Alice Jin-Yue Guan v. Bing Ran ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                       COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Alston, Chafin and Senior Judge Annunziata
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Alexandria, Virginia
    ALICE JIN-YUE GUAN
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.            Record No. 0968-16-4                                            JUDGE TERESA M. CHAFIN
    FEBRUARY 7, 2017
    BING RAN
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ALEXANDRIA
    James C. Clark, Judge
    Norman A. Thomas (Norman A. Thomas, PLLC, on briefs), for
    appellant.
    Christopher W. Schinstock (Christopher W. Schinstock, PLLC, on
    brief), for appellee.
    In this domestic relations case, Alice Jin-Yue Guan and Bing Ran appeal an order entered
    by the Circuit Court of the City of Alexandria on May 13, 2016. Guan challenges the circuit
    court’s decision in three assignments of error. Specifically, she contends that the circuit court
    erred by: (1) failing to order Ran to pay $250,000 in delinquent spousal support, (2) finding that
    she breached the parties’ October 15, 2008 post-divorce agreement, and (3) refusing to award her
    attorney’s fees and costs as the prevailing party in the litigation.
    Ran challenges the circuit court’s decision in three cross-assignments of error. He
    contends that the circuit court erred by: (1) ordering him to pay $50,000 in spousal support
    contrary to the express wording of the parties’ October 15, 2008 post-divorce agreement,
    (2) refusing to award him attorney’s fees and costs as the prevailing party in the litigation, and
    (3) “finding and ruling that the alleged overpayments . . . of $2,462,083.00 taken by [Guan]
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    constituted her separate property and [were] not offset against amounts subsequently accruing to
    her under the [agreements of the parties].”
    For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the parties’ October 15, 2008 post-divorce
    agreement did not effectively waive or modify the circuit court’s prior spousal support award.
    Subsequently, we conclude that Guan did not breach the October 15, 2008 agreement by
    petitioning the circuit court to collect the $250,000 spousal support award at issue. Additionally,
    we conclude that the terms of the October 15, 2008 agreement did not entitle Ran to an offsetting
    distribution of $2,462,083 based on the payments that Guan received from the parties’ business
    in 2008. In light of these decisions, we conclude that it will be necessary for the circuit court to
    reconsider its decision pertaining to the award of attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to the
    agreement originally incorporated into the parties’ final decree of divorce. Accordingly, we
    affirm the circuit court’s decision in part, reverse its decision in part, and remand this case for
    further consideration.
    I. BACKGROUND
    As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and this memorandum
    opinion carries no precedential value, we recite only those facts and incidents of the proceedings
    as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this appeal. Under settled
    principles of appellate review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing
    party in the circuit court, and we grant that party the benefit of any reasonable inferences flowing
    from the evidence presented. Congdon v. Congdon, 
    40 Va. App. 255
    , 258, 
    578 S.E.2d 833
    , 835
    (2003). Thus, in the context of this appeal, we view the evidence pertaining to the issues raised
    in Guan’s assignments of error in the light most favorable to Ran and the evidence pertaining to
    the issues raised in Ran’s assignments of error in the light most favorable to Guan. So viewed,
    the evidence is as follows.
    - 2 -
    Guan and Ran married in China in 1985. In that same year, they migrated to the United
    States and pursued educational opportunities.1 In 1996, the parties founded Advanced Systems
    Technology and Management, Inc. (“AdSTM”), a science and technology consulting firm that
    developed advanced applications for computer modelling and simulation. Although Ran
    managed many aspects of the business, Guan was the sole shareholder of AdSTM.
    As Guan was classified as an individual with a “social disadvantage” because she was an
    Asian-Pacific American, AdSTM was eligible to enroll in the Small Business Administration’s
    Section 8(a) program. This program provided AdSTM with an advantageous position when
    bidding for federal contracts. Over time, AdSTM grew into a very successful business that
    earned millions of dollars each year.
    When Guan and Ran separated in 2006, they began arguing about their respective roles in
    AdSTM. They disagreed about their respective stock ownership percentages in the company,
    and their rights to manage the company and control its finances. In order to resolve these
    disputes, the parties entered into a series of agreements addressing their rights concerning
    AdSTM and other issues.2
    On December 15, 2006, the parties executed an agreement entitled “Parenting, Support
    and Property Settlement Final Agreement” (“PSA”). The parties’ PSA addressed issues related
    to their children, their rights to spousal support, and their marital property and interests in
    1
    Guan earned a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering in 1997, and Ran earned a Ph.D. in
    mechanical engineering in 1992.
    2
    Although the parties entered into numerous agreements, only the “Parenting, Support
    and Property Settlement Final Agreement” executed on December 15, 2006, and the amendment
    to that agreement executed on October 15, 2008, are pertinent to this appeal. Additionally, we
    note that, while the December 15, 2006 agreement was drafted with the assistance of a mediator,
    the other agreements were drafted by the parties themselves without the assistance of legal
    counsel.
    - 3 -
    AdSTM. The circuit court affirmed, ratified, and incorporated this agreement into the parties’
    final divorce decree entered on November 30, 2007.
    Paragraph 5 of the PSA established Ran’s spousal support obligation. That provision
    stated, in pertinent part, that “[Ran] shall pay [Guan] a lump sum of $250,000 as spousal support,
    payable in five consecutive years with $50,000 per year, starting July 5th, 2008.” The provision
    also waived Ran’s right to receive spousal support from Guan. When addressing the spousal
    support obligation established in the PSA, the parties’ final decree of divorce noted that “the
    support obligation as it becomes due and unpaid creates a judgment by operation of law.”
    Paragraph 8 of the PSA addressed the division of the parties’ personal property. Notably,
    subsection (d) of that paragraph addressed a prior $1,800,000 distribution made to Guan from
    AdSTM. Paragraph 8(d), entitled “Distribution of Funds,” stated:
    [Ran] deposited certain funds into [Guan’s] bank account on
    November 3, 2006, and [Guan] acknowledges receipt of these
    funds. These funds shall be [Guan’s] sole and separate property.
    As soon as AdSTM has enough funds after paying salaries,
    expenses, taxes, [and] health insurance, [Guan] or [Ran] shall
    deposit the same amount to [Ran] and this fund shall be [Ran’s]
    sole and separate property. To maintain AdSTM’s operating
    funds, [Ran] agrees to take his amount in installments.
    Paragraph 9 of the PSA addressed the parties’ interests in AdSTM. Among other things,
    Paragraph 9 established that Ran would purchase 510 shares of AdSTM from Guan on July 5,
    2008, and thereby become the majority shareholder of the company.3 Paragraph 9 also stated
    that “[d]uring the period through July 5th, 2008, neither [Ran] nor [Guan] shall receive a higher
    income than the other from AdSTM, and the income of each party shall be not less than
    $150,000 per year.” Additionally, Paragraph 9 addressed the future managerial and financial
    roles of Guan and Ran in the ongoing operation of AdSTM.
