Matthews v. Matthews

1998 OK 66, 961 P.2d 831, 69 O.B.A.J. 2415, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 71, 1998 WL 352752
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1998
Docket87300
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1998 OK 66 (Matthews v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Matthews, 1998 OK 66, 961 P.2d 831, 69 O.B.A.J. 2415, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 71, 1998 WL 352752 (Okla. 1998).

Opinion

OP ALA, Justice.

¶ 1 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether the divorced wife, a cotenant (with the ex-husband) of the property in contest, has established an enforceable post-decree *833 plea for the premises’ sale on execution by showing an interest that is superior to the former husband’s defense of homestead-status protection. We answer in the negative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

¶ 2 George and Johnnalyn Matthews [husband, former husband, divorced husband and wife, former wife and divorced wife] were divorced by consent decree entered on 24 May 1984. Their marital property came to be divided, custody of two minor children was awarded to the wife, and the husband’s child support obligation was set.

¶ 3 According to the decree’s terms, the wife took possession of the marital home where she remained for over a year. 1 She remarried and moved to California with her children and the new spouse. The divorced husband then moved back into the former spousal home. He neglected to make child support payments for several years. The wife, who had commuted the arrearage to judgment, 2 pressed for a sale of the premises on execution. The husband defended by interposing his homestead-status protection. 3 After overruling the husband’s motion to quash and his objection to sale, the trial court confirmed the sale that was pressed by the wife. He timely appealed from the two adverse decisions. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.

II

THE OWNERSHIP REGIME OF THE PROPERTY IN SUIT

A.

Jr The Parties’ Property Ownership Regime Under The Terms Of Their Divorce Decree

¶ 5 According to the 24 May 1984 divorce decree, which incorporates the party’s predi-voree settlement agreement, the wife is to receive as her “separate property ... the home of the parties.” 4 The decree provides that the wife is “to have possession of the home” until she remarries or abandons it, at which time the husband “has the right to possession of the home” with the power to sell it. In the latter event, the equity is to be divided equally between the parties. The wife lived in the home until 1985 when she remarried and departed from the state. The *834 husband then moved into the spousal house and began making mortgage payments. The parties agree that since 1985 the husband has been occupying this property as his homestead.

¶ 6 Although the decree sets aside the property to the wife, it gives the husband occupancy rights (on wife’s remarriage or abandonment of possession), an equal share in the equity on sale of the premises, as well as the exclusive power to sell the property. Where a divorce is granted and the property must be divided, the law enjoins that there be a complete severance of the common title. 5 The portion to be awarded each spouse should be free from the claims and domination of the other. These legal strictures do not apply if the parties agree to a different spousal property’s division and waive the law’s requirement for severance of title. 6 Whenever by spousal agreement the court awards marital property to both parties without severing their title, the decree is deemed to create in them an estate in cotenancy.

B.

¶ 7 The Property Ownership Regime Created By The Terms Of The Post-Divorce Quiet-Title Decree

¶ 8 When the husband’s child support obligation fell into arrears, the wife had the unpaid amount commuted to judgment. 7 She then brought suit to quiet her title against the husband’s decree-conferred interest in the property. The trial court refused to grant the relief sought. It found from the terms of the earlier decree that the parties had agreed (a) they would each retain an undivided one-half interest in the spousal property, (b) the wife’s right to possession and her duty to pay the mortgage would end if she either abandoned possession or remarried, (c) the husband’s right to possession and his duty to pay would commence only if either of these events was to occur and (d) once the husband moved in, he would have a right to possession and the exclusive power to sell the property. The trial court also ruled that (a) because the parties’ predivorce agreement was final, it could not be collaterally attacked in the quiet-title suit and (b) the husband’s claim to homestead status that carries with it an exemption from sale on execution was uncontroverted.

¶ 9 It is clear that in this proceeding the parties’ muniment of title in the contested property is no longer that which was conferred on them in the divorce suit, but rather that which stands redefined by the later quiet-title decree. The latter disposition— as well as the former — settles the parties’ title to the property in contest here as tenants in common.

Ill

¶10 THE INCIDENCE OF THE TENANCY IN COMMON AND ITS IMPACT ON THE HOMESTEAD-STATUS PROTECTION FROM SALE ON EXECUTION

Acts In Derogation of Another Cotenant’s Title Or Rights

¶ 11 Tenancy in common is a joint interest in property, the only essential element of which is a unity of right of possession. 8 Each tenant in common has a separate and distinct title which is held independently of the other cotenants. One who stands in a cotenancy relation to another may not act or claim “in derogation of’ 9 the *835 latter’s interest. 10 This means that a coten-ant is not allowed to lessen or diminish the value or effect of the other cotenant’s right, title, interest or status in the land. 11

¶ 12 A homestead status in one’s land is an interest attached by law for the purpose of protecting the entire family of its holder. 12 The protection afforded by one’s homestead status is included in the bundle of sticks shielded by the rule against acts or claims that are in derogation of the eoten-ant’s interest. 13

The Interplay of Burdens

¶ 13 When the wife sought to subject the husband’s interest to a sale on execution, she had the initial burden — which she was able to sustain — to show that she had judgments for commuted child support delinquency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 OK 66, 961 P.2d 831, 69 O.B.A.J. 2415, 1998 Okla. LEXIS 71, 1998 WL 352752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-matthews-okla-1998.