Saltmarsh v. Saltmarsh

480 N.E.2d 618, 395 Mass. 405, 1985 Mass. LEXIS 1711
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 480 N.E.2d 618 (Saltmarsh v. Saltmarsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saltmarsh v. Saltmarsh, 480 N.E.2d 618, 395 Mass. 405, 1985 Mass. LEXIS 1711 (Mass. 1985).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

In the spring of 1983, the parties to this action, wife and husband, executed a separation agreement, swore by affidavit that there was “an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage,” and on April 4, 1983, received a court order under G. L. c. 208, § 1A (1984 ed.), for what is commonly known as a no-fault divorce. In the normal course, a judgment nisi of divorce would be entered six months after a § 1A order, and that judgment would become absolute in an additional six months.

The wife claims that, after entry of the § 1A order prospectively granting the no-fault divorce, information came to her attention that required rescission of that order. She argues that this information, which we shall subsequently discuss more fully, showed that the husband had made various misstatements to her on which she had relied in agreeing to the transfer of property to him during the marriage and in agreeing to the separation agreement and the no-fault divorce. The wife took various unsuccessful steps, before the judge who had entered the § 1A order, seeking to be relieved of the separation agreement and the consequences of the § 1A order. She brought an action in equity for rescission of the separation agreement. The judge dismissed that action, on the husband’s motion, on the ground that the wife had an adequate remedy at law. The wife has appealed from the judgment dismissing the equity action. The wife also sought relief from the § 1A order by a motion under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 60 (b). She has not appealed from the denial of that motion. Additionally, after the judgment nisi was entered, the wife filed objections under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 58 (c) to the judgment nisi becoming final. She has appealed from the order dismissing those objections. Finally, with the permission of a Justice of the Appeals *407 Court, the wife has appealed late from the judgment of divorce nisi and from the denial of her motion for a stay of the entry of the judgment of divorce absolute. We consider all three appeals together following their transfer here by order of this court.

We agree with the judge that the wife had an adequate remedy within the divorce proceeding itself so that an independent equity proceeding seeking rescission of the separation agreement was unnecessary and inappropriate. We next conclude that we may properly consider the wife’s appeal from the dismissal of her objections under rule 58 (c) even though she did not claim a timely appeal from the entry of the § 1A order or from the entry of the judgment nisi. We disagree with the judge’s conclusion that all the wife’s objections to the entry of a judgment absolute were inadequate as a matter of law. The wife’s objections based on her claim that she entered into the separation agreement and § 1A divorce proceeding because of certain misrepresentations by the husband on which she reasonably relied should not have been dismissed on their face. Because of the relief we grant in the wife’s appeal of the dismissal of her rule 58 (c) objections, we need not pass on the merits of her late appeal from the judgment nisi and from the denial of her motion for a stay of the nisi period.

1. The equity action. On August 30, 1983, shortly before the judgment nisi was to enter, the wife commenced a separate equity action against the husband in the Probate Court alleging, among other things, that the husband had fraudulently induced her to execute the separation agreement. In her amended complaint, she sought an order declaring the separation agreement null and void. The husband successfully moved to dismiss the action on the ground that the wife had an adequate remedy at law within the divorce proceeding. 2

The separation agreement was to be incorporated in the judgment of divorce, and by its terms it stood independently *408 as an enforceable agreement between the husband and the wife. G. L. c. 208, § 1A. Stansel v. Stansel, 385 Mass. 510, 513-514 (1982). Knox v. Remick, 371 Mass. 433, 436-437 (1976). To achieve her purpose of returning the parties to the state of financial affairs which existed prior to the execution of the separation agreement, the wife needed to eliminate the effect of both aspects of the separation agreement. Commencing the equity action was an appropriate precaution because it was unclear whether the wife could achieve both her goals by action taken only within the divorce proceeding. We decide in this case, however, that the wife could not only obtain relief in the divorce action from any judgment in which the separation agreement was incorporated, but she could also obtain a determination that the separation agreement was null and void between her husband and herself.

Under G. L. c. 208, § 1A, the separation agreement is to be incorporated into the judge’s order approving the agreement and “by agreement of the parties it may also remain as an independent contract.” If the judge does not approve the agreement, it “shall become null and void and of no further effect between the parties.” Therefore, the wife’s challenge to the validity of the order approving the agreement would, if successful, require that the judge disapprove the agreement, and, if it were disapproved, the agreement would be null and void and of no further effect between the husband and the wife. 3 The judge was correct in concluding that the wife had an adequate remedy in the divorce proceeding. 4 We thus turn to *409 the wife’s attempt to nullify the effect of the separation agreement within the divorce action.

2. The divorce proceeding. The wife claims that, after the order of April 4, 1983, had been entered under § 1A, she for the first time learned facts inconsistent with what her husband had told her which had caused her to agree to a § 1A divorce. In addition to commencing the equity action we have already discussed, she filed a motion under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 60 (b) for relief from the § 1A order. 5 That motion was denied in September, 1983, without an evidentiary hearing, and, as we have said, the wife has not appealed from the denial of that motion. In January, 1984, after the judge had dismissed the equity action, suggesting in doing so that relief might be available in the divorce proceeding under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 58 (c), the wife filed objections to the judgment becoming absolute. On March 15, 1984, before the judgment was to become absolute, the judge after a hearing allowed the husband’s motion to dismiss the rule 58 (c) objections. The wife claimed an appeal.

The husband contends that the wife’s appeal from the dismissal of her rule 58 (c) objections is moot because the judgment of divorce has become absolute. The judge dismissed the objections on March 15, 1984, and the wife appealed that action on March 26, 1984. The judgment absolute was not to enter until April 4, 1984. The question is whether, without appealing from the judgment of divorce nisi, a party may preserve for appellate review the dismissal of rule 58 (c) objections by an appeal entered before the six-month period of a judgment nisi has run. In the circumstances of this case, we conclude that a party may so appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
480 N.E.2d 618, 395 Mass. 405, 1985 Mass. LEXIS 1711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saltmarsh-v-saltmarsh-mass-1985.