[Cite as Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 2013-Ohio-1222.]
STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
)ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
COUNTY OF MEDINA )
BARBARA A. VANDERBILT C.A. Nos. 11CA0103-M
11CA0104-M
Appellee/Cross-Appellant
v.
APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT
SHANE W. VANDERBILT ENTERED IN THE
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
Appellant/Cross-Appellee COUNTY OF MEDINA, OHIO
CASE No. 09 DR 0086
DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
Dated: March 27, 2013
MOORE, Judge.
{¶1} Barbara Vanderbilt and Shane Vanderbilt have each appealed orders of the
Medina County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, that considered the
validity of their prenuptial agreement and applied its terms for purposes of their divorce decree.
With respect to Wife’s appeal, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, but with respect to
Husband’s appeal, the judgment of the trial court is reversed.
I.
{¶2} The Vanderbilts married in 1999 after a long relationship. It was the second
marriage for both of them, and Husband insisted that Wife sign a prenuptial agreement before
they married. His insistence led Wife to end the relationship at least once, but they soon
reconciled, became engaged, and planned a wedding for January 1999. Only days before the
wedding, they had another disagreement about the issue. Wife met with an attorney, Husband
made changes to a draft prenuptial agreement, and Wife signed it. When Wife filed a complaint
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for divorce in 2009, Husband moved the trial court to determine the validity of the prenuptial
agreement. After a hearing limited to that issue, the trial court ruled that the prenuptial
agreement was valid but, with respect to spousal support, that the prenuptial agreement did not
control.
{¶3} The trial court granted the parties a divorce on September 21, 2011, and the
divorce decree resolved three issues related to the prenuptial agreement. With respect to the
division of equity in the marital home, the trial court considered the evidence at trial in light of
the prenuptial agreement and concluded that the percentage distribution should be based on an
initial investment of separate property by Husband of $160,613.00 and “[t]he balance of the
moneys expended for and on behalf of the real estate is deemed to have been equally contributed
by the husband and wife.” With respect to spousal support, and consistent with its earlier
decision, the trial court declined to apply the terms of the prenuptial agreement and awarded
Wife $3,500 per month for 49 months. Finally, the trial court concluded that $44,895.81 in
home furnishings should be divided equally among the parties.
{¶4} Husband and Wife each appealed, and their appeals were consolidated for
purposes of decision. Wife’s five assignments of error challenge the trial court’s conclusion that
the prenuptial agreement is valid. Husband’s seven assignments of error challenge the trial
court’s interpretation and application of the prenuptial agreement. We have rearranged some of
the assignments of error for ease of analysis.
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II.
WIFE’S ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR III
THE TRIAL COURT’S FINDING THAT WIFE HAD A WORKING
KNOWLEDGE OF [HUSBAND’S] CAREER, BUSINESS, AND ASSETS WAS
AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR IV
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AS A MATTER OF LAW WHEN IT
DISREGARDED THE REQUIREMENT THAT THERE BE A FULL
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE OF THE PARTIES’ ASSETS AND UPHELD THE
PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT IN VIOLATION OF THE OHIO SUPREME
COURT’S HOLDING IN GROSS V. GROSS.
{¶5} Wife’s third and fourth assignments of error argue that the trial court erred in its
determination that she executed the agreement with full disclosure or with full knowledge and
understanding of the nature, value and extent of Husband’s property. Wife’s arguments focus on
the trial court’s evaluation of the competing evidence at trial and, therefore, maintain that the
trial court’s decision was against the manifest weight of the evidence. We disagree.
{¶6} When the weight of the evidence is challenged in a civil case, this Court “weighs
the evidence and all reasonable inferences, considers the credibility of witnesses and determines
whether in resolving conflicts in the evidence, the [finder of fact] clearly lost its way and created
such a manifest miscarriage of justice that the [judgment] must be reversed and a new trial
ordered.” (Alterations in original.) Eastley v. Volkman, 132 Ohio St.3d 328, 2012-Ohio-2179, ¶
20, quoting Tewarson v. Simon, 141 Ohio App.3d 103, 115 (9th Dist.2001).
