O'Connor v. Zeldin
This text of 848 P.2d 647 (O'Connor v. Zeldin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Defendant appeals a judgment for specific performance of an oral property settlement agreement entered into before the entry of a dissolution judgment and the death of defendant’s wife. On de novo review, ORS .19.125(3), we affirm.
Defendant and his wife (decedent) negotiated and entered into an oral property settlement agreement in contemplation of dissolving their marriage. The terms of the agreement were stated in open, court in the dissolution proceeding and, when questioned by the court, both parties expressed their agreement.1 The dissolution hearing was recessed so that the agreement could be memorialized in writing. Before the final dissolution judgment was entered, decedent died. Plaintiff, the personal representative of decedent’s estate, brought this action for specific performance of the property settlement agreement.2 The trial court held that the agreement was enforceable and imposed a trust, for the benefit of decedent’s estate and beneficiaries, on the property granted to decedent under the terms of the agreement and now held by defendant.
Defendant assigns error to the court’s ruling that entry of the dissolution judgment was not a condition precedent to the enforceability of the agreement. In addition, he assigns error to the court’s purported failure to consider whether the parties intended that the agreement extinguish their inheritance rights if one party died before the dissolution judgment was entered.
[623]*623Defendant does not dispute that the settlement agreement would have been enforceable, had the dissolution judgment been entered. The issue is whether it was enforceable before decedent died or whether it was conditioned on entry of the dissolution judgment. That issue is answered by construing the agreement in the light of the surrounding circumstances in order to ascertain the parties’ intent. Brown, Adm’r v. Miles, 193 Or 466, 480, 238 P2d 761 (1951). Our review of the evidence indicates that there was no condition precedent or subsequent to the enforceability of the agreement discussed or agreed on. When an agreement contains definite and unambiguous promises, there must be equally clear and unambiguous language before this court will find a condition precedent. Mignot v. Parkhill, 237 Or 450, 458, 391 P2d 755 (1964).
Defendant argues that this case is controlled by Hempe and Hempe, 54 Or App 490, 635 P2d 403 (1981), rev den 292 Or 356 (1982). However, the holding in Hempe is fact specific. In Hempe, the written settlement agreement had been lost. We relied on evidence of the parties’ intent to determine when the agreement was to become enforceable. On the basis of the surviving spouse’s testimony that “the signed agreement reflected the understanding as to how the assets would be divided ‘at the future time of the divorce,’ ” 54 Or App at 495 (emphasis supplied), we held that the judgment of dissolution was a condition precedent to the agreement’s taking effect.
Unlike in Hempe, here a record of the parties’ agreement is available. Moreover, at the time of decedent’s death, personal property had been divided and was in the possession of the individual spouses. It also appears that the sale of the parties’ home was pending and that defendant was collecting and retaining the rent paid by the prospective purchasers pursuant to the terms of the agreement. We conclude that the trial court was correct in holding that no condition existed to the enforceability of the agreement and that it became effective when made.
Defendant also argues that the trial court erred when it did not consider the effect of his “statutory inheritance rights” in deciding what the parties intended by their agreement. He explains that, by that phrase, he means his rights [624]*624under ORS 112.035.3 He says that the failure of the agreement to explicitly abolish his “statutory inheritance rights” affects the enforceability of the agreement.4 See Brown, Adm’r v. Miles, supra, 193 Or at 480-82; see also Daywalt v. Bertrand, 10 Or App 418, 420, 500 P2d 484 (1972). Because decedent died testate, ORS 112.035 is inapplicable, as are the cases on which defendant relies concerning intestate rights.
Decedent’s will governs the distribution of her estate, and ORS 114.1055 etseq controls defendant’s right to elect against the will. Moreover, unlike in Daywalt v. Bertrand, supra, where the issue was whether the property settlement agreement terminated the surviving spouse’s intestate succession rights, plaintiff does not claim that the agreement divests defendant of his elective share. Rather, plaintiff concedes that defendant may assert his right to an elective share of decedent’s estate in the probate proceeding. Because the parties divided their marital property under an enforceable property settlement agreement before decedent died, and that agreement defines what assets are in decedent’s estate, the trial court was correct when it held that [625]*625defendant must assert his rights under ORS 114.105 in the probate of decedent’s estate.
[624]*624“If the decedent leaves a surviving spouse and no issue, the surviving spouse shall have all of the net intestate estate.”
[625]*625Because of our disposition of this case, we need not consider defendant’s remaining assignment of error.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
848 P.2d 647, 118 Or. App. 620, 1993 Ore. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-zeldin-orctapp-1993.