Hammett v. Hammett ( 2019 )


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  •                                    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    MICHAEL E. HAMMETT SR., Petitioner/Appellee,
    v.
    ANN PEARL JOY CUIZON HAMMETT, Respondent/Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CV 18-0632 FC
    FILED 10-29-2019
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FN2015-071793
    No. FN2017-002640
    (Consolidated)
    The Honorable Lori Horn Bustamante, Judge
    The Honorable Frank W. Moskowitz, Judge
    VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
    COUNSEL
    Lincoln & Wenk PLLC, Goodyear
    By Michael Lincoln
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee
    DeRoon & Seyffer, Phoenix
    By Charles R. Seyffer
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellant
    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    OPINION
    Presiding Judge Paul J. McMurdie delivered the opinion of the Court, in
    which Chief Judge Peter B. Swann and Judge Diane M. Johnsen joined.
    M c M U R D I E, Judge:
    ¶1            Ann Hammett (“Wife”) appeals from the property
    distribution in the decree annulling her marriage to Michael Hammett
    (“Husband”) and the superior court’s subsequent orders. We hold parties
    acquire community property and debt even during a marriage that results
    in an annulment; and, when terminating the marriage, the court must
    dispose of such assets and debt under Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”)
    section 25-318, to the extent applicable. Because the superior court and the
    parties assumed the couple had acquired no community property, we
    vacate the decree’s property disposition and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2             Husband met Wife while she lived in the Philippines. The
    couple married in Nevada in November 2009, after Wife obtained a fiancé
    visa. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(15)(K)(i) (2006). In November 2015, Husband, as
    the sole signatory, obtained a loan for $78,600, secured by a house that was
    his separate property (the “Loan”). That same month, Husband purchased
    a condominium for $58,000, titled in both spouse’s names as community
    property with the right of survivorship. Less than two weeks later,
    Husband petitioned for the dissolution of the parties’ six-year marriage.
    ¶3            In August 2016, Wife moved for a temporary order for
    spousal maintenance. She claimed that she was unable to work because of
    a car accident, Husband had been supporting the couple for the duration of
    their marriage, and he had ended all financial support earlier in the year.
    The court discussed Wife’s motion during a resolution management
    conference and ordered the parties to exchange financial affidavits. At the
    conference, Husband asserted—for the first time—that Wife was married
    to another man when the couple married.
    ¶4           After Wife submitted her financial affidavit, over Wife’s
    objection Husband moved to dismiss his petition for dissolution. He argued
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    that the court must dismiss the dissolution action because of the “mutual
    fraud committed by both parties” and asserted that Wife was still married
    to her first husband. He alleged that before their marriage in 2009, the
    parties conspired to have a fake death certificate produced to allow Wife to
    enter the United States with a fiancé visa. Husband submitted emails
    between him and a third party from 2008 in which he expressed his
    frustration with the time and cost of an annulment in the Philippines, and
    solicited the help of the third party to either “find[] a judge and pay[] him
    off” or create a fake death certificate.
    ¶5            The court held an oral argument on Husband’s motion in
    February 2017—more than a year after Husband petitioned for dissolution.
    Because the parties presented evidence outside of the pleadings, the court
    treated the motion to dismiss as a summary judgment motion. See Ariz. R.
    Fam. Law P. 32(B) (2006) (repealed effective January 1, 2019, see now Ariz.
    R. Fam. Law P. 29 (2019)). Husband argued that because Wife’s marriage to
    her first husband had never been dissolved, their subsequent marriage was
    invalid. Husband asserted that even though Wife had unsuccessfully tried
    to locate her first husband for 19 years before she married Husband, she
    had failed to comply with the law in the Philippines to have her first
    husband presumed dead and the marriage dissolved. Accordingly,
    Husband argued Wife’s first husband “must be presumed to be alive.”
