Jan Kay Estes v. Jeff Edward Titus

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2008
Docket133098
StatusPublished

This text of Jan Kay Estes v. Jeff Edward Titus (Jan Kay Estes v. Jeff Edward Titus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jan Kay Estes v. Jeff Edward Titus, (Mich. 2008).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan Chief Justice: Justices:

Opinion Clifford W. Taylor Michael F. Cavanagh Elizabeth A. Weaver Marilyn Kelly Maura D. Corrigan Robert P. Young, Jr. Stephen J. Markman

FILED JULY 2, 2008

JAN KAY ESTES, personal representative of the estate of Douglas Duane Estes,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 133098

JEFF EDWARD TITUS,

Defendant-Appellee,

and

JULIE L. SWABASH, formerly known as JULIE L. TITUS,

Appellant.

BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH

KELLY, J.

In this case of first impression, we are asked whether the Uniform

Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA)1 applies to a transfer of property made pursuant

to a property settlement agreement incorporated in a divorce judgment. We hold

1 MCL 566.31 et seq. that it does apply and that a UFTA claim is not an impermissible collateral attack

on a divorce judgment. However, property owned as tenants by the entirety is not

subject to process by a creditor holding a claim against only one spouse. Such

property is not an “asset” under the UFTA. Therefore, its distribution in a divorce

judgment does not constitute a “transfer” for purposes of that act.

Because the trial court refused to apply the UFTA in this case, it never

addressed whether plaintiff stated a valid cause of action against Julie Swabash

under the act. Thus, the question whether plaintiff raised issues of fact concerning

Jeff Titus’s actual intent to defraud her was not properly before the Court of

Appeals. Hence, we vacate the portion of the Court of Appeals judgment that

discusses the factual sufficiency of plaintiff’s claim of a transfer made with an

actual intent to defraud. We affirm in part and vacate in part the judgment of the

Court of Appeals.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The relevant facts of this case are as follows. On September 23, 2002,

plaintiff Jan Estes filed a wrongful death action against defendant Jeff Titus, the

incarcerated murderer of plaintiff’s husband.2 Not long after, Titus’s wife, now

known as Julie Swabash, filed for divorce. A divorce judgment entered on March

2 Titus shot plaintiff’s husband and another hunter during deer hunting season in 1990. The case was not solved until a decade later, and Titus was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to a nonparolable term of life in prison in 2002.

23, 2003, providing Swabash with nearly all the marital assets pursuant to the

parties’ property settlement agreement.3 The judgment explained that the property

distribution was unequal because Titus was serving a life sentence in prison and

was relieved of any child support obligation for the couple’s 17-year-old daughter.

On March 24, 2003, plaintiff sought to intervene in the divorce action. She

challenged the distribution of assets to which Titus was entitled in anticipation of

obtaining a recovery from him in her wrongful death action. The divorce court

denied the motion, and plaintiff did not appeal the denial. Instead, on January 20,

2005, after obtaining a wrongful death award, she moved under MCL 600.6128 to

join Swabash in the wrongful death action in an effort to collect the judgment.

Plaintiff contended that the Tituses’ property settlement had been a

fraudulent transfer within the meaning of the UFTA. The trial court held that it

lacked the authority to amend the judgment entered by the divorce court. It

declined to add Swabash as a party, dissolved the restraining order, and quashed

the discovery subpoena it had issued earlier. Plaintiff appealed.

Judge Markey, writing for the majority in the Court of Appeals, joined by

Judge White, held that the UFTA applied to property transfers in divorce cases.

The Court of Appeals majority went further, holding that plaintiff had sufficiently

3 The terms of the parties’ property settlement agreement were included in the divorce judgment, but the agreement explicitly was not merged in the judgment.

established a claim under the UFTA by demonstrating an actual intent to defraud.4

The Court remanded the matter to the trial court so that Swabash could be added

as a party defendant to the supplemental proceedings in the wrongful death case.5

Judge O’Connell dissented in part in the belief that the Court of Appeals majority

was allowing a collateral attack on the divorce judgment. We granted leave to

appeal.6

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

This appeal presents jurisdictional issues, which we review de novo.7 The

interpretation of statutes and court rules is also a question of law subject to de

novo review,8 as is the application of legal doctrines, such as res judicata and

collateral estoppel.9

III. THE UFTA’S APPLICATION TO PROPERTY SETTLEMENTS IN DIVORCE CASES

In her appeal, Swabash argues that the Legislature did not intend to include

property distributions in divorce cases within the purview of the UFTA. We note

initially that the language of the act does not exempt from its reach property

4 See MCL 566.34(2).

5 Estes v Titus, 273 Mich App 356; 731 NW2d 119 (2006).

6 Estes v Titus, 478 Mich 864 (2007).

7 Lapeer Co Clerk v Lapeer Circuit Judges, 465 Mich 559, 566; 640 NW2d

567 (2002). 8 Cardinal Mooney High School v Michigan High School Athletic Ass’n, 437 Mich 75, 80; 467 NW2d 21 (1991). 9 Ghaffari v Turner Constr Co, 473 Mich 16, 19; 699 NW2d 687 (2005).

transferred pursuant to divorce judgments. However, the definition of “asset” in

the UFTA does exempt some property held as tenants by the entirety.10 Hence, in

a UFTA action, marital property held by the entirety is exempt from the creditor of

only one spouse when the property is transferred pursuant to a divorce judgment.

But property transferred pursuant to a property settlement agreement incorporated

in a divorce judgment is subject to a UFTA action if it meets the definition of an

asset.

A. TRANSFER

We reject Swabash’s claim that the UFTA can never reach the transfer of

property in divorce actions. The UFTA defines “transfer” at MCL 556.31(l) as

“every mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary,

of disposing of or parting with an asset or an interest in an asset, and includes

payment of money, release, and creation of a lien or other encumbrance.”

A court may provide for the distribution of property in a divorce judgment,

and, when it enters, the judgment has the same effect as a deed or a bill of sale.11

10 MCL 566.31(b)(iii). 11 MCL 552.401 provides:

The circuit court of this state may include in any decree of divorce or of separate maintenance entered in the circuit court appropriate provisions awarding to a party all or a portion of the property, either real or personal, owned by his or her spouse, as appears to the court to be equitable under all the circumstances of the case, if it appears from the evidence in the case that the party contributed to the acquisition, improvement, or accumulation of the (continued…)

A property settlement agreement incorporated in a divorce judgment disposes of

the parties’ interests in the marital property. As part of the judgment, it effectuates

a transfer for purposes of the UFTA when the divorce judgment enters.

We conclude that plaintiff may challenge the Tituses’ property settlement

agreement incorporated in the divorce judgment as a transfer within the purview

of the UFTA.

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