    3
    The testimony of the parties suggested that AdSTM was scheduled to “graduate” from
    the Small Business Administration’s Section 8(a) program on July 5, 2008.
    - 4 -
    Paragraph 16 of the PSA addressed the settlement of any potential disputes arising under
    the agreement. In Paragraph 16, Guan and Ran agreed to try to resolve any future disputes
    involving the PSA without resorting to litigation. To that end, the parties agreed to attempt to
    initially resolve disputes through mediation. Paragraph 16, however, allowed either party to
    present a dispute arising under the PSA to a court of proper jurisdiction when mediation failed to
    resolve the dispute or did not “appear to be productive.” Paragraph 16 then stated:
    If either party files a petition charging the other with a breach of
    any of the provisions of this agreement and the matter is heard by a
    court, the prevailing party shall have the right to have all of his or
    her reasonable legal fees and costs in the matter reimbursed by the
    party who does not prevail.
    Paragraph 19 of the PSA addressed the ability of the parties to modify the agreement in
    the future. That provision stated, “No modification or waiver of any of the terms of this
    agreement shall be valid unless in writing and signed by both parties and notarized at [Guan’s]
    bank.” Paragraph 19 also established that “[t]he failure of either party to insist upon the strict
    performance of any provision of this agreement shall not be construed as a relinquishment of
    such right.”
    Shortly before Ran was scheduled to purchase the majority of the shares of AdSTM from
    Guan pursuant to the PSA, Guan withdrew approximately $2,400,000 from the company’s
    accounts through a series of distributions.4 Ran objected to the distributions, and disagreements
    arose concerning the parties’ interests in AdSTM. The parties agreed to renegotiate their
    interests in the company in an effort to amicably resolve their dispute.
    After several months of negotiation, the parties executed an amendment to their PSA on
    October 15, 2008. In the amendment, Ran agreed to allow Guan to keep the distributions she
    4
    These distributions form the basis of Ran’s assignment of error challenging the circuit
    court’s holding concerning his right to a $2,462,083 offset distribution.
    - 5 -
    received from AdSTM in 2008 and Guan agreed to waive Ran’s spousal support obligation.
    Specifically, Paragraph 2 of the amendment stated:
    [Guan] is entitled to all the [AdSTM] distributions made to her and
    the taxes AdSTM paid to IRS and VA State for [Guan] from
    1/1/2008-7/1/2008, and those payments are [Guan’s] sole property.
    [Ran] agrees that those payments were made correctly and [Ran]
    shall not claim any part of it. In addition [Ran] agrees that the
    wording of “income” in the original agreement citing: “. . . Neither
    [Ran] or [Guan] shall receive a higher income than the other from
    AdSTM . . .” means salary and bonus only. And the spousal
    support in the original agreement ([signed] on Dec. 15, 2006
    between [Ran] and [Guan]) is voided. [Ran] shall not pay any
    spousal support to [Guan]. And [Guan] shall not claim any spousal
    support under any circumstances.
    The terms set forth in Paragraph 2 were expressly made contingent on Ran’s purchase of Guan’s
    home pursuant to another section of the amendment.
    Paragraph 3 of the amendment clarified each party’s interest in AdSTM. That paragraph
    established that Guan owned 51% of AdSTM, and Ran owned the remaining 49% of the
    company. Other provisions of the amendment addressed the roles that each party would play in
    the future management of the business. Paragraph 7 of the amendment stated that “[Guan] and
    [Ran] shall have the same salary and bonus, other benefits and . . . profit distribution from
    AdSTM. Minimum salary [b]onus of Guan or/and [sic] Ran will be $150K.”
    In Paragraph 17 of the amendment, Guan and Ran agreed that the amendment was the
    only valid amendment to the parties’ PSA. They also agreed to a punitive provision triggered by
    any potential breach of the terms of the amendment. Paragraph 17 stated, in pertinent part, “If
    this amendment is breached, then the original agreement [the PSA] will become the governing
    agreement.”
    Paragraph 19 of the amendment addressed disputes over the accuracy of corporate
    documents. That paragraph stated, “Both [Ran] and [Guan] have reviewed all corporate
    documents and files prior to 7/l/2008 and agree with all that is in those documents are correct
    - 6 -
    [sic].” That paragraph also stated that “[Ran] and [Guan] shall not threaten each other or take
    any legal action against each other.”
    The October 15, 2008 amendment resolved the parties’ disputes for a period of almost
    seven years. During that period, neither party claimed that the other had breached the terms of
    either the amendment or their PSA. In fact, the parties got along both professionally and
    personally. In 2014, however, their affable relationship rapidly dissolved due to business
    disputes pertaining to the security clearance required by many of AdSTM’s government
    contracts.
    On October 10, 2014, Guan filed a petition requesting the circuit court to issue a rule to
    show cause commanding Ran to appear and explain why he should not be held in contempt of
    court for his noncompliance with the terms of the PSA incorporated into the parties’ final decree
    of divorce. Guan alleged that Ran had violated the terms of the PSA by failing to pay her any
    spousal support. She also alleged that Ran had not properly paid her salary and distributions
    from AdSTM pursuant to the terms of the PSA. Additionally, Guan claimed that Ran had
    violated the PSA by failing to reimburse her for their children’s college expenses. Guan
    requested the circuit court to order Ran to pay her the sums owed to her under the parties’ PSA
    under pain of contempt, and award her the attorney’s fees and costs associated with the
    enforcement of their agreement.5
    On October 13, 2014, the circuit court issued a rule to show cause commanding Ran to
    appear and explain his failure to comply with the terms incorporated into the parties’ final decree
    5
    Guan’s petition also requested the circuit court to enter an order freezing Ran’s assets to
    preserve the status quo during the litigation. On October 15, 2014, Guan filed a separate motion
    for injunctive relief that requested the circuit court to enter an order freezing the assets of both
    Ran and AdSTM. The circuit court denied these requests at the conclusion of a hearing held on
    October 22, 2014.
    - 7 -
    of divorce. The parties then engaged in months of extensive discovery, with each party
    employing forensic accountants to analyze AdSTM’s finances.
    On May 1, 2015, Ran filed a motion to modify the parties’ final decree of divorce based
    on the October 15, 2008 amendment to the PSA. Although Guan’s petition failed to reference
    the amendment, Ran attached a copy of the amendment to his motion and requested the circuit
    court to modify the parties’ divorce decree to conform to its terms. Guan opposed Ran’s motion
    by arguing that the amendment contained void and ineffective provisions and that it was signed
    under duress.
