Conditionally Grant Writ of Mandamus; Opinion Filed August 20, 2015.
In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-15-00518-CV
IN RE SHARON LAURIETTE, Relator
Original Proceeding from the 256th Judicial District Court
Dallas County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. DF-12-07868
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Francis, Myers, and Schenck
Opinion by Justice Myers
This case involves a mediated settlement agreement entered into in a divorce proceeding.1
The trial court determined the agreement was ambiguous, and the court vacated and set aside the
agreement. Relator Sharon Lauriette filed a petition for writ of mandamus requesting that we
order the trial court to vacate its order vacating and setting aside the agreement. We agree, and
we conditionally grant the writ.
BACKGROUND
Sharon Lauriette and Samy Lauriette were married on August 16, 1998. They had one
child during the marriage. On April 14, 2012, Samy filed for divorce. The parties participated in
two full days of mediation, but they did not reach an agreement at that time. However, the
parties continued to negotiate, and they traded proposed settlement agreements. After a few
1
The divorce proceeding was joined with a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 6.406(b) (West 2006).
The mediated settlement agreement covered both proceedings. The issues in this original proceeding concern only the divorce proceeding.
months of negotiation, the parties signed the “Mediated Settlement Agreement” on February 10,
2014. The agreement divided the parties’ property and debts and provided for custody and care
of their child. The agreement also contained the following provision for post-divorce spousal
maintenance or alimony:2
Father to pay Mother post-divorce maintenance in the amount of $7,500.00 per
month for 72 months beginning March 1, 2014. Alimony shall terminate only if
Father becomes the Sole Managing Conservator under the conditions set forth in
paragraph 3 above and not as a result of other factors or other changes of
conservatorship. Alimony is not terminated upon death of Father, cohabitation of
the Mother, or marriage of the Mother.
Paragraph 3 of the agreement provided that if one parent changed residences to outside a
specified area or failed to return the child timely after a holiday or vacation, then the other parent
would become the sole managing conservator. The agreement also provided that “[t]he
Decree . . . shall be prepared consistently with the Texas Family Law Practice Manual forms.” It
also provided that any dispute in the drafting of the decree “that cannot be settled through direct
communication will be submitted to mediation . . . .”
The parties disagreed about how to incorporate the alimony provision into the decree.
Specifically, they disagreed about whether termination of the alimony payments was limited to
Samy becoming sole managing conservator under paragraph 3 or whether Samy’s obligation to
make the payments would terminate if Sharon died before all payments were due.
Whether the payments would terminate at Sharon’s death has tax consequences for the
parties. If Samy would have no liability to make the payments after Sharon’s death, then the
payments qualify as “alimony or separate maintenance payments” under the Internal Revenue
Code, and the payments are deductible from Samy’s income and are taxable as income to
Sharon. See 26 U.S.C. § 71(a), (b)(1)(D); id. § 215(a), (b). However, if the payments do not
2
Sharon asserted the payments were intended to be part of the property division and not just contractual alimony. Although we refer to the
payments throughout this opinion as “alimony” or “spousal maintenance,” we make no determination of whether the parties intended the
payments to be part of the property division.
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terminate at Sharon’s death, then the payments do not qualify as “alimony or separate
maintenance payments” under the Internal Revenue Code and are not deductible by Samy or
taxable to Sharon. The parties returned to mediation to try to resolve their differences; however,
they were unable to reach an agreement on this matter.
After the parties’ mediation of this disagreement failed to lead to a settlement, they each
filed a motion for judgment with a proposed decree attached. Samy also filed a motion to vacate
or set aside the agreement. Sharon’s proposed decree stated the alimony obligation “shall only
terminate if and only if [Samy] becomes the sole managing conservator” under the conditions in
paragraph 3 of the agreement. Samy’s proposed decree stated the obligation:
shall earlier terminate, without further obligation of [Samy] to [Sharon] if:
(1) If father becomes the Sole Managing Conservator as set forth herein
under conservatorship; or
(2) The death of [Sharon.]
