-horner-carter-indctapp-2012.