February 4 2008
DA 06-0563
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2008 MT 28
IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF:
FLORIAN CORTESE,
Petitioner and Appellee,
v.
CHARLENE CORTESE, n/k/a CHARLENE AMATO,
Respondent and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Second Judicial District,
In and For the County of Butte/Silver Bow, Cause No. DR-02-215
Honorable Kurt Krueger, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
David L. Vicevich, Joseph, Vicevich & Whelan, Butte, Montana
For Appellee:
R. D. Corette and C. Kathleen McBride, Corette, Pohlman & Kebe, Butte,
Montana
Submitted on Briefs: May 2, 2007
Decided: February 4, 2008
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice John Warner delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Charlene Cortese appeals from an order and judgment entered in the Second Judicial
District, Silver Bow County, terminating the maintenance obligation of her ex-husband,
Florian Cortese.
¶2 The sole issue in this appeal is whether the District Court erred in finding as a matter
of law that Florian’s monthly maintenance obligation to Charlene ended when she remarried.
¶3 On March 17, 2005, the District Court entered a Final Decree of Dissolution of
Marriage of Florian and Charlene. The Decree incorporated a Marital and Property
Settlement Agreement. The Agreement included separate sections providing for
maintenance and distribution of the marital estate. The maintenance provisions required that
Florian make monthly payments to Charlene through 2009, pay Charlene’s health insurance
for eighteen months, and pay the remaining debt on one of Charlene’s credit cards. The
Agreement includes a paragraph stating: “The parties specifically agree that provisions for
maintenance herein are non-modifiable.” There is no provision in the agreement that
Florian’s maintenance obligation would continue in the event Charlene remarried.
¶4 On December 29, 2005, Charlene remarried. In February 2006, Florian filed a motion
to terminate his maintenance obligation, arguing that it ended by operation of law when
Charlene remarried. On July 3, 2006, the District Court, treating Florian’s motion as one for
summary judgment, entered an Order and Judgment terminating his obligation to continue
making maintenance payments. Charlene now appeals from this Order and Judgment.
¶5 We review a summary judgment ruling de novo. Fulton v. Fulton, 2004 MT 240, ¶ 6,
322 Mont. 516, ¶ 6, 97 P.3d 573, ¶ 6. Summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine
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issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
M. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
¶6 Section 40-4-208(4), MCA, provides: “Unless otherwise agreed in writing or
expressly provided in the decree, the obligation to pay future maintenance is terminated upon
. . . the remarriage of the party receiving maintenance.”
¶7 If a separation agreement contains no express provision which addresses the
termination of a maintenance obligation provided for therein, remarriage of the party
receiving maintenance terminates the maintenance obligation, unless maintenance payments
are intended as part of the property division. Bertagnolli v. Bertagnolli, 185 Mont. 1, 4, 604
P.2d 299, 301 (1979). We conclude that pursuant to § 40-4-208(4), Florian’s maintenance
obligation to Charlene ended when she remarried.
¶8 Charlene is correct that when a separation agreement provides that maintenance
payments are “in the nature of a property settlement,” remarriage will not terminate a
maintenance obligation. In re Marriage of Hahn, 263 Mont. 315, 322, 868 P.2d 599, 603
(1994). Such language in the separation agreement at issue in Hahn was sufficient to defeat
the operation of § 40-4-208(4). However, there is no provision in the separation agreement
at issue here which could be construed to make the monthly payments from Florian to
Charlene a part of the property distribution. To the contrary, the property distribution and
maintenance provisions are in separate sections of the agreement. Likewise, the separation
agreement’s provisions concerning its tax consequences reiterate that only the provisions in
the maintenance section—monthly payments, health insurance, and payments on one
particular credit card—constitute maintenance.
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¶9 Montana law also provides that a decree of dissolution may “expressly preclude or
limit modification of terms set forth in the decree.” Section 40-4-201(6), MCA. If an
agreement between parties limits modification, a District Court must adhere to the non-
modification clause and cannot later modify the agreement. In re Marriage of Bolstad, 203
Mont. 131, 135, 660 P.2d 95, 97 (1983). Similar to the agreement in this case, Bolstad
involved a separation agreement that expressly precluded modification. However, the
petition to reduce maintenance in Bolstad was based on an alleged inability to pay. Bolstad,
203 Mont. at 134, 660 P.2d at 96. It did not involve a situation where the party receiving
maintenance remarried. Bolstad is therefore inapposite.