    ¶6           The court dismissed the dissolution petition based on Wife’s
    admission that she failed to have her first husband presumed dead, and her
    previous marriage annulled. The court held Wife did not correctly dissolve
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    her first marriage under Philippine law, which rendered her subsequent
    marriage to Husband invalid. 1
    ¶7             In March 2017, Husband petitioned for annulment. Before the
    resulting trial, the parties agreed that Husband’s house would remain his
    separate property and that each spouse would “keep their retirement
    accounts and bank accounts in their own names” and “the debts in their
    own names.” The court found that the parties knowingly, intelligently, and
    voluntarily entered into a binding agreement that was fair and equitable
    under Arizona Rule of Family Law Procedure (“Rule”) 69.
    ¶8             The parties then presented evidence on the remaining
    unresolved claims—mainly, their interest in the condominium, the Loan,
    and Wife’s allegation that she contributed over $30,000 in repairs and
    improvements to the condominium after service of the dissolution petition.
    After the trial, the court ruled that “all community property rights and
    obligations acquired by marriage are void ab initio with respect to both
    parties as to all property, income, and liabilities received or incurred from
    the date of the annulled marriage.” The court then ordered that the parties
    owned the condominium as tenants in common and directed Wife to buy
    out Husband’s one-half interest in the condominium by refinancing the
    loan in her name before August 19, 2018, or place the condominium on the
    market on or before September 1, 2018. The court further ordered Wife to
    pay any mortgage payments, HOA fees, and taxes so long as she continued
    to live in the condominium. The court declined to grant either party any
    additional funds from the proceeds of the condominium for improvements
    to it.
    1      The Arizona Constitution prohibits “[p]olygamous or plural
    marriages, or polygamous cohabitation,” Ariz. Const. art. 20, par. 2. Under
    A.R.S. § 25-301, a court may dissolve a marriage and issue an annulment
    decree when the marriage is “void.” The legislature has defined what
    constitutes a “void and prohibited” marriage. A.R.S. § 25-101. Different
    types of marriages are prohibited in Arizona, see, e.g., A.R.S. § 25-102(B)
    (“Persons who are under sixteen years of age shall not marry.”), but only a
    few are codified under A.R.S. § 25-101 as “void.” The legislature has not
    defined a polygamous marriage as one that is void, but the conduct is
    punishable under A.R.S. § 13-3606. The parties have not raised the issue of
    whether the court correctly issued an annulment decree rather than a
    dissolution decree. Therefore, we will assume without deciding that an
    annulment decree was the proper vehicle to dissolve the parties’ marriage.
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶9            Husband moved the court to clarify its ruling concerning the
    condominium sale proceeds and the Loan. The court did not explain its
    decision until after the 90-day deadline passed for Wife to refinance the
    Loan. The court clarified that the condominium “sale proceeds shall first be
    applied to the [Loan]” and “any remaining proceeds shall be equally
    divided.” The court again ordered Wife to “refinance the mortgage in her
    name alone” if she wanted to retain possession of the condominium. The
    balance of the Loan was $75,350.94, which exceeded the amount necessary
    to buy out Husband’s interest in the condominium.
    ¶10            Wife—unclear of the amount she was to refinance and the
    deadline to do so because of the court’s amended ruling—had not
    refinanced the home by the time set by the court, so eventually, Husband
    moved to sell it. Ultimately, the court ordered the condominium to be sold
    and ruled that from Wife’s share of the proceeds, she must pay Husband
    $3980 in attorney’s fees and costs and reimburse him for the taxes,
    mortgage, and HOA fees he had paid since service of the petition. The
    condominium sold in February 2019, yielding net proceeds of $33,793.81,
    all of which went to Husband after Wife made the required reimbursements
    to him out of her share. The sale proceeds were distributed according to the
    court’s order.
    ¶11           Wife filed a timely notice of appeal from the decree of
    annulment, and we have jurisdiction under A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(2),
    Rule 78(c) (2019), and Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 9(c).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶12           The parties disagree whether the superior court had the
    power to order them to pay off the Loan from the proceeds of the
    condominium sale before splitting the remaining proceeds. Wife reiterates
    the superior court’s conclusion that the annulment voided the community
    and argues that Husband gifted her the interest in the condominium. She
    contends, however, that in an annulment proceeding, the court is only
    permitted to distribute property and may not divide debt.
