In Re Marriage of Fiorito

50 P.3d 298
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 22, 2002
Docket48576-8-I
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 50 P.3d 298 (In Re Marriage of Fiorito) 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 Marriage of Fiorito, 50 P.3d 298 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

50 P.3d 298 (2002)

In re the MARRIAGE of Joseph A. FIORITO, Respondent, and
Shannon M. Fiorito, Appellant.

No. 48576-8-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

July 22, 2002.

*300 Craig Hansen, Bellevue, for Appellant.

Andrea Vogel Gilbert, Mark Timothy Higgins, Seattle, for Respondent.

*299 COX, A.C.J.

Following entry of findings, conclusions, an order of child support, and a decree of dissolution, one of the former spouses appealed. Thereafter, the other former spouse died. At issue is whether we may still review this matter, notwithstanding the death of one of the parties to the dissolution. We hold that the death of one of the parties to a dissolution proceeding during an appeal does not bar review. Accordingly, we deny the motion of the Estate of Joseph Fiorito (Estate) to terminate review. We also hold that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in the division of property and the award of child support. We affirm.

Shannon and Joseph Fiorito were married in 1996. Mr. Fiorito was very wealthy at the time the couple married. He received a salary for working at a quarry his family owned. He also owned extensive real estate and other property. There was no prenuptial agreement. The couple separated in 1997, and reunited that same year. They had twin daughters, Hannah and Maria, in October 1998. They separated in November 1999 and moved into separate residences. They separated permanently in the summer of 2000. Mr. Fiorito began dissolution proceedings in June 2000.

Mr. Fiorito was being treated for cancer at the time of trial. He testified that he had established a trust for the benefit of his two minor daughters, and that all of his estate would be inherited by his seven daughters, including those from other relationships.

After a bench trial, the trial court entered an order of child support, findings of fact and conclusions of law, and a decree. The court awarded all of the real estate and most of the other property to Mr. Fiorito. Ms. Fiorito received all of the property that the trial court determined to be her separate property, and most of the community property. Ms. Firorito appealed. Following her appeal, Mr. Fiorito died.

Review of Dissolution Proceeding Following Death of a Party

The Estate moves to terminate review of this appeal, arguing that the death of *301 Mr. Fiorito abated any action regarding the dissolution of his marriage. The Estate appears to rely on Dwyer v. Nolan,[1] arguing that our Supreme Court's recent decision in In re Marriage of Himes[2] applies only to cases in which there is evidence of fraud. The Estate is mistaken. Himes expressly overrules Dwyer, and there is no limitation to the ruling of the type argued by the Estate.

In 1905, our Supreme Court held in Dwyer that it had no jurisdiction to hear an action for vacation of dissolution after the death of one of the parties because an action for dissolution is purely personal.[3] In that case, the wife sought vacation of a divorce granted to the husband six years earlier without, she argued, jurisdiction over her. The court described the distribution of property in a divorce as merely "incidental" to the primary purpose, termination of the marriage.[4] Washington State appears to have been the only state in the country to follow this rule.[5]

Washington courts applied this rule for almost a century. In McPherson v. McPherson,[6] our Supreme Court considered an appeal of an interlocutory decree settling the property rights of the parties to a divorce decree. While the appeal was pending, one of the parties died. The court determined that an interlocutory decree abates upon the death of one of the parties, whether before or after the interlocutory decree was entered.[7] The court held that it was without authority to review an interlocutory decree of divorce after the death of one of the parties, except where the rights of third parties were involved in the decree itself, and then only for the purpose of adjudicating the rights of such third parties.[8]

In Crockett v. Crockett,[9] our Supreme Court held that Ms. Crockett's son, administrator to her estate, could not attack his parents' divorce decree after her death. Mr. Crockett had obtained the decree while his wife was confined in a mental institution. The court observed that the son did not have any interest in the property involved in the proceeding until his mother's death, which was seven years after the final decree of divorce.[10] The court declared that the subject matter of the action had ceased to exist at Ms. Crockett's death, and the administrator of her estate could not, under any theory, bring an action to vacate the decree.[11]

Our Supreme Court expressly overruled this line of cases in In re Marriage of Himes. In that case, Victor Himes obtained a dissolution of his marriage to Frances Himes. He filed a fraudulent affidavit for service by publication, falsely stating that he was unable to locate her for purposes of personal service of the summons.[12] After his death, Ms. Himes moved to vacate the dissolution, arguing that it was void because Mr. Himes obtained it by fraud.[13] Because of the dissolution and Mr. Himes' subsequent remarriage, the Navy provided his surviving spouse benefits to his second wife, rather than to his first wife, Ms. Himes.

Ms. Himes argued that a court should be able to vacate a dissolution decree after the death of a party on equitable grounds. She also argued that the court should reconsider the rule because, with the "increasing prevalence of surviving spouse benefit plans offered under federal, state, and private annuities, dissolutions are no longer `purely *302 personal actions' because they involve substantial property rights."[14]

Our Supreme Court agreed, discussing its holdings in Dwyer, Crockett, and McPherson. The court also discussed the majority rule reflected in the United States Supreme Court's holding in Bell v. Bell.[15]

Accordingly, our Supreme Court announced that "[w]e believe the facts in [Himes] justify our reconsideration of the rule in Dwyer on equitable grounds."[16] The court expressly "overrule[d] the 1905 decision in Dwyer v. Nolan which established the principle that death of one party to a divorce or dissolution proceeding eliminates the subject matter of the action."[17]

The Estate argues that the rule announced in Himes is limited to cases where fraud is involved. We do not read so narrowly the decision to overrule Dwyer. If our Supreme Court had meant to limit its holding to factually similar cases, it could have said so. It did not.

The Estate also argues that this case is not reviewable under Himes because Ms. Fiorito has no "substantial property interest" at stake. This argument ignores both the express holding in Himes and the nature of dissolution proceedings.

Here, there are both equitable grounds and significant third party interests that support review of the decree, notwithstanding the death of Mr. Fiorito. First, Ms. Fiorito asserts that the division of property was not just and equitable. The dissolution statute requires the court to divide the property in such a way "as shall appear just and equitable after considering all relevant factors."[18]

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.3d 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-fiorito-washctapp-2002.