{¶7} In Ohio, prenuptial agreements that govern the disposition of property upon
divorce are valid “(1) if they have been entered into freely without fraud, duress, coercion, or
overreaching; (2) if there was full disclosure, or full knowledge and understanding of the nature,
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value and extent of the prospective spouse’s property; and (3) if the terms do not promote or
encourage divorce or profiteering by divorce.” Gross v. Gross, 11 Ohio St.3d 99 (1984),
paragraph two of the syllabus. When application of a prenuptial agreement leads to a
distribution “disproportionately less than the party challenging it would have received under an
equitable distribution,” the party asserting the validity of the agreement must demonstrate “that
the other party entered into it with the benefit of full knowledge or disclosure of the assets of the
proponent.” Fletcher v. Fletcher, 68 Ohio St.3d 464 (1994), paragraph one of the syllabus.
{¶8} In Gross, the Court adopted and explained the analysis that Ohio courts had
previously used when considering prenuptial agreements with respect to estate distribution. In
that context, the Ohio Supreme Court had concluded that “[a]n antenuptial contract voluntarily
entered into during the period of engagement is valid when the provision for the wife is fair and
reasonable under all the surrounding facts and circumstances” and will be upheld even when the
distribution is “wholly disproportionate” if the spouse “voluntarily enter[ed] into the contract
after full disclosure or with full knowledge.” Juhasz v. Juhasz, 134 Ohio St. 257 (1938),
paragraphs two and four of the syllabus. Elaborating on this requirement, the Juhasz Court
summarized the law applicable to prenuptial agreements:
The rule supported by the weight of authority may be stated thus: An engagement
to marry creates a confidential relation between the contracting parties and an
antenuptial contract entered into after the engagement and during its pendency
must be attended by the utmost good faith; if the provision for the prospective
wife is, in the light of surrounding circumstances, wholly disproportionate to the
means of her future husband and to what she would receive under the law, the
burden rests on those claiming the validity of the contract to show that there was a
full disclosure of the nature, extent and value of the intended husband's property,
or that she had full knowledge thereof without such disclosure, and that she, with
this knowledge, voluntarily entered into the antenuptial settlement.
Id. at 264.
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{¶9} In a later case, the Court explained that a “trial court, faced with an attack on [a
prenuptial] agreement, must consider all facts and circumstances bearing upon the validity of that
agreement, and determine whether it is binding and valid.” Hook v. Hook, 69 Ohio St.2d 234,
236 (1982). After concluding that the agreement at issue in that case contemplated a
disproportionate distribution to the surviving spouse, the Court emphasized that “the agreement
will be upheld only if it appears [the surviving spouse] voluntarily entered into the agreement
with full knowledge of the nature, extent and value of her prospective husband’s property.” Id.
The Court rejected any “requirement that the parties to such an agreement itemize their various
assets and their worth.” Id. at 238.
{¶10} From this context, the Ohio Supreme Court explained in Gross that the
requirement of “full disclosure” is satisfied “either by the exhibiting of the attachment to the
antenuptial agreement of a listing of the assets of the parties to the agreement, or alternatively a
showing that there had been a full disclosure by other means.” Gross, 11 Ohio St.3d at 105.
Courts of appeals have consistently looked to the totality of the circumstances to determine
whether the required knowledge of assets is present. See, e.g., Grimm v. Grimm, 12th Dist. No.
CA2002-04-089, 2003-Ohio-80, ¶ 8-9.
{¶11} In this case, the evidence at trial established that although the financial disclosures
were not attached to the prenuptial agreement when Wife first consulted her attorney on
December 30, 1998, they were attached when she returned to his office on the following day
with the amended agreement. Wife acknowledged that she did not know whether they were
attached or not because she did not look at it before she signed it against the continuing advice of
her attorney. Although Husband acknowledged at trial that he omitted two oil and gas wells
from his list of assets on the financial disclosure, the undisputed testimony demonstrated that
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those assets were of insignificant value, if any. Viewing this issue in light of the totality of the
testimony at trial, the trial court’s conclusion that Husband made full disclosure of his assets is
not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Husband’s third and fourth assignments of error
are overruled.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AS A MATTER OF LAW WHEN IT APPLIED A
LESS STRINGENT STANDARD TO DETERMINE THE VALIDITY OF A
PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT THAN THE ONE DICTATED BY THE OHIO
SUPREME COURT IN GROSS V. GROSS.
