Cook v. Cook ( 2018 )


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    08/07/2018 01:09 AM CDT
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    COOK v. COOK
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    26 Neb. Ct. App. 137
    Deena M. Cook, appellee, v.
    Joshua J. Cook, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed July 31, 2018.     No. A-17-480.
    1.	 Divorce: Child Custody: Child Support: Property Division:
    Alimony: Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. In a marital dissolution
    action, an appellate court reviews the case de novo on the record to
    determine whether there has been an abuse of discretion by the trial
    judge. This standard of review applies to the trial court’s determinations
    regarding custody, child support, division of property, alimony, and
    attorney fees.
    2.	 Evidence: Appeal and Error. In a review de novo on the record, an
    appellate court reappraises the evidence as presented by the record and
    reaches its own independent conclusions with respect to the matters
    at issue.
    3.	 Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists if the
    reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriv-
    ing a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in matters
    submitted for disposition.
    4.	 Child Custody: Visitation: Courts. A trial court has an independent
    responsibility to determine questions of custody and visitation of minor
    children according to their best interests, which responsibility cannot be
    controlled by an agreement or stipulation of the parties.
    5.	 Divorce: Child Custody: Evidence. If the court disapproves of a cus-
    tody stipulation, it must give the parties an opportunity to present evi-
    dence relevant to a complete reexamination of the question of custody.
    6.	 Divorce: Child Custody. Personal observations by the court are not suf-
    ficient to support an award of custody in a dissolution proceeding in the
    absence of evidence establishing the best interests of the child.
    7.	 ____: ____. A court is required to review a parenting plan and determine
    if it meets the requirements of the Parenting Act and if it is in the best
    interests of the minor child or children.
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    8.	 ____: ____. If a parenting plan lacks any of the elements required by
    the Parenting Act or is not in the child’s best interests, the court shall
    modify and approve the parenting plan as modified, reject the parenting
    plan and order the parties to develop a new parenting plan, or reject the
    parenting plan and create a parenting plan that meets all the required
    elements and is in the best interests of the child.
    9.	 ____: ____. If a court rejects a stipulated parenting plan, it must provide
    written findings as to why the parenting plan is not in the best interests
    of the child.
    10.	 Divorce: Property Division. Equitable division of property is a three-
    step process: (1) classify the parties’ property as marital or nonmarital,
    setting aside the nonmarital property to the party who brought that prop-
    erty to the marriage; (2) value the marital assets and marital liabilities of
    the parties; and (3) calculate and divide the net marital estate between
    the parties in accordance with the principles contained in Neb. Rev. Stat.
    § 42-365 (Reissue 2016).
    11.	 ____: ____. All property accumulated and acquired by either spouse
    during the marriage is part of the marital estate, unless it falls within an
    exception to this general rule.
    12.	 Antenuptial Agreements: Property Division. A premarital agreement
    allows prospective spouses to avoid the application of the general rule
    that all property accumulated and acquired by either spouse during mar-
    riage is part of the marital estate.
    13.	 Antenuptial Agreements: Proof. The party opposing enforcement of
    a premarital agreement has the burden of proving that the agreement is
    not enforceable.
    14.	 Antenuptial Agreements. Nebraska’s Uniform Premarital Agreement
    Act broadly allows prospective spouses to protect their interests dur-
    ing a marriage and in contemplation of a divorce through a premari-
    tal agreement.
    15.	 Antenuptial Agreements: Property Division. Nebraska’s Uniform
    Premarital Agreement Act specifically allows prospective spouses to
    create premarital agreements providing that property acquired by each
    of the parties during the marriage, which by definition includes income
    separately earned, is to be his or her separate property.
    16.	 Property Division. A marital debt is one incurred during the marriage
    and before the date of separation by either spouse or both spouses for
    the joint benefit of the parties.
    Appeal from the District Court for Custer County: K arin
    L. Noakes, Judge. Affirmed in part as modified, and in part
    reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
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    COOK v. COOK
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    26 Neb. Ct. App. 137
    Nathan T. Bruner, of Bruner Frank, L.L.C., for appellant.
    Michael S. Borders, of Borders Law Office, for appellee.
    Moore, Chief Judge, and A rterburn and Welch, Judges.
    Moore, Chief Judge.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    The marriage of Deena M. Cook and Joshua J. Cook was
    dissolved by a decree of the district court for Custer County.
