Fox v. Fox

731 S.E.2d 676, 291 Ga. 492, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 2740, 2012 WL 3889123, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 682
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 10, 2012
DocketS12A0672
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 731 S.E.2d 676 (Fox v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Fox, 731 S.E.2d 676, 291 Ga. 492, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 2740, 2012 WL 3889123, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 682 (Ga. 2012).

Opinions

Nahmias, Justice.

In this divorce case, the husband disputed the validity and enforceability of the parties’ self-styled “Premarital Agreement.” He argued, among other things, that the agreement is actually a “marriage contract . . . made in contemplation of marriage,” OCGA § 19-3-63, but it was not attested by two witnesses as required by that statute to be valid. The trial court agreed, and we affirm.

1. In 2000, appellant Joanne Fox (“Wife”) and appellee Lyle M. Fox (“Husband”) divorced after 25 years of marriage. The divorce decree and incorporated settlement agreement required Husband to pay Wife monthly child support of $500, as well as monthly alimony of $1,500 for one year, $2,000 for the next three years, and $1,500 thereafter until Wife was 59V2 years old. By March 2002, however, the parties were planning to remarry. Without the assistance of legal counsel, they signed a nine-page document captioned “Premarital Agreement”; the document was notarized, but the notary was the only witness to it. Three months later, the parties remarried, thereby extinguishing Husband’s child support and alimony obligations. In February 2010, Wife again filed for divorce, and she sought to enforce the Premarital Agreement as a legally binding prenuptial agreement. After a hearing, the trial court entered an order on June 10, 2011, ruling, among other things, that the Premarital Agreement, reviewed as a whole, was a “marriage contract in writing, made in contemplation of marriage” and that it therefore was void because it was not attested by at least two witnesses as required by OCGA § 19-3-63. After the trial court granted a certificate of interlocutory review, we granted Wife’s interlocutory appeal.

[493]*4932. Contracts between prospective spouses conditioned on the later occurrence of a marriage are referred to variously in statutes, case law, and treatises as “prenuptial,” “antenuptial,” “premarital,” or “antemarital” contracts or agreements. See 5 Samuel Williston & Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 11:8 (4th ed. 2003). This difference in terminology has no significance under Georgia law. See Lawrence v. Lawrence, 286 Ga. 309, 309, n.1 (687 SE2d 421) (2009). It is important, however, to distinguish “marriage contracts” — those made “in contemplation of marriage” — from other types of contracts that parties may enter into before embarking on a marriage. The distinction between “marriage contracts” and other prenuptial agreements may seem semantic, but it is well established in the law of Georgia and the rest of the nation, and it can affect the requirements for and validity of the contract at issue. See id. at 311.

In particular, we have held that a contract made in contemplation of divorce need not be witnessed. See Dove v. Dove, 285 Ga. 647 (680 SE2d 839) (2009). However, such contracts were long deemed invalid as contrary to our State’s public policy favoring marriage, and while they are now enforceable under some circumstances, they must meet other requirements. See id. at 650-651; Scherer v. Scherer, 249 Ga. 635, 641 (292 SE2d 662) (1982). By contrast, for more than 150 years, the Code has said that “[e]very marriage contract in writing, made in contemplation of marriage, shall be liberally construed to carry into effect the intention of the parties and no want of form or technical expression shall invalidate the same.” OCGA § 19-3-63. However, the statute also requires that “[t]he contract must be attested by at least two witnesses.” Id. The Premarital Agreement at issue in this case was attested by only one witness, so if it is a “marriage contract,” it is invalid and unenforceable.

Prenuptial agreements that settle property rights only during the course of a prospective marriage or at death are marriage contracts under OCGA § 19-3-63. See Sullivan v. Sullivan, 286 Ga. 53, 53-54 (684 SE2d 861) (2009) (holding that an agreement that defined the parties’ respective rights in the property of the other and waived each spouse’s right in the other’s property either before or after death was a marriage contract); Dove, 285 Ga. at 648 (explaining that “prenuptial agreements settling property rights of the parties at death are made in contemplation of marriage”). On the other hand, contracts that provide for alimony payments in the event of divorce, or that direct how property should be distributed if the parties divorce, are considered to be made in contemplation of divorce rather than marriage alone and thus are not subject to OCGA [494]*494§ 19-3-63’s attestation requirement. See Lawrence, 286 Ga. at 311-312 (holding that an agreement which both addressed alimony and divided the parties’ property in the event of divorce was not a marriage contract subject to OCGA § 19-3-63); Dove, 285 Ga. at 37 (“This Court has repeatedly stated that prenuptial agreements settling alimony issues are made in contemplation of divorce, not marriage ....”). It is the substance of the parties’ agreement, not its title, that matters. See Harris v. Neely, 257 Ga. 361, 362 (359 SE2d 885) (1987).

3. The parties’ Premarital Agreement recognizes the possibility that their second marriage could fail, but unlike the agreements in Dove and Lawrence, it contains no provisions for alimony or property division. The mere mention of the possibility of divorce in an agreement entered shortly before a marriage (or remarriage) does not establish that the agreement was entered in anticipation of divorce. Agreements contemplating divorce typically operate to resolve post-divorce legal issues such as alimony, property division, or child custody. See, e.g., Lawrence, 286 Ga. at 311-312; Dove, 285 Ga. at 37. The parties’ agreement here does not do that.

The nine pages of the Premarital Agreement, which appears to have been derived from one or more websites, consist primarily of boilerplate relationship advice (e.g., “Communication is a two-way street. Don’t lecture or talk too much.”) and covenants requiring the parties to behave a certain way during the marriage (e.g., “Joanne agrees to pay for all her outstanding credit cards and any other outstanding bills.”). The Premarital Agreement does include a section entitled “Effects of Divorce,” but it just describes the emotional, economic, and social effects of divorce in general — the reasons couples should stay married instead of divorcing. The section does not contemplate the parties’ divorce, much less purport to settle legal issues that commonly arise from divorce, such as alimony, property division, or child custody.

Wife disagrees, claiming that the very last paragraph in the agreement provides for alimony:

[I]n the event the marriage does fail, it is agreed that the settlement to [Wife] will compensate her for the hardship of mentally, emotionally, and physically creating a standstill in her life by further losing ground in her process of healing and of creating an independent life instead of putting her children and family reconciliation first.

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Bluebook (online)
731 S.E.2d 676, 291 Ga. 492, 2012 Fulton County D. Rep. 2740, 2012 WL 3889123, 2012 Ga. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-fox-ga-2012.