    ¶13             The superior court’s characterization of property is a question
    of law that we review de novo. In re Marriage of Pownall, 
    197 Ariz. 577
    , 581,
    ¶ 15 (App. 2000). We review the superior court’s division of assets and
    liabilities for an abuse of discretion. In re Marriage of Flower, 
    223 Ariz. 531
    ,
    535, ¶ 14 (App. 2010). “A trial court abuses its discretion when it misapplies
    the law or predicates its decision on incorrect legal principles.” State v.
    Jackson, 
    208 Ariz. 56
    , 59, ¶ 12 (App. 2004).
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶14            Property acquired by either spouse during a marriage is
    community property. We hold that an annulment does not change the
    status of the community property, and, in such a case, the court must
    allocate the community property and debt just as it would in a dissolution
    proceeding. Because the superior court here based its decision on incorrect
    legal principles, we vacate the decree dividing the couple’s assets and
    liabilities and its orders for Wife to reimburse Husband for his separate
    expenses, attorney’s fees, and community expenses. We remand for the
    court to make a distribution considering the entirety of the community.
    A.     A Marriage that Results in an Annulment Still Creates a
    Community, and the Superior Court Must Equitably Divide the
    Community Assets and Debts When Dissolving the Marriage.
    An Annulled Marriage Nonetheless Creates a Community.
    ¶15           “Superior courts may dissolve a marriage, and may adjudge
    a marriage to be null and void when the cause alleged constitutes an
    impediment rendering the marriage void.” A.R.S. § 25-301. “If grounds for
    annulment exist, the court to the extent that it has jurisdiction to do so, shall
    divide the property of the parties . . . .” A.R.S. § 25-302(B). The issue we
    have to resolve is whether an annulment alters the community status of the
    property or debt created while the parties were married. We hold that it
    does not.
    ¶16           Distributing property and debt after marriage is a “statutory
    action, and the [superior] court has only such jurisdiction as is granted by
    statute.” Weaver v. Weaver, 
    131 Ariz. 586
    , 587 (1982). The community
    property statute, A.R.S. § 25-211, does not distinguish between community
    property acquired during a marriage that is subsequently dissolved and
    community property acquired during a marriage that is subsequently
    annulled. The statute states:
    A.    All property acquired by either husband or wife
    during the marriage is the community property of the
    husband and wife except for property that is:
    1.      Acquired by gift, devise or descent.
    2.     Acquired after service of a petition for
    dissolution of marriage, legal separation or annulment
    if the petition results in a decree of dissolution of
    marriage, legal separation or annulment.
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    B.     Notwithstanding subsection A, paragraph 2, service of
    a petition for dissolution of marriage, legal separation or
    annulment does not:
    1.    Alter the status of preexisting community
    property.
    2.    Change the status of community property used
    to acquire new property or the status of that new
    property as community property.
    3.     Alter the duties and rights of either spouse with
    respect to the management of community property
    except    as    prescribed     pursuant     to   [A.R.S.
    § 25-315(A)(1)(a)].
    (Emphases added.)
    ¶17            As applied here, under A.R.S. § 25-211(A)(2), all property
    acquired “during the marriage is . . . community property . . . except for
    property that is . . . [a]cquired after service of a petition for
    dissolution . . . or annulment” that results in a dissolution or annulment.
    The statute thus presupposes that an annulment does not invalidate the
    community status of property acquired during the marriage, any more than
    a dissolution might invalidate the community status of property acquired
    during a marriage. Indeed, the relevant judicial proceeding—dissolution or
    annulment—is irrelevant for purposes of the statute. Subpart (B) of the
    statute makes the same point when it states that “service of a petition
    for . . . annulment does not . . . [a]lter the status of preexisting community
    property.”
