Ferry v. Ferry

586 S.W.2d 782, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2478
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 4, 1979
DocketKCD 30073
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 586 S.W.2d 782 (Ferry v. Ferry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferry v. Ferry, 586 S.W.2d 782, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2478 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

In this appeal from the judgment entered in a marriage dissolution case, appellant wife asserts error in decretal provisions for division of marital property and denial of maintenance pursuant to terms of an ante-nuptial agreement. An extended recitation of the facts, essentially undisputed, is necessary to place the controversy in appropriate context.

The parties first became acquainted some six months prior to the marriage while respondent was engaged in farming leased acreage near appellant’s then place of residence. Each had prior marriages terminated by divorce and each had one child born of such earlier unions. During their courtship a mutual interest in farming was a factor of attraction and appellant worked helping respondent in the fields almost every day.

The date of the marriage was January 4, 1973. Some weeks earlier, in anticipation of the marriage, respondent had suggested and the parties had discussed the desirability of a formal agreement to settle property matters upon termination of the marriage by death or divorce. Appellant prior to the marriage owned some personal property of insignificant value. Respondent’s assets consisted of farm machinery, motor vehicles, livestock, crops and cash. Appellant’s motivation for entering into the agreement establishing future restrictions on property and economic claims was her mistaken opinion that without such an agreement respondent or his family would share in an inheritance in prospect for appellant’s son by a prior marriage from the estates of appellant’s mother and stepfather.

Respondent had the antenuptial agreement drawn by his attorney. A copy was supplied to appellant a few days before the marriage. Appellant neither sought nor received legal advice as to the effect of the document before she accompanied respondent to his attorney’s office on January 2, 1973 for the purpose of signing the agreement. While there, the terms of the agreement were discussed. Appellant noted some changes she wanted made, but because of the press of time, the agreement was signed without change but subject to subsequent modifications to conform to appellant’s wishes. These changes were not, however, made and the effective agreement is that in the form as originally prepared.

The antenuptial agreement provided for retention by the parties of their separate property during and subsequent to the marriage and for the release of any future claim to homestead, family allowance or any other marital rights on death and for the release of any future claim for support, alimony, attorney fees and costs on separation or divorce. Appellant, however, was to receive the household furnishings, an automobile and $1000.00 should she survive re *784 spondent after remaining married to and residing with him to his death or, in the event of divorce, appellant was to receive the household goods and the automobile.

A schedule of assets owned by respondent was attached to the agreement as an exhibit. Farm equipment, vehicles, livestock and cash were listed, but no values were shown, except as to the cash, and no debts or encumbrances appear. Some assets were omitted including some bonds and life insurance. No assets of appellant were listed, apparently because of the nominal worth attached. Neither party owned any real estate and none was acquired during the marriage.

The separation of the parties occurred April 27,1977 and appellant commenced her action for dissolution May 20, 1977. Irretrievable breakdown of the marriage was alleged and was not contested. No allegations of marital misconduct were made and no evidence on the subject was offered at trial. Appellant’s day-to-day participation in the family farming venture was undisputed, the evidence being that appellant operated farm machinery, drove trucks and otherwise worked in crop production and in farrowing and finishing hogs and feeder pigs.

The extent of appellant’s education was not disclosed. She had, however, been employed from time to time before the marriage as a practical nurse and returned to this occupation after the separation. At the time of trial she was earning $130.00 to $140.00 a week. Respondent remained on the farm continuing his agricultural pursuits as before.

As noted above, the value of assets brought by appellant to the marriage was nominal, such property having consisted of personal effects, some household goods and an automobile which appellant later assigned to her mother in repayment of a debt. The net worth of respondent cannot be calculated as of the date of the marriage because of the omissions from the agreement exhibit of values, debts and some assets. At trial, appellant offered and the court received as exhibits a financial statement of the parties prepared as of January 1977 and an income tax return. Such exhibits were not filed with this court and the data therein which would cast some light on this subject is therefore unavailable. It can be concluded, however, that respondent’s personal property at the time of the marriage was of significant value. At the time of the separation the same types of assets were owned but, by reason of four years’ farming activity some vehicles and machinery had declined in value, some had been replaced by newer equipment or additions and livestock and crops were those of the current season.

The court in its decree ordered the marriage dissolved and, after finding the ante-nuptial agreement to be controlling as to division of property, award of maintenance and allowance of fees and costs, granted appellant the household furnishings and automobile and set all other property over to respondent subject to any debts owed thereon. Appellant’s request for maintenance and an allowance of attorney fees was denied.

On this appeal appellant challenges the efficacy of the antenuptial agreement to strip her of her share in marital property and of her claim to maintenance on the grounds that such agreements are against public policy and that the agreement was an overreaching by respondent and fundamentally unfair to appellant. Also implicit in consideration of these issues is the effect of the Dissolution of Marriage Act, Sections 452.300 to 452.415, 1 which, pursuant to Section 452.415, controls this proceeding, although the antenuptial agreement and the marriage predated the Act.

Appellant’s first point, the rejection of antenuptial agreements on grounds of public policy, requires examination both as a general concept and as expanded or modified by the Dissolution of Marriage Act. Appellant cites no Missouri authority supporting the contention that public policy in *785 this state disapproves of antenuptial agreements. Decisions from a number of other jurisdictions do, however, indicate a consistent historical pattern of judicial opposition to agreements contingent on divorce. A typical statement of the rule so evolved is, “Any antenuptial agreement that looks forward, provides for, facilitates, or tends to induce a separation or divorce after marriage is contrary to public policy and void.” Evans, Antenuptial Contracts, 47 UMKC Law Review 31, 45 (1978), quoting 2, A. Lindey, Separation Agreements and Ante-nuptial Contracts § 90-27 (1964).

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Bluebook (online)
586 S.W.2d 782, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferry-v-ferry-moctapp-1979.