    Following three days of evidentiary hearings, the circuit court issued a letter opinion
    resolving most of the issues presented in this case.6 As a preliminary matter, the circuit court
    held that the parties were bound by the terms of the October 15, 2008 amendment to their PSA.
    The circuit court emphasized that the amendment “was relied on by both parties from the time of
    its entry until this litigation.”
    The circuit court rejected Guan’s claim to spousal support pursuant to the terms of the
    amendment. As Guan waived her right to receive spousal support in the amendment, the circuit
    court concluded that she was not entitled to receive the spousal support award outlined in the
    parties’ PSA and incorporated into the divorce decree. The circuit court noted, however, that the
    initial $50,000 spousal support payment outlined in the PSA had already accrued when the
    parties agreed to the amendment. Therefore, the circuit court concluded that Guan was entitled
    to receive that payment.
    The circuit court then applied the terms of the amendment to calculate the amounts of
    money owed to each party. The circuit court found the calculations provided by Ran’s expert
    witness “more compelling” than those offered by Guan’s expert witness, and applied those
    6
    The circuit court struck Guan’s claim regarding the reimbursement of the children’s
    college expenses during the evidentiary hearings.
    - 8 -
    calculations with one exception. The circuit court disagreed with the manner in which Ran’s
    expert witness addressed the distributions that Guan received from AdSTM in 2008 shortly
    before Ran was scheduled to become the majority owner of the business. Although Ran’s expert
    classified the approximately $2,400,000 of distributions as Guan’s income, the circuit court
    concluded that such a classification was contrary to the language of Paragraph 2 of the
    amendment. The circuit court explained that:
    A fair and sensible reading of the paragraph leads to the conclusion
    that the parties intended that the $2,492,000 Ms. Guan distributed
    to herself was to be her separate property not subject to equalizing
    payments to Mr. Ran. This conclusion is supported by the party’s
    language to the effect that the payments were distributions
    correctly made and, perhaps more importantly, that for purposes of
    equalized income between the parties, income was to include only
    salaries and bonuses.
    Thus, the circuit court refused to allow Ran to take an equalizing $2,400,000 setoff distribution
    from AdSTM, or to discount the amounts owed to Guan by that amount.
    Although Guan had requested the circuit court to order Ran to pay her almost $4,000,000
    pursuant to the terms of the parties’ PSA, the circuit court concluded that Ran owed her
    $614,764 pursuant to the October 15, 2008 amendment. Citing the “imprecise and often
    confusing language employed by the parties in their various agreements,” the circuit court
    withheld a ruling on the contempt of court issue and allowed Ran to avoid being held in
    contempt by paying Guan the sum owed within 180 days of the entry of a final order.7
    On May 13, 2016, the circuit court held a hearing concerning the form of the final order
    and the award of attorney’s fees and costs. The circuit court determined that it had miscalculated
    the amount of distributions received by Guan from AdSTM in 2008. The circuit court
    7
    The circuit court also expressly rejected Guan’s claim that she agreed to the amendment
    under duress. In general, the circuit court concluded that Guan’s testimony was not credible.
    Although the circuit court noted that Ran had some “credibility issues,” it concluded that Guan’s
    testimony “was often simply not believable nor supported by objective evidence.”
    - 9 -
    recalculated the amount of these distributions, and concluded that Guan had actually received
    $2,462,000 instead of $2,492,000.
    The circuit court also clarified its holding regarding the breach of the terms of the
    amendment.8 As the amendment expressly stated that “[Guan] shall not claim any spousal
    support under any circumstances” and that “[Ran] and [Guan] shall not . . . take any legal action
    against each other,” the circuit court concluded that Guan had breached the amendment by filing
    her petition requesting the payment of spousal support.
    The circuit court then addressed the effect of Guan’s breach. Because the amendment
    provided that the PSA would become the “governing agreement” upon the breach of its terms by
    either party, the circuit court determined that the terms of the PSA, including those pertaining to
    the payments owed to Guan from AdSTM, became the controlling agreement on October 14,
    2014, the date that Guan breached the amendment by filing her petition requesting spousal
    support.
    Based on these holdings, the circuit court recalculated the payments owed to Guan under
    both the terms of the amendment and the PSA. Applying the terms of the amendment to the
    payments owed to Guan from the time of its execution until October 14, 2014, and the terms of
    the PSA to the payments owed to Guan after October 14, 2014, the circuit court concluded that
    Ran owed Guan $535,814.9
    8
    While the circuit court’s letter opinion stated that Ran had not breached the terms of the
    amendment, it was silent as to whether Guan had breached the amendment. In the letter opinion,
    however, the circuit court adopted the calculations of Ran’s expert witness concerning the
    amount of payments due to Guan from AdSTM, and those calculations assumed that Guan
    breached the terms of the amendment when she filed her petition requesting the payment of
    spousal support in October of 2014.
    9
    Although Guan argues that the circuit court erred by determining that she breached the
    amendment by requesting spousal support, neither party assigned error to the circuit court’s
    decision concerning the effect of the breach.
    - 10 -
    The circuit court denied both parties’ requests for attorney’s fees and costs. While the
    circuit court recognized that the parties’ PSA awarded attorney’s fees and costs to the “prevailing
    party” in any legal action required to enforce the terms of the agreement, the circuit court noted
    that both parties prevailed on different issues presented in the case. The circuit court implicitly
    acknowledged that Ran prevailed on more of the issues presented than Guan, noting that Guan
    successfully recovered only “approximately twelve percent” of the payments she requested.
    Under the circumstances, however, the circuit court concluded that neither party prevailed in the
    litigation.
    The circuit court entered a final order in this matter at the conclusion of the May 13, 2016
    hearing. Among its provisions, the final order expressly incorporated the October 15, 2008
    amendment into the parties’ final decree of divorce pursuant to Code § 20-109(C). This appeal
    followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    Collectively, the parties challenge four of the circuit court’s decisions on appeal: (1) the
    decision regarding spousal support, (2) the decision regarding Guan’s breach of the terms of the
    amendment, (3) the decision regarding Ran’s right to a setoff distribution of $2,400,000, and
    (4) the decision regarding attorney’s fees and costs. In order to analyze the issues presented by
    the parties, we must construe the terms of their marital agreements. Specifically, we must
    analyze the terms of the parties’ PSA and the October 15, 2008 amendment to that agreement.
    As a marital agreement is a form of a contract, “[t]he construction of a marital agreement
    is subject to the rules of contract construction generally.” Plunkett v. Plunkett, 
    271 Va. 162
    , 166,
    
    624 S.E.2d 39
    , 41 (2006). Accordingly, we apply the same standard of review to the circuit
    court’s decisions involving the interpretation of the parties’ marital agreements that we would
    - 11 -
    apply to its interpretation of other types of contracts. See Craig v. Craig, 
    59 Va. App. 527
    , 537,
    
    721 S.E.2d 24
    , 28 (2012).
