Wiles v. Wiles

871 P.2d 1026, 234 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 1994 Utah App. LEXIS 44, 1994 WL 88840
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 15, 1994
Docket920598-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 871 P.2d 1026 (Wiles v. Wiles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiles v. Wiles, 871 P.2d 1026, 234 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 1994 Utah App. LEXIS 44, 1994 WL 88840 (Utah Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVIS, Judge:

Appellant Jean B. Wiles appeals from a judgment in favor of her ex-husband and appellee Joseph Wiles. The trial court ordered the real property on which Ms. Wiles is living sold pursuant to a lien created by the court when the parties divorced in 1981. We affirm.

I. FACTS

Jean and Joseph Wiles were divorced on January 29, 1981. According to the divorce decree, Ms. Wiles was awarded alimony for eighteen months, a mobile home in which she was living, and sole possession of real property (the “real property”) located in Sanpete County, Utah, upon which the mobile home was located. In return, the trial court ordered that Ms. Wiles pay her husband $6000 plus 6% interest (the “debt”) payable within a ten year period. The trial court placed a lien against the real property in the amount of $6000, and ordered that in the event the debt was not paid by December 21,1991, Mr. Wiles could “foreclose on the lien at his option.”

Ms. Wiles apparently resided on the real property during the years after the divorce. However, she did not pay the debt within the ten year repayment period granted to her in the divorce decree. Instead, on February 6, 1990, she filed a homestead exemption on the real property pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 78-23-4 (1992). At Mr. Wiles’s request, the trial court issued an order on July 9, 1992, compelling Ms. Wiles to appear and show cause why the real property should not be sold due to her failure to pay the debt owed to Mr. Wiles.

Ms. Wiles filed a motion to dismiss the order to show cause, arguing that the homestead exemption precluded sale of the real property and that an order to show cause was not the proper proceeding to “foreclose” on the lien. A hearing was held on the matter, after which the trial court entered judgment for Mr. Wiles and denied Ms. Wiles’s motion to dismiss. The trial court ordered that the property be foreclosed and sold and the proceeds applied toward the judgment owed Mr. Wiles. 1

On appeal, Ms. Wiles claims: (1) the homestead exemption she filed precludes sale of the real property; (2) use of an order to show cause hearing to enforce the lien violat *1028 ed her right of access to the courts under article I, section 11 of the Utah Constitution; and (3) Mr. Wiles cannot enforce the lien because the value of the real property is less than the amount of the homestead exemption to which she is allegedly entitled.

II. PROPERTY DIVISION AND HOMESTEAD RIGHTS

Ms. Wiles first claims that because the debt owed to her ex-husband does not fit into any of the enumerated exceptions to the homestead exemption in Utah Code Ann. § 78-23-3(2) (1992), she does not have to give up the real property awarded her in the divorce decree in order to satisfy the debt. Section 78-23-3(2) states:

A homestead shall be exempt from judicial lien and from levy, execution, or forced sale, except upon the following obligations:
(a) statutory liens for taxes and assessments on the property;
(b) security interests in the property and judicial liens for debts created for the purchase price of such property; and
(c) judicial liens obtained on debts created by failure to provide support or maintenance for dependent children.

Although Ms. Wiles is technically correct in her reading of section 78-23-3(2), the “judicial lien” created by the court in this case is not that contemplated by section 78-23-3(2).

In Race v. Race, 740 P.2d 253 (Utah 1987), the Utah Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether a trial court, when dividing property, must set off to each party his or her homestead exemption in the property. Id. at 255. The supreme court determined that a trial court need not set off to the parties their respective share of the homestead exemption because doing so would interfere with the trial court’s ability under Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5 to make a just and equitable disposition of property on divorce. 2 Id. at 256. The Utah Supreme Court cited with approval Ruprecht v. Ruprecht, 255 Minn. 80, 96 N.W.2d 14, 24-25 (1959) and Closson v. Closson, 30 Wyo. 1, 215 P. 485, 489 (1923) for the proposition that “where there is no specific statutory provision for the disposition of a homestead on divorce, a statute (similar to Utah Code Ann. § 30-3-5) authorizing the court in the divorce case to make a ‘just and equitable’ disposition of the property controls.” Race, 740 P.2d at 256.

The Utah Supreme Court’s reasoning in Race provides guidance here. Under section 30-3-5(1), the trial court has the power to divide the parties’ property in a divorce action. Jackson v. Jackson, 617 P.2d 338, 340-41 (Utah 1980). The Utah Exemptions Act is silent concerning the court’s equitable authority and responsibility to distribute the homestead property that the parties enjoyed together prior to their divorce. Permitting one party to change the trial court’s distribution of the parties’ assets by use of a homestead exemption would impair the trial court’s ability to make just and lasting distributions of marital property.

When the divorce decree was entered in this case, the trial court divided the parties’ property by awarding the real property and mobile home to Ms. Wiles and ordering that Ms. Wiles in return pay $6000 to her ex-husband within a ten year period. As is often the case when a trial court divides marital property, the court created a “lien” on the real property awarded Ms. Wiles pending payment to Mr. Wiles of the value of his share of that property. As the trial court correctly reasoned in its decision on this matter, to allow Ms. Wiles to assert a homestead exemption against the real property “would defeat the purposes of the Divorce Decree and specifically would frustrate the Court[’]s ability to divide the property in a divorce proceeding.” We agree and hold that the trial court’s distribution of the Wileses’ property, including placement of the lien, supersedes Ms. Wiles’s ability to enforce the homestead exemption against her husband’s interest in the real property created by the court. 3

*1029

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Bluebook (online)
871 P.2d 1026, 234 Utah Adv. Rep. 41, 1994 Utah App. LEXIS 44, 1994 WL 88840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiles-v-wiles-utahctapp-1994.