07/20/2021
DA 20-0433
Case Number: DA 20-0433
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2021 MT 182N
IN THE PARENTING OF:
T.J.E.,
A Minor Child,
RACHEL RENE ERICKSON,
Petitioner and Appellant,
and
TRAVIS JOHN ERICKSON,
Respondent and Appellee.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District,
In and For the County of Flathead, Cause No. DR-13-240D
Honorable Dan Wilson, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Rachel Rene Erickson, Self-Represented, Kalispell, Montana
For Appellee:
Travis John Erickson, Self-Represented, Kalispell, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: June 23, 2021
Decided: July 20, 2021
Filed:
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__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
Reports.
¶2 Rachel Rene Erickson appeals an Eleventh Judicial District Court order denying her
request to take over the mortgage on, and move into, her ex-husband Travis John
Erickson’s home—previously their marital home. She argues that during a 2016 hearing
the District Court modified the final dissolution decree to allow this action.1 We affirm.
¶3 Rachel and Travis were married in 2008. Represented by counsel, Rachel petitioned
the District Court in April 2013 for legal separation, including a parenting plan for the
parties’ son. Travis, representing himself, responded and sought dissolution of the parties’
marriage. In July 2015, under a separate cause number and both self-represented, the
parties jointly petitioned the District Court for dissolution of their marriage. Travis then
filed in the second cause number a Consent to Entry of the final decree that Rachel had
signed, waiving her right to appear and testify at the final dissolution hearing. He also filed
a new parenting plan, which differed substantially from the one Rachel submitted in the
earlier action.
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Rachel frames the issue under several other legal theories that we do not address because they
either are unnecessary given the dispositive issue before the Court, or because they were not
preserved for appeal. State v. Rodriguez, 2021 MT 65, ¶ 20, 403 Mont. 360, 483 P.3d 1080
(citation omitted).
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¶4 The District Court, the Hon. David M. Ortley presiding, held a final dissolution
hearing at which only Travis was present. The court entered its final decree of dissolution
on the parties’ joint petition on November 27, 2015. It awarded “all right, title, and
interest” in the home to Travis and stated that Rachel “shall transfer []her interest in this
real property to [Travis].” The decree allocated to Travis the mortgage debt on the home.
It did not include any provisions regarding his responsibility to refinance or what should
happen in the event of a default. The District Court also adopted Travis’s proposed
parenting plan.
¶5 In December 2015, Rachel filed a motion to vacate the parenting plan and to dismiss
the case, alleging that relief should be granted under M. R. Civ. P. 60 because Travis
committed fraud in relation to the parties’ parenting plan. Rachel alternatively requested
that the matter be consolidated with the earlier case she had filed and that a final dissolution
decree be entered in that case, “providing that each be responsible for the home and any
debt related thereto be awarded to Travis[.]” Included with the motion was Rachel’s
affidavit, which stated that she did not know there was a separate dissolution case, that she
would not have signed “the paperwork” or would have appeared at the dissolution hearing
had she understood the substance of the filings, and that Travis’s testimony at the
dissolution hearing was “not at all truthful.”
¶6 The court held a hearing on the motion on January 6, 2016. Rachel was present with
counsel, but neither Travis nor any counsel on his behalf appeared. Rachel clarified her
fraud allegations, which focused on the parenting plan, and claimed that she did not receive
notice of the dissolution hearing. The January 6 hearing centered on the parenting plan
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and custody of the parties’ son—Rachel did not at any time allege that Travis committed
fraud related to the property distribution.
¶7 At the end of the hearing, the court stated that it proposed “to set aside . . . the
Parenting Plan, and to the extent that there is a dispute as to the property disposition and
the allocation of debt, I would set that aside.” It then confirmed that the final dissolution
decree awarded the home and the entirety of the mortgage debt to Travis, and it confirmed
that Rachel was not seeking to modify the property distribution. It ruled that
“[t]he distribution of personal property and allocation of debt likewise remains as ordered.”
After the court’s oral ruling, Rachel’s counsel informed the court that Rachel still was listed
on the home’s deed as a joint tenant with Travis. Rachel’s counsel stated that, rather than
removing her from the title, “[Rachel] wants first right of taking over” should Travis default
on the mortgage. The District Court stated that the title should be left as is because
“if [Rachel’s] name is on the title the lender would have to look to her anyway.” It then
ordered that:
the home should remain titled as is, and to the extent that [Travis] were to
refinance the home, and could remove her from the title by operation of
refinancing, that would be acceptable, but to the extent that he defaults on
that loan then [Rachel] would have the right under the dissolution decree to
step in and save the home from foreclosure or a default on the note.
The minute entry of the hearing—prepared by a Deputy Clerk of District Court—stated in
pertinent part:
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Order entered on November 27, 2015
in DR-15-442D is set aside as it relates to the parenting plan. The Decree of
Dissolution and distribution of property and allocation of debt shall remain
as ordered. The home shall remain titled as is unless Travis refinances in
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order that he may remove Rachel’s name. To the extent that he defaults on
the loan, Rachel shall have the opportunity to assume the loan.
¶8 Travis defaulted on the mortgage payments for the months of September,
November, and December 2019. On March 19, 2020, the IRS withheld $1,855.39 from
Rachel’s 2019 federal tax refund to cover the amount of Travis’s default.
¶9 On June 2, 2020, Rachel, again representing herself, filed a motion to “[r]einforce
the Court’s Order from 1-6-2016[.]” She attached a copy of the January 6, 2016 minute
entry and argued that this ruling allowed her to assume the mortgage and move into the
home. She requested the court to enforce that order because Travis had been in default for
five months and she had “assumed the loan” for three of those five months. Rachel
additionally alleged that allowing her to assume the mortgage and move into the home
would be in the interests of her son. At a July 2020 hearing on the motion, Travis
represented that he had not refinanced the home.
