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special proceeding invoked by a motion to compel arbitration,
the order would not be final or affect any substantial right.
Finally, a court’s temporary injunction or stay that merely pre-
serves the status quo pending a further order is not an order
that amounts to a dismissal of the action or that permanently
denies relief to a party.20 So the stay here was not a final order
in an action that effectively determines the action and prevents
a judgment under § 25-1902(1). We conclude that the court’s
temporary injunction and stay is an interlocutory order that is
not appealable.
We recognize that Applied and AUCRA contend they are
entitled to have the AAA arbitrators decide which contract pro-
vision governs the arbitration process. But they are not preju-
diced by waiting to appeal that issue until the court issues a
final judgment in the declaratory judgment action. Accordingly,
we dismiss this appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
20
See Pennfield Oil Co., supra note 11.
Debra S. Ryder, appellant, v.
Rocky R. Ryder, appellee.
___ N.W.2d ___
Filed April 10, 2015. No. S-14-294.
1. Motions to Vacate: Proof: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will reverse a
decision on a motion to vacate or modify a judgment only if the litigant shows
that the district court abused its discretion.
2. Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when reasons
or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a
substantial right and denying just results in matters submitted for disposition.
3. Divorce: Property Settlement Agreements. If the terms of a property settlement
agreement with respect to real and personal property and maintenance are not
found unconscionable, the agreement is binding upon the dissolution court and
the initial decree must carry such agreement into effect.
4. Judgments: Divorce: Property Settlement Agreements. A dissolution decree
which approves and incorporates into the decree the parties’ property settlement
agreement is a judgment of the court itself.
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5. Contracts. Ambiguity exists in a document when a word, phrase, or provision
therein has, or is susceptible of, at least two reasonable but conflicting interpreta-
tions or meanings. In other words, a document is ambiguous if, after application
of the pertinent rules for construction, there is uncertainty concerning which of
two or more reasonable meanings represents the intention of the parties.
6. Divorce: Modification of Decree: Property Settlement Agreements. Where
parties to a divorce action voluntarily execute a property settlement agreement
which is approved by the dissolution court and incorporated into a divorce decree
from which no appeal is taken, its provisions will not thereafter be vacated or
modified in the absence of fraud or gross inequity.
7. Divorce: Judgments. The meaning of a dissolution decree presents a question
of law.
Appeal from the District Court for Cheyenne County: Derek
C. Weimer, Judge. Vacated in part and remanded with direction.
Joel B. Jay for appellant.
No appearance for appellee.
Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, Stephan, McCormack,
Miller-Lerman, and Cassel, JJ.
Cassel, J.
INTRODUCTION
In a marital dissolution proceeding, the parties’ property
settlement agreement required the husband to “assist” the wife
in obtaining a bank loan to purchase a residence. The dissolu-
tion decree adopted the agreement. Later, the bank declined to
make the loan without the husband’s cosignature. On the hus-
band’s motion, the district court vacated the assistance clause
as ambiguous. The wife appeals.
We conclude that in the absence of fraud or gross inequity,
the district court abused its discretion in vacating the portion
of the decree implementing the assistance clause. We vacate
the portion of its order purporting to do so. Because the district
court did not determine whether the assistance clause had been
satisfied, we remand with direction that it do so.
BACKGROUND
Debra S. Ryder and Rocky R. Ryder’s marriage was dissolved
via a decree entered in June 2013. Prior to the decree, Debra
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and Rocky entered into a “Property Settlement Agreement and
Parenting Plan,” providing for the disposition of various items
of property. Rocky was granted the marital residence, which
was his before the marriage. Thus, the agreement required
Debra to leave the marital home.
Anticipating her need for different housing, the parties
signed an agreement with a third party to acquire a residence
on Ash Street in Sidney, Nebraska. The agreement is not in
the record. Thus, the record is unclear whether the purchase
agreement was signed before or after the signing of the prop-
erty settlement, although Debra testified that she was the last
to sign and that she did so in August 2013—which would have
been after the property settlement agreement was signed and
the decree was entered.
