Hoog v. Hoog, Unpublished Decision (9-24-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 1999
DocketTrial No. A-9202920. Appeal No. C-980977.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hoog v. Hoog, Unpublished Decision (9-24-1999) (Hoog v. Hoog, Unpublished Decision (9-24-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoog v. Hoog, Unpublished Decision (9-24-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

DECISION.
Please note: We have sua sponte removed this case from the accelerated calendar. The domestic relations court entered a decree dissolving the marriage of appellee Shirley Hoog Davis and Maurice Hoog in 1992.1 Incorporated into the dissolution decree was a separation agreement drafted by Hoog's attorney and signed by both Davis and Hoog. The separation agreement divided the parties' property and included a paragraph captioned "Bank Accounts-Not Jointly Held," which stated that any savings and checking account held individually was the sole property of the individual. It excepted from that statement three certificates of deposit, a pass-book savings account, unidentified "mutual funds" totaling "approximately $26,000.00," and 32 shares of Procter Gamble stock, which were given to Davis. (According to Davis and Hoog's attorney, who drafted the agreement, Hoog provided the valuation for the mutual funds. Davis did not ask for verification of the $26,000 value.)

The separation agreement also contained a provision captioned "Pensions; Marital Property," which stated that each party released and waived any claim to any "vested pension rights or plans" that were "titled in the name of the other person or held for his or her benefit," and that each party had full title to or beneficial interest in his or her plan free from any claim of the other.

In 1996, Hoog died, and his son, Thomas Hoog, became the executor of his estate. Soon after Hoog's death, Davis received a telephone call from her daughter-in-law asking if she were aware of a Florida individual retirement account (the Keystone account). The Keystone account had been established by Hoog in 1987, and it designated Davis as the primary beneficiary and Thomas Hoog as the contingent beneficiary. Initially, Davis thought that the Keystone account was a hidden asset because of it being referred to as a Florida account. After investigating, however, Davis realized that the Keystone account represented the "mutual funds" referred to in the separation agreement. She had the funds distributed to her and placed them in a savings account pending the outcome of her motion requesting that the trial court transfer the asset to her.

The issue before the magistrate was whether the term "mutual funds" as used in the separation agreement referred to the Keystone account. After an evidentiary hearing, the magistrate determined that the separation agreement was ambiguous and interpreted the term "mutual funds" in the separation agreement to mean the Keystone account. Although the magistrate determined that Davis's motion for transfer of the account was moot because she already had the funds, he concluded that, as between Davis and Hoog's estate, Davis was entitled to the Keystone account by the terms of the separation agreement. The trial court adopted this decision after conducting a hearing on objections to the magistrate's findings of fact and conclusion of law.

Thomas Hoog, as executor of Hoog's estate, appeals the decision adopted by the trial court and raises four assignments of error, all of which are in some way related to his misperception that the trial court's decision was a modification of the separation agreement and not the enforcement of the dissolution decree. He claims that the trial court abused its discretion by (1) finding that the separation agreement was ambiguous and relying upon the ambiguity to modify the agreement without the consent of the parties; (2) not applying the doctrine of laches; and (3) not applying judicial estoppel to preclude Davis from asserting that the term "mutual funds" was meant to refer to the Keystone account. He also contends that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to render a judgment.

The record reveals the following facts. In 1987, Hoog cashed in a Flexible Premium Annuity issued by General Life Insurance Corporation of Wisconsin and rolled over the proceeds into a Keystone Individual Retirement Account. The sum of $14,202.65 was paid to Keystone Investor Resource Center and used to purchase shares in Keystone Series S-3 Mid-Cap Growth Fund. The financial advisor for the Keystone account was Mutual Service Corporation. While statements to Hoog initially used a Cincinnati, Ohio, address, they later indicated a West Palm Beach, Florida, address.

In the year of the dissolution, Davis and Hoog discussed whether to transfer the Keystone account to Davis and decided that they would wait to do so until the following year. Davis feared the tax consequences of the transfer and did not know that she could roll over the account into her own name. That same year, Davis sought a loan in order to build a new home. She told Hoog that she wanted to list all her assets, and he provided the account number for the Keystone account. Hoog had the account number because the statements were still being mailed to his business address. On the information she provided to the lending institution, Davis listed the Keystone account as "Mutual Fund-Keystone," provided the account number, and indicated its value as $26,000, as provided in the separation agreement. The following year, Davis failed to have the Keystone account transferred because she was overwhelmed with moving into a new house, running her own business, and handling her own finances. She testified that she also had a series of medical problems to handle, including uncontrolled high blood pressure, negative reactions to medication, abdominal surgery, and an ill daughter. She subsequently forgot about the account.

Thomas Hoog's first assignment contends that the separation agreement is unambiguous. Consequently, he argues that the trial court did not interpret an ambiguous contract, but instead modified the separation agreement. We disagree with his assertion. Further, our disposition of this assignment also takes care of his challenge to the trial court's jurisdiction as stated in his fourth assignment.

When a separation agreement is ratified and adopted by the trial court, it is "superceded by the decree and its terms are imposed, not by contract, but by decree."2 Consequently, "[w]hile a trial court does not have the power to modify the terms of a separation agreement entered into between the parties, R.C.3105.65(B) provides that it does have full power to enforce the provisions of such an agreement as it has been incorporated into the decree of dissolution of marriage. Where there is confusion over the interpretation to be given a particular clause, the trial court in enforcing the agreement has the power to hear the matter, clarify the confusion, and resolve the dispute.3 That is the situation presented in this case.

A separation agreement is a contract to which the rules of construction are applicable.4 The determination of whether an agreement is ambiguous is a question of law and is reviewed denovo.5 Once a term or clause is determined to be ambiguous or subject to more than one interpretation, "the meaning of the words used is a factual question, and we review the trial court's clarifying order under an abuse of discretion standard."6

"In defining ambiguity, the Supreme Court of Ohio has stated that, `common words appearing in a written instrument will be given their ordinary meaning unless manifest absurdity results, or unless some other meaning is clearly evidenced from the face or overall contents of the instrument.'"7

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Bluebook (online)
Hoog v. Hoog, Unpublished Decision (9-24-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoog-v-hoog-unpublished-decision-9-24-1999-ohioctapp-1999.