    Before the marriage, Joshua and Deena signed a premarital
    agreement that provided for separate ownership of their present
    or future property. They also submitted a stipulated parenting
    plan that provided the parties would share joint final say in
    certain parenting decisions regarding their children. The dis-
    trict court found certain agricultural assets and a joint operating
    debt to be part of the marital estate. The court also altered the
    stipulated parenting plan, giving Deena final decisionmak-
    ing authority over the children. On appeal, Joshua challenges
    these findings as contrary to the respective agreements. For the
    foregoing reasons, we affirm in part as modified and in part
    reverse, and remand for further proceedings.
    II. BACKGROUND
    Before Joshua and Deena were married on September 5,
    2009, they signed a premarital agreement that defined and val-
    ued both parties’ premarital property. The attached schedules to
    the premarital agreement show that Joshua owned real estate,
    pickup trucks, a horse, a “[t]racker,” a stock trailer, a saddle,
    and guns and that he had real estate debt. Joshua’s amortization
    schedules also included two cows. Deena’s schedule showed
    that she owned a vehicle and a gun collection and that she
    had a vehicle loan. The agreement also included the follow-
    ing provision:
    3. SEPARATE OWNERSHIP OF PROPERTIES
    It is understood and agreed by each of the parties
    hereto that each party will retain full and complete
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    ownership of all real and personal property that they now
    own, and shall retain full and complete ownership of all
    property which shall come into their possession as the
    result of each party’s work and labor, investments, inher­
    itance or otherwise. No property now owned or hereinaf-
    ter acquired by either party shall be considered marital or
    jointly owned property unless said property is specifically
    transferred into a joint or survivorship account by mutual
    consent of the parties. Each party shall continue to man-
    age and operate their own investments and business inter-
    ests, and the other party shall take no action which would
    be detrimental to the business or investments of the other,
    and shall make no claim of a right to use, or inherit said
    property, whether now owned or hereinafter acquired.
    Each party agrees to execute any documents necessary to
    allow the other to conduct their business affairs, so long
    as the execution of such documents do [sic] not adversely
    impact the party being asked to sign such document. If
    either party desires to sell, transfer or otherwise convey
    his or her separate property, the other shall join in the
    deed of conveyance or other instrument as may be neces-
    sary to make the same effectual.
    On August 19, 2015, Deena filed a complaint for dissolu-
    tion of marriage. Joshua filed an answer and countercomplaint
    for dissolution of marriage, requesting, among other things,
    that the court divide the parties’ assets in compliance with
    their premarital agreement. The parties filed a stipulated
    parenting plan on January 5, 2017, which plan provided that
    Deena would have physical custody of the parties’ two minor
    children, subject to Joshua’s parenting time. In the plan,
    Joshua and Deena agreed to share joint legal custody of the
    children and to share joint final say in the choices regard-
    ing the children’s education, religious upbringing, and medi-
    cal needs.
    Trial was held on February 28, 2017. The court admitted the
    parties’ stipulated parenting plan into evidence. Neither Joshua
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    nor Deena presented evidence concerning custody, parenting
    time, decisionmaking, or the ability of the parties to communi-
    cate on issues pertaining to the children. The parties did present
    evidence, however, about the enforceability and interpretation
    of their premarital agreement. Although Deena initially argued
    the premarital agreement was unenforceable, she eventually
    stipulated at trial to its validity and enforceability. Still, Deena
    argued that the agreement did not apply to various property,
    including a house, a “40 × 40 [b]uilding,” and agricultural
    assets Joshua used to produce income.
    The parties submitted a joint property statement to the court,
    which listed the parties’ assets and debts, each party’s estima-
    tion of the value of each asset or debt, and each party’s claim
    regarding whether the asset or debt was separate or marital
    property. The listed assets relevant to this appeal were a cow,
    item G1; corn, item G2; “[c]ash [r]ent,” item G3; and 30 head
    of yearling steers, item G4. Deena valued item G1 at $900,
    item G2 at $35,000, item G3 at $4,225, and item G4 at $45,000
    based on the values assigned to them in a balance sheet pre-
    pared for Bruning State Bank in 2015. Joshua listed no values
    for these items, instead claiming them as his separate property.