In the property settlement agreement, Rocky agreed that he
shall assist [Debra] in obtaining a loan from Points West
Bank in Sidney for up to Ninety-four Thousand Dollars
($94,000.00) in order to purchase the residence located at
. . . Ash Street, Sidney, NE[,] and will do the work neces-
sary to place the home in marketable condition, as deter-
mined by a Sidney realtor, prior to [Debra] moving into
said home. [Rocky] shall have said house in marketable
condition no later than December 31, 2013.
In the dissolution decree, the district court acknowledged
the above provision of the property settlement agreement and
ordered Rocky to comply with his obligations as to the Ash
Street residence.
On December 19, 2013, Rocky filed a “Motion for an Order
to Vacate and Modify Divorce Decree or in the Alternative
to Deem Judgment Satisfied,” pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat.
§ 25-2001 (Reissue 2008). Rocky alleged that he had assisted
Debra in obtaining a loan from Points West Bank, but that
Debra was unwilling to enter into the loan agreement. And he
further claimed that due to Debra’s refusal, the purchase agree-
ment for the Ash Street residence had expired.
However, in an effort to comply with his obligations under
the dissolution decree, Rocky explained that he had purchased
the Ash Street residence and had offered Debra a loan to pur-
chase the residence from him. But Debra refused to agree to
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the arrangement. He therefore requested that the district court
vacate or modify the decree or find that he had satisfied his
obligations as to the Ash Street residence.
A hearing was conducted, and both Rocky and Debra testi-
fied. Rocky explained that he had been contacted by a repre-
sentative from Points West Bank concerning a loan for the Ash
Street residence. The representative first informed Rocky that
the representative believed he would be able to assist Debra
in obtaining a loan. However, Rocky was later informed that
he would need to cosign the loan. And the bank required addi-
tional collateral from Rocky, because he would not be living in
the Ash Street residence.
After learning of the terms of the loan, Rocky approached
Debra with a “side” agreement. Under the agreement, Debra
would execute a quitclaim deed conveying the Ash Street
residence to Rocky. The deed would be held in escrow, and
upon Debra’s failure to make a loan payment for 60 days,
the deed would be filed with the “Register of Deeds.” Rocky
would then make any necessary loan payments and place the
residence on the market for sale. In his testimony, Rocky con-
firmed that the agreement was a way to protect himself from
having to pay Debra’s loan. And he also sought to protect
his credit score and his collateral if Debra failed to make the
loan payments.
Debra, however, told Rocky that she would not sign the
agreement. And the purchase agreement for the Ash Street resi-
dence subsequently expired. The purchase agreement with the
third party apparently allowed the buyers to make repairs and
improvements to the property prior to closing. Rocky testified
that he had invested $20,000 to $30,000 in the residence and
that if the purchase was not completed, those amounts would
have been lost. Because of this investment, he obtained a loan
and purchased the residence himself.
After signing the loan documents and closing on the Ash
Street residence, Rocky approached Debra with another agree-
ment. He offered Debra a loan to purchase the residence from
him under the same terms as the loan he had obtained from
Points West Bank. Rocky testified that he would not have
made any money under the arrangement, but that it would
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“just . . . resolve the situation.” But Debra did not want to sign
the agreement.
As to his obligations regarding the Ash Street residence,
Rocky testified that he believed he was required to “help
[Debra] obtain a loan and a fair contract between both of us.”
And he confirmed that there had been no discussion that he
would offer additional collateral and no agreement that he
would make any loan payments. He indicated that he would
have been willing to cosign a loan with Debra, but under terms
that “were fair and equal” and that “protect[ed] both sides.” He
further confirmed that he believed he had fulfilled his obliga-
tion to assist Debra in obtaining a loan.
Additionally, Rocky testified that he was no longer willing
to provide Debra with a loan to purchase the Ash Street resi-
dence. He and Debra were already “having problems,” and the
loan arrangement would “cause more problems.”
