dissenting.
I respectfully depart from my colleagues’ view of this case on three points. First, I believe the property settlement agreement has a plain meaning with respect to the wife’s waiver of any claim against the trust funds. Second, I believe the majority has enunciated an unnecessarily restrictive standard governing the availability of equitable relief from a judgment procured by fraud. Third, and finally, I believe the majority opinion fails to examine the fraud issue in sufficient detail.
Before addressing each point, it is important to recall what is at stake in this litigation. During the marriage the husband inherited from his mother an interest in income-generating corporate stock and real estate. He later transferred this interest to a master family trust created by his father.1 The master trust, administered by an institutional trustee, was surrounded by a satellite group of individual trusts for beneficiaries in the family. The beneficiaries had unrestricted access to any funds deposited in their individual trust accounts *107but they had no power to compel distributions from the master trust.
For many years, the institutional trustee managed the assets of the master trust without making distributions. The master trust received dividends on the corporate shares and eventually received liquidating distributions when the corporations were dissolved. The master trust also received interest income from installment sales of the real estate and from the trust’s reinvestment of its own funds. In December, 1976, while the parties in this case were separated but still married, the master trust distributed approximately $160,000 to the husband’s individual trust account. Several other distributions after the divorce brought the total to more than $475,-000. The wife received none of this money. She now claims part of it, but the husband maintains that he is entitled to keep it all.
At times pertinent to this case, I.C. § 32-906 provided, with exceptions not applicable here, that the “rents and profits” of separate property are community property. (The statute today simply provides that the “income of all property, separate or community, is community property____”) The wife has contended that the master trust distributions included “rents and profits” and therefore comprised, at least in part, community property. The husband has responded that the wife waived any claim to such distributions when she signed the property settlement agreement and that the divorce decree has the preclusive effect of res judicata.
I
The first issue is waiver. The property settlement agreement provides as follows:
The wife waives any and all claims against the separate property of the husband, including his interest in a Trust at the U.S. National Bank of Oregon and any proceeds therefrom.
The district court held that this language does not contain a waiver. The majority’s decision today insists that it does. I agree with the majority’s conclusion, although not with its reasoning.
The district court found that when the husband and wife signed the property settlement agreement, they intended to dispose of community and separate interests in all of their property. However, the court held that the agreement failed to accomplish this purpose. Noting that the agreement referred only to “his” (the husband’s) interest in the trust, the court ruled that the wife “did not waive her claims to her interest in the specified trust.” (Emphasis original.) I think the district court has burdened the pronoun “his” with a weight it cannot carry against the context and plain meaning o'f the entire sentence in which it appears. The sentence, in my view, clearly declares that the “Trust” is the husband’s separate property and that the wife waives any claim against it.
The majority opinion, apparently eschewing this holistic approach, fixes upon yet another isolated part of the sentence — the phrase “and any proceeds therefrom.” The majority seems to suggest that if “his interest in a Trust” refers only to the husband’s separate property, the words “proceeds therefrom” broaden the waiver to include any community property. But the “proceeds” of property retain the same community or separate character as the property itself. I.C. § 32-903; see, e.g., Travelers Insurance Co. v. Johnson, 97 Idaho 336, 544 P.2d 294 (1975). The term “proceeds” designates a form of property, implying nothing as to its character. Consequently, the phrase “proceeds therefrom” neither broadens nor narrows the language preceding it as far as the community or separate character of the trust assets is concerned. By focusing on the term “proceeds” the majority simply begs the question of whether the wife waived her claim of a community interest in the underlying trust assets.
In any event, because I think the quoted language as a whole contains a plain expression of waiver, I join the majority’s ultimate conclusion that the property settlement agreement disposed of any claim by the wife against the trust funds. The next question is whether the wife is enti*108tied to equitable relief from the agreement and from the decree incorporating it.
II
The majority correctly notes that when a former spouse seeks by a separate action to obtain relief from a divorce decree, the principles of equity and res judicata are placed in conflict. In Aldape v. Akins, 105 Idaho 254, 668 P.2d 130 (Ct.App.1983), we adopted the claim preclusion component of res judicata as set forth in the RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS (1982) (herein cited as the Second Restatement). Relying upon Second Restatement § 19, we held that a valid and final personal judgment bars another action on the same claim. Citing Second Restatement §§ 24 and 25, we further held that the concept of a claim is sufficiently broad to include evidence or theories which were not, but could have been, presented in the first action. In the case before us, the wife has presented evidence and a theory concerning the trust assets that could have been presented in the original divorce action.