    Questions involving the interpretation of a contract present issues of law that we review
    de novo. 
    Plunkett, 271 Va. at 166
    , 624 S.E.2d at 41. While we give deference to the circuit
    court’s factual findings underlying its interpretation of the contracts at issue, “we are not bound
    by the [circuit] court’s conclusions as to the construction of the disputed provisions.” 
    Craig, 59 Va. App. at 537
    , 721 S.E.2d at 28 (quoting Bergman v. Bergman, 
    25 Va. App. 204
    , 211-12, 
    487 S.E.2d 264
    , 268 (1997)). “[R]ather, we have an equal opportunity to consider the words of the
    contract within the four corners of the instrument itself.” Eure v. Norfolk Shipbuilding &
    Drydock Corp., 
    263 Va. 624
    , 631, 
    561 S.E.2d 663
    , 667 (2002).
    A. THE OCTOBER 15, 2008 AMENDMENT DID NOT EFFECTIVELY WAIVE THE
    SPOUSAL SUPPORT AWARD
    On appeal, Guan contends that the circuit court erred by concluding that she waived her
    right to receive spousal support in the October 15, 2008 amendment to the parties’ PSA. Despite
    her express waiver of her right to receive spousal support, Guan argues that the amendment did
    not effectively terminate Ran’s spousal support obligation. We agree with Guan’s argument.
    Under the particular circumstances of this case, an agreement between the parties could have
    never effectively waived the lump sum spousal support obligation established by the parties’
    final decree of divorce.
    We begin our analysis by acknowledging that the parties were permitted to modify their
    PSA pursuant to the terms of that agreement and by statute. Paragraph 19 of the PSA allowed
    the parties to modify or waive any term of the agreement in a written document “signed by both
    parties and notarized at [Guan’s] bank.” Code § 20-109(C) also allowed the parties to amend the
    PSA incorporated into their final decree of divorce. That statute states, in pertinent part, “If [a
    - 12 -
    marital agreement] is filed after entry of a final decree and if any party so moves, the court shall
    modify its decree to conform to such stipulation or contract.”
    Under either the modification provision of the parties’ PSA or Code § 20-109(C), the
    parties were required to petition the circuit court for a modification of its final decree of divorce
    in order for any waiver of the spousal support award to be effective. Standing alone, an
    amendment could not effectively waive the spousal support award established by the parties’
    final decree of divorce.
    Code § 20-109(C) explicitly requires a party to file a motion requesting the circuit court
    to modify its divorce decree to conform to the terms of a post-decree marital agreement.
    Furthermore, while the modification provision contained in the parties’ PSA failed to expressly
    require the circuit court to approve any written amendment agreed upon by Guan and Ran, the
    parties could not waive a court-ordered spousal support award without obtaining judicial
    approval of the waiver. “No agreement of the parties has any effect on [a] decree awarding
    alimony unless it is ratified and made effective by judicial sanction.” Higgins v. McFarland, 
    196 Va. 889
    , 895-96, 
    86 S.E.2d 168
    , 172 (1955); see also Capell v. Capell, 
    164 Va. 45
    , 52, 
    178 S.E. 894
    , 896 (1935); Richardson v. Moore, 
    217 Va. 422
    , 423, 
    229 S.E.2d 864
    , 866 (1976).
    In Virginia, the power of a trial court to award alimony is
    incidental, inherent and express. When appropriate jurisdiction
    exists over the parties and the subject matter, the court may enter
    such orders as are necessary and proper to protect the interest of [a
    spouse entitled to receive alimony], and its jurisdiction cannot be
    ousted by any agreement outside of the court, which the court itself
    does not adopt and approve.
    Casilear v. Casilear, 
    168 Va. 46
    , 55, 
    190 S.E. 314
    , 318 (1937).
    On May 1, 2015, Ran filed a motion requesting the circuit court to modify the parties’
    final decree of divorce to conform to the October 15, 2008 amendment. Pursuant to the
    modification provision of the parties’ PSA and Code § 20-109(C), the circuit court had the
    - 13 -
    authority to modify the divorce decree to reflect the terms of the parties’ post-decree agreement.
    The circuit court could not, however, retroactively modify the fully vested and accrued lump sum
    spousal support obligation at issue in this case.
    The parties’ PSA expressly stated that Ran owed Guan “a lump sum of $250,000 as
    spousal support, payable in five consecutive years with $50,000 per year, starting July 5th,
    2008.”
    [A] lump sum award is a fixed obligation to pay a sum certain
    when the decree is entered[,] but the amount may be payable either
    in deferred installments or at once. That the payment method may
    allow for deferred installment payments does not change the
    character of the award. Thus, the right to the amount, whether
    payable immediately or in installments, is fixed and vested at the
    time of the final decree and the amount is unalterable by court
    order . . . .
    Mallery-Sayre v. Mallery, 
    6 Va. App. 471
    , 475, 
    370 S.E.2d 113
    , 115 (1988) (emphasis added);
    see also Code § 20-112 (stating that “no support order may be retroactively modified”); Cass v.
    Lassiter, 
    2 Va. App. 273
    , 280, 
    343 S.E.2d 470
    , 475 (1986) (“Support obligations ordered by the
    original decree of divorce become vested as they accrue and a court is without authority to make
    any change as to past due installments.”).
    The lump sum spousal support award at issue in this case became fully vested when the
    circuit court entered the final decree of divorce.10 Therefore, the circuit court could not
    retroactively modify that obligation to conform to the parties’ post-decree amendment to their
    PSA. While the circuit court had the authority to modify the terms of the final decree that did
    not pertain to the spousal support award pursuant to Code § 20-109(C), the circuit court did not
    10
    Alternatively, we note that each installment payment of the lump sum spousal support
    award accrued before Ran filed his motion requesting the circuit court to modify the parties’
    final decree of divorce to comply with the October 15, 2008 amendment. The installment
    payments were due each year, beginning in 2008 and ending in 2012. Ran did not file his motion
    for modification, however, until May 1, 2015, approximately three years after the last payment
    had accrued. See Code § 20-112 (a court may only modify spousal support “with respect to any
    period during which there is a pending petition for modification in any court”).
    - 14 -
    have the authority to modify a vested lump sum spousal support award under that statute. See
    Radford v. Radford, 
    16 Va. App. 812
    , 813, 
    433 S.E.2d 35
    , 36 (1993) (Code § 20-109 “applies to
    periodic payments of spousal support, not to a lump sum award.”). Therefore, the circuit court
    erred by modifying the final decree to waive the lump sum spousal support obligation set forth in
    the parties’ PSA.
