Firouzeh Dinarany v. John Stark

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 2021
Docket0166214
StatusPublished

This text of Firouzeh Dinarany v. John Stark (Firouzeh Dinarany v. John Stark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Firouzeh Dinarany v. John Stark, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, Russell and Senior Judge Haley PUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

JOHN STARK

v. Record No. 0356-21-4

FIROUZEH DINARANY OPINION BY JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES FIROUZEH DINARANY NOVEMBER 30, 2021

v. Record No. 0166-21-4

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David Bernhard, Judge

Tara Steinnerd Talley (Steinnerd Law PLLC, on briefs), for John Stark.

Minji Kim (Alanna C.E. Williams; Cook, Craig & Francuzenko, PLLC, on briefs), for Firouzeh Dinarany.

In these companion appeals, both John Stark and Firouzeh Dinarany appeal from a

divorce decree of the Circuit Court of Fairfax County. Stark argues on appeal that “[t]he trial

court erred by including the parties’ post-nuptial agreement into evidence” and further challenges

the trial court’s decisions on spousal support and equitable distribution. Dinarany also

challenges the trial court’s rulings on spousal support and equitable distribution and further

argues that the trial court erred in its apportionment of attorney’s fees.1

1 In her brief, Dinarany’s eighth assignment of error states that “[t]he trial court erred in the amount of child support by not making an adjustment in favor of the Wife for support of another child,” but Dinarany expressly states on brief that “this assignment of error must also be conceded.” I. BACKGROUND

Stark and Dinarany were married on December 18, 2012. They have a daughter together,

who was born during the marriage. Dinarany also has a son from a prior marriage.

At the time of the marriage, Stark served in the United States Army. He continued to

serve until late 2016, when he retired from the Army and accepted a position as a diplomat with

the United States Department of State. According to Stark, he served more than twenty-five

years in the Army in total – the last four of which he served while married to Dinarany. Due to

his military service, Stark earns a monthly retirement pension from the Army.

The parties own a home in McLean, Virginia, which they acquired during the marriage.

In Stark’s complaint for divorce, he stated that the parties “had tenants scheduled to move into

the home in August, 2019” but alleged that Dinarany “unilaterally cancelled the contract for the

tenants” and moved into the McLean home with the children at the end of July 2019. The parties

thus separated at the end of July 2019. After the parties separated, Stark continued making

mortgage payments on the McLean home until April 2020, after which he placed the home in

mortgage forbearance. Stark testified that the forbearance permitted him to defer mortgage

payments for up to one year with no penalty and that he would then pay back the deferred

payments at the end of the forbearance period. He further testified that, as the only party named

as liable on the mortgage, he did not need Dinarany’s consent for the forbearance.

Stark and Dinarany executed two agreements that are relevant to these appeals. On

December 17, 2012, the day before their marriage, they executed a prenuptial agreement. The

prenuptial agreement contained a paragraph entitled “Dissolution of Marriage,” which stated that

“it is the express intention of John and Firouzeh that the following provisions shall prevail in the

event of a dissolution” of the marriage:

a. Each party shall have an equal interest in all property acquired by either party during the course of the marriage (except property -2- that is merely the result of an increase in the value of property owned separately by the parties prior to the marriage, as listed on the attached schedules). b. All savings, investments, retirement accounts, and all property listed on the attached schedules as separate property (owned by a party prior to the marriage) shall remain the separate property of that party who brought such property into the marriage, including any appreciation, income, or other increase to such property. c. All joint property and accounts shall be divided equally. d. The parties shall have joint custody of any children born to or adopted into the marriage. Such joint custody entitles each party to equal visitation time, or time which is otherwise fair and equitable.

The agreement also provided that “in the event of a marital separation or dissolution, it is agreed

and understood that neither party shall seek or obtain any form of alimony or support from the

other, or seek any relief, other than a distribution of their joint property interests or those

property interests acquired during the course of the marriage, in any manner other than as

provided by this Agreement.” In addition, the prenuptial agreement contained a provision

governing revocation, which stated that any subsequent revocation “shall be ineffective until

recorded with the recorder in the county where the parties maintain their primary residence or

both counties if the parties are maintaining separate residences in separate counties.”

The parties subsequently executed a postnuptial agreement on August 17, 2016. The

postnuptial agreement is a one-page document that contains one operative provision, which says,

“In consideration of the marriage between the parties, the parties mutually agree to the

following: The pre-nuptial agreement of December 17, 2012 is nullified.” The postnuptial

agreement was signed by both parties and sworn before a notary.

Stark filed for divorce on April 13, 2020. In his complaint for divorce, Stark asked for a

divorce “on the grounds of desertion” and requested specific and general relief from the trial

court, including “[t]hat he be awarded physical and legal custody of the minor child of the

parties; . . . [t]hat the Court divide, transfer or partition marital property which is titled in the

names of both parties; . . . [t]hat the Court grant to Plaintiff a monetary award, payable in either a -3- lump sum or over a period of time in fixed amounts; [and] [t]hat he may be granted any and such

further relief pursuant to Sections 20-107.1, 20-107.2 and 20-107.3[.]” The complaint did not

refer to any prenuptial agreement between the parties. Dinarany filed a counterclaim for divorce

on April 21, 2020, in which she asked for legal and physical custody, spousal support, child

support, equitable distribution, attorney’s fees, and “such other remedies as are available to her

pursuant to the Court’s equitable distribution and spousal support award powers[.]” A trial date

was set for October 26, 2020. In setting the trial date, the circuit court entered a scheduling order

providing that “[t]he parties shall complete discovery, including depositions, by thirty (30) days

before the applicable trial date[.]”

During discovery, Stark produced the prenuptial agreement for the first time. Dinarany

claimed that she then provided a copy of the postnuptial agreement to her counsel the following

day. Dinarany’s counsel claimed that he then sent the postnuptial agreement to Stark and his

counsel. Stark’s counsel denied receiving a copy of the postnuptial agreement and further

argued that Dinarany and her counsel failed to produce any documents relevant to equitable

distribution before the discovery deadline set by the scheduling order. Consequently, Stark filed

a motion in limine seeking to exclude Dinarany’s proposed financial exhibits as well as the

postnuptial agreement itself. In the motion in limine, Stark argued that “[t]his property/support

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