Debra testified that her understanding of Rocky’s obliga-
tions as to the Ash Street residence was that he would cosign
a loan and make any required downpayment. And in order to
purchase the residence, she had signed a purchase agreement
and loan documents from Points West Bank. However, when
she contacted Rocky about the loan documents, he “gave [her]
the run around.” And approximately 1 week later, he sent her
paperwork for another agreement.
Debra confirmed that at the time of the dissolution decree,
she and Rocky had never discussed an additional agreement.
She told Rocky that she was not going to sign the agreement,
because she believed that it was unnecessary and controlling.
However, she confirmed that she was both willing to enter into
a loan from Points West Bank and able to make the loan pay-
ments. But when asked what recourse Rocky would have if she
failed to make the loan payments, Debra responded, “That I
pay him back?”
As to Rocky’s offer to extend her a loan to purchase the Ash
Street residence, Debra testified that she “did not want [Rocky]
to be [her] loan officer for 20 years.” She had attempted to
obtain a loan on her own, but she was unable to purchase the
residence from Rocky.
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The district court entered a written order granting Rocky’s
request to modify the dissolution decree. The court first
determined that Rocky had fulfilled his obligation to place
the Ash Street residence in marketable condition. However,
it concluded that his obligation to assist Debra in obtaining a
loan was “too vague to be enforceable.” It observed that both
parties had divergent beliefs as to the nature of the obliga-
tion and that Debra believed Rocky was required to “meet
and accept whatever conditions the bank may have put on the
loan.” And she could not identify any recourse Rocky would
have if she failed to pay the loan. Thus, the court concluded
that the obligation “ought to have [been] more fully explained
or defined in the [property settlement agreement].” It there-
fore vacated Rocky’s obligation to assist Debra in obtaining
a loan.
Debra filed a timely notice of appeal. We moved the case to
our docket pursuant to statutory authority.1
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
Debra assigns, restated, that the district court abused its
discretion in modifying the dissolution decree by vacating the
provision requiring Rocky to assist her in obtaining a loan to
purchase the Ash Street residence.
Debra does not attack the portion of the district court’s
order determining that Rocky had fulfilled his obligation to
place the Ash Street residence in marketable condition. Thus,
that portion of the order is not affected by our resolution of
the appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] An appellate court will reverse a decision on a
motion to vacate or modify a judgment only if the litigant
shows that the district court abused its discretion.2 A judicial
abuse of discretion exists when reasons or rulings of a trial
judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a
1
See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 24-1106(3) (Reissue 2008).
2
Eihusen v. Eihusen, 272 Neb. 462, 723 N.W.2d 60 (2006).
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s ubstantial right and denying just results in matters submitted
for disposition.3
ANALYSIS
Debra assigns that the district court erred in vacating the
provision of the dissolution decree requiring Rocky to assist
her in obtaining a loan to purchase the Ash Street residence.
She asserts that the provision was based upon the parties’ prop-
erty settlement agreement and that their agreement should have
been binding upon the court. She further claims that Rocky’s
obligation to assist her was not ambiguous.
[3] Debra’s assertion as to the binding effect of the property
settlement agreement is well taken. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 42-366(1)
(Reissue 2008) provides that parties to a dissolution of mar-
riage may enter into a written property settlement agreement
containing provisions for, among other things, “the disposition
of any property owned by either of them.” And in applying
§ 42-366, we have held that if the terms of a property settle-
ment agreement with respect to real and personal property and
maintenance are not found unconscionable, the agreement is
binding upon the dissolution court and the initial decree must
carry such agreement into effect.4
[4] Rocky’s obligation to assist Debra in obtaining a loan
was not found to be unconscionable by the dissolution court.
And his obligation was incorporated into the dissolution decree.
Upon entry of the decree, Rocky’s obligation to assist Debra
became a judgment of the dissolution court. We have long held
that a dissolution decree which approves and incorporates into
the decree the parties’ property settlement agreement is a judg-
ment of the court itself.5 Thus, Rocky was required by judg-
ment to assist Debra in obtaining a loan to purchase the Ash
Street residence.
[5] However, contrary to Debra’s argument, Rocky’s obliga-
tion was ambiguous. We have stated that ambiguity exists in a
document when a word, phrase, or provision therein has, or is
3
Simpson v. Simpson, 275 Neb. 152, 744 N.W.2d 710 (2008).