{¶12} Wife’s second assignment of error argues that the trial court erred in its
articulation of what is required to demonstrate that there has been a full disclosure of financial
assets when reviewing a prenuptial agreement. Specifically, she has argued that the trial court
applied a lower threshold of disclosure consistent with Millstein v. Millstein, 8th Dist. No.
79617, 79754, 80184, 80185, 801886, 80187, 80188, 80963, 2002-Ohio-4783, in which the
Eighth District Court of Appeals concluded that a general knowledge of the spouse’s wealth is
sufficient to establish disclosure.
{¶13} Wife correctly observes that this Court has never had occasion to consider
whether the Millstein analysis is valid. In light of our conclusion with respect to her third and
fourth assignments of error, however, we need not reach the issue in this case. Wife’s second
assignment of error is overruled.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
THE TRIAL COURT’S FINDING THAT THE PARTIES’ PRENUPTIAL
AGREEMENT WAS NOT PROCURED THROUGH FRAUD, DURESS, OR
OVERREACHING WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE
EVIDENCE AND THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT UPHELD THE
AGREEMENT.
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{¶14} In her first assignment of error, Wife has argued that the manifest weight of the
evidence demonstrated that Husband obtained the prenuptial agreement through fraud, duress,
and overreaching. According to Wife, Husband “subjected her to significant stress and coerced
her into signing” the agreement.
{¶15} As explained above, prenuptial agreements are enforceable “(1) if they have been
entered into freely without fraud, duress, coercion, or overreaching; (2) if there was full
disclosure, or full knowledge and understanding of the nature, value and extent of the
prospective spouse’s property; and (3) if the terms do not promote or encourage divorce or
profiteering by divorce.” Gross, 11 Ohio St.3d at paragraph two of the syllabus. The party
challenging the agreement, however, must prove fraud, duress, coercion, or overreaching. Id.
{¶16} With respect to fraud, duress, coercion, or overreaching, the financially
disadvantaged party “must have a meaningful opportunity to consult with counsel.” Fletcher, 68
Ohio St.3d at 470. The critical element in this requirement is the meaningfulness of the
opportunity:
[A]ssistance of counsel may in some cases be necessary for a fully informed and
considered decision to sign. The meaningfulness of the opportunity of the
nonproponent party to seek counsel before executing an antenuptial agreement is,
therefore, a significant element of the Gross test to determine whether coercion or
overreaching occurred. Nevertheless, an agreement signed without counsel is not
per se invalid, and mere regret at an unwise decision does not establish duress,
coercion, fraud or overreaching.
Id. “[T]he term ‘overreaching’ is used in the sense of one party by artifice or cunning, or by
significant disparity to understand the nature of the transaction, to outwit or cheat the other.”
Gross at 105. Courts therefore look to the totality of the surrounding circumstances when
considering the existence of duress, coercion, fraud, or overreaching, including knowledge of the
nature of the agreement and whether the agreement was presented for signature in close
8
proximity to the scheduled wedding. See Mann v. Mann, 9th Dist. No. 09CA009685, 2010-
Ohio-1489, ¶ 18-22. See also Barth v. Barth, 4th Dist. No. 08CA53, 2010-Ohio-425, ¶ 9-12;
Zawahiri v. Alwattar, 10th Dist. No. 07AP-925, 2008-Ohio-3473, ¶ 22.
{¶17} Wife has argued that the prenuptial agreement in this case resulted from duress
and overreaching because Husband provided the agreement to her only days before their
wedding date, leaving her without a meaningful opportunity to consult her attorney and with no
choice but to sign in order to proceed with the wedding. Her recitation of the events surrounding
the signing of the agreement, however, does not convey the full sense of the testimony at trial.
{¶18} According to Wife, she and Husband discussed the possibility of a prenuptial
agreement on two occasions before December 1998. She testified that she had always been
vehemently opposed to signing and, in fact, that she and Husband had broken up over the issue
in 1995. Husband also testified that Wife had always opposed a prenuptial agreement, but his
testimony differed from hers in many other respects.