    Also listed on the joint property statement as item I1 was a
    secured debt from the Bank of Broken Bow, which each party
    claimed to be marital and valued at $27,000. At trial, Joshua
    and Deena stipulated that this debt corresponds to the corn,
    item G2.
    A loan officer at the Broken Bow branch of Bruning State
    Bank, also known as Bank of Broken Bow, testified that Joshua
    and Deena have an operating loan with his bank. The court
    admitted into evidence the loan note, which both Joshua and
    Deena signed. The operating loan is a line of credit that Joshua
    uses to fund his agricultural operation. To maintain the loan,
    the bank required Joshua and Deena to file a balance sheet of
    their assets and debts each year. The balance sheets contained
    property belonging to both Joshua and Deena. Although the
    loan officer had not researched the values the parties assigned
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    to equipment or real estate in the balance sheet, he verified
    the values assigned to corn, feed, and cattle using local market
    prices. The court admitted into evidence two of those balance
    sheets, the first dated July 6, 2015, and the second dated June
    24, 2014. Deena’s signature appeared on the June 2014 balance
    sheet but not on the July 2015 balance sheet. The loan officer
    indicated the discrepancy was a clerical error. The court also
    admitted the transaction history for this line of credit into evi-
    dence, which showed the loan had an outstanding balance of
    $27,000 at the time Deena filed for divorce.
    Deena testified about the extent and value of the property
    she claimed to be marital, specifically stating that items G1
    through G4 were not included by name in the premarital agree-
    ment. She noted that item G4, the 30 head of yearling steers,
    must have been purchased during the marriage because they
    were not listed on Bruning State Bank’s June 2014 balance
    sheet. Deena admitted that, consistent with their premarital
    agreement, she and Joshua kept their finances separate during
    their marriage, having separate bank accounts, vehicles, and,
    with some exceptions, debts. At the time of trial, Deena had
    been employed for 5 years and was earning an annual salary
    of $40,100. Deena’s employment provides health and dental
    insurance for the family, as well as a retirement account. Deena
    deposited her earnings into her separate bank account.
    Joshua testified that he farms, ranches, and drives a truck
    for a living and that he custom farms corn and raises cattle
    on leased ground. Joshua further testified that he attempts to
    sell the corn and cattle at the high points of their respective
    markets, although each year’s corn crop and yearling steers
    are grown or raised and sold in the same year. He subleases
    some of his rental land, but does not charge his sublessees
    more for the land than he pays to rent it. Joshua’s 2015 tax
    return does not reflect any rental income, and he could not
    explain the $4,225 in cash rent shown as an asset on Bruning
    State Bank’s July 2015 balance sheet. The balance sheet
    includes cash rent of $6,500 as a current liability. Joshua uses
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    his separate bank accounts for his farming, ranching, and
    trucking operations. The court admitted bank statements for
    Joshua’s separate accounts into evidence, which demonstrate
    that Joshua deposited the income from his various operations
    into those accounts.
    At the conclusion of evidence, the trial court expressed the
    following concerns with the premarital agreement:
    I’m just going to point out to the parties my concern with
    the language in the Prenuptial Agreement in section three
    where it says, shall retain full and complete ownership
    of all property which shall come into their possession
    as the result of each party’s work and labor. You know,
    typically I’ve upheld prenuptial agreements where it is
    income-­produced [sic] on premarital property that remains
    separate. But, this appears as though it’s too broad to
    be allowed. The result of each party’s work and labor
    typically goes into a marital estate . . . . So, anyway, that
    wording concerns me that that may not be equitable.
    The court filed the decree in April 2017. The decree recited
    that the parties submitted a stipulated parenting plan, which the
    court found to be fair, reasonable, and in the best interests of
    the minor children. The court awarded the parties joint legal
    custody of the children and awarded Deena the primary care,
    custody, and control of the children subject to the parenting
    plan. The court then stated:
    The parenting plan (Exhibit 24) is approved and ordered
    EXCEPT that the mother shall have the final say in
    decisions regarding the children upon which the par-
    ties cannot agree. The court does not approve the por-
    tion of the plan under the Parenting Responsibilities and
    Cooperation section that states the parents shall have the
    “joint final say in the choices regarding the children’s
    education, religious upbringing and medical needs” and
    the parties are not ordered to comply with that provision.
    The parties are ordered to comply with the remaining
    terms of the parenting plan.