¶10 The District Court, the Hon. Dan Wilson now presiding, denied Rachel’s motion on
July 24, 2020. The court noted that it had reviewed the transcript of the January 2016
hearing before Judge Ortley and that “[n]othing in the January 06, 2016 hearing amended
or vacated the provisions of the Decree awarding Travis the Property and allocating the
mortgage debt to him.” It further noted that the decree was silent as to default on the
mortgage debt. The District Court held:
The Court now deems and considers the above-quoted statement made by
Judge Ortley in the January 06, 2016 hearing concerns only Rachel’s right to
cure the default on the mortgage loan on the Property in the event that Travis
defaults on the loan, a right she would possess in any event as a party to the
mortgage debt. The statement made by Judge Ortley does not grant Rachel
any further right in the Property and does not, more particularly, grant Rachel
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the right to occupy the residence or otherwise assume possession or control
of the Property in the event Travis defaults on the mortgage loan and she
cures the default. She may have other remedies in that event, but assuming
possession of the Property is not one of them. [Emphasis original.]
¶11 “An appellate court defers to the district court’s interpretation of its own orders as
long as that interpretation is reasonable.” In re Marriage of Ruis, 2020 MT 90, ¶ 16,
399 Mont. 524, 462 P.3d 204 (citations omitted). We thus review “whether the trial court
acted arbitrarily without the employment of conscientious judgment or exceeded the
bounds of reason resulting in substantial injustice.” Marriage of Ruis, ¶ 16.
¶12 Rachel argues on appeal that the District Court’s January 6, 2016 oral ruling and
minute entry amended the final decree of dissolution, allowing her to “assume the loan and
take over the property” upon Travis’s default. She maintains that the District Court
correctly set aside the final decree of dissolution, “apparently . . . under Rule 60(b)(3)[,]”
and contends that her status as primary custodian and caretaker of the parties’ son
“likely entered the [c]ourt’s reasoning to allow [her] to have the house[.]” She also claims
that Travis “is entitled to [no] equity” based on his alleged damage to the home and that
“[h]e should be held financially responsible for the damages caused to [her] equity.”
Rachel argues that the home therefore should be “awarded to [her].”
¶13 “[E]ntry of final judgment constitutes a final adjudication of the rights and
obligations of the parties with respect to the status of the marriage and property rights[.]”
Section 40-4-134, MCA. A court may grant relief from a final decree upon a showing of
“fraud, duress, accident, mistake, or other grounds recognized at law or in equity or to
make a motion pursuant to the Montana Rules of Civil Procedure.”
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Section 40-4-135, MCA. M. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(3) provides such an avenue, allowing relief
from judgment or order due to “fraud . . . , misrepresentation, or misconduct by an opposing
party[.]” The rule thus “is designed to be applied primarily as an exception to the finality
of a judgment where a party was wronged through no fault of its own.”
Wagenman v. Wagenman, 2016 MT 176, ¶ 11, 384 Mont. 149, 376 P.3d 121
(citation, internal quotation marks omitted).
¶14 Rachel’s December 2015 Rule 60(b) motion properly alleged fraud as a basis to set
aside the parenting plan, but her fraud allegation did not extend to the dissolution decree
or to the property distribution. Rachel reiterated her argument regarding the parenting plan
at the January 2016 hearing. She did not, at that hearing or in any motion, request the court
to reopen and modify the property distribution or assert grounds for such an action. The
District Court granted the relief Rachel requested and explicitly stated in the 2016 hearing
that it would leave the dissolution and property allocation “as is,” setting aside only the
parenting plan.
¶15 The District Court’s January 6, 2016 statement regarding Rachel’s right to take over
the mortgage thus could not effectuate an amendment to the decree. Because the final
dissolution decree explicitly allocated the marital home to Travis, ordered Rachel to
transfer her joint interest in it to Travis, and ordered that Travis be responsible for the
mortgage, the District Court did not act arbitrarily or exceed the bounds of reason by
denying Rachel’s June 2020 motion.
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¶16 We recognize a party’s ability under § 40-4-208(3)(b), MCA,2 to seek modification
of a final dissolution decree’s property disposition when she alleges the disposition is
unconscionable. See In re Marriage of Laskey, 252 Mont. 369, 372, 829 P.2d 935,
937 (1992); In re Marriage of Simpson, 2018 MT 281, ¶¶ 12, 17–18, 393 Mont. 340,
430 P.3d 999. Though such an argument certainly may be available here—indeed, the
decree assigns the entire interest in the home and responsibility of the mortgage debt to
Travis but fails to take into account Rachel’s responsibility on the mortgage debt or her
interest in the property should Travis fail to refinance—Rachel did not assert it or seek
relief under that section in the motion at issue in this appeal. Our decision does not preclude
her from doing so in the future, but we express no opinion on the merits.
¶17 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of our
Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. In the opinion of the
Court, the case presents a question controlled by settled law or by the clear application of
applicable standards of review. The District Court did not act arbitrarily or exceed the
bounds of reason when it denied Rachel’s motion on the basis that its January 6, 2016
statement did not amend the parties’ final dissolution decree. We accordingly affirm.
/S/ BETH BAKER
2
Section 40-4-208(3)(b), MCA, states: “[t]he provisions as to property disposition may not be
revoked or modified by a court except . . . if the court finds the existence of conditions that justify
the reopening of a judgment under the laws of this state.”
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We Concur:
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
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