dissenting. I cannot join the majority in affirming the chancellor’s decree that held the appellant ex-husband was estopped from asserting that he was not obligated to pay his ex-wife half of the sums that he received from a revocable trust that his mother established before the parties divorced. Having also considered the law and the parties’ arguments, I am firmly convinced that the chancellor’s decree was clearly erroneous and that we should reverse. Therefore I dissent from the majority position and opinion.
Although the chancellor bottomed his ruling on Undem v. First Nat’l Bank, 46 Ark. App. 158, 879 S.W.2d 451 (1994), he explicitly relied upon a supposed “relationship of trust and confidence” between the parties in concluding that appellant misled appellee when his attorney submitted a property setdement agreement in which appellant agreed to “equally divide with Wife any inheritance of personal property he may receive in the future from the Estate of Lucretta Wedin.” (Emphasis added.) The chancellor concluded that appellee (the wife) relied on appellant’s prior oral promises to give her half of whatever he got from his mother and that appellant had a duty to explain that the actual language of the property settlement agreement prepared by his attorney and forwarded to appellee after the divorce action was filed was different from his earlier promise. One can understand the chancellor’s disapproval of what he considered appellant’s failure to be forthright. However, that disapproval of the failure to be forthright neither justifies nor demands a finding that the parties shared a “relationship of trust and confidence” when all the relevant facts indicate otherwise. It also should not blind us to the plain rules of law concerning contracts, division of property, and inter vivos gifts that compel reversal.
Contrary to the view that a relationship of trust and confidence existed between appellant and appellee when the property settlement agreement was prepared, submitted to appellee, and executed, the agreement plainly reads that on October 19, 1993, the parties were separated and were contemplating a divorce action in Baxter County, that their differences were irreconcilable, and that each had either retained or been afforded the opportunity to retain legal counsel in connection with drafting the agreement. Those facts have never been disputed by appellee who admitted that she had the opportunity to consult counsel in connection with the property settlement agreement. Appellee declined to consult counsel or even discuss the agreement with any of the twelve lawyers in the law firm where she worked.
Moreover, the language that appellee relies upon is clearly different from a promise to give her half of whatever appellant may have received from his mother because it is limited to half of the personal property inherited from his mother’s estate. When the agreement was submitted to appellee by appellant’s attorney, appellee knew that appellant’s mother had created a trust and named appellant as a beneficiary; however, she made no effort to obtain a copy of the trust documents before signing the property settlement agreement. She did not inquire as to what property was in the trust and did not consult counsel concerning any impact that the trust had on the property settlement agreement. She knew that appellant had retained legal counsel and knew that she had already rejected the language of a previous property settlement agreement draft because she considered it different from what appellant had orally promised her. She knew that appellant’s lawyer did not represent her, nor consult with her, that appellant had left her in Texas, moved to Arkansas, and did not intend to reconcile with her. In short, there was no plausible reason for appellee or any other person of ordinary insight to believe that the property settlement agreement that appellee received from appellant’s lawyer in contemplation of their divorce action arose from anything remotely like a “relationship of trust and confidence.”
The chancellor’s decision is tantamount to an award of damages for the tort of deceit. However, appellee is not entitled to tort damages merely because her contract (the property settlement agreement) differs from what appellant promised, especially when she failed to exercise the reasonable diligence expected of anyone negotiating a contract for what she thought amounted to more than $100,000 by ascertaining whether the plainly different language of the proposed agreement was consistent with the oral promise that appellant made before his lawyer prepared the agreement. Even under a deceit theory, appellee’s prospect for recovery would have been problematic because of the requirement that any reliance on her part be reasonable under the circumstances. Medlock v. Burden, 321 Ark. 269, 900 S.W.2d 552 (1995) (citing Roach v. Concord Boat Corp., 317 Ark. 474, 880 S.W.2d 305 (1994)); Godwin v. Hampton, 11 Ark. App. 205, 669 S.W.2d 12 (1984). Of course, the chancellor’s decision permits appellee to avoid these questions by construing the parties to have been in a confidential and trusting relationship when the evidence plainly shows that they were not.