    ¶18             The corresponding statute concerning separate property
    supports the same conclusion. Under A.R.S. § 25-213(B), property acquired
    by a spouse “after service of a petition for dissolution . . . or annulment
    is . . . the separate property of that spouse” if the petition results in a
    dissolution or annulment. If, as the superior court concluded here,
    community property principles do not apply to property acquired during a
    marriage that is annulled, the distinction the statute draws between
    property obtained before and after service of an annulment petition would
    be immaterial.
    ¶19           As for debt incurred during a marriage, A.R.S. § 25-214(C)(3)
    likewise allows either spouse to unilaterally bind the community to debt
    except, as relevant here, “after service of a petition for dissolution . . . or
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    annulment” that results in a dissolution or annulment. As in A.R.S.
    § 25-211, the legislature has mandated that the service of a petition for
    annulment has the same consequence as the service of a petition for
    dissolution. Just as A.R.S. § 25-211 presupposes that property acquired
    during a marriage that is annulled remains community property, A.R.S.
    § 25-213(C) presupposes that debt acquired by one spouse during a
    marriage binds both spouses even after the marriage is annulled. It would
    be unnecessary to discontinue the accrual of community property and
    community debt after service of the petition if the annulment itself resulted
    in the nullification of the community. See City of Mesa v. Killingsworth, 
    96 Ariz. 290
    , 294–95 (1964) (“The presumption is that the legislature did not
    intend to do a futile thing by including [language that] is not operative.“).
    ¶20           We acknowledge that our supreme court once held that
    “where there was no valid marriage of appellant to appellee, there can be
    no acquisition of property rights based on their marital status.” Cross v.
    Cross, 
    94 Ariz. 28
    , 31 (1963). The statutes cited above, however, were
    enacted or amended after the Cross decision, and render it inapplicable
    here. To the extent Cross conflicts with the current marital property statutes,
    A.R.S. §§ 25-211 to -215, it has been superseded.
    In an Annulment Action, the Superior Court is to Allocate
    the Community’s Assets and Debts under A.R.S. § 25-318.
    ¶21            Citing A.R.S. § 25-302(B), Wife argues that the only authority
    for the superior court to divide jointly held property in a family proceeding
    is A.R.S. § 25-318(A), which requires an equitable distribution. She asserts
    that the court erred by considering Husband’s Loan under A.R.S.
    § 25-318(B) because there is no authority in Title 25 for the allocation of
    marital or separate debts in an annulment proceeding.
    ¶22            We disagree. As discussed above, the court has the authority
    to divide property in an annulment proceeding. The court has that power
    under A.R.S. § 25-302(B), applying the principles in A.R.S. §§ 25-211
    through -215, and the division of community property includes the
    allocation of community debts. Cadwell v. Cadwell, 
    126 Ariz. 460
    , 462 (App.
    1980) (although the dissolution statutes do not expressly grant authority to
    allocate debts between the parties, “[a]ssets and obligations are reciprocally
    related and there can be no complete and equitable disposition of property
    without a corresponding consideration and disposition of obligations”).
    ¶23           “If grounds for annulment exist, the court to the extent that it
    has jurisdiction to do so, shall divide the property of the parties . . . .”
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    A.R.S. § 25-302(B). This provision grants the court authority to divide the
    community unless the court otherwise lacks jurisdiction to do so. Therefore,
    in an annulment action, the court has the same authority to allocate debts
    as in a dissolution or separation action. See A.R.S § 25-318(B)–(G).
    B.     The Court Must Divide the Couple’s Property Following
    Community Property Principles.
    ¶24          Husband urges this court to affirm the superior court’s
    property division arguing that the court adequately considered the Loan
    according to A.R.S. § 25-318(B). However, when dividing the community,
    the court is to consider all community assets and debts in making an
    equitable property distribution. A.R.S. § 25-318(A).
    ¶25           Before the annulment trial, the court accepted the parties’
    agreement for Husband’s house to remain his separate property and for
    each spouse to “keep their retirement accounts and bank accounts in their
    own names” and “the debts in their own names” as a binding agreement,
    pursuant to Rule 69, and found that the agreement was entered into
    “knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily,” and was “fair and equitable.”
