Linda S. Miller v. Chester E. Miller

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 11, 2007
Docket2354064
StatusUnpublished

This text of Linda S. Miller v. Chester E. Miller (Linda S. Miller v. Chester E. Miller) 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
Linda S. Miller v. Chester E. Miller, (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Beales Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

CHESTER E. MILLER

v. Record No. 2223-06-4 MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY LINDA S. MILLER JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES SEPTEMBER 11, 2007 LINDA S. MILLER

v. Record No. 2354-06-4

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY LeRoy F. Millette, Jr., Judge

Catherine S. Croft (Farrell & Croft, P.C., on briefs), for Chester E. Miller.

Elizabeth Munro von Keller (Arthur Von Keller IV, on briefs), for Linda S. Miller.

Chester E. Miller (husband) appeals from a final decree of divorce from Linda S. Miller

(wife) entered by the Prince William County Circuit Court on August 16, 2006, and from the

accompanying Court Order Acceptable for Processing (COAP) that the trial court entered on the

same day as the final decree. Wife also appeals from the final decree. We have consolidated their

appeals and address their contentions here.

Husband argues that the trial court erred in finding the antenuptial agreement between the

parties was ambiguous and accepting parol evidence on the intentions of the parties. He argues this

error was compounded when the court interpreted the antenuptial agreement as allowing distribution

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. of his pension and allowing an award of spousal support to wife. He also claims the trial court erred

when it included language in the COAP allowing wife to transfer her interest in the pension to an

alternate payee should she predecease husband. In her appeal, wife argues that the trial court erred

in finding the antenuptial agreement remained valid, even though the court also found the parties

mutually intended to revoke the agreement. Wife claims she relied to her detriment on the

revocation of the agreement. For the reasons noted herein, we affirm the trial court’s rulings.

I. Background

Prior to their marriage in 1987, the parties signed an antenuptial agreement in wife’s

home country of Canada, but stipulated that the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia would

govern their contract. Several months after the birth of their first child in 1988, the parties

agreed that they no longer needed the antenuptial agreement and threw the only known copy of it

into a fire. After the parties separated in 2004, wife discovered that her mother had another copy

of the antenuptial agreement. The parties agree that this newly discovered document is an exact

copy of the original agreement.

Paragraph 1 of the antenuptial agreement sets the term of the contract at “199 years from

the date hereof or until the parties herein shall mutually agree to its termination.” Paragraph 2 of

the agreement states:

Each party shall during his or her lifetime keep and retain sole ownership, control and enjoyment of all property, real and personal now owned or hereafter acquired by him or her, free and clear of any claim by the other. Complete lists of [husband’s] and [wife’s] personal property are attached as Exhibits A and B respectively.1

1 The exhibits list several items of personal property, specific retirement accounts, and proceeds from the sales of their separate homes. The parties agree that these listed values constitute separate property and do not argue on appeal that the trial court erred in distributing these amounts.

-2- In paragraph 9, the agreement states:

In the event of dissolution of the contemplated marriage between [wife] and [husband], these sums ([wife $10,032.00 Canadian and [husband] $48,876.00 American) shall be returned free and clear in whole or proportionately prior to any equitable distribution of marital property, after calculating the amounts in a common currency at the rate of exchange at the time of calculation.

Paragraph 10 provides, “This agreement contains the entire understanding of the parties. There

are no representations, warranties, promises, covenants or undertakings, oral or otherwise, other

than those expressly set forth herein.” The agreement does not contain a section of definitions

and does not define marital property or separate property. The agreement does not mention

spousal support or alimony.

The trial court found that, although the parties mutually intended to revoke the

antenuptial agreement when they threw it into the fire, the agreement was still binding because

the revocation was not in writing as required by Code § 20-153. The Court then found the

antenuptial agreement was ambiguous and accepted parol evidence.

Wife testified that the pensions existing at the time of the marriage were separate

property under the agreement, but she did not intend to waive any rights to future accruals of

pensions when she signed the agreement. She also testified that the agreement was not intended

to prevent her from developing an interest in property acquired during the marriage, and she did

not think her husband interpreted the agreement that way until divorce proceedings started. The

agreement, according to wife’s testimony, was intended only to protect the parties’ interests in

the property that they owned prior to the marriage and did not address any other issues.

During initial questioning by his counsel, husband essentially agreed that the antenuptial

agreement covered only property existing when the parties were wed. Husband later said he

thought all the property that he bought during the marriage would be his separate property. The

trial court found the agreement was not intended to cover property acquired during the marriage, -3- but instead was designed to protect the assets that the parties owned before the marriage. The

trial court also found the agreement did not address spousal support.

As part of the equitable distribution award, the trial court awarded a portion of husband’s

Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) pension, acquired after the marriage, to wife.

The COAP entered for submission to the federal government included a provision that allowed

wife, in the event of her death, to award her share of the pension to the parties’ children.

Husband was ordered to pay $1,300 per month in spousal support to wife for four years,

then $500 per month for an additional four and a half years.

II. Analysis

A. Enforcement of the Antenuptial Agreement

Wife argues that the parties effectively revoked the antenuptial agreement. Alternatively,

she argues that equitable estoppel prevented husband from asking the trial court to enforce the

agreement. Husband argues that they did not revoke the agreement and estoppel does not apply.

At the time that the parties signed the antenuptial agreement (and still today) Code

§ 20-153 stated: “After marriage, a premarital agreement may be amended or revoked only by a

written agreement signed by the parties.” Wife acknowledges that the parties did not revoke the

agreement in writing. However, she contends Code § 20-150(8) permits parties to contract

regarding “[a]ny other matter, including their personal rights and obligations, not in violation of

public policy or a statute imposing a criminal penalty.” She argues that the parties included in

their agreement a provision allowing the parties to “mutually agree to its termination” and,

thereby, they contracted to permit revocation of the antenuptial agreement without another

written agreement. Alternatively, wife argues that she relied to her detriment on the

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