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    The decree further acknowledged that the parties stipulated
    to the premarital agreement’s validity and enforceability. It
    explained, “The findings and orders hereinafter made incor-
    porate such stipulations insofar as they go, and the Court
    determines the other issues upon the evidence presented.” The
    court found various property and debts to be nonmarital or
    separate property under the premarital agreement. The court
    awarded to Deena as her separate property two bank accounts,
    a life insurance policy, and a retirement account. And to
    Joshua as his separate property, the court awarded a 2006
    Chevy Silverado pickup, a 2006 Kawasaki, a residence in
    Custer County, a “40 × 40 [b]uilding,” a life insurance policy,
    and three investment accounts. The court found the mortgage
    on the residence to be Joshua’s nonmarital debt under the
    premarital agreement. But the court included the property dis-
    puted here—items G1, G2, G3, G4, and the debt, item I1—in
    the marital estate. The court awarded assets to Deena valued
    at $12,622 and did not assign her any marital debt. The court
    awarded assets to Joshua, including those presently disputed,
    with a total value of $137,733, and assigned him the $27,000
    operating debt, resulting in a net marital estate of $110,733.
    To equalize the marital estate, the court awarded Deena a
    judgment of $49,056.
    Joshua appeals.
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Joshua assigns, restated, that the district court erred in (1)
    modifying the parties’ stipulation contained in the joint par-
    enting plan to give Deena final decisionmaking authority over
    the children and (2) including items G1, G2, G3, G4, and I1
    in the marital estate.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1-3] In a marital dissolution action, an appellate court
    reviews the case de novo on the record to determine whether
    there has been an abuse of discretion by the trial judge.
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    Becher v. Becher, 
    299 Neb. 206
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 12
     (2018).
    This standard of review applies to the trial court’s determi-
    nations regarding custody, child support, division of prop-
    erty, alimony, and attorney fees. Id. In a review de novo
    on the record, an appellate court reappraises the evidence
    as presented by the record and reaches its own independent
    conclusions with respect to the matters at issue. Connolly v.
    Connolly, 
    299 Neb. 103
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 693
     (2018). A judicial
    abuse of discretion exists if the reasons or rulings of a trial
    judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a
    substantial right and denying just results in matters submitted
    for disposition. Id.
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. Parenting Plan
    Joshua assigns the district court erred in giving Deena final
    decisionmaking authority over the children. He argues that
    because he and Deena agreed to a parenting plan that awarded
    them joint decisionmaking authority and presented no evidence
    beyond the stipulated parenting plan, the court could not alter
    the parties’ parenting plan without an evidentiary hearing. He
    further argues that the court should have included in the decree
    factual findings about why Joshua and Deena’s stipulated
    parenting plan was not in the best interests of the children.
    We agree.
    (a) Evidentiary Hearing
    Joshua argues that if a court alters a stipulated parenting
    plan, it must hear evidence concerning the custody arrange-
    ment that is in the best interests of the children. He asserts the
    court erred in altering the plan to award Deena final decision-
    making authority over the children, because the only evidence
    regarding the parenting plan presented at trial was the testi-
    mony of Joshua and Deena that the stipulated parenting plan is
    in their children’s best interests.
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    [4-6] A trial court has an independent responsibility to deter-
    mine questions of custody and visitation of minor children
    according to their best interests, which responsibility cannot be
    controlled by an agreement or stipulation of the parties. Becher,
    supra. But if the court disapproves of a custody stipulation, it
    must give the parties an opportunity to present evidence rel-
    evant to a complete reexamination of the question of custody.
    Zahl v. Zahl, 
    273 Neb. 1043
    , 
    736 N.W.2d 365
     (2007) (citing
    Lautenschlager v. Lautenschlager, 
    201 Neb. 741
    , 
    272 N.W.2d 40
     (1978)). Personal observations by the court are not suffi-
    cient to support an award of custody in a dissolution proceed-
    ing in the absence of evidence establishing the best interests of
    the child. See Lautenschlager, supra.
    In Lautenschlager, supra, a mother and father agreed by
    stipulation that the mother should have custody of their
    child. In the course of the divorce trial, the mother falsely
    answered a question posed to her. The trial court concluded
    that because she lied to the court, the mother’s character was
    not conducive for custody. The mother appealed, arguing that
    the record did not contain sufficient evidence to support the
    trial court’s custody decision. The Nebraska Supreme Court
    held that when a trial court concludes that a stipulation should
    not be approved, it must give the parties an opportunity to
    secure and present evidence relevant to a competent reexam­
    ination of the question of custody and the best interests of
    the child. Because the trial court did not offer that opportu-
    nity to the mother, the Nebraska Supreme Court reversed the
    decree and remanded the custody issue to the trial court for
    further proceedings.