{¶19} According to Husband, he insisted from the beginning of their relationship that,
after a difficult divorce from his first wife, he would never remarry without a prenuptial
agreement. Husband testified that he and Wife broke up over the issue not once, but twice. He
also testified that the matter of a prenuptial agreement was a source of continuous friction
between the two of them over the course of their relationship. Numerous friends of the couple
testified similarly. Husband testified that after he and Wife reconciled in 1995 and became
engaged in 1997, he instructed his attorney to prepare a prenuptial agreement. Although he
agreed that the draft that resulted was not the product of ongoing negotiations between him and
Wife, he testified that he did give the draft to her in January 1998, leading to a second breakup.
According to Husband, they reconciled when he agreed to modify the draft to include language
9
that would benefit Wife and her children in the event of his death. He also testified that he never
wavered in his insistence on a prenuptial agreement prior to their wedding.
{¶20} Wife’s attorney, Ricky Helmuth, testified that he met with Wife regarding the
prenuptial agreement on December 30, 1998. According to Attorney Helmuth, he received a
draft on December 28, 1998 and made notes memorializing his concerns. On December 30, he
reviewed the agreement with Wife, going through the draft and providing explanations. He
advised Wife not to sign the agreement, noting specifically that there were no financial
disclosures included. Attorney Helmuth testified that Wife returned to his office unannounced
on December 31, determined to sign the agreement. Based on Wife’s representations, Attorney
Helmuth assumed that the agreement had not changed, but he noted the attachment of what
appeared to be financial disclosures. His advice to Wife did not change, and he “reiterated [his]
recommendation” at that time. When Wife insisted on signing, Attorney Helmuth signed the
certification that he had reviewed the agreement, noting that the agreement was dated on
December 30.
{¶21} With respect to the timing of the agreement, the trial court credited the testimony
of Husband and other witnesses that the prenuptial agreement was not sprung on Wife at the last
minute but was, in fact, an ongoing source of contention between the couple. In any event,
however, the Supreme Court of Ohio has noted that a prenuptial agreement may be valid, even if
executed on the eve of the wedding, when “because of the small size and informality of the
impending wedding, it could have been postponed had [the spouse] wished to consult counsel[.]”
Fletcher, 68 Ohio St.3d at 468. See also Mann, 2010-Ohio-1489, at ¶ 20-21.
10
{¶22} Under Fletcher, the proximity of the agreement to the wedding date is significant
because it may impede the meaningful opportunity to obtain the advice of counsel before
signing:
[W]hen an antenuptial agreement provides disproportionately less than the party
would have received under an equitable distribution, the party financially
disadvantaged must have a meaningful opportunity to consult with counsel. The
presentation of an agreement a very short time before the wedding ceremony will
create a presumption of overreaching or coercion if, in contrast to this case, the
postponement of the wedding would cause significant hardship, embarrassment or
emotional stress.
Fletcher at 470. In this case, even if we accept Wife’s testimony that she was not provided a
draft of the prenuptial agreement until December 28, 1998, the lateness of the hour did not
interfere with her opportunity to consult an attorney. Wife went to Attorney Helmuth’s office
two times. He testified that he explained the agreement and his concerns on December 30 and
advised her not to sign. Nonetheless, according to Attorney Helmuth, Wife returned on
December 31 determined to sign over his objections. In addition, as in Fletcher and Mann, Wife
and Husband planned a small wedding limited to their immediate family members, and had Wife
wanted further consultations with her attorney, the circumstances of the wedding would not have
exposed her to “significant hardship, embarrassment or emotional stress.” Fletcher at 470.
{¶23} This Court has reviewed the entire record of the hearing on the validity of the
prenuptial agreement, and we cannot conclude that the trial court lost its way in concluding that
Wife did not demonstrate duress, coercion, fraud or overreaching. Wife’s first assignment of
error is overruled.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR V
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AS A MATTER OF LAW WHEN IT FOUND
THE PARTIES’ PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT VALID AND ENFORCEABLE
WHEN THE TERMS OF THE AGREEMENT PROMOTE AND ENCOURAGE
11
DIVORCE OR PROFITEERING BY DIVORCE IN VIOLATION OF THE
OHIO SUPREME COURT’S HOLDING GROSS V. GROSS.
