Egedi v. Egedi

88 Cal. App. 4th 17, 105 Cal. Rptr. 2d 518
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2001
DocketNo. B140733
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 88 Cal. App. 4th 17 (Egedi v. Egedi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Egedi v. Egedi, 88 Cal. App. 4th 17, 105 Cal. Rptr. 2d 518 (Cal. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

YEGAN, Acting P. J.

Parties contemplating dissolution of marriage may choose a “friendly divorce” or they can engage in the emotional and financial turmoil of protracted litigation. Some parties electing a “friendly divorce” will seek the help of a single attorney to assist them in putting their settlement agreement in proper legal form.1 In this situation, there is a problem but not an insurmountable one, i.e., the attorney draftsperson has a potential conflict of interest because he or she cannot simultaneously represent adverse parties. As we shall explain, where a single attorney obtains an informed written waiver of the potential conflict of interest and acts only as a scrivener of the parties’ marital settlement agreement (MSA), such agreement is enforceable.

Wife appeals from the judgment challenging the trial court’s refusal to enforce the MSA freely and voluntarily entered into by the parties without fraud, duress, or undue influence. The MSA was typed by an attorney who informed the parties of the potential conflict of interest caused by his acting as a scrivener of the agreement. The parties signed a waiver of the conflict. Nevertheless, the trial court invalidated the MSA on the theory that the attorney’s disclosures were insufficient to enable the parties to give an informed consent to dual representation. We reverse. We emphasize that the only issue before the court is the enforceability, vel non, of the September 1998 MSA.2

[20]*20 Facts

In July 1998, the parties filed a joint petition for summary dissolution of their marriage. Thereafter the parties asked an attorney to formalize their MSA. He had previously represented wife in a criminal matter and husband in a paternity action. He told the parties that he did not want to prepare the MSA because of a potential conflict of interest. He advised them to obtain independent counsel. However, the parties had extreme confidence in the attorney and insisted that he prepare the MSA. He ultimately agreed to serve as the scrivener of their agreement. He told them that he would not render legal advice but would merely set out the terms that the parties had agreed to and add standard provisions normally found in an MSA.

In August 1998, the parties faxed to the attorney their signed agreement, drafted by husband, specifying the terms to be included in the MSA. (See appendix) Husband testified that, during the interval between the fax and the signing of the MSA, the attorney would not discuss the terms with him because of the potential conflict of interest. The attorney “told me that there was a huge potential conflict of interest and that he . . . wanted to remain as neutral as possible . . . .” The attorney testified that he spoke to both parties on the telephone only to confirm the terms they wanted included in the final MSA.

In September 1998, the parties met with the attorney at his office to sign the MSA. The attorney again discussed the potential conflict of interest. The parties signed a waiver which provided: “This will confirm that Angela Egedi and Paul Egedi have been advised that . . . [attorney’s] mere typing of an agreement made between the parties may be a potential conflict of interest, despite the fact that he was not in the advisory capacity, nor involved in the negotiation of the agreement. [¶] Each party knowingly waives any potential conflict of interest in the preparation of the parties agreement. In addition, each party has been advised to seek independent legal counsel and advice with respect to this letter and the agreement.”

The MSA provided, inter alia, for $750 monthly spousal support to wife until a new lease was signed by the tenant of husband’s separate property. After the signing of the new lease, monthly spousal support would increase to $2,000 or one-half of the net monthly lease income, whichever was [21]*21greater. In addition, wife would receive one-half of the “yearly percentage income” paid by the tenant. Spousal support would terminate after five years or when wife became self-supporting, whichever occurred first. The MSA allocated responsibility for the attorney’s past due attorney’s fees, required husband to pay a $100,000 loan secured by his separate property in Texas, and provided that the parties would keep whatever property was in their possession. The agreement recited that “the parties intend to effect a complete and final division of their assets and debts, and to resolve all rights and obligations relating to spousal support.” It also recited: “The parties agree that: (1) each of the parties has read and reviewed this Agreement; (2) each of the parties is fully aware of the contents, legal effect and consequences of this agreement and its provisions; (3) each of the parties has read this Agreement and understands and accepts its contents and acknowledges that there have been no promises or agreements by either party to the other, except as set forth here, that were relied on by either party as inducement to enter into this Agreement; and (4) this Agreement has been entered into voluntarily, free from duress, fraud, undue influence, coercion, or misrepresentation of any kind.”3

Thereafter wife fully performed her MSA obligations but husband elected not to pay spousal support as agreed. Wife sought judicial enforcement of the MSA. Husband contended that the MSA should be set aside on various ground, i.e., failure of consideration, unfairness, improper conduct by attorney, fraud, duress, undue influence and mistake.

Trial Court Ruling

The court found that “the MSA was in fact the free and voluntary agreement of the parties . . . .” It rejected “the claim that [husband] was forced to consent to [the MSA’s] terms as a result of fraud, duress, or undue influence.” The court credited the attorney’s testimony that he had “observed nothing that suggested the agreement was anything other than what the parties freely and genuinely ‘wanted’ and consented to at the time it was signed.” The court found the attorney’s “testimony on this issue clear, [22]*22credible and convincing.” Furthermore, it concluded that, if husband’s allegations of mistake were true, the mistake was insufficient to invalidate the MSA.4

Nevertheless, the trial court ruled that the MSA “may not be enforced because the conflict disclosures made by [attorney] were inadequate to permit his dual representation of the parties . . . .” Despite the attorney’s role as a “scrivener,” the trial court found that “he was effectively rendering legal advice to both [parties]” because he added “standard provisions” to the MSA. It concluded that “he could do so only after making full disclosure of all facts and circumstances necessary to enable both parties to make a fully informed decision regarding such representation.” The trial court also said that the attorney failed to disclose “all facts and circumstances necessary to enable both parties to make a fully informed decision regarding [his] representation.” It did not, however, specify the “facts and circumstances” that should have been disclosed.

MSA Set Aside Rules

“Property settlement agreements occupy a favored position in the law of this state . . . .” (Adams v. Adams (1947) 29 Cal.2d 621, 624 [177 P.2d 265].) Courts are reluctant to disturb them “except for equitable considerations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Cal. App. 4th 17, 105 Cal. Rptr. 2d 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/egedi-v-egedi-calctapp-2001.