4
See Reinsch v. Reinsch, 259 Neb. 564, 611 N.W.2d 86 (2000).
5
See Rice v. Webb, 287 Neb. 712, 844 N.W.2d 290 (2014).
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susceptible of, at least two reasonable but conflicting interpre-
tations or meanings.6 In other words, a document is ambiguous
if, after application of the pertinent rules for construction, there
is uncertainty concerning which of two or more reasonable
meanings represents the intention of the parties.7
As the district court observed, the parties possessed diver-
gent understandings of the nature of Rocky’s obligation. Debra
testified that she believed Rocky was required to cosign a loan
and to make any required downpayment. But Rocky’s obliga-
tion could reasonably be interpreted as requiring only one such
action or neither. Rocky could also assist Debra in obtaining
a loan in a myriad of other ways, such as providing copies of
the parties’ income tax returns or other financial documents.
We therefore agree that the nature of Rocky’s obligation was
ambiguous and that it should have been more fully explained
or defined in the property settlement agreement.
[6] But the ambiguity of Rocky’s obligation did not provide
grounds to vacate it from the dissolution decree. We have con-
sistently stated that where parties to a divorce action voluntarily
execute a property settlement agreement which is approved by
the dissolution court and incorporated into a divorce decree
from which no appeal is taken, its provisions will not there-
after be vacated or modified in the absence of fraud or gross
inequity.8 In his motion, Rocky did not allege the existence of
fraud or gross inequity. And no evidence of such was received
by the district court. Thus, no grounds permitting modification
of the decree were established before the district court.
Although Rocky’s motion invoked the district court’s inher-
ent authority to vacate or modify its decisions within term,9
this does not affect the outcome. Rocky’s motion was filed
within the same term as the dissolution decree.10 And although
6
See Strunk v. Chromy-Strunk, 270 Neb. 917, 708 N.W.2d 821 (2006).
7
Id.
8
See, Whitesides v. Whitesides, 290 Neb. 116, 858 N.W.2d 858 (2015);
Rice, supra note 5; Strunk, supra note 6.
9
See Jarrett v. Eichler, 244 Neb. 310, 506 N.W.2d 682 (1993).
10
See Rules of Dist. Ct. of 12th Jud. Dist. 12-0 (rev. 2010) (providing for
calendar year as regular term of court).
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the district court did not issue its modification order until after
the term expired, it retained the inherent authority to do so.11
However, the court’s inherent authority did not permit the
partial modification of the terms of Debra and Rocky’s prop-
erty settlement agreement. As previously discussed, a property
settlement agreement with respect to real and personal property
and maintenance is binding upon the dissolution court unless
its terms are found to be unconscionable.12 And if uncon
scionable, the dissolution court may request that the parties
revise the agreement or proceed to make its own division of
the marital property.13 The court is not free to selectively vacate
a provision of the agreement on the basis of ambiguity as was
done in this case.
In vacating Rocky’s obligation for ambiguity, the district
court apparently misconstrued the nature of the underlying
property settlement agreement. A contract may be found to
be unenforceable due to a lack of definite or certain terms or
a binding mutual understanding between the parties.14 But in
Rice v. Webb,15 we specifically disapproved of the applica-
tion of contract principles to a property settlement agreement
that had been incorporated into a dissolution decree. Once a
property settlement agreement has been incorporated into a dis-
solution decree, the contractual character of the agreement is
subsumed into the court-ordered judgment.16 “‘At that point the
court and the parties are no longer dealing with a mere contract
between the parties.’”17
Ambiguity as to a party’s obligation under a dissolution
decree does not provide grounds for vacation or modification
11
See Jarrett, supra note 9.
12
See Reinsch, supra note 4.
13
See, § 42-366(3); Prochazka v. Prochazka, 198 Neb. 525, 253 N.W.2d 407
(1977).
14
See MBH, Inc. v. John Otte Oil & Propane, 15 Neb. App. 341, 727
N.W.2d 238 (2007).
