In Re Diafos

37 P.3d 304
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 31, 2001
Docket47437-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 P.3d 304 (In Re Diafos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Diafos, 37 P.3d 304 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

37 P.3d 304 (2001)

In re Nick Peter DIAFOS, Debtor.
Robert W. Ryan, Respondent,
v.
Nick P. Diafos, and the marital community comprised of Nick P. Diafos and Jane Doe Diafos, Appellants.

No. 47437-5-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

December 31, 2001.

*305 John Mele, Ryan Swanson & Cleveland, Seattle, for Appellants.

Guy Beckett, Seattle, for Respondent.

BAKER, J.

Nick Diafos appeals an order of garnishment in favor of Robert Ryan on a judgment arising out of the parties' settlement of an adversary proceeding in Diafos' bankruptcy. Ryan cross-appeals an order quashing his garnishment of the bank account of Diafos' wife. Because the adversary action sounded in tort, we hold that the judgment is a tort judgment, allowing Ryan to collect against Diafos' one-half interest in any personal community property of Diafos' marriage in the event that insufficient separate property exists to satisfy the claim.

*306 I

Nick Diafos was the owner of financially troubled Bellevue Mitsubishi.[1] Over the course of a year, he borrowed $400,000 from Robert Ryan, a business associate, who purchased automobiles and placed them on the Bellevue Mitsubishi lot for resale. Unable to regain solvency despite the loans, Bellevue Mitsubishi and later Diafos, personally, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, leaving Ryan exposed not only for the $400,000 loan, but also for $200,000 worth of vehicles he had placed on the Bellevue Mitsubishi lot for resale.

During his bankruptcy proceedings, Diafos married Athena Modonas. They signed a prenuptial agreement, which set forth each spouse's separate property and debts and provided that all income and accumulations after marriage would remain the separate property of the spouse receiving it. They agreed not to create any community estate except by mutual consent effected in writing.

Shortly after the marriage, Ryan filed an adversarial proceeding in the bankruptcy action, naming Diafos and Modonas as defendants and alleging that Diafos' debt to him should not be discharged because it was obtained under false pretenses, false representation, or by actual fraud. He claimed that the financial statements Diafos provided to obtain the loans did not accurately reflect the extent of Diafos' debt and overstated the value of his assets.

Shortly before trial, Ryan and Diafos settled. Diafos agreed to pay $400,000 in installments. Ryan agreed not to file the judgment for six months if Diafos timely made the agreed upon installment payments. At the time the parties entered into the agreement, Diafos had been married for two years, ten months.

The parties performed according to their agreement for nearly five months. Then Diafos ceased making payments and Ryan received notice from Diafos' counsel that Diafos intended to make no more payments because Diafos had now been married for three years and was invoking the protection of RCW 26.16.200. That statute provides that creditors may not reach the earnings and accumulations of debtors who later marry unless the debts have been reduced to judgment within three years of the marriage.

Ryan proceeded to file the judgment and attempted to obtain writs of garnishment for both Diafos' and Modonas' accounts. He was successful as to Diafos' account, but the trial court quashed the writ as to Modonas' account. Diafos appeals and Ryan cross-appeals.

II

The parties' sole dispute in this case is what property, if any, Ryan may reach to satisfy his judgment against Diafos. Diafos argues that the parties' settlement agreement must be characterized as his separate debt to Ryan. Consequently, he argues that RCW 26.16.200 insulates him from the reach of Ryan's collection efforts.

RCW 26.16.200 is a partial abrogation of the historic rule that creditors could only access the separate property of a debtor to satisfy his separate debts.[2] Once a debtor married, all of his earnings and accumulations therefrom became community property and were thus beyond the reach of the creditors. This instant protection from creditors upon marriage gave rise to the term "marital bankruptcy."[3] RCW 26.16.200 now provides, however, that creditors of premarital debt may not only continue to reach the separate property of the debtor spouse, but they may also access the debtor's earnings and accumulations if the debt is reduced to judgment within three years of marriage.[4]

*307 Diafos first argues that his obligation to Ryan constitutes his premarital, separate debt, and that he is therefore insulated from Ryan's collection action because it was not reduced to judgment within three years of his marriage. But the parties' settlement agreement was not the product of a premarital contract debt. It arose out of Ryan's tort claim of fraud against Diafos. The original business debt serves only as a measure of damages.

Diafos next contends that Ryan's consent to judgment must be characterized as his postmarital separate debt because it "is not `based' on Diafos' `tortious conduct.'" In Haley v. Highland,[5] a postmarital judgment was entered upon a verdict that the spouse had committed tortious acts prior to his marriage. The supreme court held that a judgment on premarital tortious conduct is not a debt under RCW 26.16.200 and therefore, the protections of the statute do not apply to the tortfeasor spouse.[6] The court held that the judgment creditor could attach the defendant's one-half interest in community personal property if his separate property was insufficient to satisfy the claim.[7]

Diafos admits in his brief that "Ryan's adversary [proceeding] was based on claims which would have amounted to tortious conduct under Washington law if proven...." But he contends that proof of the claims was necessary to make the consent to judgment one based on tortious conduct. He further contends that because he did not admit to any liability for those claims in the settlement or consent to judgment, the judgment is not one for tortious conduct, but instead a postmarital contract debt. In the context of interpreting or enforcing provisions of a settlement agreement, courts will regard a settlement agreement as a contract.[8] But the validity of the agreement is not at issue here.

For purposes of res judicata,[9] or claim preclusion, a settlement agreement which is approved by the court is considered to be a final judgment on the merits, despite the fact that the issue of liability has not been adjudicated.[10] This is because "on the merits" does not require actual litigation. It is sufficient that the parties might have had their suit disposed of in that manner if they had properly presented and managed their respective cases.[11] In this context, Diafos' judgment sounds in tort.

We know of no requirement that properly characterizing the nature of the judgment for purposes of RCW 26.16.200

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Bluebook (online)
37 P.3d 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-diafos-washctapp-2001.