{¶24} Wife’s fifth assignment of error is that the trial court erred by determining that the
agreement did not promote divorce when, according to her, it “encouraged Husband to do
whatever he pleased while it discouraged Wife from leaving * * * as it financially chained her to
the marriage.” We disagree.
{¶25} In Gross, the Ohio Supreme Court provided an example of a hypothetical
situation in which a prenuptial agreement might be found to encourage divorce or profiteering by
divorce:
A hypothetical example of the type of situation which condition three seeks to
avoid is where the parties enter into an antenuptial agreement which provides a
significant sum either by way of property settlement or alimony at the time of a
divorce, and after the lapse of an undue short period of time one of the parties
abandons the marriage or otherwise disregards the marriage vows.
Id., 11 Ohio St.3d at 105. In concluding that the terms of the agreement at issue did not
encourage divorce or profiteering from divorce, the Court looked not only at the agreement in
light of the circumstances surrounding execution, but at the duration and circumstances of the
subsequent marriage. See id. at 109. See also In re Estate of Gates v. Gates, 7th Dist. No. 06
CO 60, 2007-Ohio-5040, ¶ 20-30. According to the Supreme Court, therefore, the validity of the
agreement is judged, at least in part, by its fruits. Few cases have applied this analysis since
Gross was decided. As the Ohio Supreme Court recognized in Fletcher, however, a prenuptial
agreement that results in a distribution that is “disproportionately less than the party challenging
it would have received under an equitable distribution” may still be valid. Fletcher, 68 Ohio
St.3d 464 at paragraphs one and two of the syllabus. It stands to reason, therefore, that financial
disadvantage to one spouse is insufficient in itself to establish that a prenuptial agreement
encourages divorce or profiteering from divorce.
12
{¶26} According to Wife, however, the agreement is invalid precisely because it
“allowed [Husband] to benefit from his divorce.” Specifically, Wife has argued that the terms of
the agreement permitted Husband to engage freely in infidelity without any consequences.
Beyond Wife’s assertions, she provides no support for the proposition that adultery during a
marriage is sufficient grounds for invalidating an otherwise valid prenuptial agreement. In fact,
Gross suggests that the opposite is true:
The parties here, and others who enter into such instruments, specifically provide
for a possible “parting of the twain” by way of divorce or separation. It would
seem that some misconduct was contemplated at that time. If there would be no
basic circumstance present which could occasion a separation or divorce of the
parties, how could the provisions in the contemplated contract ever be meaningful
as to either party? Any other view taken of such agreements would undermine
and render inane the basic purpose of such agreements. If the parties had
intended that the subsequent marital misconduct would extinguish the mutual
promises in the agreement, either voiding the provisions or permitting only the
one not at fault to enforce such provisions, the parties could very well have made
this clear within the terms of the agreement.
Gross, 11 Ohio St.3d at 107.
{¶27} In this case, the terms of the agreement do not limit its applicability in the event
that either spouse is unfaithful, and Wife did not demonstrate that the facts of this case require
the conclusion that the agreement specifically encouraged divorce or profiteering from divorce.
See, e.g., Johnson, 2011-Ohio-500, at ¶ 68. Wife’s fifth assignment of error is overruled.
HUSBAND’S ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
IN REGARD TO THE DIVISION OF EQUITY IN THE PARTIES’[] HOME,
THE COURT ERRED BY MISAPPLYING THE EVIDENCE TO ITS
INTERPRETATION OF THE PARTIES’ PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT
AND/OR DISREGARDING THE CLEAR AND UNAMBIGUOUS TERMS OF
SAID AGREEMENT.
13
{¶28} Husband’s first assignment of error argues that the trial court erred by
disregarding the provisions of the agreement related to the marital residence and, even if the trial
court’s construction of the agreement is correct, that the trial court’s determination that Wife
contributed financially to the construction of the marital residence through referrals to Husband’s
business is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
{¶29} Courts apply the law of contracts generally to the interpretation and application of
valid prenuptial agreements. Johnson, 2011-Ohio-500, at ¶ 10. Consequently, our primary role
in doing so is to give effect to the parties’ intentions, looking first to the plain language of the
prenuptial agreement:
When the language of a written contract is clear, a court may look no further than
the writing itself to find the intent of the parties. As a matter of law, a contract is
unambiguous if it can be given a definite legal meaning. On the other hand,
where a contract is ambiguous, a court may consider extrinsic evidence to
ascertain the parties’ intent.