Further, there shall be no liability for [Samy] to make any payments for any
period after the death of [Sharon], and there is no liability for [Samy] to make any
payment in cash or property as a substitute for such payments after the death of
[Sharon].
Samy’s proposed decree then discussed the “Tax Impact” of the payments and stated the
payments were taxable to Sharon and deductible by Samy. The proposed decree required Sharon
to furnish written proof each year that the payments were included as income on her federal
income tax return. Samy’s proposed decree also stated that Samy could suspend the payments if
Sharon failed to include them in her income on her federal income tax return. The parties filed
objections to each other’s proposed decrees, and the trial court held a hearing.
During the hearing, the parties’ discussed their respective positions concerning the
agreement’s alimony provisions. Samy’s position was that the agreement required the parties to
use the forms for alimony required by the TFLPM. He asserted that the TFLPM forms provided
two ways for alimony to be a subject of a divorce decree: either (1) a statement that the decree
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did not provide for alimony or (2) provisions that the parties intended for the alimony payments
to meet the definition of alimony under Internal Revenue Code and require that payments stop on
the payee-spouses’ death, and that the payments be tax deductible by the payor spouse and
taxable to the payee spouse. Sharon’s position was that the alimony provisions for the decree
should be dictated by the terms of the agreement using the TFLPM forms as necessary to
implement the terms of the agreement. She asserted that because the agreement does not
mention the tax consequences of the alimony or require that the payments terminate upon her
death, the TFLPM forms requiring those provisions do not apply. At the conclusion of the
hearing, the court determined that the agreement was ambiguous.
At a hearing to determine the parties’ intent regarding the tax effect of the alimony
payments, Samy, Sharon, and Scott Rewak (an attorney for Sharon), testified. They all testified
that the agreement was silent regarding the tax effect of the alimony payments. The trial court
admitted rejected drafts of the agreement. These early drafts of the agreement expressly
provided that the alimony payments would not terminate on Sharon’s death. As explained
above, the signed agreement omitted that provision and did not contain a similar express
statement of whether the payments would cease on Sharon’s death.
After the hearing, the court did not make a finding resolving the ambiguity by
determining the parties’ intent. Instead, the court signed an order stating, “the Court finds that
there is an ambiguity regarding the Parties’ intent regarding the tax effect of the alimony in the
Parties’ February 10, 2014 Mediated Settlement Agreement that cannot be resolved.” The order
then denied Sharon’s motion to enter judgment on the agreement and granted Samy’s motion “to
Vacate/Set Aside” the agreement. Sharon now brings this petition for writ of mandamus
asserting the trial court abused its discretion by vacating the agreement.
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MEDIATED SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
The family code provides for binding agreements between the parties in divorce
proceedings.
(b) A mediated settlement agreement is binding on the parties if the agreement:
(1) provides, in a prominently displayed statement that is in boldfaced type
or capital letters or underlined, that the agreement is not subject to
revocation;
(2) is signed by each party to the agreement; and
(3) is signed by the party’s attorney, if any, who is present at the time that
the agreement is signed.
(c) If a mediated settlement agreement meets the requirements of this section, a
party is entitled to judgment on the mediated settlement agreement
notwithstanding Rule 11, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, or another rule of law.
TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 6.602(b), (c) (West 2006); see also id. § 153.0071(c)–(f) (West 2014)
(mediated settlement agreement in suit affecting parent-child relationship).
In this case, the agreement meets these requirements. Therefore, the agreement is
binding, and the parties are entitled to a judgment that conforms to the agreement
“notwithstanding . . . another rule of law.” Milner v. Milner, 361 S.W.3d 615, 619 (Tex. 2012)
(quoting TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 6.602(c)).
