Hussein-Scott v. Scott

298 P.3d 179, 2013 WL 1279664, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 42
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
Docket6768 S-14561
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 298 P.3d 179 (Hussein-Scott v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hussein-Scott v. Scott, 298 P.3d 179, 2013 WL 1279664, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 42 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

1. INTRODUCTION

Jerry Scott and Camilla Hussein-Scott dissolved their marriage and signed a marital settlement agreement requiring Jerry to pay alimony every month. On the line of the agreement reserved for the alimony termination date, Jerry wrote “12/2/2020,” which is the 18th birthday of their youngest daughter, Myriam. But on the next line, in a space left blank for “other specifics,” Jerry wrote, “To be paid until Yasmine Scott’s 18th birthday or until remarriage.” Yasmine is the couple’s middle daughter, and her 18th birthday is August 1, 2015. We are asked if Jerry’s alimony obligation ends on the earlier date or the later one. Relying on the well-established rule that the more important or principal clause controls, we conclude that Jerry’s support obligation terminates on December 2, 2020, or upon Camilla’s remarriage if earlier.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Jerry Scott and Camilla Hussein-Scott were married in Eugene, Oregon and had three children, Salome, Yasmine, and My-riam. The couple separated after 13 years of marriage. At the time, Camilla was living in Florida with the children, and Jerry was working in Alaska. Four years latex’, Jerry filed a petition to dissolve the marriage, and Jeri’y and Camilla signed a marital settlement agreement. Jerry handwrote the agreement’s teims on a pre-printed form. The agreement disposed of the marital assets and liabilities and set terms for child support, custody, and visitation, as well as spousal support. A Florida coui’t adopted the agreement by refei’ence and dissolved the marriage.

The current dispute arose because the spousal support provision of the settlement agreement is ambiguous. The pre-pi’inted settlement agreement form required the parties to specify the amount, fi’equency, and duration of alimony payments. The parties indicated that Jerry would pay Camilla $10,000 every month, continuing until *181 “12/2/2020.” This is the 18th birthday of their youngest daughter, Myriam. The next line of the form asked the parties to “Explain [the] type of alimony (temporary, permanent, rehabilitative, and/or lump sum) and any other specifics.” Jerry circled the word “temporary,” and, in the space provided, wrote “To be paid until Yasmine Scott’s 18th birthday or until remarriage.” Yasmine is the couple’s middle daughter. She will turn 18 on August 1, 2015, more than five years before the termination date specified on the line above. As the superior court noted, “Obviously the parties intended to have both descriptions identify the same date. Thus they either erred by using the wrong date (12/2/2020) for Yasmine’s 18th birthday or they erred in the descriptive phrase by referring to Yasmine rather than Myriam.”

B. Proceedings

Jerry and Camilla now both live in Alaska. In 2009 they registered the Florida divorce decree and marital settlement agreement in Alaska for enforcement and modification.

In 2011 Jerry filed a motion in the Alaska superior court to end his alimony payments, or, if that were not successful, to clarify his obligation under the settlement agreement. The trial court denied Jerry’s motion to end payments, and Jerry does not appeal this ruling. The court held an evidentiary hearing to resolve the above-noted ambiguity.

At the hearing, Jerry and Camilla gave conflicting testimony about the intended termination date of alimony payments. Jerry testified that the alimony payments were meant to support Camilla while she home-schooled their oldest daughter, Salome. Once Salome turned 18 and finished with her home-schooling, the other children were to attend public school. Camilla was to receive support payments for four more years to give her a chance to complete college or start a business. Four years after Salome tons 18 is the same year Yasmine turns 18, and, according to Jerry, they decided to use Yas-mine’s 18th birthday as a convenient end date. Jerry testified that the date 12/2/2020 was a mistake; Jerry claims he got mixed up and accidentally entered the date child support, not spousal support, would end — that is, Myriam’s 18th birthday. Jerry also testified that he and Camilla sat at the dinner table together and discussed the terms of the agreement equably.

Camilla testified that Jerry’s version of events was a story that Jerry “made up.” She explained that the support payments were supposed to help her raise all three children and pay the mortgages on her properties. She testified that the support payments were supposed to end when Myriam, their youngest daughter, turned 18. Finally, she agreed that they discussed the agreement at the dinner table, and that she had an opportunity to review the terms, but she also claimed that Jerry made her discuss the agreement in front of their children and that Jerry threatened that if she did not sign the papers he would get a divorce “she wouldn’t like.” Camilla alleged that she had been coerced into getting the divorce and signing the settlement agreement.

The superior court found neither party credible. Citing by analogy to a provision of the Uniform Commercial Code stating that, when in conflict, words prevail over numbers, the court found that “the more likely error would occur in the entry of the bald numerical date rather than in the narrative description of the end date.” The superior court held that Jerry’s obligation to pay spousal support ends on August 1, 2016. 1 Camilla appeals.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We are asked to review the superior court’s interpretation of a marital settlement agreement. This is a question of law, which we consider de novo. 2 But if we rely on extrinsic evidence, we will accept the factual findings of the superior court unless they are *182 unsupported by substantial evidence. 3

IV. CHOICE OF LAW

Like every other state, Alaska has adopted the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA), which guides our choice-of-law determination in this case. Under UIFSA, the duration of current obligations in a marital settlement agreement is governed by the law of the issuing state. 4 In this case, the issuing state is Florida. We will therefore interpret the agreement according to Florida law.

V. DISCUSSION

A. General Contract Principles Apply To Determine The Meaning Of The Settlement Agreement.

Under both Florida and Alaska law, an ambiguous settlement agreement is interpreted using basic contract principles. 5 These principles include considering the contract as a whole, looking to the intent of the parties, avoiding absurd results, and constructing the contract such that the result is fair, customary, and such as a prudent person would naturally execute. 6

B. The Lower Court Did Not Err In Disregarding The Parties’ Testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
298 P.3d 179, 2013 WL 1279664, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hussein-scott-v-scott-alaska-2013.