On the other hand, equity long has recognized that when a judgment is the product of a fraud, it may be set aside. In Compton v. Compton, 101 Idaho 328, 612 P.2d 1175 (1980), our Supreme Court surveyed the development of equitable remedies. The Court cited numerous case decisions and treatises, which need not be listed again here, supporting the proposition that upon a sufficient showing of fraud, the interests of res judicata will yield to the interests of equity.2 The Second Restatement also embodies this view. Section 70 of the Second Restatement provides that “a judgment in a contested action may be avoided if the judgment ... [w]as based on a claim that the party obtaining the judgment knew to be fraudulent.”
However, the majority opinion does not apply this straightforward legal standard for obtaining equitable relief. Rather, the majority seeks to narrow the availability of relief by quoting a dictum from Compton and by treating it as a more rigorous standard than that contained in the Second Restatement. The dictum appears in the following passage:
Among the non-conclusory points we can make are that the independent action in equity is a most unusual remedy, available only rarely and under the most exceptionable circumstances. It is most certainly not its function to relitigate issues determined in another action between the same parties or to remedy the inadvertence or oversight of one of the parties to the original action. It will lie only in the presence of an extreme degree of fraud.
101 Idaho at 335, 612 P.2d at 1182 (emphasis added).
Of course, no one would quarrel with the observations that an independent action in equity is available only in exceptional circumstances and that it is not a remedy for mere inadvertence or oversight. Indeed, as we shall see, the section of Second Restatement pertinent here requires a clear showing of fraud. On the other hand, no legitimate interest in protecting the finality of judgments requires us to say that relief is available only if the proven fraud is “of an extreme degree.” Fraud is fraud. Nothing is gained, and much confusion may be created, by suggesting that the courts will disregard some frauds while deeming others worthy of relief. I believe the instant case should be examined for simple fraud, as envisioned by the Second Restatement.
Ill
Section 70 of the Second Restatement provides that a party seeking relief must:
(a) Have acted with due diligence in discovering the facts constituting the basis for relief;
(b) Assert his claim for relief from the judgment with such particularity as to indicate it is well founded and prove the *109allegations by clear and convincing evidence; and
(c) When his' claim is based on falsity of the evidence on which the judgment was based, show that he had made a reasonable effort in the original action to ascertain the truth of the matter.
Comment d to section 70 further explains these requirements and breaks them into four elements required for relief from fraud:
First, it must be shown that the fabrication or concealment was a material basis for the judgment and was not merely cumulative or relevant only to a peripheral issue. Second, the party seeking relief must show that he adequately pursued means for discovering the truth available to him in the original action.
Third, the applicant must show due diligence after judgment, in that he discovered the fraud as soon as might reasonably have been expected. * * *
Finally, the party seeking relief must demonstrate, before being allowed to present his case, that he has a substantial case to present, and must offer clear and convincing proof to establish that the evidence underlying the judgment was indeed fabricated or concealed. This heavy burden of proof is an important measure of protection against attacks on honestly procured judgments. It also transforms the issue from a retrial of a question previously litigated to a search for something approaching incontestable proof as to the truth of the underlying matter in issue.
The first requirement, that the concealment must be material to the judgment, invokes the wife’s theory of entitlement to a share in the trust distributions. As noted earlier, the wife has claimed that the distributions contained “rents and profits” constituting community property. The district court adopted this theory, but applied it only to the pre-decree distribution. The court apparently relied, by analogy, upon Simplot v. Simplot, 96 Idaho 239, 526 P.2d 844 (1974), and Speer v. Quinlan, 96 Idaho 119, 525 P.2d 314 (1974). In those cases our Supreme Court held that the earnings of a corporation, in which a husband held shares as his separate property, did not represent “rents and profits” if they were retained by the corporation for legitimate business reasons rather than being distributed to a spouse-shareholder. The Supreme Court reasoned that to postulate a community interest in retained corporate earnings, and to require satisfaction of such an interest in a divorce, would be tantamount to compelling the corporation to declare a dividend to which the shareholder would not otherwise have been entitled. In the present appeal the wife has attacked the Simplot-Speer analogy, arguing that the beneficiary of a trust, unlike a corporate shareholder, has a vested and enforceable, albeit future, interest in the undistributed trust assets. Accordingly, she claims a community interest in all distributions, whenever made.
