Sax v. Sax

762 N.E.2d 888, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 765, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 207
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 2002
DocketNo. 99-P-640
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 762 N.E.2d 888 (Sax v. Sax) 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
Sax v. Sax, 762 N.E.2d 888, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 765, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 207 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

McHugh, J.

Following protracted and fractious divorce proceedings, Lawrence and Gloria Sax reached an agreement later incorporated into a judgment ending their forty-year marriage. Lasting peace, however, proved elusive. Lawrence soon filed a complaint for contempt alleging that Gloria had violated a provision of the agreement prohibiting her from disclosing what she claimed were Lawrence’s pre-agreement financial misdeeds. Denying that she had violated anything, Gloria moved to dismiss the complaint. A judge of the Probate Court agreed with her, allowed her motion, and dismissed the complaint without an evidentiary hearing. Lawrence now has appealed. Being of the opinion that the relevant provision of the agreement was too imprecise to support an action for contempt, we affirm.

The stage-setting facts are these: Lawrence and Gloria were [766]*766married on June 12, 1955. Gloria filed a complaint for divorce in January of 1994, and extended litigation ensued. In the course of that litigation, Gloria, among other things, accused Lawrence of making dishonest financial disclosures to the court and engaging in dishonest financial dealings with third parties.

On February 4, 1997, Lawrence and Gloria signed a comprehensive agreement containing, as one might expect, a series of provisions dividing the tangible components of their long marriage. Only a few of those provisions are relevant here. One such provision allowed Lawrence to retain ownership of a piece of commercial real estate on Granite Avenue in Boston, collect the rents, and sell the property if and when he chose to do so. Another provision said that Lawrence was to pay Gloria alimony consisting of fifty percent of each month’s net Granite Avenue rents and that he was to divide with her the net proceeds of any sale of the property. Any differences that might arise between Lawrence and Gloria over amounts due and owing and the like were to be resolved through arbitration.

The final provision of relevance was aimed at suppressing Gloria’s allegations of Lawrence’s alleged financial misdeeds. That provision contained three consecutively-numbered paragraphs, the third of which was a “take no action” provision reading as follows:

“3. [Gloria] agrees that she will undertake no action or authorize or permit other person(s) with whom she is in privity, or who is her agent, which would cause, encourage or expedite action taken against or with respect to [Lawrence] which would or may result in financial or other jeopardy, for any cause or thing which occurred before the execution of this agreement.”1

After Gloria and Lawrence signed the agreement, the Probate [767]*767Court entered a judgment of divorce nisi that subsequently became final. In material part, the judgment said that

“the signed Agreement of the parties [dated] February 4, 1997 ... is hereby incorporated but not merged into this Judgment and shall survive as an independent contract. The parties shall comply with the terms thereof.”

Although the judgment produced a modicum of tranquility on the domestic front, trouble quickly arose on Granite Avenue. In July, 1997, Lawrence’s Granite Avenue tenants, wTe Corporation and wTe Recycling, Inc., whom we shall collectively refer to as “wTe,” stopped making rent payments. When discussions failed to trigger their resumption, Lawrence brought suit in Superior Court to collect the rents plus all other amounts to which he claimed entitlement under the lease. Almost as soon as he filed suit, however, Lawrence and wTe began settlement discussions and, by December 19, 1997, a written settlement agreement was on the table.2

In timely fashion, Lawrence told Gloria that wTe had stopped paying rent and, in some manner the record does not reveal, she soon learned of the action he had commenced. In September, 1997, she inquired through counsel about whether she should intervene in the Superior Court action to protect her own interests in the net rents and sale proceeds. After her attorney and counsel for Lawrence spoke on the telephone about the matter, she decided not to intervene. She did, however, request that she be kept in “the information loop” and that she be “informed with respect to any offers that may be made to purchase the property.”

[768]*768The record contains little regarding any subsequent communications between the lawyers for Gloria and Lawrence about the lawsuit’s progress. It does reveal, however, that, on January 26, 1998, Gloria served a motion to intervene on counsel for Lawrence and counsel for wTe. In her motion, Gloria stated, in part, as follows:

“5. [Gloria and Lawrence] have an adversarial and acrimonious relationship as a result of the dissolution of their marriage. As a result of [Lawrence’s] past conduct, [Gloria] is justifiably concerned that if she is not made a party to this action, the payments due under the lease in which she has an interest may be compromised.
“7. Clearly, [Gloria] has an interest relating to the lease transaction at issue. Additionally, as set forth above, due to the acrimonious nature of the parties’ relationship, including [Lawrence’s] desire to pay as little to [Gloria] as possible (which might include making side deals with [wTe] in order to defeat [Gloria’s] claim), unless [Gloria] is made a party, disposition of the. action may, as a practical matter, impair or impede her ability to protect that interest.”

Lawrence formally opposed Gloria’s motion and informally urged her to withdraw it.3 Instead, Gloria decided to ratchet things up a notch by serving a reply to Lawrence’s opposition in which she stated, in part, that

“3. . . . [Gloria] is extremely concerned that, behind her back, [Lawrence] will compromise the claim [against wTe], or enter into side deals with [wTe], in order to defeat her rights under the divorce agreement. Her basis for believing same stems from [Lawrence’s] consistent conduct in the divorce action, where [Lawrence] attempted to conceal assets from [Gloria], made misrepresentations [769]*769to both [Gloria] and the court, and acted in other ways in order to mislead [Gloria] as to his income and assets.”

The day after serving that reply, Gloria served another reply repeating the quoted language but increasing its punch by alleging that Lawrence had been

“compelled to plead the Fifth Amendment on his financial statement filed with the Probate Court rather than truthfully complete same.”4

Ultimately, and before the court decided Gloria’s intervention motion, Lawrence and wTe settled. Lawrence thereafter filed in the Probate Court a complaint for contempt alleging that the quoted language from Gloria’s intervention papers violated the “take no action” provisions of the divorce judgment. In his complaint, Lawrence also alleged that Gloria’s revelations caused a $182,500 reduction in the amount for which he was able to settle with wTe and thus cost him personally $91,250 or fifty percent of the settlement differential.5

Gloria moved to dismiss the complaint. Over Lawrence’s objection and request for an evidentiary hearing, a judge allowed the motion.

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Bluebook (online)
762 N.E.2d 888, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 765, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sax-v-sax-massappct-2002.