Paulson v. Paulson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 16, 2026
DocketCase No. 20220914-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Paulson v. Paulson (Paulson v. Paulson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paulson v. Paulson, (Utah Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 UT App 108

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

TRISHNA PAULSON, Appellee, v. CHRISTOPHER PAULSON, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20220914-CA Filed July 16, 2026

Fourth District Court, Provo Department The Honorable Christine S. Johnson The Honorable Jennifer A. Mabey No. 184400701

Rodney R. Parker, Attorney for Appellant Julie J. Nelson and Aaron Harris, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER, Judge:

¶1 Christopher Paulson challenges several of the orders the trial court issued in the divorce proceedings between him and his former spouse, Trishna Paulson. 1 Specifically, he contests (1) the exclusion of an expert witness, (2) a number of partial summary judgment decisions establishing that various properties are Trishna’s separate property, (3) the denial of his request for attorney fees, and (4) the denial of his motion to disqualify the

1. Because the parties share a last name, we refer to them by their given names, with no disrespect intended by the apparent informality. Paulson v. Paulson

trial judge based on an appearance of bias. While we see no error in the determinations regarding Trishna’s separate property or the alleged bias of the trial judge, we do find merit in Christopher’s arguments regarding the excluded expert and the attorney fees request. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part, and we remand this case for such further proceedings as are now appropriate.

BACKGROUND

The Premarital Agreement

¶2 Christopher and Trishna were married on August 21, 1992. Prior to their marriage, they signed a premarital agreement (the Agreement), which was “to be construed and enforced under the laws of the State of California.” 2 The Agreement was entered based on both the parties’ “desire to define the respective rights of each in and to the property of the other from and after the solemnization of the marriage” and the parties’ intention “to limit the application of the community property laws of the State of California or of any other community property State or country in which the parties, from time to time, may reside or be domiciled.” And one of the initial recitals of the Agreement declared, “It is mutually desired by the parties hereto that any property acquired by either of the parties hereto after the solemnization of the marriage shall be the separate property of the party so acquiring the same . . . .”

¶3 Section 3 of the Agreement, entitled “Future Ownership of Property,” further addressed property that the parties already

2. Although the dates on which the parties’ signatures were notarized were after the parties’ marriage, the trial court found that the Agreement was signed before the marriage. And while Christopher categorizes this as a disputed fact, he concedes for purposes of this appeal that the Agreement is valid.

20220914-CA 2 2026 UT App 108 Paulson v. Paulson

possessed or might acquire after their marriage. One provision in this section addressed Trishna’s separate property as follows:

The property possessed by Trishna at the time of the Marriage between her and Christopher is and shall remain her sole and separate property and shall be subject entirely to her individual control and management, both before and after the Marriage, in the same manner as if she were unmarried. Christopher agrees that he does not [have] and will not, by reason of the Marriage, acquire any interest in the property, either for himself, his heirs, assigns, successors in interest, or creditors, nor does he [have] nor will he acquire any right in or to the income, rents, profits, accretions or use of such property, or any part or portion thereof, arising for any reason whatsoever . . . .

A separate provision with largely identical language addressed Christopher’s separate property and Trishna’s lack of interest in it.

¶4 Section 3 also addressed future property the parties may acquire as follows:

All of the property which either of the parties may hereafter acquire, or to which he or she shall be or become entitled, either before or after the Marriage, and the income, rents and profits of and accretions to all such property, shall be the separate property of the party so acquiring the same and shall be subject entirely to the individual control and management of such party in the same manner as if he or she were unmarried, and the other party shall have no right to or interest in said property whatsoever. In addition, it is expressly agreed that all other property acquired by either of the parties

20220914-CA 3 2026 UT App 108 Paulson v. Paulson

which would, except for this . . . Agreement, be the community property of said parties by reason of the laws of the State of California or any other State or country in which the parties, from time to time, may reside, and the income, rents and profits of and accretions to all such property, shall be the separate property of the party so acquiring the same, regardless of how said property may be acquired, except as hereinafter provided.

¶5 Section 3 further provided that the “sole exception” to the separate property categorization was “that the cash ‘salary’ each of them receives shall be considered the community property of the parties.” The language went on to clarify that “‘bonuses’ received by either party or non-cash compensation of any sort” would be separate property.

¶6 Additionally, Section 3 also specified, “The separate property of each of the parties hereto shall not be liable for debts or obligations incurred by the other party, whether arising before or after the Marriage and whether now known or unknown.” Section 3 instructed that “separate bank accounts shall be maintained by each of the parties . . . with respect to the separate property cash of each,” but the Agreement did contemplate a joint bank account wherein the parties would deposit their community income and from which they would pay all their living expenses.

¶7 Section 6 of the Agreement was entitled “Transmutation” and contained the following provision specifically setting forth the circumstances whereby a party’s separate property could become community property:

Except as otherwise provided herein, property or interests now owned or hereafter acquired by the parties, which by the terms of this Agreement is classified as the separate property of one of them, can only become the separate property

20220914-CA 4 2026 UT App 108 Paulson v. Paulson

of the other or the parties’ community property by a written instrument executed by the party whose separate property is thereby reclassified.

¶8 A financial statement attached to the Agreement listed Trishna’s net worth at the time of the marriage as $1,803,148, the bulk of which was attributable to the value of stock she had received from her employer, the Koosharem Corporation. Christopher, on the other hand, brought no significant assets into the marriage.

The Marriage

¶9 During the marriage, neither party earned a significant cash salary. However, at various points in the marriage, Trishna sold portions of her Koosharem Corporation stock “for a total value of $21,827,123.” Trishna “also generated other funds through real estate investments that she owned.”

¶10 As anticipated by the Agreement, the parties maintained a joint account into which their cash salaries were deposited and from which household expenses were paid. Although Trishna maintained other bank accounts to facilitate her investment activities, she also “intermittently deposited” funds from her separate accounts and funds from her real estate investments into the joint account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Paulson v. Paulson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paulson-v-paulson-utahctapp-2026.