(Internal citations omitted.) Westfield Ins. Co. v. Galatis, 100 Ohio St.3d 216, 2003-Ohio-5849,
¶ 11-12. “Where the parties following negotiation make mutual promises which thereafter are
integrated into an unambiguous contract duly executed by them, courts will not give the contract
a construction other than that which the plain language of the contract provides.” Aultman Hosp.
Ass’n. v. Community Mut. Ins. Co., 46 Ohio St.3d 51 (1989), syllabus.
{¶30} In this case, the prenuptial agreement unambiguously expressed the parties’
intention that their separate incomes remain separate after their marriage. The recitals provided,
for example, that they would:
[I]rrevocably renounce and relinquish any interest in the present property of the
other or in additional property that is produced from said present property or
results from passive earnings, accrued increments, interest, dividends, or the like
to the extent said original and/or additional property remains separate property.
The parties further intend to irrevocably renounce and relinquish any interest in
after-acquired property of the other and/or any right or claim to the present or
14
future income or earnings of the other and any right or claim to spousal support,
in the event of their separation, divorce, dissolution or other judicial termination
of their marriage.
The prenuptial agreement defined separate property to include past, present, and future income,
and provided that “[a]ll such separate property now owned and/or subsequently acquired by each
party shall be free from the claim of the other that may arise by reason of their contemplated
marriage” and that “[a]ny earnings, income, accretion, change or increase in value of such
property shall be and remain the separate property of the original owner.” With respect to
income earned during the marriage, the agreement reiterated this intention:
All salary, earnings and other income acquired or made during the marriage shall
be the sole and separate property of the party acquiring it. Each party hereby
waives any property interest or right to spousal support that he or she might
otherwise acquire in the earnings or income, or the proceeds, as invested or
retained, thereof of the other party acquired during the marriage.
With respect to the martial residence, the agreement provided:
SHANE and BARBARA intend to use a portion of each party’s respective pre-
marital assets to purchase their marital residence. The parties specifically intend
that their new residence shall be their joint asset, which shall continue to be
maintained by marital funds. * * * To the extent that either party contributes each
party’s respective separate funds from the sale of a prior residence or from any
other separate property to the purchase * * * the parties agree that each of them
shall be entitled to the return of the same percentage of equity he or she
respectively contributed, limited to: down payment, lump sum mortgage reduction
* * * and the cost of any capital improvements.”
{¶31} Wife agreed that she did not contribute any of her separate income from her
wages or from the sale of her premarital residence toward construction of the marital home. She
also agreed that she was never employed by Husband’s business and that she never had separate
income attributable to the business. She maintained, however, that her percentage of equity in
the marital home should be higher because, according to her, Husband’s separate income was
higher because of her efforts in connection with his business. In other words, Wife’s position is
that Husband only had the separate income to contribute to construction of their home because
15
she helped to build his business. According to Wife, the couple had an unwritten agreement to
the effect that she would recruit clients for his business in order to generate income for Husband
that would fund the construction of the home.
{¶32} The provisions of the prenuptial agreement, however, are unambiguous. By its
terms, the parties defined separate income, explained how equity in the marital residence would
be calculated, and expressed the clear intention that income earned by each would remain free of
claims by the other in the event of a divorce. Because the terms of the agreement with respect to
the parties’ separate income are clear, this Court must look no further than the agreement itself
and must give effect to the parties’ intentions as expressed therein. See Aultman, 46 Ohio St.3d
51 at syllabus. By its terms, the agreement does not contemplate any system of attributed
income like the one Wife has advocated. To the extent that the trial court reached a different
conclusion, we agree with Husband that it erred in its interpretation of the agreement. Even were
we to accept Wife’s theory of attributed income, however, there was no evidence presented at
trial through which the trial court could have determined a proportion of Husband’s income
attributable to Wife. Apart from Wife’s speculation about what might have been a reasonable
proportion, there was simply no evidence in this regard.