    The court’s acceptance of the parties’ agreement, however, was predicated
    on the incorrect legal principle that the annulment voided the creation of
    the community. Therefore, the court could not correctly find that the parties
    acted with full knowledge of their property rights when they entered the
    agreement; nor could it determine whether the agreement was “fair and
    equitable.” See Buckholtz v. Buckholtz, 
    246 Ariz. 126
    , 132–33, ¶ 24 (App. 2019)
    (the court must determine whether a party acted with full knowledge of his
    separate property rights when he entered into an “unfair” agreement).
    When the court accepts a Rule 69 agreement based on an erroneous view of
    the law governing the marital estate, the agreement cannot be enforced
    absent novation. Accordingly, we vacate that portion of the decree
    concerning the disposition of property and debt.
    ¶26           Wife also requests that we vacate “all orders entered in
    connection with proceedings by Appellee for the enforcement of the Decree
    of Annulment after Appellant’s Notice of Appeal.” Pursuant to the court’s
    order, the condominium has been sold. We cannot unwind the sale, but we
    vacate the disposition of the parties’ property and debt, including
    reimbursement, contribution, outstanding fees related to the condominium,
    and the awarded attorney’s fees. On remand, the court may consider the
    amounts that Husband or Wife paid to maintain community assets as it
    would in any other proceeding dividing community property. See Bobrow
    v. Bobrow, 
    241 Ariz. 592
    , 596, ¶ 19 (App. 2017) (post-petition maintenance of
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    community assets from separate funds to be accounted for in “equitable
    property distribution”).
    C.     Husband’s Loan is Not a Separate Debt and Must be Considered
    in the Community Property Distribution.
    ¶27           Concluding that the couple established a community does not
    resolve the parties’ dispute regarding the allocation of the Loan. The court
    did not expressly characterize the nature of the Loan, but effectively found
    Wife responsible for half of the obligation by ordering that the parties first
    apply the condominium sale proceeds to pay off the Loan.
    ¶28           Husband maintains that because he obtained the Loan during
    the marriage for the benefit of the community, it is a community debt. See
    A.R.S. § 25-214(C). Wife argues that because A.R.S. § 25-214(C)(1) requires
    joinder of both spouses to bind the community in any transaction for the
    acquisition, disposition, or encumbrance of an interest in real property, the
    Loan should be viewed as Husband’s separate debt. Wife maintains that
    because Husband obtained the Loan as the sole signatory and using his
    separate real property as security, the Loan is Husband’s separate debt
    under the statute. We disagree with Wife.
    ¶29            Generally, all liability incurred by either spouse during a
    marriage is presumed to be a community obligation. Flower, 223 Ariz. at
    535, ¶ 12. This presumption applies to debt secured by separate property,
    Johnson v. Johnson, 
    131 Ariz. 38
    , 45 (1981) (“[W]e [do not] see any reason why
    the [community obligation] presumption should be negated by the fact that
    the husband used his separate property to secure the community loans.”),
    unless there is a statutory exception, Vance-Koepnick v. Koepnick, 
    197 Ariz. 162
    , 163, ¶ 6 (App. 1999) (guaranty exception applicable).
    Section 25-214(C)(1) provides that “[e]ither spouse separately may acquire,
    manage, control or dispose of community property or bind the community,
    except that joinder of both spouses is required” for “any transaction for the
    acquisition, disposition or encumbrance of an interest in real property.”
    (Emphasis added.) The Loan was not a purchase money loan on the
    condominium, nor did it encumber a community asset; therefore, the
    statutory exception under A.R.S. § 25-214(C)(1) does not apply. On remand,
    the court shall consider the loan as a community debt to be considered
    when equitably dividing the community.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30          We vacate the property and debt orders in the annulment
    decree and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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    Hammett v. Hammett
    Opinion of the Court
    Wife did not request attorney’s fees, but as the successful party, she is
    entitled to costs upon compliance with ARCAP 21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED:    JT
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