    In summary, we conclude that the October 15, 2008 amendment to the parties’ PSA did
    not effectively waive Ran’s spousal support obligation. The court-ordered spousal support
    obligation at issue in this case could not be waived by a private agreement between the parties
    unless a court approved the agreement and modified the order that established the support award.
    As the spousal support award at issue was a fully vested lump sum award, the circuit court did
    not have the authority to alter the parties’ final decree of divorce to retroactively modify Ran’s
    spousal support obligation. Thus, the circuit court could not modify its final decree to conform
    to the terms of the amendment waiving Ran’s spousal support obligation.
    Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court erred by concluding that Guan waived her
    right to receive spousal support. Consequently, we conclude that she was entitled to receive the
    entire $250,000 spousal support award established by the parties’ PSA and incorporated into
    their final decree of divorce.
    B. GUAN DID NOT BREACH THE TERMS OF THE OCTOBER 15, 2008 AMENDMENT
    BY ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT SPOUSAL SUPPORT
    Guan also contends that the circuit court erred by concluding that she breached the terms
    of the October 15, 2008 amendment to the parties’ PSA. The circuit court determined that Guan
    breached the terms of the October 15, 2008 amendment by taking legal action to enforce Ran’s
    spousal support obligation. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that Guan did not breach
    the amendment.
    - 15 -
    The circuit court’s decision regarding Guan’s breach of the October 15, 2008 amendment
    was based on the express terms of that agreement. In Paragraph 2 of the amendment, Guan
    attempted to waive her right to receive the spousal support payments established by the parties’
    PSA and incorporated into their final decree of divorce. That paragraph explicitly endeavored to
    “void” Ran’s spousal support obligation. It also stated that Guan “shall not claim any spousal
    support under any circumstances.”
    As previously noted, the amendment did not effectively waive Ran’s spousal support
    obligation. The amendment could not modify the court-ordered spousal support obligation
    without judicial sanction, and the circuit court could not modify its final divorce decree to alter
    the vested lump sum spousal support award. Thus, Guan’s waiver of her right to receive the
    spousal support payments at issue in Paragraph 2 of the October 15, 2008 amendment had no
    effect. Because Guan did not effectively waive her right to petition the circuit court to collect
    spousal support, she did not breach Paragraph 2 of the amendment.
    Paragraph 19 of the amendment provided an alternate basis for the circuit court’s
    decision concerning Guan’s alleged breach. In pertinent part, that paragraph stated that “[Ran]
    and [Guan] shall not threaten each other or take any legal action against each other.” Regardless
    of whether or not Guan was entitled to receive the spousal support payments set forth in the
    parties’ PSA, Ran contends that Guan breached the amendment by taking legal action against
    him by petitioning the circuit court to order him to pay the spousal support at issue or be held in
    contempt of court.
    We conclude that the circuit court erred by determining that Guan breached the
    “covenant not to sue” provision contained in Paragraph 19 for two reasons. First, the language
    of the amendment limited the scope of the provision. When read in context, the covenant not to
    sue only applied to certain disputes related to AdSTM. Second, enforcing the provision
    - 16 -
    contained in Paragraph 19 to penalize Guan for attempting to enforce her vested spousal support
    award would violate public policy.
    An isolated reading of the covenant not to sue provision of Paragraph 19 suggests that
    Guan breached the terms of the amendment by taking legal action against Ran. Nevertheless,
    “contracts must be considered as a whole ‘without giving emphasis to isolated terms.’” 
    Plunkett, 271 Va. at 167
    , 624 S.E.2d at 42 (quoting TM Delmarva Power, L.L.C. v. NCP of Va., L.L.C.,
    
    263 Va. 116
    , 119, 
    557 S.E.2d 199
    , 200 (2002)). “In other words, ‘the meaning of a contract is to
    be gathered from all its associated parts assembled as a unitary expression of the agreement of
    the parties.’” Stacy v. Stacy, 
    53 Va. App. 38
    , 48, 
    669 S.E.2d 348
    , 353 (2008) (en banc) (quoting
    Sully Station II Cmty. Ass’n v. Dye, 
    259 Va. 282
    , 284, 
    525 S.E.2d 555
    , 556 (2000)).
    In the present case, the application of the covenant not to sue provision contained in
    Paragraph 19 was limited by the preceding language of that section of the amendment.
    Paragraph 19 of the amendment addressed disputes over the accuracy of corporate documents
    following a business dispute between the parties earlier in the year. In totality, Paragraph 19
    stated, “Both [Ran] and [Guan] have reviewed all corporate documents and files prior to 7/l/2008
    and agree with all that is in those documents are correct [sic]. [Ran] and [Guan] shall not
    threaten each other or take any legal action against each other.” When Paragraph 19 is read as a
    whole, it implies that the covenant not to sue provision only applies to disputes concerning the
    contents of the corporate documents of the parties’ business. The first sentence of Paragraph 19
    qualified the covenant not to sue contained in the second sentence.
    This interpretation of the provisions of Paragraph 19 is supported by the context in which
    the parties agreed to the amendment. “[T]he facts and circumstances surrounding the parties
    when they made the contract, and the purposes for which it was made, may be taken into
    consideration as an aid to the interpretation of the words used . . . .” Stroud v. Stroud, 49
    - 17 -
    Va. App. 359, 367, 
    641 S.E.2d 142
    , 146 (2007) (quoting Seaboard Air Line R.R. Co. v.
    Richmond-Petersburg Tpk. Auth., 
    202 Va. 1029
    , 1033, 
    121 S.E.2d 499
    , 503 (1961)). The parties
    agreed to the October 15, 2008 amendment after Guan unilaterally took approximately
    $2,400,000 in distributions from AdSTM shortly before Ran was scheduled to become the
    majority owner of the business. We can reasonably infer that the purpose of the amendment was
    to resolve the ongoing disputes between the parties concerning the operation of their business,
    including the dispute regarding Guan’s right to receive the $2,400,000 at issue. In order to
    resolve the dispute concerning the distributions, the parties agreed that the corporate documents
    were accurate and that they would not take any legal action against each other concerning those
    documents. Interpreting the covenant not to sue contained in Paragraph 19 to apply to legal
    actions unrelated to the parties’ business disputes would not further the underlying purpose of the
    amendment.
    Enforcing the covenant not to sue contained in Paragraph 19 to prevent Guan from
    enforcing her right to receive spousal support would also contradict strong policy considerations.
    While
    parties to a contract may specify the events or pre-conditions that
    will trigger a party’s right to recover for the other party’s breach of
    their agreement[,] . . . we have remained “committed to the view
    that parties may contract as they choose so long as what they agree
    to is not forbidden by law or against public policy.”