Although I do not read the majority opinion to hold that divorcing parties enjoy a “relationship of trust and confidence” as a matter of law so that their oral promises to each other are actionable upon breach, I see no difference between that unsound proposition and the result reached by affirming the decree in this case. The majority purports to buttress its decision by reading the words “from the Estate of Lucretta Wedin” in the executed property settlement agreement to be ambiguous. The flaw in that reasoning is that even the appellee recognizes that the chancellor did not find the language ambiguous. The appellee has vigorously challenged the appellant’s contention that the chancellor found the language in Paragraph 9 of the Joint Stipulation and Property Settlement Agreement ambiguous. Instead, appellee maintains that she was defrauded and that the appellant’s allegedly deceptive conduct justified holding that he was estopped from relying upon the wording of the agreement. I do not understand how the majority is better situated to find an ambiguity in an agreement when the party who challenges that agreement does not find it ambiguous. I also do not understand how the majority is able to affirm the chancellor’s decision holding appellant estopped from relying upon the agreement due to a purported ambiguity that the chancellor has not found and which the party who contests the agreement does not assert.
Of course, it has long been the law in Arkansas that the initial determination of whether an ambiguity exists in a contract rests with the court as a matter of law. If the court finds that a contract term is ambiguous as a matter of law, then parol evidence is admissible and the meaning of the disputed term becomes a question of fact for the fact finder. C. & A. Constr. Co., Inc. v. Benning Constr. Co., 256 Ark. 621, 509 S.W.2d 302 (1974). When a technical term is used in a contract in a sense other than the ordinary meaning of the word, testimony is admissible to explain the meaning of the term and the question may be submitted to the trier of fact to determine in what sense the term was used. Les-Bil, Inc. v. General Waterworks Corp., 256 Ark. 905, 511 S.W.2d 166 (1974). Although the chancellor in this case did not find the term “from the Estate of Lucretta Wedin” in the property settlement agreement ambiguous, he did observe that the term “estate” is used in a general sense to describe an interest in property so that when the agreement referred to “the Estate of Lucretta Wedin” at paragraph 9 it could have contemplated her property generally, her trust estate only, her probated estate only, or both her trust and probated estate. However, appellee has never contended that she was misled by the language of the agreement or that she signed it in the mistaken belief that it conformed to what appellant had orally promised. Her sole contention is that appellant failed to inform her that he changed his mind about what he would give her and, therefore, willfully induced her to sign an agreement that she would not have otherwise signed. That contention is bottomed upon the alleged “relationship of trust and confidence” mentioned previously, not an alleged ambiguity concerning the meaning of the term “the Estate of Lucretta Wedin.”
If there was no relationship of trust and confidence between the parties, then the effect of the chancellor’s decision and its affirmance is to reform the property settlement agreement. Again, the established rules of contract law applicable to property settlement agreements in divorce proceedings bar the way that the majority seeks to travel. The supreme court stated the standard used for determining whether a party is entitled to reformation of a written contract in McIntyre v. McIntyre, 241 Ark. 623, 410 S.W.2d 117 (1966):
We have. consistendy held that reformation of a contractual agreement will not be granted except upon clear, unequivocal and decisive evidence, [citations omitted] In Corey v. The Mercantile Insurance Company of America, 205 Ark. 546, 169 S.W.2d 655 (1943), we quoted the applicable ride with approval, as follows: “To entitle a party to reform a written instrument upon the grounds of mistake, it is essential that the mistake be mutual and common to both parties; in other words, it must be found from the testimony that the instrument as written does not express the contract of either of the parties. It is also necessary to prove such mutual mistake by testimony which is clear and decisive before a court of equity will add to or change by reformation the solemn terms of a written instrument.”
Id. at 626-27, 410 S.W.2d at 119. Here there is no proof that a mutual mistake occurred. As appellee has observed in her brief, neither party contends that there was a mistake, and she did not ask that the property settlement agreement be reformed.