{¶33} The trial court erred as a matter of law in its interpretation of the prenuptial
agreement, and Husband’s first assignment of error is sustained.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY IGNORING THE PRENUPTIAL
AGREEMENT IN ITS DIVISION OF PERSONAL PROPERTY.
{¶34} Husband’s second assignment of error is that the trial court erred in dividing the
personal property consisting of household furnishings equally between the parties when the
prenuptial agreement provides otherwise. We agree.
16
{¶35} As with respect to Husband’s first assignment of error, the terms of the prenuptial
agreement are unambiguous with respect to the division of this personal property, providing that
“All household personal property bought during the marriage by marital funds or by SHANE,
including, but not limited to, furniture, decorations, artwork, appliances, tools and equipment,
would remain with SHANE.” Wife does not dispute that the prenuptial agreement contains this
language, nor does she argue that she purchased any of the personal property with her separate
funds. Instead, her argument is the same as the one that she advanced with respect to Husband’s
first assignment of error: she is entitled to a portion of the personal property because she
contributed to Husband’s earning capacity during their marriage.
{¶36} As with Husband’s first assignment of error, we agree that the terms of the
agreement are unambiguous and do not contemplate Wife’s theory of income. The trial court,
therefore, erred in dividing the parties’ property other than in accordance with the prenuptial
agreement.
{¶37} Husband’s second assignment of error is sustained.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR III
THE COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO DO A CONSCIONABILITY
ANALYSIS AS TO THE ISSUE OF SPOUSAL SUPPORT.
{¶38} Husband’s third assignment of error is that the trial court erred by disregarding
the terms of the prenuptial agreement with respect to spousal support without determining that
those terms were unconscionable as of the time of the divorce. We agree.
{¶39} Even if a prenuptial agreement is valid at the time of execution, a party may
challenge the spousal support provisions contained therein by demonstrating that the terms
related to spousal support are unconscionable at the time of the divorce. Gross, 11 Ohio St.3d at
109. In other words,
17
[a]lthough * * * such provisions in an antenuptial agreement generally may be
considered valid, and even though it is found in a given case upon review that the
agreement had met all of the good faith tests, the provisions relating to
maintenance or sustenance may lose their validity by reason of changed
circumstances which render the provisions unconscionable as to one or the other
at the time of the divorce of the parties. Accordingly, such provisions may, upon
a review of all of the circumstances, be found to have become voidable at the time
of the divorce or dissolution.
Id. The analysis of whether spousal support provisions are unconscionable is guided by the
factors applicable to the determination of support under R.C. 3105.18(C)(1). Id. at 109-110. See
also Saari v. Saari, 9th Dist. No. 08CA009507, 2009-Ohio-4940, ¶ 12. A trial court errs when it
invalidates spousal support terms of a prenuptial agreement without conducting this
conscionability analysis. Saari at ¶ 13-15; Buzard v. Buzard, 2d Dist. No. 2011 CA 18, 2012-
Ohio-2658, ¶ 48-49.
{¶40} During the course of the hearing on the validity of the agreement, the trial court
explained the analysis that it would employ with respect to spousal support:
[A]s a matter of law, counsel, I’m going to advise the two of you and your clients
that it is well-settled law in the State of Ohio that an antenuptial agreement does
not control spousal support. It may fall within one of the statutory “other factors”
for the Court to consider, but an antenuptial agreement, as a matter of law, does
not control spousal support be it a temporary allocation of spousal support or a
final award.
Consistent with this analysis, when the trial court ordered spousal support, it noted that it had
considered the factors set forth in R.C. 3105.18, but concluded that the provisions of the
agreement would result in an “unfair and inequitable” result. The trial court did not find that the
agreement was unconscionable with respect to spousal support but, instead, seemed to be of the
view that the starting point for its analysis was that the spousal support terms of the agreement
need not be enforced if they were unfair or inequitable. As the Supreme Court has recognized,
however, unfair and inequitable results are often the outcome of valid prenuptial agreements.