¶10 The dissent, while acknowledging that the separation agreement does not mention
remarriage, would add to it a provision that Charlene’s remarriage does not terminate
maintenance. Such an addition would be contrary to the Court’s role in interpreting
contracts: “In the construction of an instrument, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain
and declare what is in terms or in substance contained therein, not to insert what has been
omitted or to omit what has been inserted.” Section 1-4-101, MCA. See also Anderson v.
Stokes, 2007 MT 166, ¶ 46, 338 Mont. 118, ¶ 46, 163 P.3d 1273, ¶ 46 (relying on the plain
language in an easement grant and declining to insert additional words into the grant); Wurl
v. Polson School Dist. No. 23, 2006 MT 8, ¶ 20, 330 Mont. 282, ¶ 20, 127 P.3d 436, ¶ 20
(declining to interpret an employment contract to insert additional language not in the
contract itself); Creveling v. Ingold, 2006 MT 57, ¶ 12, 331 Mont. 322, ¶ 12, 132 P.3d 531, ¶
12 (concluding that “it is not the proper role of the judiciary to insert modifying language
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into clearly written and unambiguous instruments where the parties to the instrument
declined to do so”).
¶11 Both § 40-4-208(4), MCA, and § 40-4-201(6), MCA, concern the subject of
dissolution of marriage. Section 40-4-208(4), MCA, is a separate, specific statute providing
that maintenance will terminate if the party receiving it remarries, unless it is expressly
agreed otherwise or specifically provided in the decree. Section 40-4-201(6), MCA, is a
statute which applies generally to provisions in separation agreements, which provides that
the parties may, if they so desire, limit the court’s ability to later modify their agreement.
These two statutory provisions are not necessarily inconsistent because both can potentially
be applied to the same agreement.1 Where statutes relate to the same general subject they
should be construed together, where there is no inconsistency between them, so as to give
effect to both where possible. City of Billings v. Smith, 158 Mont. 197, 212, 490 P.2d 221,
230 (1971); State ex rel. Ronish v. School District No. 1 of Fergus County, 136 Mont. 453,
462, 348 P.2d 797, 802 (1960).
¶12 Taking § 40-4-208(4) and § 40-4-201(6) together, we discern the legislative intent to
be that upon the remarriage of a party receiving maintenance, maintenance will terminate by
operation of law, even if the separation agreement provides that the agreement cannot be
modified. For maintenance to continue after the receiving party remarries, a written
separation agreement or a court decree must include an express provision that maintenance
will not terminate on remarriage of the party receiving maintenance. Thus, despite the non-
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modification provision in the Agreement, Florian’s maintenance obligation to Charlene
ended by operation of law when she remarried.
¶13 There are no material facts in issue, and the District Court applied the law correctly.
Affirmed.
/S/ JOHN WARNER
We Concur:
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
/S/ JIM RICE
/S/ BRIAN MORRIS
Chief Justice Karla M. Gray, dissenting.
¶14 I dissent from the Court’s conclusion in ¶ 7 that, pursuant to § 40-4-208(4), MCA,
Florian’s maintenance obligation to Charlene ended when she remarried. I would reverse the
District Court.
¶15 The maintenance provisions in the Marital and Property Settlement Agreement
incorporated into the decree of dissolution required Florian to pay Charlene a certain sum
each month, beginning April 1, 2005, as maintenance. The final payment was to be made on
December 1, 2009. In my view, the date certain for the final payment of maintenance—
while not referencing remarriage—is an agreement in writing regarding the obligation to pay
future maintenance pursuant to § 40-4-208(4), MCA. I would enforce the Agreement
incorporated into the decree by its terms.
1
For example, in the present case, if Florian had petitioned to modify his maintenance obligation as it somehow became
unconscionable, a possibility provided for by § 40-4-208(2)(b)(i), MCA, the Court would not have the authority to grant
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¶16 I dissent.
/S/ KARLA M. GRAY
the petition as the agreement invokes § 40-4-201(6), MCA, to prevent a modification. Nevertheless, § 40-4-208(4),
MCA, applies to terminate maintenance upon Charlene’s remarriage.
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