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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 MAUREEN A. TELLES,
3 Petitioner-Appellee,
4 v. No. 35,170
5 EDMUNDO TELLES,
6 Respondent-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
8 Gerard J. Lavelle, District Judge
9 Dorene A. Kuffer
10 Albuquerque, NM
11 for Appellee
12 Edmundo Telles y Padilla
13 Albuquerque, NM
14 Pro Se Appellant
15 MEMORANDUM OPINION
16 VIGIL, Chief Judge.
17 {1} Husband appeals several aspects of the divorce decree entered by the district
18 court, as well as the manner in which the district court enforced an award of attorney
1 fees granted to Wife. We issued a notice of proposed summary disposition proposing
2 to affirm in part and reverse in part. Wife has responded with a memorandum in
3 opposition, and Husband has responded with a memorandum supporting portions of
4 the proposed disposition and opposing others. Having given careful consideration to
5 the parties’ submissions, we continue to believe reversal in part and affirmance in part
6 is warranted. We affirm in part and reverse in part for the reasons stated in this
7 opinion as well as in the notice of proposed summary disposition.
8 {2} We address Wife’s memorandum in opposition first. Wife does not challenge
9 our proposed holdings to the effect that, under the parties’ premarital agreement
10 (PMA), the BMW was her separate property and Husband contributed $7500 of his
11 separate property to reduce the debt owed on the BMW. [MIO 1] However, Wife
12 argues that awarding Husband reimbursement of the $7500, as the PMA requires,
13 would result in unjust enrichment of Husband. She argues that she contributed far
14 more than $7500 toward the debt owed on the Lexus, which according to the PMA
15 was Husband’s separate property. [Id. 2] According to Wife, these contributions
16 included both separate and community funds. As we stated in the notice of proposed
17 disposition, the district court did not treat the Lexus as Husband’s separate property
18 but instead found that it had been transmuted into community property. The district
19 court therefore did not address the possibility of reimbursing Wife for community and
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1 separate funds that may have been expended to reduce the debt on the Lexus. On
2 remand, the district court will have an opportunity to follow the PMA, treat each
3 party’s separate property as separate in accordance with the PMA, and determine
4 which party is entitled to reimbursement for reductions in the debts owed on each
5 piece of separate property. At this time, however, since both the BMW and the Lexus
6 were erroneously treated as community property we cannot determine whether the
7 appropriate reimbursement amounts have already been ordered. We therefore reverse
8 and remand to allow the district court to strictly apply the terms of the PMA in
9 dividing the property and debts of the parties.
10 {3} In reaching the above result, we note Wife’s argument that the district court had
11 jurisdiction over all the property of the parties, and had discretion to divide the
12 parties’ property and debts equitably. [MIO 3] However, Wife has cited no authority
13 indicating that the district court’s discretion allows it to override the clear terms of a
14 PMA entered into by the parties knowingly and voluntarily, and we are aware of no
15 such authority. The district court in this case appears to have ignored the terms of the
16 PMA by treating all of the property as community property, in contravention of the
17 requirements of the PMA. The district court’s discretion over property and debt
18 matters in a divorce cannot go so far as to allow the court to simply ignore a PMA
19 entered into by the parties. See NMSA 1978, § 40-3A-4(A)(1) (1995) (authorizing
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1 spouses to enter into a PMA that contracts with respect to any and all property owned
2 by the parties); Lebeck v. Lebeck, 1994-NMCA-103, ¶¶ 18-24, 118 N.M. 367, 881
3 P.2d 727 (discussing fact that a PMA is a contract, and is valid in the absence of
4 defenses to a contract such as undue influence or misrepresentation).
5 {4} Wife also objects to our proposed reversal of the district court’s action of
6 stripping Husband of the Lexus and awarding that vehicle to Wife to be sold, in order
7 to satisfy an award of attorney fees previously made to Wife. Wife argues that it was
8 not necessary for her to obtain a separate lien or judgment against Husband’s property
9 in order to execute on it, and that it was also not necessary to strictly follow the
10 procedures set out in the statutory provisions governing executions on judgments.