    Ulloa v. QSP, Inc., 
    271 Va. 72
    , 79-80, 
    624 S.E.2d 43
    , 48 (2006) (quoting Coady v. Strategic
    Res., Inc., 
    258 Va. 12
    , 17, 
    515 S.E.2d 273
    , 275 (1999)). “[A] provision that violates public
    policy is void and has no legal effect.” Uniwest Constr., Inc. v. Amtech Elevator Servs., Inc.,
    
    280 Va. 428
    , 440, 
    699 S.E.2d 223
    , 229 (2010).
    As explained above, a private agreement between the parties cannot waive a
    court-ordered spousal support obligation without judicial approval.
    - 18 -
    A decree for alimony is something more than an order for the
    payment of money. . . . A decree for alimony “is an order
    compelling [one spouse to support the other], and this is a public as
    well as a marital duty -- a moral as well as a legal obligation.”
    Branch v. Branch, 
    144 Va. 244
    , [251,] 
    132 S.E. 303
    , 305 [(1926)].
    . . . “[L]aws enacted from considerations of public concern, and to
    subserve the general welfare cannot be abrogated by mere private
    agreement.” Walter v. Walter, 
    189 Ill. App. 345
    [, 349 (1914)].
    
    Capell, 164 Va. at 49
    , 178 S.E. at 895. This general principle has been established in Virginia
    for over eighty years. See 
    id. Ran’s construction
    of the covenant not to sue contained in Paragraph 19 essentially
    circumvents the legal precedent requiring judicial approval of private agreements modifying
    court-ordered spousal support. By penalizing Guan for attempting to collect her vested spousal
    support payments, the covenant not to sue would give indirect effect to an unenforceable spousal
    support waiver. While Guan did not effectively waive the spousal support award at issue, Ran’s
    construction of the covenant not to sue would bar her from collecting her vested spousal support
    payments unless she was willing to endure the consequences of breaching the amendment. We
    refuse to interpret the covenant not to sue contained in Paragraph 19 in a manner that would
    allow Ran to avoid satisfying the court-ordered spousal support obligation established in the
    parties’ final decree of divorce without obtaining the judicial approval of the waiver at issue
    required by both case law and statute.
    In summary, we conclude that Guan did not breach the October 15, 2008 amendment to
    the parties’ PSA by petitioning the circuit court to enforce Ran’s spousal support obligation. As
    she did not effectively waive her right to receive the spousal support payments at issue, she did
    not breach the terms of the amendment by requesting to receive the payments. Although the
    amendment contained a provision generally prohibiting Guan from taking legal action against
    Ran, that provision only applied to disputes pertaining to the parties’ business. Additionally,
    - 19 -
    applying the covenant not to sue to penalize Guan from collecting vested spousal support would
    circumvent binding precedent and violate public policy.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the circuit court erred by determining that Guan breached
    the amendment when she filed her petition to collect spousal support and that her breach
    triggered the punitive provision contained in Paragraph 17 of the amendment. Therefore, we
    also conclude that the circuit court erred by determining that the parties’ PSA became the
    governing agreement upon Guan’s breach of the amendment and calculating the amounts of
    money owed to Guan pursuant to the terms of that agreement. On remand, we direct the circuit
    court to recalculate the amounts owed to Guan under the terms of the October 15, 2008
    amendment as if she had not breached that agreement.
    C. THE OCTOBER 15, 2008 AMENDMENT DID NOT ENTITLE RAN TO TAKE A
    $2,462,083 SETOFF DISTRIBUTION
    On appeal, Ran contends that the terms of the October 15, 2008 amendment entitled him
    to a setoff distribution of $2,462,083. Ran claims that this setoff distribution was necessary to
    equalize the distributions that Guan received from AdSTM in 2008 shortly before he was
    scheduled to become the majority shareholder of the business. We disagree with Ran’s argument
    and affirm the circuit court’s decision regarding this issue. The terms of the amendment, the
    terms of the parties’ PSA, and the actions of the parties following the execution of the
    amendment implied that Ran was not entitled to a setoff distribution based on the distributions
    Guan received from AdSTM in 2008.
    Ran’s argument is based on Paragraph 7 of the amendment. In pertinent part, that
    paragraph stated that “[Guan] and [Ran] shall have the same salary and bonus, other benefits and
    . . . profit distribution from AdSTM.” (Emphasis added). Ran contends that he and Guan were
    entitled to equal profit distributions pursuant to the plain language of Paragraph 7. Accordingly,
    - 20 -
    he argues that he was entitled to a setoff distribution equal to the distributions taken by Guan in
    2008.
    In response to Ran’s argument, Guan claims that the distributions she received from
    AdSTM in 2008 were her separate property and that Ran was not entitled to an equalizing setoff
    distribution.11 Guan refers to Paragraph 2 of the October 15, 2008 amendment to support her
    position. In pertinent part, Paragraph 2 of the amendment stated:
    [Guan] is entitled to all the [AdSTM] distributions made to her and
    the taxes AdSTM paid to IRS and VA State for [Guan] from
    1/1/2008-7/1/2008, and those payments are [Guan’s] sole property.
    [Ran] agrees that those payments were made correctly and [Ran]
    shall not claim any part of it. In addition [Ran] agrees that the
    wording of “income” in the original agreement citing: “. . . Neither
    [Ran] or [Guan] shall receive a higher income than the other from
    AdSTM . . .” means salary and bonus only.
    The circuit court placed emphasis on the alternative definition of “income” provided in
    Paragraph 2. In concluding that Ran was not entitled to a setoff distribution based on the
    distributions made to Guan in 2008, the circuit court expressly noted that “for purposes of
    equalized income between the parties, income was to include only salaries and bonuses.”
    This issue presents a question of contract interpretation that we review de novo. See
    
    Plunkett, 271 Va. at 166
    , 624 S.E.2d at 41. In general, “[c]ontracts are construed as written,
    without adding terms that were not included by the parties. Where the terms in a contract are
    clear and unambiguous, the contract is construed according to its plain meaning.” Id. at 
    167, 624 S.E.2d at 42
    (citations omitted) (quoting TM Delmarva 
    Power, 263 Va. at 119
    , 557 S.E.2d at
    200). “The guiding light in the construction of a contract is the intention of the parties as
    expressed by them in the words they have used, and courts are bound to say that the parties
    11
    Ran agrees that the distributions that Guan received were her separate property, and he
    does not claim that she should have been required to repay any of the distributions at issue to
    AdSTM. Rather, Ran only contends that he was entitled to an equivalent setoff distribution
    based on the distributions Guan received in 2008.
    - 21 -
    intended what the written instrument plainly declares.” 
    Stacy, 53 Va. App. at 44
    , 669 S.E.2d at
    351 (quoting Irwin v. Irwin, 
    47 Va. App. 287
    , 293, 
    623 S.E.2d 438
    , 441 (2005)).
