Terri Colby Barr v. Mark H. Barr

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 28, 2006
Docket0464061
StatusUnpublished

This text of Terri Colby Barr v. Mark H. Barr (Terri Colby Barr v. Mark H. Barr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terri Colby Barr v. Mark H. Barr, (Va. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Kelsey, McClanahan and Senior Judge Willis Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia

TERRI COLBY BARR MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0464-06-1 JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY NOVEMBER 28, 2006 MARK H. BARR

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Charles E. Poston, Judge

Peter V. Chiusano (Kimberly L. Stegall; Willcox & Savage, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Barry Kantor (Christie, Kantor, Griffin & Smith, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

On four grounds, Terri Colby Barr appeals the entry of a final divorce decree in this

case. The language of the final decree, she contends, demonstrates that the trial court erred by

misinterpreting a settlement agreement she entered into with her husband, Mark H. Barr,

failing to declare the agreement unconscionable,

misconstruing the agreement as a full, rather than partial, settlement of the contested equitable distribution issues, and

mischaracterizing the contractual spousal support obligation as nonmodifiable.

Finding no merit in these assertions, we affirm.

I.

The parties married in 1972 and separated in 2002. Husband filed for a divorce, and wife

filed a cross-bill seeking the same end. While the divorce proceeding was pending, husband

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. voluntarily paid wife’s monthly expenses. The trial court entered no pendente lite orders. With

the parties’ consent, the trial court referred the case to a commissioner in chancery for an

evidentiary hearing.

The commissioner’s hearing lasted eight days. On the last day, the parties entered into a

handwritten settlement agreement addressing support and equitable distribution issues then

pending before the commissioner. Among other things, they agreed wife would live in the

marital home and husband would “reasonably maintain the marital home and property until the

mortgage is paid or Terri remarries whichever first occurs.” The spousal support provision

required husband to pay wife $5,000 a month for a little over eight years, “commencing”

September 1, 2005, and paralleling “the remaining term” of the mortgage. A separate clause

stated:

Mark agrees to assume all debt of the Parties as of the date of this Agreement and ∧Terri’s normal monthly expenses as of September 1, 2005∧ except for the mortgage on the marital residence and the “second” mortgage due to Shelia Colby. Terri will be responsible for paying the “second” mortgage to Sheila Colby.

The crossed-out language, as well as the inserted italicized language, bore the initials of both

husband and wife. The commissioner read the agreement into the record and confirmed the

parties’ consent to its terms.

The commissioner reported the agreement to the trial court and recommended that it be

incorporated into the final divorce decree. Wife filed an objection to the commissioner’s report

and sought to set aside the agreement. She later withdrew this objection. The court then issued a

scheduling order, entitled “Notice to Submit Final Decree,” noting the absence of any objections

to the commissioner’s report and directing the parties to submit a final decree for entry.

-2- Wife responded by filing a “Motion to Enforce Agreement,” asserting husband had failed

to pay her “monthly household expenses” as the settlement required. The motion also argued

that, “to the extent” husband interpreted the settlement agreement otherwise, “there was no

‘meeting of the minds’ and there is no agreement.” Shortly thereafter, wife filed a second

motion entitled “Motion to Enforce Agreement and Request for Reimbursement.” This motion

again asserted her entitlement to “monthly household expenses” and added a request for

reimbursement of those expenses she had paid out of her own pocket.

At the hearing in the trial court, wife objected to husband’s proposed draft of a final

decree claiming it did not “track and mirror the actual language of the agreement.” “It’s not

necessarily the decree,” wife’s counsel explained, “it’s how the parties are now interpreting that

agreement, that’s the issue.” The disputed interpretation centered on the provision requiring

husband to “assume all debt of the Parties and Terri’s normal monthly expenses as of September

1, 2005.” (Emphasis added). Husband interpreted that provision to require that he pay all

accrued, but unpaid, debt and monthly expenses existing on September 1, 2005. Wife agreed the

provision required husband to pay all accrued, unpaid debt as of September 1, but contended her

unspecified monthly expenses must also be paid for an indefinite period commencing September

1 and continuing indefinitely thereafter.

In support of his interpretation, husband pointed out that he had been paying wife’s

monthly expenses since their separation without a pendente lite order requiring him to do so.

Entered into on August 2, 2005, the settlement agreement required husband to bring all unpaid

debt and expenses current as of September 1, 2005. Beginning on September 1, 2005, husband

noted, the agreement required him to pay support to wife in the amount of $5,000 a month for

just over eight years. In contrast to the debt-and-expenses provision, the support provision

-3- expressly required the $5,000 monthly payments for an agreed period “commencing” on

September 1, 2005.

For her part, wife claimed the text of the debt-and-expenses provision unambiguously

required husband to pay her unspecified monthly expenses in perpetuity. The phrase “as of”

really meant “commencing,” she argued. Thus, she interpreted the payment obligation to begin

on September 1, 2005, and to continue without any ending date. Wife’s counsel also argued that

if both parties interpreted the provision differently, then “there is no meeting of the minds and

there can’t be any contract.”

The trial court agreed with husband’s interpretation of the debt-and-expenses provision,

reading it as an unambiguous expression of the parties’ intent that husband pay all accrued,

unpaid debt and monthly expenses “as of” (that is, calculated on) September 1, 2005. The trial

court also observed that, “Just because the parties disagree doesn’t mean there is not a meeting of

the minds.” The trial court then entered husband’s draft of the proposed decree and denied

wife’s motions seeking to enforce the provision as she interpreted it.

II.

A. THE “AS OF” INTERPRETATION

On appeal, wife argues that the trial court erred as a matter of law because the plain

meaning of the unambiguous debt-and-expenses provision can only be interpreted as she

proposes. We disagree.

Under settled contract law principles, the dispute over the debt-and-expenses provision

presents three decisional alternatives: the plain meaning of the provision either clearly favors

wife’s interpretation, clearly favors husband’s interpretation, or clearly favors neither

interpretation because its ambiguous language can be reasonably interpreted in more than one

-4- way. See generally Vilseck v. Vilseck, 45 Va. App. 581, 588-91, 612 S.E.2d 746, 749-50

(2005); Smith v. Smith, 43 Va. App. 279, 287-88, 597 S.E.2d 250, 254-55 (2004). Of these

three, the least defensible interpretation is the one advocated by wife.

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