Gartner v. Gartner

74 N.W.2d 809, 246 Minn. 319, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 515
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 10, 1956
Docket36,614
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 74 N.W.2d 809 (Gartner v. Gartner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gartner v. Gartner, 74 N.W.2d 809, 246 Minn. 319, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 515 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Appeal from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff and defendant were married on June 5, 1948. Just prior to their marriage they entered into an antenuptial agreement, dated May 26,1948, which purported to adjust their property rights upon their forthcoming marriage.

Plaintiff, on May 7, 1953, brought this action to have the ante-nuptial contract declared null and void on the grounds that: (1) It was contrary to public policy; (2) its terms are inadequate and unconscionable; (3) plaintiff did not understand its effect when she signed it; (4) defendant’s procurement of plaintiff’s signature thereto was a breach of a confidential and fiduciary relationship; and finally (5) it was the product of mutual mistake of the parties. Defendant in his answer, after making a general denial, affirmatively alleged that it was the intent of the parties that the agreement should become effective only in the event of his death leaving the *321 plaintiff surviving him, and that all provisions therein applicable to a termination of their marriage by legal proceedings were the result of mutual mistake and inadvertence.

The trial court, pursuant to a specific finding that the parties in entering into the antenuptial agreement did not intend that it should govern or apply in the event of divorce or other legal termination of their marriage but intended solely that it should control and limit the rights of each in the estate of the other only in case of the death of one or the other, ordered that the contract be reformed accordingly. The trial court concluded that the contract as reformed was adequate and reasonable, not contrary to public policy, and in full force and effect.

Prior to its reformation, paragraph 3 of the written instrument read:

“* * * This contract limits the right of either party to participate in the estate of the other, whether the marriage relation is determined by death or legal proceedings.” (Italics supplied.)

In two other paragraphs the instrument similarly referred to a determination of the marriage by legal proceedings. The instrument was reformed by deleting therefrom all language alluding to a termination of the marriage status by legal proceedings.

We have issues therefore as to whether, upon the evidence adduced, the court was justified in ordering a reformation of the contract and as to whether the contract as reformed was reasonable and valid as not being in contravention of public policy.

Plaintiff asserts that the evidence does not justify a reformation of the antenuptial agreement as written.

“* * * A written contract may be reformed where there has been an actual agreement between the parties and their minds have met on the terms which they intended the writing to express, and where the writing in fact fails to express those terms, and such failure was due to mutual mistake, or to mistake on one side and fraud or inequitable conduct on the other.” 2

*322 The important point is that there was in fact a valid agreement between the parties and not that the contract as drawn was valid. Actually, where the parties have agreed to the terms of a contract and the scrivener has made a mistake in drawing the agreement, a court may reform the contract to make it conform to the intention of the parties. Mahoney v. Minnesota F. M. Ins. Co. 136 Minn. 34, 161 N. W. 217. It is well established that before a court may decree a reformation of a written contract on the ground of mutual mistake of the parties, or on the ground of a mistake of one party which is accompanied by the fraud or inequitable conduct of the other, the essential facts necessary to establish either of said grounds must be proved, not by a mere preponderance of the evidence, but by evidence which is clear, unequivocal, and convincing, although such evidentiary proof need not be so conclusive ás to be beyond a reasonable doubt. 3

In the light of these principles, does the evidence sustain a finding of mutual mistake? Defendant, who could not read or write, went to the office of an attorney, who on a few prior occasions had helped him with income tax matters, and asked if a contract could be drawn to govern his and plaintiff’s property rights upon the death of either of them after their forthcoming marriage. No contract was then drawn but after defendant’s departure the attorney prepared a preliminary draft based on a model taken from a form book. The next day both defendant and plaintiff appeared at his office. After some discussion of their respective property rights, the tentative draft was read to them. Plaintiff testified that she did not understand that the contract contained anything pertaining to divorce. She further said that she did not know the meaning of the phrase “whether the marriage relation is terminated by death or legal proceedings.” Defendant testified that there was no talk or discussion about divorce, legal separation, or annulment prior to the execution of the contract and that he understood that the contract meant *323 “to take care of my property after I died.” The attorney testified there was nothing said by either party while they were in his office as to what would happen to the property or what their rights would be if there was a divorce. As usual there is conflict in the testimony, but taking it as a whole we cannot say that it does not sustain the trial court’s finding of mutual mistake by evidence that is clear, unequivocal, and convincing.

Was the contract as reformed valid? Antenuptial contracts in anticipation of marriage, fixing the rights which the survivor shall have in the property of the other after his or her death, are not against public policy but are regarded with favor as conducive to the welfare of the parties making them, and these contracts will be sustained whenever equitably and fairly made. 4 These contracts, when fairly and equitably made, exclude the operation of law in respect to the property rights of each insofar as these rights are covered by the contract. 5 An antenuptial contract, between parties standing in a fiduciary relation to each other, 6 is fairly and equitably made when its execution has been preceded by a fair and full disclosure and explanation of every material particular within the knowledge of the one who seeks to uphold it against the other; 7 and when it has not been procured: By an abuse of such fiduciary relations, 8 by undue influence or duress, 9 or for a consideration which under all the circumstances is so inadequate as to be unconscionable. 10 Where the parties stand in a confidential relation to *324

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.W.2d 809, 246 Minn. 319, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gartner-v-gartner-minn-1956.