This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A15-1473
In re the Marriage of:
David Lee Christensen, petitioner,
Appellant,
vs.
Kathryn Florence Kladek,
Respondent.
Filed May 23, 2016
Affirmed
Peterson, Judge
Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-FA-12-3364
Rasheen R. Tillman, Tillman Law Firm, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)
Melanie P. Persellin, Jensen Sondrall Persellin & Woods, P.A., Brooklyn Park, Minnesota
(for respondent)
Considered and decided by Kirk, Presiding Judge; Peterson, Judge; and Jesson,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
PETERSON, Judge
Appellant husband challenges a district court order that requires him to repay a
home equity line of credit (HELOC) that was ambiguously addressed in the parties’
marital-dissolution judgment and decree. Appellant argues that the district court made
factual findings that were contrary to the extrinsic evidence that the court considered in
resolving the ambiguity. Because husband failed to show that the district court’s findings
are clearly erroneous and because any ambiguity in the dissolution decree should be
resolved against husband as drafter of the judgment and decree, we affirm.
FACTS
The marriage of appellant-husband David Lee Christensen and respondent-wife
Kathryn Florence Kladek was dissolved by a stipulated judgment and decree that was
entered on December 4, 2012. The stipulation was drafted by husband’s counsel; wife was
not represented by counsel. Wife had a nonmarital interest in a house in Excelsior that was
encumbered by a HELOC “in the approximate amount of $31,214.73.” The judgment and
decree awarded the house to wife “subject to all encumbrances, including home equity
lines that are of record.” The judgment and decree also listed the HELOC as a $32,000
bank account of husband’s and awarded him “all right, title, interest and equity, free and
clear of any claim on the part of [wife]” in that account. Another provision of the judgment
and decree made each party responsible for “debts in their name.” The HELOC is in
husband’s name only.
Following the parties’ postdecree motions directed at determining which of them
was responsible to repay the HELOC, the district court ruled that husband was responsible
to repay the HELOC. Husband appealed, and this court reversed in an unpublished
opinion. Christensen v. Kladek, No. A14-1045, 2015 WL 1514039 (Minn. App. Apr. 6,
2015). This court ruled that the district court’s finding that husband was responsible to pay
the HELOC was clearly erroneous because the judgment and decree is ambiguous and, in
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resolving the ambiguity, the district court considered only the extrinsic evidence offered
by wife. Id., at *2-3. This court remanded “for the district court to determine the parties’
intent after considering all of the relevant extrinsic evidence.” Id. at *3. This court
specifically referred to six e-mails that mentioned the HELOC account that were sent by
wife or a mortgage consultant. Id.
On remand, the district court received affidavits from the parties and counsel, and
considered additional extrinsic evidence that pertained to the HELOC account, including
the e-mails. The district court made the following findings of fact:
58. To determine intent, the [c]ourt must weigh [wife’s]
words versus [husband’s] actions. It is clear that on multiple
occasions before the signing of the Stipulation and on at least
one occasion after the Stipulation was signed [wife] indicated,
in writing, her intent to take on responsibility for [the HELOC].
59. However, [husband] was the sole signatory on the
lending agreement that created [the HELOC]. His actions after
the parties[] signed the Stipulation are not those of someone
who intends to abdicate responsibility for the debt. He
continued to make payments. He continued to withdraw
money from the account, incurring additional debt. He did not
allow [wife] to make payments and was the controlling account
holder. The bank refused to speak with [wife] unless [husband]
gave them permission.
60. As the conduct of the parties after the contract is
entered into is the most probative evidence, the [c]ourt must
give greater weight to [husband’s] actions than [wife’s] emails,
most of which were sent before the contract was entered into.
Therefore, the [c]ourt finds that [husband] is solely responsible
for [the HELOC]. [Husband] will hold [wife] harmless from
any obligation to make payment of the same.
61. Even if the [c]ourt was unable to reach a
determination about the parties’ intent, in those cases where the
contract is ambiguous and the intent of the parties unknown,
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Minnesota case law requires the [c]ourt to construe the contract
against the drafter. In this case, [husband] drafted the
Stipulated Judgment and Decree. Under this alternative
analysis, the [c]ourt would reach the same conclusion.
The district court ordered that husband is solely responsible to repay the HELOC and
required him to hold wife harmless and indemnify her for that obligation. Husband
appeals.
DECISION
A stipulation is a binding contract. Shirk v. Shirk, 561 N.W.2d 519, 521 (Minn.
1997). This court ruled that the language in the stipulated judgment and decree regarding
who is to repay the HELOC is ambiguous. Christensen, 2015 WL 1514039 at *2. A
district court’s resolution of the meaning of a contract ambiguity “is in the nature of a
finding of fact,” which “shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous.” Trondson v.
