Scott v. Scott

430 P.2d 580, 19 Utah 2d 267, 1967 Utah LEXIS 619
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1967
Docket10725
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 430 P.2d 580 (Scott v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Scott, 430 P.2d 580, 19 Utah 2d 267, 1967 Utah LEXIS 619 (Utah 1967).

Opinion

DAY, District Judge.

This case involves the question of full faith and credit to be given to a Nevada divorce decree and more particularly, whether our court can modify a “property settlement agreement” payable as installments of alimony provided for therein.

In 1961, while the parties were residents of Nevada, the plaintiff brought suit for a divorce against the defendant herein, in the District Court of Clark County. The defendant filed an answer, hut on February 6, 1961, the date the case was heard, he and the plaintiff with their respective attorneys entered into what was entitled as a “property settlement agreement.”

The “property settlement agreement” contained the usual and appropriate statements : that the parties were contemplating a divorce; that in the event the court should determine that a cause of action existed for the divorce, then the said agreement should be in force; but otherwise null and void. It provided that the defendant should pay to the plaintiff

* * * as alimony the sum of $1,000.00 per month for a period of one-hundred twenty-one (121) months, commencing Feb. 6, 1961, and continuing on the first day of each and every month thereafter until the 121 payments of alimony shall be made to the First Party (the plaintiff), or to her heirs in the event of her death, and the obligation of Second Party (the defendant) to make such payments shall not be affected by the remarriage of First Party, or by change of circumstances of either party during said period of 121 months. During said period First Party agrees that she will not petition the court for an increase, in said amount; and Second Party agrees that he will not petition the court for a reduction in said amount.

*269 Upon the appearance of the plaintiff and her counsel and the testimony of witnesses before the Nevada Court, it entered its Decree of Divorce as to these parties on February 6, 1961, including therein the following provisions:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the property settlement agreement entered into by and between the parties hereto on or about the 6th day of February, 1961, be and the same hereby is ratified, approved and confirmed and made a part of this Decree as though fully set forth herein. * * *

The Decree became and was an absolute decree when entered.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff against the defendant in the District Court of Salt Lake County, Utah, where both parties now reside, referring to the Nevada proceedings and asking judgment for unpaid alimony payments accrued and required under the Nevada decree. Her complaint states:

Said [Clark County, Nevada] judgment so rendered was and still is a final judgment; that the same is valid, subsisting, not reversed, vacated nor annulled; and under the laws of the State of Nevada said amounts are now due and owing and cannot be recalled or set aside, and judgment, under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution of the United States of America, is entitled to full faith and credit in this [Salt Lake County, Utah] court.

Defendant filed his Answer and Counterclaim in the present proceedings, in substance denying that he was delinquent in his payments under the Nevada decree, but claiming also that the said property settlement agreement was illegal, null and void as against public policy, and further that there had been such a material change of circumstances as to require a modification of the prior decree to relieve defendant of future payments thereunder.

At tke hearing with both parties present, counsel stipulated as to the amounts past due under the Nevada decree, and also stipulated that the matter of offsets claimed by the defendant should be referred to a Mr. Spencer Nilson, a certified public accountant, to be determined by him and then referred to the court.

Two hearings were held but no testimony or exhibit evidence was offered or received in either hearing.

The trial court’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law included determination: that the Nevada decree was a final judgment and still valid, subsisting and not reversed, vacated or annulled; that under the law of Nevada the said amounts were due and owing and could not be recalled or set aside; and that the decree was entitled to full faith and credit in Utah; and that the agreement and decree of Nevada *270 was not illegal or against public policy, so the Utah court had no authority to modify the Nevada decree. The trial court further indicated that it had no jurisdiction to adjudicate any contempt of the Nevada decree nor to award attorney’s fees. Accordingly, judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the stipulated amounts, being $16,000 delinquent alimony payments, less credits of $4,476.38, or a net amount of $11,523.62, plus court costs.

The defendant now urges reversal of the trial court’s rulings on these grounds: (1) that the trial court erred in refusing to rule that the property settlement agreement upon which the divorce decree was based was illegal, null and void as against public policy without permitting defendant to introduce evidence thereon (emphasis added) ; (2) that the trial court erred in ruling that it lacked authority to modify the decree of the Nevada Court as to alimony installments which did not accrue prior to defendant’s filing a counterclaim; and (3) that the trial court erred in ruling that there was no material change of circumstances without permitting defendant to introduce evidence thereon.

We consider the points raised by defendant in the order in which he noted them in his brief.

Defendant’s first contention that he was not permitted to introduce evidence on his issue that the property settlement was void as against public policy, just simply is not borne out by the record. In the first hearing the trial court specifically stated that the issue of public policy was taken under advisement and that defendant’s counsel should be prepared on that issue in the subsequent hearing to be held. In the subsequent hearing eight months later, when the matter came up again defendant’s counsel assumed that the trial court had ruled against him on that issue, stating his recollection was not too clear but that he “didn’t figure it was worth going back bothering” the court reporter to “dig out what her notes state it was.” Almost at the end of the brief second hearing before the trial court defendant’s counsel stated, “I guess my good and valid defenses having been determined to be not worth a damn. * * t ” At no time in either hearing was there any offer of evidence one- way or another on this issue, and a party will not be permitted to claim on appeal that he was precluded from doing in the trial court what he never there offered or attempted to do.

It should be noted in this case, however, that the record before us shows no evidence or indication whatever that this particular property settlement was in any way against public policy, but on the contrary, it appears this was an ordinary and usual property settlement to be effective in case a divorce was granted to the plaintiff.

*271

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 P.2d 580, 19 Utah 2d 267, 1967 Utah LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-scott-utah-1967.