    In giving effect to the intention of the parties “as expressed
    by them in the words they have used,” 
    Irwin, 47 Va. App. at 293
    ,
    623 S.E.2d at 441 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted),
    we are not to treat any word or clause in the [contract] “as
    meaningless if a reasonable meaning can be given to it, and there is
    a presumption that the parties have not used words needlessly,”
    Dominion Sav. Bank, FSB v. Costello, 
    257 Va. 413
    , 417, 
    512 S.E.2d 564
    , 567 (1999).
    
    Stacy, 53 Va. App. at 48
    , 669 S.E.2d at 352-53. “When two provisions of a contract seemingly
    conflict, if, without discarding either, they can be harmonized so as to effectuate the intention of
    the parties as expressed in the contract considered as a whole, this should be done.” 
    Plunkett, 271 Va. at 168
    , 669 S.E.2d at 42 (quoting Ames v. Am. Nat’l Bank of Portsmouth, 
    163 Va. 1
    ,
    39, 
    176 S.E. 204
    , 217 (1934)). As previously stated, “the meaning of a contract is to be gathered
    from all its associated parts assembled as a unitary expression of the agreement of the parties.”
    
    Stacy, 53 Va. App. at 48
    , 669 S.E.2d at 353 (quoting Sully Station 
    II, 259 Va. at 284
    , 525 S.E.2d
    at 556).
    When viewed as a whole, the October 15, 2008 amendment implied that the parties did
    not intend for Ran to receive a setoff distribution based on the distributions that Guan received
    from AdSTM in 2008. While a cursory reading of the payment provision contained in Paragraph
    7 may suggest that Ran and Guan were entitled to receive equal distributions from AdSTM, such
    an interpretation would render the alternative definition of “income” provided in Paragraph 2 of
    the amendment meaningless.
    We agree with the circuit court’s conclusion regarding the effect of the alternative
    definition of “income” provided in Paragraph 2 of the October 15, 2008 amendment. Paragraph
    2 expressly modified the definition of “income” as that term was used in the parties’ PSA by
    specifying that, “the wording of ‘income’ in the original agreement citing: ‘. . . Neither [Ran] or
    - 22 -
    [Guan] shall receive a higher income than the other from AdSTM . . .’ means salary and bonus
    only.” (Emphasis added). Thus, Paragraph 2 modified the definition of “income” as applied in
    the PSA to exclude the distributions made to the parties by AdSTM.
    If the parties intended for Ran to receive a setoff distribution equal to the distributions
    taken by Guan in 2008, then there would have been no need to include an alternative definition
    of “income” in the amendment. Paragraph 7 established that Guan and Ran were entitled to
    equal salaries, benefits, bonuses, and profit distributions from AdSTM. The parties’ decision to
    include the alternative definition of “income” that excluded distributions, however, implied that
    they did not intend for Paragraph 7 to apply to the distributions addressed in Paragraph 2.
    Instead, the inclusion of the alternative definition demonstrated that the parties intended for the
    distributions addressed in Paragraph 2 to be governed by the terms of the PSA rather than the
    amendment.
    Furthermore, we note that Paragraph 7 did not expressly state that it applied retroactively
    to the distributions taken by Guan before the parties agreed to the amendment. This omission is
    significant when viewed in context with the parties’ PSA.12 Paragraph 8 of the PSA addressed a
    similar situation involving a $1,800,000 payment that Guan received from Ran. Like Paragraph
    2 of the October 15, 2008 amendment, subsection (d) of Paragraph 8 of the PSA provided that
    the payment at issue was Guan’s “sole and separate property.” Notably, however, that
    subsection also stated that, “As soon as AdSTM has enough funds after paying salaries,
    expenses, taxes, [and] health insurance, [Guan] or [Ran] shall deposit the same amount to [Ran]
    and this fund shall be [Ran’s] sole and separate property.” By including the language
    12
    As the October 15, 2008 amendment amended the parties’ PSA, both documents
    constitute parts of the same contract and must be construed together. “It is elementary that
    where several papers constitute one contract, they must be given effect as one document, and all
    speak as of the same date.” Bott v. N Snellenburg & Co., 
    177 Va. 331
    , 338, 
    14 S.E.2d 372
    , 374
    (1941) (citing Weinroth v. Mill End Clothing Co., 
    84 Pa. Super. 107
    (1925)).
    - 23 -
    establishing Ran’s right to receive an equal payment from AdSTM, Paragraph 8 of the PSA
    essentially provided that Ran was entitled to receive a setoff distribution.
    Unlike Paragraph 8 of the PSA, Paragraph 2 of the amendment did not address Ran’s
    right to receive a setoff distribution. While the parties had addressed a similar situation in the
    PSA, they chose to treat the distributions at issue in Paragraph 2 of the amendment differently.
    In light of the express setoff provision included in Paragraph 8 of the PSA to address a similar
    dispute, the failure of the parties to include an express provision establishing Ran’s right to a
    setoff distribution in Paragraph 2 implied that they did not intend for Ran to receive one.
    Additionally, we acknowledge that the parties’ actions following the execution of the
    amendment implied that they did not intend for Ran to receive a setoff distribution based on the
    distributions that Guan received from AdSTM in 2008. “It is long established that ‘[w]hen the
    terms of an agreement are . . . uncertain, the interpretation placed thereon by the parties
    themselves is entitled to great weight and will be followed . . . .’” 
    Stroud, 49 Va. App. at 368
    ,
    641 S.E.2d at 146 (footnote omitted) (quoting Dart Drug Corp. v. Nicholakos, 
    221 Va. 989
    , 995,
    
    277 S.E.2d 155
    , 158 (1981)). Although Ran claims that he was entitled to a $2,462,083 setoff
    distribution pursuant to the October 15, 2008 amendment, he did not attempt to collect such a
    distribution for almost seven years.13 These actions implied that Ran did not believe that he was
    entitled to a setoff distribution, and we assign “great weight” to his interpretation of the
    amendment.
    Based on the alternative definition of “income” provided in Paragraph 2 of the October
    15, 2008 amendment, the language of Paragraph 8 of the parties’ PSA pertaining to setoff
    distributions, and Ran’s actions after the execution of the amendment, we conclude that the
    13
    On appeal, Ran maintains that AdSTM did not have enough funds to pay him the
    disputed setoff distribution. We note, however, that under the calculations that Ran presented to
    the circuit court, AdSTM distributed over $12,000,000 to the parties between 2008 and 2014.
    Additionally, we note that Ran did not attempt to collect his distribution in installments.
    - 24 -
    parties did not intend for Ran to receive a $2,462,083 setoff distribution based on the
    distributions that Guan received from AdSTM in 2008. Interpreting Paragraph 7 of the
    amendment to allow Ran to receive a setoff distribution would render the definition of “income”
    provided in Paragraph 2 meaningless, and ignore the method by which the parties attempted to
    resolve a similar dispute and Ran’s actions following the amendment. Accordingly, we conclude
    that Ran was not entitled to a $2,462,083 setoff distribution and affirm the circuit court’s
    decision concerning this issue.