11 [MIO 4] She contends that Husband suffered no prejudice as a result of the procedure
12 employed by the district court, and cites to Armstrong v. Csurilla, 1991-NMSC-081,
13 112 N.M. 579, 817 P.2d 1221, in support of her argument. We agree that Armstrong
14 held that strict adherence to all of the statutory judgment-lien-foreclosure procedures
15 is not always necessary, as long as no party is prejudiced as a result. Id. ¶ 21. We
16 disagree, however, that Husband was not prejudiced by the procedure employed in
17 this case. It should be noted that in Armstrong, the procedures followed by the district
18 court resulted in a judicial sale of the property, which is the approved statutory
19 method for selling property following execution. Id. ¶¶ 10, 21-22; NMSA 1978, § 39-
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1 5-1 (1895). Such a sale allows a judgment debtor to take action to increase the sale
2 price of the property, by obtaining potential customers or other means. Id. ¶ 22
3 (pointing out that judgment debtors could have tried to cause the price at the judicial
4 sale to be bid up for their economic benefit). In this case, on the other hand, the
5 district court simply awarded the Lexus to Wife with instructions to sell it, and
6 accepted her representations as to how much was still owed on the Lexus and how
7 much she could sell it for [RP 95, 111]. This action provided no opportunity for the
8 public auction that is required by Section 39-5-1 for the protection of the judgment
9 debtor. See § 39-5-1 (requiring that the sale be at a “public vendue,” which is a public
10 auction, following notice of the sale by publication and posting).
11 {5} We find that the lack of a sale by public auction is sufficient prejudice in this
12 case to overturn the procedure followed by the district court. We therefore do not
13 address the additional possible source of prejudice discussed in the notice of proposed
14 summary disposition, concerning Husband’s lack of an opportunity to assert a
15 homestead exemption as a defense to the execution on his Lexus.
16 {6} We now address Husband’s memorandum in opposition. The only portion of
17 our notice that Husband objects to is the discussion concerning the award of attorney
18 fees to Wife. Husband splits the fees into two amounts---the $5,000 that was awarded
19 in the original divorce decree, and an additional $2,000 that was awarded following
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1 the hearing on Wife’s motion requesting that the Lexus be awarded to her to satisfy
2 the attorney fees award. [MIO 6] As we stated in the notice, following remand the
3 district court will have the ability to adjust the attorney fees awarded to account for
4 the parties’ relative success during the litigation, as well as other factors. In doing so,
5 the court should take into account the fact that $2,000 of the fees were awarded as a
6 result of Wife’s legally-unjustified request to circumvent the statutory procedures
7 concerning enforcement of judgments. At this time, however, since the fees issue will
8 be subject to adjustment on remand, we decline to decide whether any particular
9 portion of the fees awarded should be reversed.
10 {7} We note Husband’s request that he not have to return to district court to
11 continue litigating this matter. [MIO 6, 9] However, this is unavoidable; there are
12 factual issues to be resolved concerning reimbursement for pay-down of debts owed
13 on separate property, as well as the proper remedy for the lack of a judicial sale of the
14 Lexus. This Court is not a fact-finding body but can only review those facts
15 determined by the district courts. N.M. Const. art. VI, § 29. We also note Husband’s
16 request that he not have to appear before the same district judge who presided over the
17 proceedings below. Husband’s evidence of bias is not sufficient, however, to allow
18 us to find that the district judge must recuse himself following remand; although
19 Husband complains that the judge was impatient with him and refused to listen to
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1 certain of his arguments, it does not appear that Husband raised this issue with the
2 district judge by, for example, asking the judge to recuse from the case. See Rule 12-
3 216 NMRA (requiring a party to raise an issue in the district court in order to preserve
4 it for purposes of appeal). We are confident that the district court will be fair to both
5 Husband and Wife in any proceedings that may occur in the future. {8} Based
6 on the foregoing as well as the discussion set out in the notice of proposed summary
7 disposition, we affirm in part and reverse in part as discussed in the notice. On remand
8 the district court shall strictly apply the terms of the PMA, including the provisions
9 for reimbursement when debt owed on separate property is reduced due to
10 contributions made by the other spouse. In addition, the district court shall fashion a
11 remedy for the deprivation of Husband’s separate property that occurred as a result
12 of the circumvention of the execution-and-sale statutes.
13 {9} IT IS SO ORDERED.
14 ______________________________________
15 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Chief Judge
16 WE CONCUR:
17 ____________________________
18 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
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1 ____________________________
2 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
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