Melissa v. Melissa

212 Cal. App. 4th 598
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 2012
DocketNos. G045899, G046261
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 212 Cal. App. 4th 598 (Melissa v. Melissa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melissa v. Melissa, 212 Cal. App. 4th 598 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion

O’LEARY, P. J.

Raymond Melissa (Raymond) challenges the trial court’s invalidation of Roberta Melissa’s (Roberta) spousal support waiver contained in a 1985 prenuptial agreement.1 Raymond argues the court erred because the waiver “does not offend contemporary public policy” and the new rules requiring a spouse to be represented by independent counsel before waiving support cannot be retroactively applied. (See Earn. Code, § 1612.)2 We conclude the trial court properly applied the law in effect when the parties signed the agreement, i.e., spousal support waivers were deemed invalid as being against public policy. We affirm the judgment.

I

In the summer of 1984, Raymond (then 41 years old) met Roberta (then 32 years old). Both had been married before. Raymond told Roberta he was retired but he had started another company. He owned a home in Newport Beach, a new Jaguar automobile, and had a net worth of over $2 million. She worked as a nurse and rented an apartment in Huntington Beach. After dating for a few months, they moved in together with the plan of deciding after six months whether to get married. When Raymond told Roberta he was not interested in marriage, she moved out.

Soon thereafter, the couple reconciled and decided to get married. They set a wedding date of August 8, 1985, and Roberta moved back in with Raymond. Around this same time, they learned Roberta was pregnant.

The parties disagree on when Raymond first asked Roberta to sign a prenuptial agreement. However, they agree it was clearly Raymond’s condition to getting married. Raymond told Roberta his last divorce was very difficult and he did not want to pay spousal support. Raymond explained he would not get married unless she signed a prenuptial agreement. Roberta agreed to sign it.

Raymond asked Craig Willford, the attorney son of his neighbor, to draft the prenuptial agreement (Agreement). Raymond told Willford what he [601]*601wanted included in the Agreement. Roberta had no input about the wording of the document. They executed the Agreement on August 5, 1985, at a bank in front of a notary.

The parties dispute when Roberta first saw the Agreement. Roberta recalled the first time she saw it was on August 5, three days before the wedding, and when all the invitations had already been sent out. Willford told her she could have her own attorney review the Agreement, but she did not do so. She did not understand some of the language in the Agreement. By contrast, Raymond recalled Willford came over to the house in July to explain the Agreement to him and Roberta. He agreed with Roberta that they executed the document in August.

Willford could only “vaguely” remember the events. He did not recall meeting with Raymond or Roberta to go over the Agreement. Based on notes and dates in his file, Willford believed he did not prepare the Agreement until sometime in August.

The Agreement is approximately three pages long. It begins with the recital, “Both parties to this Agreement have made to each other a full and complete disclosure of the nature, extent, and probable value of all of their property, estate, and expectancies. In particular, Raymond . . . has disclosed his ownership of the single family residence in Orange County and holdings of corporate stock.” No other specific disclosures of assets are made in the Agreement. Raymond recalls he told Roberta about his assets in March 1985.

The next recital stated Raymond was represented by counsel and Roberta was advised of the right to be represented by independent counsel. In addition, the Agreement stated Roberta “admits and acknowledges that any failure to seek independent counsel [did] not stem from any inducement of Raymond ... or his counsel, but rather upon her having read the Agreement, understood it, and having made a knowledgeable waiver of the right to counsel in that regard. Both parties admit and acknowledge that they have read the Agreement, and understand its meaning and legal consequences.”

The first term of the Agreement provided each party waived any claim “in the separate property of the other.” In addition, the Agreement discussed spousal support: “Each of the parties acknowledge that while the case of In re Marriage of Higgason (1973) 10 [Cal.3d] 476 [110 Cal.Rptr. 897, 516 P.2d 289] (Higgason) . . . provides that the potential for the future right of spousal support cannot be waived by an agreement, the parties acknowledge that the law (relating to the authority of individuals to enter into contracts as such [602]*602authority is [ajffected by the marital status of the parties) is in a state of flux (e.g. Marvin v. Marvin [(1976) 18 Cal.3d 660 [134 Cal.Rptr. 815, 557 P.2d 106]]). The parties do specifically state and acknowledge that each is currently capable of supporting himself or herself and that neither party is entering the marital relationship with the expectancy of developing reliance upon the earning capacity of the other. Therefore, for mutual consideration of this waiver and of the expected marriage, each party mutually releases the other and waives any potential future rights which would have or may have accrued for spousal support in the event of a legal separation, dissolution of marriage, or action therefore. The parties further agree that at anytime either changes his or her intention to become reliant upon the earnings of the other, notice of such change in intent shall be given to the other in writing.”

The next term of the Agreement was concerned with what should occur when separate property is commingled with community property and how the community property should be valued. The final term stated separate property sold or reinvested during the marriage would remain separate property.

After the parties married, they had a son, R., who is mentally disabled, and also suffers from fragile X syndrome and autism. Roberta stopped working full time in 1997. The parties separated in October 2009, and Roberta filed her petition for dissolution in November 2009. After the separation, Roberta lived with and cared for R., who is now 24 years old. He is able to work part time as a janitor, earning $9 an hour. Roberta is unemployed.

The trial court granted Raymond’s motion to bifurcate the issue of whether the Agreement was valid. The court heard testimony from four witnesses: Raymond, Roberta, Willford, and David Monkarsh (R.’s psychologist). After considering the briefing and oral argument, the court framed the issue as having three subparts: (1) Was the entire Agreement valid and enforceable? (2) Was the waiver in 1985 void as being against public policy? (3) If not void, was the waiver unenforceable due to it being “unjust or unconscionable”?

The court stated it would start with the second question, and after considering the Higgason case, the relevant statutes, and In re Marriage of Pendleton & Fireman (2000) 24 Cal.4th 39 [99 Cal.Rptr.2d 278, 5 P.3d 839] (Pendleton), the court concluded it must apply the law in effect in 1985. It determined the legal authority in 1985, including the Higgason case, was very clear that waivers of spousal support were void as against public policy. The court determined the Pendleton

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Bluebook (online)
212 Cal. App. 4th 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melissa-v-melissa-calctapp-2012.