Janice L. Bergman v. Stuart M. Bergman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1997
Docket1948963
StatusPublished

This text of Janice L. Bergman v. Stuart M. Bergman (Janice L. Bergman v. Stuart M. Bergman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janice L. Bergman v. Stuart M. Bergman, (Va. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Moon, Judges Coleman and Willis Argued at Salem, Virginia

STUART M. BERGMAN

v. Record No. 1876-96-3

JANICE L. BERGMAN OPINION BY JUDGE SAM W. COLEMAN III JANICE L. BERGMAN JULY 15, 1997

v. Record No. 1948-96-3 STUART M. BERGMAN

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF MARTINSVILLE Martin F. Clark, Jr., Judge

Philip G. Gardner (Gardner, Gardner, Barrow & Sharpe, P.C., on briefs), for Stuart M. Bergman.

H. Morgan Griffith for Janice L. Bergman.

The issue in these appeals is whether the trial court erred

in interpreting the terms "reside" and "cease" when construing

the spousal support provision of the parties' separation

agreement. Both parties appeal the trial court ruling. We hold

that the trial court erred in finding that the word "reside" was

an ambiguous term requiring the admission of parol evidence.

Further, we hold that the evidence failed to prove that the

former wife violated the "reside" provision in the separation

agreement. Finally, we hold that the trial court erred in

finding that the word "cease" was ambiguous and interpreting that

term in the agreement to mean "temporarily suspend." Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's decision.

FACTS

In April 1989, Stuart and Janice Bergman entered into a

property settlement agreement in which Mr. Bergman agreed to pay

spousal support in an amount equal to twenty-five percent of his

salary up to $160,000 and twenty percent of his salary, including

bonuses, that exceeded $160,000. The paragraph of the agreement

in controversy stated, "[s]pousal maintenance and support shall cease in the event Janice L. Bergman resides with a male person

to whom she is not married excluding immediate relatives such as

her father or a brother or male child." (Emphasis added). The

trial court ratified, confirmed and approved the agreement and

incorporated certain provisions, including the spousal support

provision, into the final divorce decree.

In 1994, Mr. Bergman filed a petition to terminate spousal

support based on the foregoing provision of the settlement

agreement. He alleged that Janice Bergman was residing with a

male to whom she was not married.

At the hearing on Mr. Bergman's petition, Mr. Bergman

presented evidence that he had observed a man at his former

wife's home on several occasions. Mr. Bergman then hired a

private investigator, who began surveillance of Janice Bergman's

home to determine whether the man was "residing" with her. The

combined surveillance by Mr. Bergman and the investigator lasted

several years. During that time, the man's vehicle and Janice

- 2 - Bergman's vehicle were seen at the same location, either at her

home or his home, late at night on numerous occasions. Mr.

Bergman introduced into evidence detailed notes and a calendar

chronicling the dates and times on which he and the investigator

observed that the man "spent the night" with Janice Bergman.

Janice Bergman confirmed that the truck seen at her home by

her former husband and the investigator was that of a male friend

whom she dated. She testified that they had a dating

relationship and acknowledged that they had spent nights together

but only on intermittent weekends. When the man stayed

overnight, he slept in her room. Janice Bergman testified that

her friend did not keep his clothing or toiletries at her home

and did not have a key to her house. Further, her male friend

did not receive mail at her house, nor did they have a joint post

office box. Janice Bergman further testified that she and the

man never helped each other financially and that she did not use

his truck and he did not use her car. Janice Bergman refuted

several of the investigator's entries, stating that she and her

friend were out of town together at a time when, according to the

investigator's notes, the investigator had purportedly observed

their cars moving between the two houses. The man's brother and sister, who lived with him at their

parents' home, testified that he had moved into a bedroom in the

basement of their parents' home in July or August of 1993. His

sister testified that he usually had dinner with the family and

- 3 - rarely spent the night away from their home. The man's father

testified that his son did not spend the night away from home

often and that he did not pay rent or contribute to household

expenses.

The man's employer testified that, due to the nature of his

job in the maintenance department for Glass Dynamics, he was

subject to being called to work at any time. However, the man

never gave Janice Bergman's address or telephone number to his

employer. Instead, he gave his home and his parents' home phone

numbers and addresses. The parties' son, Robert, lived at home with his mother

until he went to college in 1994. He testified that, although

his mother and the man had a dating relationship, the man kept no

clothing or personal effects at his mother's home. The only item

in the house that the son could recall that belonged to the man

was a broken shop vacuum kept in the garage. While Robert was

living at home, the man stayed at the house, at most, three or

four nights per month and never two nights in a row. Robert also

testified that the investigator's notes concerning the man's

staying at the house during the weekend of December 4, 1993 were

incorrect because he recalled being home alone studying.

The trial judge ruled that the term "reside" as used in the

settlement agreement was ambiguous; therefore, the judge received

parol evidence to determine the parties' intent when using the

term, "reside." After receiving the evidence, the trial judge

- 4 - ruled that the term "reside" as used in the agreement meant: that either party would move into the home of the other a significant amount of clothing or personal property[,] . . . that the parties would spend more than four nights . . . together per calendar month under the same roof with each other[,] . . . that the parties would spend more than two consecutive nights together under the same roof, that would exclude vacations and out-of-town trips[, and] . . . that a party received mail or had a phone listing or made a significant economical or nonmonetary contribution to the home or the residence of the other . . . .

The judge found that, based upon the evidence presented, the man

was "residing" with Janice Bergman in violation of the settlement

agreement provision. The trial judge then interpreted the term

"shall cease" in the same provision to mean that spousal support

would be suspended while Janice Bergman was "residing" with an

unrelated male but would be reinstated once she was no longer

"residing" with "a male person" other than her father, brother,

or male child.

ANALYSIS Property settlement agreements are contracts subject to the

same rules of formation, validity, and interpretation as other

contracts. Smith v. Smith, 3 Va. App. 510, 513, 351 S.E.2d 593,

595 (1986); Tiffany v. Tiffany, 1 Va. App. 11, 15, 332 S.E.2d

796, 799 (1985). "Extrinsic evidence can be admitted to explain

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