Vilseck v. Vilseck

612 S.E.2d 746, 45 Va. App. 581, 2005 Va. App. LEXIS 199
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 17, 2005
Docket1207042
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 612 S.E.2d 746 (Vilseck v. Vilseck) 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
Vilseck v. Vilseck, 612 S.E.2d 746, 45 Va. App. 581, 2005 Va. App. LEXIS 199 (Va. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

KELSEY, Judge.

Joseph Richard Vilseck, Jr. appeals a final divorce decree that equitably distributed property he claims to have acquired and titled separately during the marriage. The plain meaning of his premarital agreement, Vilseck argues, excluded this property from equitable distribution. The chancellor reached the opposite conclusion, holding that the plain meaning of the agreement included such property within the equitable distribution scheme. Upon our de novo review of the agreement, we find the contractual language ambiguous and remand the case for the chancellor to consider the parties’ extrinsic evidence in support of their respective interpretations.

I.

A. The Premarital Agreement

Joseph Vilseck married Shirley Neale Wiatt in 1983. Both had been married before and had children. Before marrying *584 each other, they retained legal counsel and negotiated a premarital agreement. As most do, the agreement begins with a prefatory series of recitals followed by the transition phrase “Now, therefore ... Vilseck and Wiatt agree as follows.” Some twenty numbered paragraphs, many with sub-paragraphs, then go into detail setting out the parties’ contractual rights and liabilities. 1

The introductory recitals state that each party was “aware that the other owns substantial assets” and each

acquired all of his or her “Separate Property,” as defined herein, independently of and without the assistance of the other. Each is aware of the rights and interests in and to the Separate Property of the other to which he or she might otherwise be entitled by virtue of the marriage. (Emphasis added).

Thus, whatever the meaning of “ ‘Separate Property,’ as defined herein,” the context of the recital limited it to separate property owned by either party before marriage. In this respect, the contractual meaning parallels the usual meaning employed by the equitable distribution statute. See Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(i) (defining separate property as including all property acquired “before the marriage”).

One of the rights each party became entitled to “by virtue of the marriage” was the legal capacity to renounce the other’s will and to claim minimum threshold rights of inheritance in the deceased spouse’s separate property. 2 As it concerns premarital property, therefore, the phrase “Separate Property” in the recital demonstrates the parties’ intent to shield such property from spousal inheritance rights. That result *585 dears the way for paragraph 8, entitled “Provisions Upon Death of Vilseck,” which sets out inheritance rights Wiatt would have by contract (not by “virtue of the marriage”) under various scenarios depending on who died first, the number of surviving children, and the value of the estate.

The premarital agreement also includes a provision entitled “Retention of Separate Property.” Paragraphs 2(A) and (B) read:

Except as provided herein, each of the parties shall retain sole ownership of all of his or her Separate Property and shall have the exclusive right to sell, convey ... or otherwise dispose of any and all of his or her Separate Property and any right or interest therein during lifetime by inter vivos transfer or upon death by will, or by any other method of disposition, free from interference by or of any right or interest of the other therein, in such manner as shall be determined in his or her sole discretion and as if the marriage had not taken place.
As used in this agreement, the term “Separate Property” shall mean all real and personal property of each of the parties and all rights and interests in such property of whatever kind and wherever located, regardless of whether such property is now owned or hereafter acquired.

Except for the very last clause of the last sentence, these provisions fit comfortably within the statutory meaning of separate property and the context of the earlier recital protecting premarital property from spousal inheritance claims.

By recognizing the possibility of property “hereafter acquired,” however, the last clause of paragraph 2(B) implies that contractual “Separate Property” can be acquired at any time, even during marriage. That would not be ordinarily true of statutory separate property under Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(i), which includes only property acquired “before the marriage.” But it could be true for inherited property received during marriage, Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(ii), property acquired in exchange for, or from the proceeds of, preexisting separate property, Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(iii), and any sepa *586 rate property component of hybrid property, Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(iv) & (A)(3).

Paragraph 5 of the premarital agreement deals with jointly titled property and deems each party to own an undivided half interest in such property “[njotwithstanding any other provisions of this agreement” to the contrary. Under this provision, no matter how one interprets separate property, once it has been jointly titled it becomes jointly owned in equal shares.

Paragraph 7 addresses “Spousal Support and Monetary Award.” It states that, despite the upcoming nuptials, the parties recognize the possibility of a divorce within five years of marriage. If that happened, Wiatt waives under paragraph 7(B)(1) any “spousal support or monetary award (whether payable in a lump sum or in periodic payments or over a period of time in fixed amounts) which Wiatt might otherwise have the right to receive in accordance with applicable law.” If they divorce after five years, paragraph 7(C) provides that Wiatt would receive whatever the law allowed “subject, however, to all of the provisions of this agreement, including, without limitation, the definition of ‘Separate Property’ contained herein.”

B. The Trial Court Proceedings

Wiatt filed for divorce in 1999 and requested spousal support and an equitable distribution award pursuant to Code § 20-107.3. In response, Vilseck asserted that the premarital agreement should be interpreted to deem all property acquired and titled individually during the marriage to be characterized as contractual “Separate Property” wholly immune from the equitable distribution statute.

Wiatt argued that the agreement addressed “Separate Property” to protect premarital property from spousal inheritance claims. The contractual reference to property “hereinafter acquired,” Wiatt reasoned, merely broadened the protection to property purchased during the marriage with premarital separate funds, property inherited during mar *587 riage, and whatever separate property components existed within hybrid property — each tracking the limited categories of statutory separate property that could be acquired during marriage. See Code § 20-107.3(A)(1)(ii), (A)(1)(iii), (A)(1)(iv) & (A)(3).

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Bluebook (online)
612 S.E.2d 746, 45 Va. App. 581, 2005 Va. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vilseck-v-vilseck-vactapp-2005.