    So too, in Zahl, supra, when a mother and father divorced,
    they each sought sole custody of their child. The parents each
    submitted evidence to support their claims for sole custody and
    their different proposed parenting plans. The trial court’s dis-
    solution decree did not adopt either party’s proposal. Instead,
    it decreed that the parties would share joint custody, without
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    discussing the best interests of the child. On appeal, the father
    challenged the court’s ability to enter a joint custody order
    without allowing the parties to present evidence on that issue.
    The Nebraska Supreme Court held that under Lautenschlager,
    supra, the trial court was required to give the parties an oppor-
    tunity to present evidence relevant to a competent reexamina-
    tion of the question of custody when it disapproved of the
    plans they submitted.
    Here, the parties presented no evidence on child custody
    other than their testimony that the agreed-upon parenting plan
    was in their children’s best interests. The parties agreed to
    share joint legal custody of the children. “Joint legal custody”
    is defined by statute as “mutual authority and responsibility of
    the parents for making mutual fundamental decisions regard-
    ing the child’s welfare, including choices regarding education
    and health.” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2922(11) (Reissue 2016).
    Consistent with this definition, the parties’ stipulated parent-
    ing plan provided that the parents shall have “the joint final
    say in the choices regarding the children’s education, religious
    upbringing and medical needs.” At no time during the trial
    did the court inform the parties that it was dissatisfied with
    this provision. The court offered no opportunity for the par-
    ties to present evidence on why they believed the joint final
    decisionmaking authority to be in the best interests of their
    children. Under the rule announced in Lautenschlager and
    Zahl, the court was required to give the parties due process
    before altering their stipulated arrangement, and the court’s
    observation of the parties during the dissolution hearing is
    insufficient to support altering a stipulated parenting plan. See
    Lautenschlager, supra. We find the district court abused its
    discretion in failing to provide the parties an opportunity to
    present evidence before altering their stipulated parenting plan
    as it relates to joint decisionmaking. We, therefore, reverse
    the portion of the decree granting Deena final decisionmak-
    ing authority over the children and remand that issue to the
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    district court for further proceedings to allow the parties to
    present evidence on it.
    (b) Written Findings Regarding
    Why Parenting Plan Was Not
    in Children’s Best Interests
    Joshua also argues that when the district court chose to
    reject a portion of the stipulated parenting plan, under Neb.
    Rev. Stat. § 43-2923(4) (Reissue 2016), the court was required
    to provide written findings as to why the stipulated parenting
    plan was not in the best interests of the children.
    [7-9] A court is required to review a parenting plan and
    determine if it meets the requirements of the Parenting Act
    and if it is in the best interests of the minor child or children.
    Becher v. Becher, 
    299 Neb. 206
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 12
     (2018). If the
    parenting plan lacks any of the elements required by the act
    or is not in the child’s best interests, the court shall modify
    and approve the parenting plan as modified, reject the par-
    enting plan and order the parties to develop a new parenting
    plan, or reject the parenting plan and create a parenting plan
    that meets all the required elements and is in the best inter-
    ests of the child. Id. See, also, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2935(1)
    (Reissue 2016). But if the court rejects a parenting plan, it
    must provide written findings as to why the parenting plan is
    not in the best interests of the child. Becher, supra. See, also,
    § 43-2923(4).
    In Becher, supra, the dissolution trial was conducted by a
    referee whose report included recommended findings of fact
    related to child custody and a proposed parenting plan. The
    district court modified the referee’s proposed parenting plan.
    On appeal, the Nebraska Supreme Court found that the district
    court did not abuse its discretion in modifying the proposed
    parenting plan, because of its independent responsibility to
    determine custody and parenting time according to the chil-
    dren’s best interests. In reaching this conclusion, the court
    noted that the district court provided written findings of why
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    the modification to reduce potential conflicts was in the chil-
    dren’s best interests.
