Rubino v. Rubino

765 A.2d 1222, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 133199
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 12, 2001
Docket99-443-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 765 A.2d 1222 (Rubino v. Rubino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubino v. Rubino, 765 A.2d 1222, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 133199 (R.I. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

Weisberger, Chief Justice.

This case came before the Court, pursuant to the appeal of the defendant, Donna Rubino (Donna or defendant), from a decision of a Family Court justice granting the parties a divorce and concluding that the rights and liabilities of the parties, pursuant to the divorce, were to be determined by the provisions of G.L.1956 § 15-5-16.1, the equitable distribution statute, rather than the terms of the antenuptial agreement signed by the parties two days before they were married. The facts insofar as pertinent to this appeal are as follows.

Donna and Michael Rubino (Michael or plaintiff) were married on December 19, 1997. At the time of their marriage, defendant had a five-year-old child from a previous marriage, Christopher, and plaintiff had two children from a previous marriage, Michael and Alicia.

On December 17, 1997, Donna and Michael executed an antenuptial agreement. The purpose of that agreement was to fix and determine the rights of each of them, including the children, to certain property *1223 in the event that the marriage was terminated by divorce. Among other things, the agreement provided that all assets “acquired by the parties as joint tenants with the right of survivorship shall be divided equally between the parties,” but that “[ajssets owned by each party individually, any additions or accessions thereto, and any assets acquired in the future by gift or by inheritance shall be and remain the sole property of that individual to the exclusion of the other.” The agreement also required plaintiff to transfer certain of his assets to himself and defendant as joint tenants or tenants by the entirety, and to add defendant as a beneficiary on eerinn accounts and insurance policies. Furthermore, the agreement provided that “the parties each expressly and permanently waive any right of any kind to alimony and/or temporary or permanent support or payments in lieu thereof from each other, including without limitation, any form of ‘temporary allowances,’ pending a hearing for divorce or other proceeding.” Finally, the agreement provided that “[a]ny modification or waiver of any of the provisions of [the agreement shall be effective only if made in writing and executed with the same formality” as the original agreement.

On February 17, 1998, approximately two months after they were married, plaintiff filed a petition for absolute divorce against defendant. The plaintiff alleged that irreconcilable differences had arisen between the parties that had resulted in the irremediable breakdown of the marriage. In his complaint, plaintiff sought an equitable distribution of the assets of the marriage in accordance with § 15-5-16.1, as well as counsel fees, the exclusive right to the marital domicile, and an injunction against defendant restraining her from “bothering, harassing, threatening, assaulting and or interfering with * * * plaintiff.” The defendant answered the complaint and counterclaimed; she also filed a motion for a temporary restraining order and temporary allowances on that same day. Like plaintiff, defendant also sought an equitable distribution of the assets of the marriage in accordance with § 15-5-16.1, the exclusive use of the marital domicile, and an injunction against plaintiff. The initial complaint, answer, and counterclaim contained no reference to the antenuptial agreement and no request to enforce its provisions; however, the motion for a temporary restraining order does mention the agreement.

In February 1998, a Family Court justice signed an ex parte order in favor of plaintiff. That order restrained defendant from alienating certain assets and removed her from the marital domicile. That same justice also granted similar relief to defendant, short of removing plaintiff from the home. Thereafter, both plaintiff and defendant filed contempt motions alleging that the other party had dissipated and transferred various named assets in violation of the previous order. On March 5, 1998, another order was entered mutually restraining plaintiff and defendant from assaulting, molesting, or threatening each other, and further restraining them from alienating, selling, or encumbering any assets. The plaintiff was also ordered to withdraw $5,000 from a Prudential Advantage account held in plaintiffs and defendant’s names as joint tenants and to advance that money to defendant “as an advancement on her award of equitable distribution.”

Thereafter, in May 1998, before the Family Court proceeding began, defendant filed a complaint in the Superior Court, individually and as a parent and next friend of Christopher, requesting specific performance of the antenuptial agreement. On June 18, 1998, a Family Court justice ordered defendant to dismiss the Superior Court action, and on October 29, 1998, defendant filed an amended counterclaim in the Family Court in which she sought specific performance of the antenuptial agreement. The divorce action subsequently was heard on January 6, 1999, by a second Family Court justice. That justice found that there were “indeed irrecon- *1224 eilable differences between [the parties] which ha[d] resulted in the irremediable breakdown of [the] marriage.”

The sole issue at trial was whether the respective property rights of the parties should be determined in accordance with the equitable distribution statute or according to the antenuptial agreement signed by the parties. At the time of trial, plaintiffs attorney argued a motion in li-mine to preclude defendant from asserting any rights under the antenuptial agreement. The plaintiffs attorney argued that because defendant had accepted a $5,000 payment as an advancement on her statutory right to equitable distribution, she had waived her right to enforce the ante-nuptial agreement. The trial justice denied the motion. She held:

“Clearly [Donna Rubino] has a right to seek relief protection, and clearly she has a right to seek relief regarding dissipation of funds. The motion that she filed * * * clearly does contain many pages referencing the [antenuptial] agreement that was executed here. It does not appear * * * that this motion was filed in contravention of the [ante-nuptial] agreement at all.
“I agree with [Donna Rubino’s] argument * * *. At this point in time, one would have to first determine this antin-uptial [sic ] agreement is a valid one.”

On April 20, 1999, the justice concluded in a bench decision that:

“[T]he defendant wife is precluded from enforcing [the provisions of the antenup-tial agreement]. * * * Accepting the fact [that] the wife requested specific performance of [the] contract in her amended counterclaim relating back effectively to February 20,1998,1 find she has indeed abandoned the provisions of that contract by later accepting statutory relief. In accepting temporary support less than one month after filing this counterclaim to enforce the contract, she proceeded in total violation of the intent, spirit, and unambiguous wording of that contract. The language of that order is clear and it is also not ambiguous. The monies received were * * * [^advancements on equitable distribution. [’]”

Therefore, she determined the rights and liabilities of the parties to each other’s property in accordance with the equitable distribution statute, § 15-5-16.1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
765 A.2d 1222, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 44, 2001 WL 133199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubino-v-rubino-ri-2001.