It is self-evident that the parties enjoyed no “relationship of trust and confidence” so as to justify a holding that appellee was justified in blindly trusting whatever agreement that appellant’s attorney tendered for her signature. It is equally plain that appel-lee has not contended that the written agreement contains ambiguous language upon which she relied believing it to be consistent with appellant’s oral promise to her before the agreement was prepared. The only remaining basis for affirming the chancellor’s decision is to reform the agreement to mean what neither party contends that they ever thought it meant. That is nothing short of imposing upon the parties a property disposition that one party (appellant) clearly does not want, and the other party (appellee) has not won through negotiation despite having every opportunity to try to do so.
No matter what our view may be about appellant’s decision to abandon his original position toward appellee, the fact remains that appellant had the right to change his mind about what he wanted to give appellee in the property settlement. She had the right to disagree with his changed position and reject the property settlement agreement that reflected that changed position. But appellee has no right to acknowledge that the agreement she signed was not misleading, acknowledge that neither party mistakenly executed it, and acknowledge that she refused to seek any advice about what it meant, yet be awarded a property settlement that she refused to negotiate and which nobody else has ever determined she otherwise has the right to obtain.
Despite appellee’s disappointment about appellant’s change of mind, she has no right to receive anything that appellant obtained by inheritance from his mother in a property settlement agreement terminating their marriage, and appellant had no duty to give her anything that his mother gave him. Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315 (Repl. 1993) prescribes how property is divided. Subsection (a)(1)(A) provides that all marital property shall be divided one-half to each party unless the court finds that division to be inequitable. Subsection (b)(1) states that “marital property” means all property acquired by either spouse subsequent to the marriage except property acquired prior to marriage, or by gift, or by bequest, or by devise, or by descent. Whether the property that appellant received upon his mother’s death passed to him by operation of her Will (by bequest), by virtue of the trust she created (by gift or bequest), or as her heir (by descent), Arkansas law plainly holds that it was not marital property to be divided with appellee upon divorce. Appellant was not obligated to share it with appellee, and no court is authorized to take it from him to satisfy a property settlement. Perhaps this explains why appellee has not attempted to have the property settlement agreement declared void and has not asked the chancellor to divide the marital property according to the statute.
The majority has cited no authority for the proposition that property obtained by a spouse from his parent by gift, bequest, or descent must be shared with the other spouse when they divorce. There was no proof that appellant ever put the property that he obtained after his mother died in a joint account with appellee. Therefore, we have no basis for holding that appellee had a right to anything.
Appellee argues that we should endorse her contention because appellant gave her $23,400. Had the parties remained married and appellant gave appellee that amount, what law holds that she would be entitled to recover another part of appellant’s inheritance? Appellee has cited none. Neither does the majority.
When did we abandon the test for inter vivos gifts that has existed in Arkansas for most of this century? According to our law, the essential elements of an inter vivos gift include (1) actual delivery of the subject matter by the donor to the donee or the donee’s agent, (2) clear intent to make an immediate, present, and final gift beyond recall, (3) knowledge and understanding on the part of the donor regarding the effect of his act, and (4) actual acceptance of the property by the donee. O’Flarity v. O’Flarity, 42 Ark. App. 5, 852 S.W.2d 150 (1903). Here appellant did not make an immediate and unconditional gift to appellee. He did not make actual delivery of half of what he received from his mother. Appellee did not accept half of what appellant received from his mother because he never gave it to her. None of the well-setded elements for an inter vivos gift have been proven by clear and convincing evidence or otherwise.
If voiding the agreement is warranted, we should reverse and remand so that appellee can negotiate an agreement or receive an equitable property settlement pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315. Absent grounds for voiding the agreement, (and I have found none), we should not impose a property settlement upon appellant by judicial fiat merely because we dislike his failure to be forthright about changing his mind, or because he changed his mind after talking with his lawyer. Appellant had the right to change his mind and the right not to give appellee any part of what he inherited from his mother; thus, appellee has not been wronged by the change of mind, only disappointed. Until now the law has not treated disappointment as fraudulent concealment, deceit, or misrepresentation. Until now appellate courts have not disregarded the plain language of Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315 merely to soothe the disappointment of a divorced party. Until now we have not ignored the legal requirements for inter vivos gifts simply because a putative donee is displeased that a putati ve donor changed his mind. This case is not the place to begin doing so.
I would reverse.