The issue before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion by setting aside the
agreement because it is ambiguous. Both Sharon and Samy assert the agreement is not
ambiguous and that the divorce decree should conform to their interpretations of the agreement.
If the agreement is not ambiguous, then the trial court’s stated reason for setting aside the
agreement is not valid, and the court abused its discretion. However, we need not determine
whether the agreement is ambiguous, because any ambiguity in the tax treatment of the alimony
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payments and whether the payments would cease on Sharon’s death did not authorize the trial
court to set aside the agreement.3 The court’s doing so was an abuse of discretion.
In Milner v. Milner, the parties to a mediated settlement agreement under section 6.602
disagreed about the meaning of a term in their agreement, namely, whether the husband was to
transfer to the wife only his beneficial interest in a limited partnership or whether he was to
transfer all his rights as a limited partner. See Milner, 361 S.W.3d at 622. The trial court entered
a divorce decree, but the court of appeals reversed and ordered the trial court to set aside the
agreement because there was no meeting of the minds regarding the nature of the partnership
interest to be transferred to the wife. Id. at 618. The supreme court concluded the agreement
was ambiguous (the court did not specifically address whether there was a meeting of the minds),
and affirmed the court of appeals’ decision to remand the case to the trial court. Id. at 622, 623.
However, the supreme court determined that the ambiguity was not cause to set aside the
agreement. Id. Instead, the ambiguity was to be resolved by the appropriate trier of fact. Id. at
622. In Milner, the agreement provided that any disputes regarding the language of the decree or
other documents necessary to effectuate the terms of the agreement would be finally decided
through binding arbitration before the mediator. The supreme court stated this language made
the mediator, instead of the trial court, the appropriate authority to resolve the fact issue created
by the ambiguity. Id.
Applying Milner, we conclude the presence of an ambiguity in the agreement did not
authorize the trial court to set aside the agreement. Samy argues, however, the trial court had no
choice but to set aside the agreement. He argues the agreement, like that in Milner, required the
3
The supreme court observed that courts of appeals have stated that mediated settlement agreements are not enforceable when they are
illegal in nature or procured by fraud, duress, coercion, or other dishonest means. Milner, 361 S.W.3d at 619; see also Garcia-Udall v. Udall,
141 S.W.3d 323, 332 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2004, no pet.) (trial court has authority not to enforce illegal provisions in mediated settlement
agreement). Because the trial court set aside the agreement due to an ambiguity concerning the tax consequences of the alimony payments, none
of those grounds are at issue in this case.
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trial court to send any disagreements to the mediator. However, unlike the provision in Milner,
which authorized the mediator to make the final decision about the ambiguity, the provision in
this agreement stated the “issue or controversy . . . will be submitted to mediation . . . .” The
parties mediated the issue of the tax effect of the alimony and whether the payments would cease
at Sharon’s death, but they could not reach an agreement. “Therefore,” Samy argues, “the only
choice [the trial court] had was to set aside the [agreement], giving the parties the options of
returning to mediation to begin anew or moving forward with a trial to the court.” We disagree.
In Milner, the agreement contained an agreement to arbitrate any disputes. When parties
enter into a valid agreement to arbitrate, the parties have agreed that the arbitrator and not the
trial court or a jury will be the trier of fact for the disputed issue subject to the arbitration
provision. See Arbitration, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 125 (10th ed. 2014). In that situation,
the trial court has no authority to decide the issue that is subject to the arbitration provision.
However, an agreement to mediate is not an agreement to change the trier of fact. An agreement
to mediate is an agreement that the parties will use a third party to guide them toward an
agreement resolving their dispute. Mediation, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1130 (10th ed. 2014).
In the event the mediation does not lead to a resolution, the trial court or jury remains the trier of
fact4 and determines all relevant fact questions. In this case, when the mediation did not result in
a resolution, the trial court remained the trier of fact with the duty to resolve ambiguities in the
agreement by determining the parties’ true intentions. See Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391,
394–95 (Tex. 1983) (when contract is ambiguous, “the trier of fact must resolve the ambiguity
by determining the true intent of the parties”). We conclude that the provision in the agreement
4
Of course, if the parties agree to arbitration in the event the mediation fails to resolve the dispute, then the arbitrator would be the trier of
fact. In this case, there was no such agreement to arbitrate.