It is unnecessary, in this opinion, to discuss the validity of the wife’s theory of broader recovery. It is sufficient under section 70, comment d, that concealment of the pre-decree distribution was material to the property settlement agreement and to the decree. Had the distribution been timely disclosed, the wife — even if limited by the Simplot-Speer analogy — would have been entitled to her share of any “rents and profits” contained in that distribution. The allocation of community property in the settlement agreement and decree would have been significantly affected.
For reasons to become apparent later, I will defer for a moment a discussion of the second requirement under comment d— that a party seeking relief from a fraudulently obtained judgment must have pursued available means for discovering the truth during the original action. As to the third requirement, that of due diligence after judgment, the district court made no findings. Neither has this requirement been argued as an issue on appeal. Consequently, it need not be discussed further.
The fourth requirement relates to proof of the fraud. As noted by the majority, the *110district court found that the husband had not “misrepresented” the assets in the trust. The court concluded that the husband had engaged in no fraud. However, it is undisputed that the wife and her attorney inquired about trust distributions while the divorce was pending and that neither the husband nor his attorney communicated the existence of the pre-decree distribution. Indeed, the husband was asked at trial in this case whether he had disclosed the pre-decree distribution to his wife, to her attorney, to anyone else representing his wife, or even to his own attorney. He replied that he had informed his accountant, “[b]ut those people that you enumerated, no.”
Nevertheless, as mentioned, the district court concluded that there had been no fraud. The only findings of fact arguably supportive of that conclusion are a finding that the wife received a computer printout from the institutional trustee showing the existence of the pre-decree distribution and a finding that the wife received from the accountant a copy of an income tax return showing the distribution. But even if these findings were correct, they would not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the husband’s conduct was free from fraud. It has long been recognized that a fraudulent misrepresentation is not alleviated by the availability of other, truthful sources of information. Only if the recipient of the fraudulent information undertakes and relies upon his or her own independent investigation is the taint of fraud removed. See generally Annot., 61 A.L.R. 492, 514, 537 (1929) (collecting cases relating to sales of personal property). Moreover, the district court’s findings regarding the printout and tax return are binding on appeal if, but only if, they are supported by substantial evidence in the record. E.g., Rasmussen v. Martin, 104 Idaho 401, 659 P.2d 155 (Ct.App.1983). I now turn to the evidence.
The printout was a multi-page document. On its sixth page, according to testimony in the present case, it contained an entry to the following effect: “TRF to 4-08909-____ K. Ray Barlow trusts share of cash in this partial distribution. Tax Code 94. Disbursed $143,268.96.” The printout arrived in the mail at the family home after the husband had moved away. The envelope was addressed to both the husband and the wife. The wife opened the envelope and, being unable to decipher the meaning of the printout, asked a financial adviser to help her. When the adviser could not interpret it either, they took it to the wife’s attorney. The attorney examined it but could not discern anything contrary to the husband’s earlier representation about the status of the master trust. The attorney asked a second lawyer in his office, the holder of a tax degree, to examine the printout. This individual was similarly unable to find anything significant in the document. In the presence of the wife and her financial adviser, the attorney also called the husband’s attorney and asked him what the printout signified. According to the wife’s attorney, the husband’s attorney responded that the printout merely showed internal operations of the master trust. The husband’s attorney later testified, “I have no recollection that such a conversation occurred. And by that, I am not saying that it did or did not. I just simply don’t recall anything about it.” In my view, the foregoing summary of the record does not reveal “substantial” evidence that the wife or her attorney were meaningfully informed of a distribution from the master trust to the husband's individual trust, where he would have full control over the money.
The tax return was prepared in 1977. It related to income received by both spouses during 1976. The pre-decree distribution was received by the husband in December, 1976. The tax return filed with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service did, in fact, refer to trust distributions received by the husband. However, the wife testified, contrary to the judge’s finding, that she did not see a copy of the completed return, with trust information included, until 1980, several years after the decree of divorce was entered.
The accountant testified that on or before April 13, 1977, Mrs. Barlow brought *111him information concerning her earnings during 1976. A tax return was prepared by April 13. It was not customary for the accountant to have clients sign returns unless they were completed. However, in this case, two returns were prepared. After the first return had been completed, the husband came to the office on April 14 with information not previously furnished. This information concerned the trust distribution. The accountant then prepared a second return, incorporating some pages from the first return. The accountant testified that he did not know when the wife received a copy of this second, completed return. The wife’s attorney testified that the wife did not provide, and he did not otherwise obtain, a copy of the ultimate 1976 joint tax return before the divorce decree was entered. This testimony, as I view it, does not comprise “substantial” evidence that the wife or her attorney actually received, prior to the decree, a completed tax return showing the receipt of a trust distribution by the husband.