    D. ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS
    On appeal, both parties claim that the circuit court erred by refusing to award them the
    attorney’s fees and costs associated with the proceedings pursuant to the terms of their PSA.
    Each party also requests us to award the attorney’s fees and costs associated with this appeal. In
    order to resolve this issue, we must interpret the relevant provisions of the parties’ PSA. While
    we apply a de novo standard of review when interpreting the PSA, see 
    Plunkett, 271 Va. at 166
    ,
    624 S.E.2d at 41, we acknowledge that generally “[a]n award of attorney’s fees is within the
    sound discretion of the court, and will not be disturbed on appeal absent evidence of abuse [of
    that discretion].” 
    Stroud, 49 Va. App. at 379
    , 641 S.E.2d at 152 (quoting Price v. Price, 
    4 Va. App. 224
    , 237, 
    355 S.E.2d 905
    , 912 (1987)).
    Paragraph 16 of the PSA addressed the award of attorney’s fees and costs associated with
    the enforcement of the agreement. In pertinent part, that provision stated:
    If either party files a petition charging the other with a breach of
    any of the provisions of this agreement and the matter is heard by a
    court, the prevailing party shall have the right to have all of his or
    her reasonable legal fees and costs in the matter reimbursed by the
    party who does not prevail.
    Both parties contend that they were the prevailing party in the litigation, and therefore,
    that they were entitled to be reimbursed for the attorney’s fees and costs that they incurred in this
    - 25 -
    matter. Guan claims that she was the prevailing party because a judgment was entered on her
    behalf. Ran claims that he was the prevailing party because he prevailed on a majority of the
    issues presented to the circuit court.14
    The Supreme Court has defined the term “prevailing party” when used in a similar
    context as: “[a] party in whose favor a judgment is rendered, regardless of the amount of
    damages awarded.” Sheets v. Castle, 
    263 Va. 407
    , 413, 
    559 S.E.2d 616
    , 620 (2002) (quoting
    Black’s Law Dictionary 1145 (7th ed. 1999)). The Supreme Court further explained that:
    “The ‘prevailing party,’ within the meaning of the general rule that
    such a party is entitled to costs, is the party in whose favor the
    decision or verdict in the case is or should be rendered and
    judgment entered, and in determining this question the general
    result should be considered, and inquiry made as to who has, in the
    view of the law, succeeded in the action.”
    
    Id. at 414,
    559 S.E.2d at 620 (quoting Richmond v. Cty. of Henrico, 
    185 Va. 859
    , 869, 
    41 S.E.2d 35
    , 41 (1947)).
    We note, however, that the Supreme Court has also explained that a “prevailing party”
    under a similar contractual provision “is not entitled to recover fees for work performed on
    unsuccessful claims.” West Square, L.L.C. v. Commc’n Techs., Inc., 
    274 Va. 425
    , 434, 
    649 S.E.2d 698
    , 702 (2007) (quoting 
    Ulloa, 271 Va. at 82
    , 624 S.E.2d at 49). A prevailing party
    requesting an award of attorney’s fees and costs has the burden to establish “to a reasonable
    degree of specificity” the attorney’s fees and costs associated with the claims on which he or she
    prevailed. See 
    id. at 435-36,
    649 S.E.2d at 703-04; 
    Ulloa, 271 Va. at 83
    , 624 S.E.2d at 50.
    14
    Ran additionally claims that Guan was not entitled to receive attorney’s fees and costs
    because she initiated the litigation without attempting to resolve the dispute through mediation.
    While the parties agreed in their PSA to attempt to resolve any disputes through mediation, the
    PSA allowed the parties to present their disputes to a court for resolution when mediation did not
    “appear to be productive.” The circuit court expressly decided “as a matter of fact that mediation
    between these two people would have been useless.” Upon our independent review of the
    record, we conclude that this factual finding was supported by the evidence presented in this
    case.
    - 26 -
    In light of our decisions concerning the spousal support and breach issues presented on
    appeal, we conclude that the circuit court’s decision pertaining to the award of attorney’s fees
    and costs must be revisited. Due to our decisions on appeal, Guan is now the prevailing party on
    additional issues presented in this case. Therefore, we remand this case to the circuit court for
    reconsideration of its decision regarding the award of attorney’s fees and costs associated with
    the proceedings before it. See 
    Stacy, 53 Va. App. at 49-50
    , 669 S.E.2d at 353 (remanding a case
    for reconsideration of a decision regarding attorney’s fees under similar circumstances).
    Nevertheless, we conclude that Guan was the prevailing party regarding the issues
    presented on appeal and award her appellate attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to the terms of the
    PSA. Guan prevailed on the spousal support, breach, and distribution issues, and the circuit
    court’s decision pertaining to attorney’s fees and costs has been reversed and remanded.
    Accordingly, we also remand this case to the circuit court for a determination of the reasonable
    attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses incurred by Guan in this appeal.
    III. CONCLUSION
    In summary, we conclude that the circuit court erred by holding that Guan waived her
    right to receive spousal support. The October 15, 2008 amendment did not effectively waive
    Ran’s spousal support obligation. Therefore, we hold that Guan was entitled to receive the entire
    $250,000 spousal support award established by the parties’ PSA and incorporated into their final
    decree of divorce, and we reverse the circuit court’s decision to the extent it holds otherwise.
    We also conclude that Guan did not breach the terms of the October 15, 2008 amendment
    by petitioning the circuit court to request the enforcement of Ran’s spousal support obligation.
    Guan did not effectively waive her right to receive spousal support, and the covenant not to sue
    provision contained in the October 15, 2008 amendment did not apply to disputes pertaining to
    the collection of spousal support. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s determination that
    - 27 -
    Guan breached the October 15, 2008 amendment, and remand this case for the redetermination
    of the amounts owed to Guan under the terms of the amendment.
    Additionally, we conclude that the circuit court correctly determined that Ran was not
    entitled to receive a $2,462,083 setoff distribution pursuant to the October 15, 2008 amendment.
    Such an interpretation of that agreement would render other contract terms meaningless, and
    ignore the parties’ own interpretation of the amendment. Thus, we affirm the circuit court’s
    decision pertaining to this issue.
    In light of our holdings on appeal, we remand this case for the circuit court to reconsider
    its decision regarding the award of attorney’s fees and costs associated with the proceedings
    before it, and to determine the appropriate amount of appellate attorney’s fees and costs to be
    awarded to Guan.
    For these reasons, the circuit court’s decision is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and this
    case is remanded for further proceedings.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    - 28 -