18
See Fletcher, 68 Ohio St.3d 464 at paragraphs one and two of the syllabus (recognizing that
prenuptial agreements often result in property distributions that are “disproportionately less than
the party challenging it would have received under an equitable distribution.”) The question for
the trial court is not whether the spousal support terms of a prenuptial agreement are fair, but
whether they are unconscionable when viewed at the time of the divorce. The burden of this
demonstration is on the party alleging the unconscionability. Gross at 109-110.
{¶41} We therefore agree that the trial court erred by setting aside the spousal support
terms in the prenuptial agreement without conducting the conscionability analysis required by
Gross. Husband’s third assignment of error is sustained.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR IV
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT ENFORCING THE PRENUPTIAL
AGREEMENT PROVISION AS TO SPOUSAL SUPPORT AS IT IS NOT
UNCONSCIONABLE.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR V
THE COURT ERRED IN ITS DETERMINATION OF [HUSBAND’S]
INCOME.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR VI
THE COURT ERRED IN NOT CREDITING [HUSBAND] FOR COST PAID
DURING THE PENDENCY OF THE CASE.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR VII
THE COURT ERRED IN ORDERING THE ENFORCEMENT OF
PARAGRAPH 4(A)(4) OF THE PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT
{¶42} Husband’s fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error challenge various
aspects of the divorce decree that flowed from the trial court’s decision regarding spousal
support. In light of our disposition of Husband’s third assignment of error, these arguments are
premature. We decline to address them at this time.
19
IV.
{¶43} Wife’s assignments of error are overruled and, with respect to C.A. No.
11CA0104-M, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Husband’s first, second, and third
assignments of error are sustained. His fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error are
premature. With respect to C.A. No. 11CA0103-M, therefore, the judgment of the trial court is
reversed, and this matter is remanded to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
Judgment affirmed in part,
reversed in part,
and cause remanded.
There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common
Pleas, County of Medina, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy
of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of
judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the
period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(C). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is
instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the
mailing in the docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
Costs taxed to Appellant/Cross-appellee, Barbara Vanderbilt.
CARLA MOORE
FOR THE COURT
20
WHITMORE, P. J.
CONCURS.
CARR, J.
CONCURRING IN PART, AND DISSENTING IN PART.
{¶44} I concur with the majority’s resolution of Barbara’s assignments of error and
therefore agree that with respect to C.A. No. 11CA0104-M, the judgment of the trial court
should be affirmed. I also agree with the majority’s resolution of Shane’s third, fourth, fifth,
sixth, and seventh assignments of error. I write separately, however, because I disagree with the
majority’s resolution of Shane’s first and second assignments of error.
{¶45} The parties’ prenuptial agreement provided that with respect to the marital
property,
SHANE and BARBARA intend to use a portion of each party’s respective pre-
marital assets to purchase their marital residence. The parties specifically intend
that their new residence shall be their joint asset, which shall continue to be
maintained by marital funds. “Maintained” shall refer to regular mortgage
payments, routine upkeep and care. To the extent that either party contributes
each party’s respective separate funds from the sale of a prior residence or from
any other separate property to the purchase, capital improvement and/or lump sum
mortgage reduction of such residence, and in the event of the termination of the
marriage, the parties agree that each of them shall be entitled to the return of the
same percentage of equity he or she respectively contributed, limited to: down
payment, lump sum mortgage reduction, (excluding monthly payment mortgage
reduction) and the cost of any capital improvements.
The prenuptial agreement included an example of the formula that would be used to implement
the provisions of the property division that also included a mortgage. When they executed the
prenuptial agreement, Shane and Barbara planned to finance the purchase of the marital
residence through a mortgage. Instead, they were able to build the residence debt free. The plain
language of the agreement, therefore, demonstrates that the acquisition of the marital residence
21
falls outside the prenuptial agreement and is not subject to the formula set forth therein. I would
overrule Shane’s first assignment of error on this basis.
{¶46} Even if the property division fell within the terms of the prenuptial agreement, I
would overrule Shane’s first and second assignments of error because the trial court’s
methodology is not inconsistent with the prenuptial agreement and Barbara demonstrated that
she contributed to the purchase of the marital residence.
APPEARANCES:
STEVE C. BAILEY, Attorney at Law, for Appellant.
JAMES MCILVAINE, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.