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requiring the parties to mediate any disputes in drafting the divorce decree did not require the
trial court to set aside the agreement when the parties’ mediation proved unsuccessful.
We express no opinion whether the agreement is ambiguous or how any ambiguity
should be resolved. We conclude only that the trial court abused its discretion in this case by
setting aside the agreement.
MANDAMUS RELIEF
To be entitled to mandamus relief, a relator must show (1) the trial court clearly abused
its discretion by failing to apply the law correctly, and (2) the benefits and detriments of
mandamus render appeal inadequate. In re Schmitz, 285 S.W.3d 451, 458 (Tex. 2009). We have
already determined the trial court abused its discretion; therefore, the only remaining issue is
whether an appeal could adequately address the error. See id.
The trial court’s error of setting aside the mediated settlement agreement could be
corrected on appeal, but only after the parties had litigated or reached a new settlement
concerning the issues in this proceeding. Cf. Garcia-Udall v. Udall, 141 S.W.3d 323, 332 (Tex.
App.—Dallas 2004, no pet.) (modifying trial court’s judgment on appeal to conform with
mediated settlement agreement). Waiting until the appeal to correct this error would deprive the
parties of one of the benefits of a mediated settlement agreement under the family code, an end
to litigation through the immediate enforceability of the agreement. See Cayan v. Cayan, 38
S.W.3d 161, 166 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2000, pet. denied).5 A failure to enforce a
5
As the Houston 14th District Court of Appeals has explained,
the purpose of alternative dispute measures is to keep parties out of the courtroom. Where a mediated settlement
agreement is not summarily enforceable, the trial court is then faced with litigating the merits of not only the original
action but also the enforceability of the settlement agreement, thereby generating more, not less, litigation. Enforcing
mediated agreements as of the time they are entered rather than later also encourages parties to avail themselves of
mediation by giving them greater assurance of a prompt and final resolution. Further, parties are more likely to mediate in
good faith if they know their agreement will be enforced. Therefore, effecting the plain meaning of section 6.602 is
supported by public policy.
Cayan, 38 S.W.3d at 166 (citations omitted).
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mediated settlement agreement deprives the party seeking to enforce the agreement of one of the
benefits of a mediated settlement agreement because it forces the party to expend further time
and resources litigating a suit that was settled.
The supreme court has determined that mandamus relief is available to remedy a trial
court’s erroneous refusal to enter judgment on a mediated settlement agreement because the
parties will have lost much of the settlement’s benefit if they are required to expend time and
resources appealing the error. See In re Lee, 411 S.W.3d 445, 450 n.7 (Tex. 2013) (orig.
proceeding) (citing Mantas v. Fifth Court of Appeals, 925 S.W.2d 656, 659 (Tex. 1996) (orig.
proceeding)). Not correcting the trial court’s error of setting aside the agreement would similarly
deprive the parties of the benefits of a mediated settlement agreement.
In this case, mandamus relief will enable the parties to proceed immediately to
determining whether the agreement is ambiguous and permit the trial court to resolve any
ambiguity and enter judgment in accordance with the agreement without the time and expense of
reaching a final judgment without the benefit of the agreement, followed by an appeal. We
conclude the benefits and detriments of mandamus render appellate relief inadequate. See
Schmitz, 285 S.W.3d at 458.
CONCLUSION
We conditionally grant Sharon’s petition for writ of mandamus and direct the trial court
to vacate its order setting aside the mediated settlement agreement. The writ will issue only if
the trial court fails to vacate its order.
150518F.P05
/Lana Myers/
LANA MYERS
JUSTICE
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