15
See Rice, supra note 5.
16
See id.
17
Id. at 723, 844 N.W.2d at 299, quoting Henderson v. Henderson, 307 N.C.
401, 298 S.E.2d 345 (1983).
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of the decree. Rather, we have stated that when a decree is
ambiguous, “the parties must bring some form of action which
raises the issue and thereby requires the court before whom
the matter is then pending to resolve the issue as a matter of
law in light of the evidence and the meaning of the decree as
it appears.”18
Rocky raised the issue of the dissolution decree’s ambigu-
ity, and the district court received testimony on that issue. But
rather than resolving the matter, the court vacated the provision
from the decree. And without a basis for doing so, the court’s
modification constituted an abuse of discretion. We therefore
vacate that portion of the court’s order purporting to modify
the decree.
[7] Ultimately, the issue presented by Rocky’s motion was
his compliance with his obligation to assist Debra in obtaining
a loan. Because the meaning of a dissolution decree presents a
question of law,19 we may address the issue in the first instance.
We reject Debra’s interpretation of the assistance clause. The
clause required Rocky to “assist” Debra. But it did not require
him to “obtain” the loan in his own behalf by a cosignature or
to provide a downpayment, as Debra advocates.
And the required assistance could take many forms. Because
the district court erroneously vacated the assistance clause, it
did not decide whether Rocky had fully complied. And because
this is a task that the district court should undertake in the first
instance, and which we would review for abuse of discretion,
we remand the cause with direction to the district court to
decide this issue.
CONCLUSION
The district court determined that Rocky had fulfilled his
obligation to place the Ash Street residence in marketable
condition. Our decision does not affect that portion of the
court’s order.
Although Rocky’s obligation to assist Debra in obtaining a
loan was ambiguous, such ambiguity did not provide a basis
18
Neujahr v. Neujahr, 223 Neb. 722, 728, 393 N.W.2d 47, 51 (1986).
19
See Strunk, supra note 6.
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to modify the dissolution decree. Without evidence of fraud
or gross inequity, modification of the decree was an abuse of
discretion. We vacate the portion of the district court’s order
purporting to do so.
Finally, we address the portion of Rocky’s motion seeking
an order determining that he had performed his obligation
under the assistance clause. Because the district court did not
determine whether, based on the evidence before it, Rocky had
fully complied with the assistance clause, we remand the cause
with direction that the court do so.
Vacated in part and remanded with direction.
Donald P eterson, appellant, v. Kings Gate
Partners - Omaha I, L.P., and Picerne
Kings Gate, LLC, appellees.
___ N.W.2d ___
Filed April 10, 2015. No. S-14-383.
1. Motions to Dismiss: Appeal and Error. A district court’s grant of a motion to
dismiss is reviewed de novo.
2. Motions to Dismiss: Pleadings: Appeal and Error. When reviewing an order
dismissing a complaint, the appellate court accepts as true all facts which are
well pled and the proper and reasonable inferences of law and fact which may be
drawn therefrom, but not the plaintiff’s conclusion.
3. Motions to Dismiss: Pleadings. To prevail against a motion to dismiss for failure
to state a claim, a plaintiff must allege sufficient facts, accepted as true, to state a
claim to relief that is plausible on its face. In cases in which a plaintiff does not
or cannot allege specific facts showing a necessary element, the factual allega-
tions, taken as true, are nonetheless plausible if they suggest the existence of the
element and raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of
the element or claim.
4. Statutes: Appeal and Error. To the extent an appeal calls for statutory interpre-
tation or presents questions of law, an appellate court must reach an independent
conclusion irrespective of the determination made by the court below.
5. Negligence: Proof. In order to recover in a negligence action, a plaintiff must
show a legal duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, a breach of such duty,
causation, and damages.
6. Negligence. The question whether a legal duty exists for actionable negligence is
a question of law dependent on the facts in a particular situation.
7. ____. The existence of a duty generally serves as a legal conclusion that an actor
must exercise that degree of care as would be exercised by a reasonable person
under the circumstances.