To be sure, an appellate court, when examining the record to determine whether a judge’s findings are supported by “substantial” evidence, must give due regard to the judge’s unique opportunity to observe the demeanor, and to evaluate the credibility, of witnesses. I.R.C.P. 52(a); Church v. Roemer, 94 Idaho 782, 498 P.2d 1255 (1972). However, in this case, the trial judge made no findings or other comments in the record concerning the credibility of witnesses. Upon the present record I would hold that the judge’s findings regarding the wife’s purported knowledge of the trust distributions prior to the decree were not supported by “substantial” evidence. Consequently, they do not support the court’s ultimate conclusion on the issue of fraud.
I now return to the second requirement for equitable relief — that the applicant must have “adequately pursued means for discovering the truth available to him in the original action.” In my view, this requirement calls for a balancing decision to be made by the trial judge. Comment d to section 70 identifies the appropriate criteria:
Under modern procedure in trial courts of general jurisdiction in cases involving substantial stakes, abundant devices exist for discovering an opposing party’s proof and subjecting it to investigation prior to trial and adequate incentive usually exists to use such devices. Hence, in such circumstances, only a well concealed or unforeseeable fraud is likely to survive a reasonably diligent effort to ascertain the truth. On the other hand, in cases involving limited stakes, it may be unreasonably costly to pursue intensive discovery or investigation when there is no indication that the other side may offer fabricated evidence. Furthermore, in some situations a litigant is entitled to be passive and unquestioning with respect to the proofs of another party. Thus, the cases allowing relief from fraud practiced by a trustee often advert to the fact that a beneficiary should not have to anticipate a trustee’s deliberate falsification of the accounts he presents to the court.
In this case, the district court engaged in no weighing of such factors nor did the judge make any ultimate determination concerning the reasonableness of efforts by the wife and her attorney to ascertain the truth about trust distributions. Of course, through discovery the wife’s attorney could have probed beneath the surface of general information received from the husband and his attorney concerning the nature of the trust and the reported lack of any distributions. However, the husband owed a fiduciary duty of disclosure to his wife, and the wife’s attorney felt he could rely upon information furnished by the reputable attorney representing the husband. Moreover, the wife’s attorney testified:
[The wife] was a school teacher, and ... she had, of course, a pension income from the State of Idaho, being a teacher, which had been depleted. She had a son living with her. She had an old Toronado automobile. She did not have any particular disposable income. Money was important to [her].
*112... I indicated to [her] ... that we' could engage in extensive discovery, but that I had no reason not to believe [the husband’s attorney]; [I] thought that our discovery would produce exactly what [he] told me, and did not think that spending huge quantities of her money was going to generate anything, except a bill from me.
The question, then, is how these competing factors should have been balanced. Where, as here, a trial court has failed to make its decision by reference to the proper criteria, the correct appellate response is to remand the case. But the majority, instead of recognizing the competing factors to be weighed, simply declares, as though it were a question of undisputed fact, that the record “demonstrates a distinct absence of diligence” by the wife in challenging the husband’s representations regarding the trust. Not only does this declaration usurp the district court’s role but it is misguided to the extent that it criticizes the wife's failure to challenge what the majority calls the husband’s “valuation of the trust interest or his classification of it as separate property.” Valuation and classification are not the issues critical to the instant case. Rather, the critical issue is the husband’s failure to disclose the existence of a trust distribution that would have been material to the outcome of the divorce proceedings.
Thus, this case is fundamentally different from Compton. There, the Supreme Court, after acknowledging the availability of equitable relief from a fraud, held that the husband had not fraudulently withheld information concerning the existence of assets. Rather, he had simply taken a position — as he is permitted to do — concerning the value and separate character of the assets. In contrast, here the existence of an asset, the pre-decree trust distribution, was withheld. Accordingly, I would vacate the judgment below and remand the case for reconsideration of the availability of equitable relief in light of the criteria enunciated by the Second Restatement.
. The majority deems it undisputed that the interest transferred was entirely the husband’s separate property. For the sake of discussion I will presume likewise. However, I note that several years elapsed between the mother’s death and the transfer of assets into the trust. If the assets had grown during this period by reinvesting income that the husband was entitled to receive, the assets might have acquired a partially community character.
. Another useful summary of authorities, including Compton itself, appears in Sharp, Fairness' Standards and Separation Agreements: A Word of Caution on Contractual Freedom, 132 U.PA.L.REV. 1399 (1984).