    In the instant case, beyond the district court’s statement
    that it did not approve of the parties sharing joint decision-
    making authority over their children, the dissolution decree
    provided no written findings explaining why it rejected and
    modified this provision in the stipulated parenting plan. Under
    § 43-2923(4), the district court is required to provide such
    written findings. Because we are reversing the portion of the
    decree that rejected the decisionmaking provision in the parent-
    ing plan and remanding the issue for further proceedings, we
    need not address this argument further, other than to point out
    the statutory obligation of the court.
    2. Determination of
    M arital Estate
    Joshua assigns that the district court erred in including items
    G1, G2, G3, G4, and I1 in the marital estate, contrary to the
    provisions of the premarital agreement. The court enforced the
    provisions of the premarital agreement with respect to some of
    the parties’ separate property as outlined above. But the court
    disregarded the premarital agreement with respect to a $900
    cow, item G1; $35,000 in corn, item G2; $4,225 in cash rents,
    item G3; and $45,000 in yearling steers, item G4. Based on
    this division, it appears the court determined that the premarital
    agreement applied only to items with a specific title or account
    name. We disagree with the court’s interpretation.
    [10] Under Nebraska’s divorce statutes, “The purpose of
    a property division is to distribute the marital assets equita-
    bly between the parties.” Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-365 (Reissue
    2016). Equitable division of property is a three-step process:
    (1) classify the parties’ property as marital or nonmarital, set-
    ting aside the nonmarital property to the party who brought
    that property to the marriage; (2) value the marital assets
    and marital liabilities of the parties; and (3) calculate and
    divide the net marital estate between the parties in accordance
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    with the principles contained in § 42-365. See Osantowski v.
    Osantowski, 
    298 Neb. 339
    , 
    904 N.W.2d 251
     (2017).
    [11,12] All property accumulated and acquired by either
    spouse during the marriage is part of the marital estate, unless
    it falls within an exception to this general rule. Stephens v.
    Stephens, 
    297 Neb. 188
    , 
    899 N.W.2d 582
     (2017). Thus, income
    from either party that accumulates during the marriage is a
    marital asset. Id. (citing Harris v. Harris, 
    261 Neb. 75
    , 
    621 N.W.2d 491
     (2001)). But spouses are able to contract around
    this general rule using a premarital agreement. See Strickland
    v. Omaha Nat. Bank, 
    181 Neb. 478
    , 491, 
    149 N.W.2d 344
    , 354
    (1967) (“it is the very purpose of an antenuptial contract to
    exclude the operation of statutory law with respect to the prop-
    erty rights of the parties”), overruled on other grounds, In re
    Estate of Stephenson, 
    243 Neb. 890
    , 
    503 N.W.2d 540
     (1993).
    [13] Under Nebraska’s Uniform Premarital Agreement Act
    (UPAA), a “[p]remarital agreement” is an agreement between
    prospective spouses made in contemplation of marriage that
    is effective upon marriage. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-1002(1)
    (Reissue 2016). The party opposing enforcement of a premari-
    tal agreement has the burden of proving that the agreement is
    not enforceable. Edwards v. Edwards, 
    16 Neb. Ct. App. 297
    ,
    
    744 N.W.2d 243
     (2008) (citing Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-1006(1)
    (Reissue 2016)). Joshua and Deena stipulated that the premari-
    tal agreement is valid and enforceable.
    [14] The UPAA broadly allows prospective spouses to pro-
    tect their interests during a marriage and in contemplation of a
    divorce through a premarital agreement. It provides, in relevant
    part, as follows:
    (1) Parties to a premarital agreement may contract with
    respect to:
    (a) The rights and obligations of each of the parties in
    any of the property of either or both of them whenever
    and wherever acquired or located;
    (b) The right to buy, sell, use, transfer, exchange, aban-
    don, lease, consume, expend, assign, create a security
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    interest in, mortgage, encumber, dispose of, or otherwise
    manage and control property;
    (c) The disposition of property upon separation, marital
    dissolution, death, or the occurrence or nonoccurrence of
    any other event;
    (d) The modification or elimination of spousal support;
    (e) The making of a will, trust, or other arrangement, to
    carry out the provisions of the agreement;
    (f) The ownership rights in and disposition of the death
    benefit from a life insurance policy;
    (g) The choice of law governing the construction of the
    agreement; and
    (h) Any other matter, including their personal rights
    and obligations, not in violation of public policy or a stat-
    ute imposing a criminal penalty.
