Elliott v. James

977 P.2d 727, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 68, 1999 WL 343641
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketS-8000
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 977 P.2d 727 (Elliott v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. James, 977 P.2d 727, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 68, 1999 WL 343641 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

I. INTRODUCTION

After filing for divorce from her husband Christopher James, Sharon Elliott learned that James had deceived her about his past marital status and involvement with the law. Elliott then supplemented her complaint to request an annulment based on fraud. Elliott asked the court to award her the couple’s primary asset, a condominium purchased before the marriage and used as the couple’s marital residence, because she claimed that James had taken advantage of her financially. The superior court ruled that an annulment was inappropriate and divided the equity of the condominium evenly between the parties. We affirm both of the trial court’s rulings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Sharon Elliott filed for divorce from Christopher James in September 1995 after less than two years of marriage. Approximately one year later, Elliott learned that James had deceived her about his background and supplemented her divorce complaint to request an annulment based on fraud. She claimed that James had misled her in two specific ways: He had lied to her about the existence of a prior marriage and about a prior misdemeanor conviction.

During trial, Elliott portrayed James as a “con artist” who had lied to her about his past in order to marry her and live off her income. To support her contention that James was a “flimflam” man, Elliott pointed to the fact that James had not filed or paid taxes in over five years and hád no record of how he had spent the approximately $140,000 that he had earned in the three years prior to trial. The evidence at trial showed that at various times during their courtship, James had told Elliott that he had never been married before. 1 Although James’s former girlfriend advised Elliott that he was deceiving her about his prior marital status, Elliott believed James’s declarations of bachelorhood. Elliott also trusted James when he told her that there was nothing inappropriate in his past of which she should be aware. Still, she testified that it was not important to her to know whether James had been married before except insofar as it reflected upon his truthfulness.

Because she believed that James had married her for her money, Elliott argued that the superior court should award her the parties’ marital residence, a condominium. The parties bought the condominium shortly after they became engaged in June 1993. Although both Elliott and James were obligated on the loan obtained to pay for the condo *730 minium, Elliott paid the down payment and closing costs, approximately $17,000, from her separate funds. Elliott’s evidence showed that she also paid the vast majority of the couple’s living expenses during the marriage, including the condominium’s mortgage payments. In contrast, James’s financial statement showed that he had earned large sums of money during the marriage for which he could not account. Elliott therefore claimed that James did not deserve to share in the condominium’s equity.

Although it found that James had been dishonest with Elliott about his background prior to their marriage, the superior court ruled that annulment was inappropriate because Elliott had failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that her consent was “obtained by the fraud alleged.” The court also ruled that the parties had treated the condominium as a marital asset and, after considering the factors listed in AS 25.24.160(a)(4), “concluded that the most equitable division ... [was] to divide the equity in the condominium equally between the parties.”

Elliott appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

1. Annulment

We review de novo questions of law, 2 such as the superior court’s legal conclusion that the fraud alleged in this case did not justify an annulment. We review questions of fact under the clearly erroneous standard; 3 we apply this standard to the questions of whether James deceived Elliott and whether Elliott agreed to marry him as a result of this deception.

2. Property division

Generally, a superior court has broad discretion when dividing property in a divorce proceeding and we will not disturb the superior court’s property division unless it is clearly unjust. 4 Further, an equal division of property, such as the one entered in this case, is presumptively valid; as the party seeking a modification, Elliott bears the burden of showing that it is unfair. 5

The classification of property depends on the intent of the parties. 6 We review the superior court’s factual decision that the condominium is marital property under the clearly erroneous standard. 7 But we exercise our independent judgment in determining whether or not the superior court applied the correct legal rule in classifying the property — that is, whether it looked to the parties’ intent rather than to other factors. 8

B. The Superior Court Correctly Refused to Grant Elliott an Annulment Based on Fraud.

Elliott argues that the superior court should have granted her an annulment because she proved that James had been dishonest with her about his past and that she would not have married him “had she known the truth about his deceit.” As the party seeking to annul the marriage, Elliott must prove that it is invalid by clear and convincing evidence. 9

Although we have never previously addressed the issue of annulment, courts are generally reluctant to grant annulments based on fraud. Decisions from other jurisdictions generally hold that marriages are presumed valid and can be annulled on the basis of fraud only if the fraud concerns an issue essential to the marriage. 10 While the *731 superior court found that James misled Elliott about his background, 11 it is an open question whether concealing a prior marriage and a misdemeanor conviction constitutes a fraud “essential” to the marriage. At least one case holds that failure to disclose a prior marriage and divorce does not justify annulment based on fraud. 12

In the case at hand, we agree with the superior court’s ruling that “[Elliottj’s consent to marry [James] was not obtained by the fraud alleged.” 13 Elliott has failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that James’s misrepresentations about his marital status and conviction induced her to marry him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
977 P.2d 727, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 68, 1999 WL 343641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-james-alaska-1999.