Janikula, 458 N.W.2d 679, 682 (Minn. 1990) (quoting Minn. R. Civ. P. 52.01). “When
deciding whether a finding of fact is clearly erroneous, [an appellate] court takes the view
of the evidence which is most favorable to the [district] court’s findings.” Id.; c.f. Maurer
v. Maurer, 623 N.W.2d 604, 606 (Minn. 2001) (acknowledging that, in dissolution matters,
valuation findings are necessarily based on approximations, and “broad deference is
appropriate” so that such findings should not be reversed “unless clearly erroneous on the
record as a whole”). To conclude that findings of fact are clearly erroneous, an appellate
court must be “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” In
re Stisser Grantor Trust, 818 N.W.2d 495, 507 (Minn. 2012) (quotation omitted). “That
the record might support findings other than those made by the [district] court does not
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show that the court’s findings are defective.” Vangsness v. Vangsness, 607 N.W.2d 468,
474 (Minn. App. 2000).
Husband argues that “the e-mails from [wife] clearly demonstrate the parties’ intent
that she will assume and pay the HELOC.” During dissolution negotiations in August and
September 2012, wife sent husband four e-mails that address the HELOC repayment and
include language offering to repay the HELOC. An August 2012 e-mail from a mortgage
consultant to wife addresses “[p]aying off the home equity credit line.”
Nearly four months after entry of the judgment and decree, wife sent husband’s
attorney the following email:
I have started the process to take on the [HELOC].
[Husband] needs to stop asap the auto pay on that loan so I can
make the payments directly to [Royal Credit Union] until I can
do a new [HELOC] loan in my name only. He has to first sign
the quit claim deed for my house so his name is off my
property. Once [C]arver [C]ounty has filed the quit claim deed,
and [husband] stops the auto pay so I can make the payments
from here on out, then I will go and re-write the [HELOC] in
my name and [husband] will be off everything of mine and it
doesn’t go against his credit. I do not have to refi my house to
take on this loan. I can keep my small 1st on my house and
have this 2nd on my house. I hope this makes sense to you.
There is $29,600 left on [the HELOC]. [Husband] did not pay
this off as I was over to [Royal Credit Union] talking with an
officer there and he showed me the loan and let me know how
I can take over this amt. I AM doing what I said I would do in
the decree. I am not trying to skip out of this so we do not need
to go back to the courts.
The district court found that these e-mails “clearly signal[] [wife’s] intent to take
responsibility for paying the HELOC as part of the parties’ agreement.”
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But the district court also found that husband’s conduct demonstrated his intent to
remain responsible for repayment of the HELOC. The court found that: (1) husband
“continued to make the payments [on the HELOC] during the parties’ separation and for
five months after the parties were divorced”; (2) thirteen days after wife’s final e-mail that
clearly indicated her intent to be responsible for the HELOC, husband “withdrew additional
monies from the account”; (3) husband “refused to allow [wife] to make payments on the
[HELOC] after the divorce”; and (4) husband “maintained control of the account, as
evidenced by the September 2013 email from the bank to [husband] requesting his
permission to speak with [wife] about the account.” The district court also noted that most
of wife’s e-mails were sent before the parties entered into their contract.
Husband argues that he continued to pay “the [HELOC] debt to protect his credit,
until such time as [wife] fully assumed the debt.” He also argues that he initially prohibited
wife from making payments on the HELOC because he wanted her “to refinance and
assume the HELOC, so that his name would be removed from the loan.” In an affidavit
that he submitted to the district court, husband stated, “I did tell [wife] that she couldn’t
just make payments on the HELOC, because she needed to refinance. After I spoke with
my Attorney she informed me that I needed to give [wife] access to the account so she
could make payments.” Although these arguments explain how husband’s conduct could
be consistent with an agreement to make wife responsible for paying the HELOC debt,
husband’s conduct (making payments for five months after the judgment and decree was
entered and prohibiting wife from making payments) was also consistent with an
agreement to make husband responsible for paying the HELOC debt.
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The district court described this as a “close case,” but it ultimately determined that
the judgment and decree made husband “solely responsible” for the HELOC because the
court “g[a]ve greater weight to [husband’s] actions than [wife’s] emails, most of which
were sent before the contract was entered into.”1 Although the record could support a
different resolution of the question, taking the view of the evidence that is most favorable
to the district court’s finding that husband is solely responsible for the HELOC, as we must,
we are not “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” Stisser
Grantor Trust, 818 N.W.2d at 507. Therefore, we conclude that the district court’s findings
supporting its decision to require husband to repay the HELOC are not clearly erroneous.
Also, the general rule that an ambiguous contract must be interpreted against the
drafter, in this case husband, also supports the district court’s decision. See Hilligoss v.
Cargill, Inc., 649 N.W.2d 142, 148 (Minn. 2002) (“[A]mbiguous contract terms must be
construed against the drafter . . . .”); accord Turner v. Alpha Phi Sorority House, 276
N.W.2d 63, 66 (Minn. 1979).
Affirmed.
1
The e-mails that were sent before the contract was entered into concern dissolution
negotiations and are not unequivocal evidence of wife’s agreement to repay the HELOC.
Wife’s postdissolution e-mail to husband’s attorney regarding the HELOC could be
describing the process wife was taking to become the sole title holder of her house, with
the house remaining subject to the encumbrance of the HELOC and husband remaining
responsible for the HELOC debt.
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