    (Emphasis supplied.) Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-1004 (Reissue 2016).
    The act defines property as “an interest, present or future, legal
    or equitable, vested or contingent, in real or personal property,
    including income and earnings.” § 42-1002(2).
    [15] Joshua and Deena’s premarital agreement in section
    3 specifically provided “each party will retain full and com-
    plete ownership of all real and personal property that they
    now own, and shall retain full and complete ownership of
    all property which shall come into their possession as the
    result of each party’s work and labor, investments, inherit­
    ance or otherwise.” Despite the concerns the court voiced
    at the conclusion of the trial, Nebraska’s UPAA specifi-
    cally allows prospective spouses to create premarital agree-
    ments providing that property acquired by each of the parties
    during the marriage, which by definition includes income
    separately earned, is to be his or her separate property. See
    §§ 42-1002(2) and 42-1004(1). Therefore, we find section 3
    of Joshua and Deena’s premarital agreement to be enforceable
    under Nebraska’s UPAA.
    The evidence shows that Joshua acquired items G1, G2,
    G3, and G4 as the result of his separate farming and ranching
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    activities and through his individual labor. Joshua placed earn-
    ings from the sale of his corn and yearling steers and from
    subletting land in his separate account. And Joshua and Deena
    followed the terms of their premarital agreement by keeping
    their finances separate during marriage. As a result, the cow,
    corn, yearling steers, and rental income were Joshua’s separate
    property under the premarital agreement.
    [16] Both parties labeled item I1, which is a $27,000 debt
    secured by Joshua’s corn, as a marital debt on their joint prop-
    erty statement, and Joshua and Deena owe the debt jointly. A
    marital debt is one incurred during the marriage and before
    the date of separation by either spouse or both spouses for the
    joint benefit of the parties. McGuire v. McGuire, 
    11 Neb. Ct. App. 433
    , 
    652 N.W.2d 293
     (2002). But the record shows that this
    joint debt was for the benefit of Joshua’s separate operations.
    Joshua and Deena’s stipulation at trial connected this debt to
    Joshua’s corn, item G2. Deena presumably executed the loan
    in compliance with the provision in the premarital agreement
    to execute any documents necessary to allow Joshua to conduct
    his business affairs. Thus, also consistent with the agreement,
    she should not be adversely impacted by signing the loan. And
    there was no evidence that the parties used Deena’s income or
    money from her separate bank account to make payments on
    the debt. Because we have determined that the corn is Joshua’s
    separate property pursuant to the premarital agreement, the
    associated debt likewise should be considered Joshua’s sepa-
    rate debt and not included in the marital estate, because the
    debt is not for the joint benefit of the parties.
    We find the district court abused its discretion in includ-
    ing items G1, G2, G3, and G4 in the marital estate. Thus, we
    modify the decree to exclude those items from the division of
    the marital estate and to award them to Joshua as his separate
    property under the premarital agreement. Similarly, we modify
    the decree to exclude the debt in item I1 from the marital
    estate and to assign the debt to Joshua as his separate debt
    under the premarital agreement.
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    Because we modified the determination of the marital
    estate, we must recalculate the equalization judgment due
    to Deena. Neither party has challenged the court’s valuation
    of the marital property, so we use the court’s values in cal-
    culating the division of the marital estate. The court found
    Deena’s net marital estate to equal $12,622. After removing
    the disputed assets and debt from the marital estate, Joshua’s
    net marital estate equals $52,608. The difference between the
    awards is $39,986. To equalize the division, Deena is entitled
    to a judgment of $19,993. Therefore, we modify the decree to
    award Deena a judgment in the sum of $19,993, as opposed
    to $49,056.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We find the district court abused its discretion in altering
    the parties’ stipulated parenting plan without affording the par-
    ties an opportunity to present evidence on their ability to make
    joint decisions concerning the children. We reverse the portion
    of the decree that altered the parenting plan and remand the
    cause for further proceedings on this issue. We also find the
    court abused its discretion in including items G1, G2, G3, G4,
    and I1 in the marital estate. We modify the classification of the
    marital estate to provide that these items are Joshua’s separate,
    nonmarital property in accordance with the premarital agree-
    ment. As a result, we modify the court’s equalization judgment
    against Joshua to $19,993.
    A ffirmed in part as modified, and in part reversed
    and remanded for further proceedings.