Rabinowitz v. Schenkman

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 16, 2023
DocketAC 22-P-378
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Rabinowitz v. Schenkman, (Mass. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

22-P-378 Appeals Court

JULIE RABINOWITZ vs. MARK SCHENKMAN.

No. 22-P-378.

Bristol. May 4, 2023. – November 16, 2023.

Present: Vuono, Hand, & Hodgens, JJ.

Contract, Separation agreement, Performance and breach, Implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Divorce and Separation, Separation agreement, Division of property. Evidence, Relevancy and materiality, Guilty plea. Practice, Civil, Judgment on the pleadings, Affirmative defense, Waiver.

Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on October 16, 2019.

A motion for judgment on the pleadings was heard by Renee P. Dupuis, J.; a motion for reconsideration was considered by her; and the case was heard by Jackie A. Cowin, J.

Mark Booker for the plaintiff. Charles G. Devine, Jr., for the defendant.

HODGENS, J. To effect the gradual division of property

under a separation agreement, Mark Schenkman (husband) made

monthly payments to his former spouse, Julie Rabinowitz (wife).

After the wife tried to kill the husband, payments ceased. The 2

wife filed an action for breach of contract in the Superior

Court, and the husband asserted that the wife's attempt to

murder him excused his further performance. Following a jury-

waived trial, judgment entered for the husband on the contract

claim. We affirm.

Background. The parties married in 1997 and divorced in

2013 by a judgment of divorce nisi (divorce judgment). The

divorce judgment incorporated their stipulation, which granted

the husband sole legal and physical custody of the parties' four

minor children and deferred for trial the resolution of issues

involving alimony, child support, and the division of assets.

The parties thereafter resolved those outstanding issues in a

separation agreement dated March 17, 2014, which a judge of the

Probate and Family Court approved and incorporated into an

amended judgment of divorce nisi (amended divorce judgment)

dated the same day. All child-related provisions merged with

the amended divorce judgment; the remaining provisions survived

the judgment as an independent contract. Among other

provisions, the separation agreement required the husband to pay

the wife $212,000 over five years in sixty equal monthly

payments of $3,533.33. These payments represented the wife's

share of the marital estate that stemmed from the value of the

husband's ownership of his ongoing dental practice. The

separation agreement also required the husband to maintain a 3

life insurance policy to secure this property division

obligation in the event that he died before making all the

payments. The husband made the required payments over the next

seventeen months through August 1, 2015.

On August 11, 2015, the wife attacked the husband and the

parties' nine year old son with a hatchet outside the husband's

dental practice. In the pandemonium of the attack, the wife

accused the husband of ruining her "reunification plans" that

were "in the works" for the children. The husband ceased making

payments. A grand jury returned five indictments against the

wife. On December 16, 2015, the wife pleaded guilty to armed

assault with intent to murder, one count of assault and battery

by means of a dangerous weapon, one count of assault and

battery, and two counts of assault by means of a dangerous

weapon. A Superior Court judge sentenced her to two and one-

half years in the house of correction, one year to serve, the

balance suspended for ten years of probation. The husband did

not make any payments to the wife after the attack.

On October 16, 2019, the wife filed a complaint in the

Superior Court alleging breach of contract by the husband based

on his failure to make the monthly payments required by the

separation agreement. Following a jury-waived trial, the judge

found that the wife's attempt to kill the husband was "part of a

woefully misguided plan to regain custody of her children" and 4

was an attempt to interfere with the husband's "buyout" of the

wife's share in the dental practice. The judge concluded that

the husband was excused from further performance of the

separation agreement because the wife's attempt to murder him

constituted a violation of the covenant of good faith and fair

dealing implicit in the separation agreement and incorporated

into the amended divorce judgment.

On appeal, the wife claims that the motion judge erred by

failing to grant her motion for judgment on the pleadings. She

also claims that the trial judge erred by (1) taking judicial

notice of the parties' custody stipulation which was not part of

the separation agreement; (2) allowing testimony regarding the

hatchet attack; (3) giving preclusive effect to her guilty

pleas; and (4) applying the covenant of good faith and fair

dealing.

Discussion. "The standard of review is well established.

The findings of fact of the judge are accepted unless they are

clearly erroneous." T.W. Nickerson, Inc. v. Fleet Nat'l Bank,

456 Mass. 562, 569 (2010). "We review the judge's legal

conclusions de novo." Id. After addressing each argument

raised by the wife, we discern no error and affirm.

1. Motion for judgment on the pleadings. The wife claims

that the motion judge erred by denying her motion for judgment

on the pleadings because the husband's answer did not deny any 5

material facts and only recited "boilerplate" affirmative

defenses. We disagree. A judgment on the pleadings is

appropriate in "the rare case where the answer admits all the

material allegations of the complaint." 1973 Reporter's Notes

to Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (c), Massachusetts Rules of Court, Rules

of Civil Procedure, at 25 (Thomson Reuters 2023). "If the

defendant pleads by denial or by affirmative defense so as to

put in question a material allegation of the complaint, judgment

on the pleadings is not appropriate" (emphasis added). Tanner

v. Board of Appeals of Belmont, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 1181, 1182

(1989). Here, the husband filed a four-page answer that

included seven affirmative defenses disputing the wife's

performance of contractual obligations and claiming that the

wife prevented him from performing his obligations. Such

affirmative defenses showed a factual dispute and "provide[d]

notice to the plaintiff[] of defenses that will be raised."

Demoulas v. Demoulas, 428 Mass. 555, 575 n.16 (1998).

Therefore, the motion judge properly denied the motion for

judgment on the pleadings.

2. Judicial notice of child custody. In her findings and

conclusions, the trial judge took judicial notice of the

parties' stipulation incorporated into the divorce judgment that

"provided that [the husband] would have sole legal and physical

custody of the [parties'] four minor children." Although the 6

wife urged the trial judge in a posttrial memorandum to "take

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