Knutson v. Knutson

973 P.2d 596, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 29, 1999 WL 112360
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1999
DocketS-8246
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 973 P.2d 596 (Knutson v. Knutson) 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
Knutson v. Knutson, 973 P.2d 596, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 29, 1999 WL 112360 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

When Randy and Lesley Knutson dissolved their marriage and divided their property in 1988, they agreed to postpone selling the marital residence until its market value rose. In 1997 Randy sought judicial authority to buy out Lesley’s share in the still-unsold house. The superior court found the parties’ agreement to be ambiguous; interpreting the agreement, it ordered Randy to pay Lesley $4,301.50 to buy out her equity interest. The superior court correctly found that the agreement required division of the parties’ equity, but it was error to implicitly fiijd that the parties did not intend to share the benefits of the post-dissolution reduction of their mortgage debt. We remand for recalculation of the value of Lesley’s interest to correct that error. It was also error to fail to account for mortgage assistance Randy received that increased the parties’ mortgage debt by about $7,900. But it was not error to credit Randy with twenty percent of his post-dissolution home improvement expenses given evidence that the improvements might maintain or increase the value of the house.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Randy Thomas Knutson and Lesley Ann Knutson (now Logue) married in 1974. In late 1987 they petitioned for dissolution of their marriage. Neither was represented by counsel.

Their petition incorporated an amended agreement concerning disposition of their Eagle River marital residence. They had purchased it for $123,440. When they petitioned for dissolution, its market value was about $104,700, and the mortgage balance was about $117,000. Because the house then had a “negative equity,” they decided to wait for the housing market to improve before selling it. Their amended dissolution agreement added the following term: “Husband will .occupy the house and pay its mortgage and utilities until it sells, whereupon both parties shall equally split either the profits or debt.” They also agreed that Randy would receive all household furniture. Superior Court Judge Peter A. Michalski granted the petition in early 1988.

With Lesley’s approval, Randy reorganized the mortgage debt in January 1989. The reorganization increased the term from sixteen to thirty years, at the original interest rate. At the same time Randy also received a twenty-four-month subsidy of his mortgage payments through a homeowner’s assistance plan. The subsidy added $6,615.67 to the mortgage balance and was to be amortized over the life of the reorganized loan. The reorganization also paid the $1,293.25 January mortgage payment, and increased the new mortgage balance by that amount. Lesley later testified that she had not known of or agreed to the subsidy; Randy did not claim that she had. Lesley remained jointly liable with Randy on the reorganized mortgage. As a result of the 1989 reorganization, the mortgage balance rose from $112,931.81 to $121,698.02.

Randy tried to refinance the mortgage in 1994 to take advantage of lower interest rates. According to Randy, Lesley withheld her approval, and Randy could not refinance. Randy contends that he lost the chance to save more than $80,000 over the term of the loan because Lesley blocked the refinancing, although no admissible evidence established that her alleged refusal caused measurable financial loss. Lesley denied that she had refused to cooperate.

In January 1997 Randy moved under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b) for relief from the property settlement agreement incorporated into the dissolution decree; he alleged that he feared Lesley would stymie all future refinancing efforts. He asked the court to modify the dissolution decree so that he could “buy out” Lesley’s interest in the house. *599 Lesley did not object to a buyout, but disagreed with Randy’s proposed method for calculating the buyout price.

The parties exchanged memoranda and testified at a hearing before Superior Court Judge Sen K. Tan. They offered conflicting interpretations of their agreement. Randy contended that the parties intended to divide equally any “profit,” which he defined as the value of the house at the time of sale minus the cost of sale, the original purchase price, the original closing costs, the costs of pre-dissolution improvements, and the increased value he attributed to post-dissolution improvements. Randy calculated that a hypothetical sale of the house at fair market value in 1997 would result in a loss of $9,374.17. 1 Although his motion did not expressly say so, it implied that Lesley should pay him for half of this hypothetical loss.

Lesley contended that the parties intended to divide equally the “equity” in the property, which she defined as the value of the house at the time of the buyout ($127,500) less the mortgage balance then owed ($113,043.77). She concluded that her equity interest was half of $14,456.23. Lesley also argued that Randy’s 1989 mortgage reorganization entitled her to a credit of $3,954.46, on her theory that Randy had reduced the parties’ equity in the house by obtaining the mortgage subsidy under the state homeowner’s assistance plan and the payment of the January 1989 mortgage installment. She contended that Randy’s proposed buyout did not warrant Rule 60(b) relief, but that the court simply needed to determine the intent of the parties at the time of the dissolution agreement and make findings as to each party’s financial interest in the home.

The superior court declined to grant Rule 60(b) relief to Randy, but “clarif[ied] the ambiguous terms of the property settlement.” It rejected each party’s interpretation of the agreement; it stated that Randy’s calculation deprived Lesley of her share of the equity in the house at. the time of dissolution, whereas Lesley’s calculation allowed her to “reap a windfall” from Randy’s contributions to the equity in the form of post-dissolution improvements and mortgage payments. To determine Lesley’s equity interest, the court calculated what part of the increased value was attributable to market conditions, and what part was attributable to Randy’s post-dissolution contributions. The court therefore made the following calculation:

Sale price $127,500.00
Mortgage debt at time of dissolution -$117,000.00
Post-dissolution addition to value -$ 1,897.00
$ 8,603.00

The court concluded from this calculation that $8,603 of the market value was attributable to equity jointly contributed before the dissolution and to the jointly shared increase in value due to improved market conditions. The court found that the remaining increases in equity resulted from Randy’s post-dissolution improvements and mortgage payments. The court ordered Randy to pay Lesley half of the increase attributable to the agreement and pre-dissolution equity contribution, $4,301.50, to obtain her interest in the property.

Lesley appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

The interpretation of the parties’ dissolution agreement is a question of law. 2

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Bluebook (online)
973 P.2d 596, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 29, 1999 WL 112360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knutson-v-knutson-alaska-1999.