IN THE
ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION ONE
DIGITAL SYSTEMS ENGINEERING, INC., Plaintiff/Appellee,
v.
JOHN MORENO and BERNADETTE BRUCE-MORENO,
Defendants/Appellants.1
No. 1 CA-CV 16-0156
FILED 4-18-2017
Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
No. CV2007-005794
The Honorable Margaret Benny, Commissioner, Judge Pro Tem
REVERSED; WRIT OF GARNISHMENT VACATED
COUNSEL
Marko Law PLC, Phoenix
By Edward J. Marko
Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee
Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix
By Charles H. Oldham, Amanda E. Newman
Counsel for Defendants/Appellants
1 The caption has been modified to more accurately depict the
relevance of the parties to this appeal. The caption above should be used
for all future filings in this matter.
DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
Judge Jon W. Thompson delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge Lawrence F. Winthrop joined.
T H O M P S O N, Judge:
¶1 Appellants, John Moreno (John) and his wife Bernadette
Bruce-Moreno (Bernadette) (collectively, the Morenos) appeal from the trial
court’s order permitting Digital Systems Engineering, Inc. (DSE) to garnish
John’s wages in his current marital community with Bernadette, whom he
remarried after divorce, to fulfill his liabilities associated with the Morenos’
prior marital community, despite a contrary stipulated judgment
tantamount to an agreement by DSE to limit the scope of John’s liability.
For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s order and vacate the
garnishment writ.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2 In April 2007, DSE filed a lawsuit against Bernadette, who is
its former employee, and her husband, John. In the lawsuit, DSE alleged
that from 2001 to 2005 Bernadette engaged in fraudulent transactions
causing DSE nearly $300,000 in damages. DSE sought relief from both
Bernadette and John in their individual capacities and from their marital
community. After a bench trial in 2008 and 2009, the superior court found
that John was not individually liable, and entered judgment, on September
4, 2009, only against his undivided one-half interest in his marital property
with Bernadette.2
¶3 John appealed the judgment and DSE filed a cross-appeal
challenging the court’s ruling that John was not individually liable. On
appeal, this court affirmed both the judgment on the fraud claim and the
determination that John was not individually liable. See Digital Sys. Eng’g,
Inc. v. Bruce-Moreno, 1 CA-CV 09-0574, 2010 WL 5030808, at * 7, ¶ 36 (Ariz.
App. Nov. 16, 2010). However, we reversed the court’s damages award and
2 The superior court originally entered judgment in July 2009. It
amended that judgment in September 2009 because the original judgment
incorrectly stated that John had been found individually liable.
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DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
remanded the case for further determinations as to the amount of DSE’s
damages on the fraud claim and directed that the judgment granted to DSE
against John for unjust enrichment be vacated. Id.
¶4 Back in the trial court, in April 2011, DSE filed a Request for
Judicial Notice, asking the court to take judicial notice of the fact that the
Morenos had entered into a marital settlement agreement and that the
marriage was dissolved on September 8, 2009. On August 3, 2011, the court
took judicial notice, as DSE requested.
¶5 Before the trial to determine DSE’s damages, DSE and John
entered a stipulated judgment, on September 2, 2011, which the court filed
on September 7, 2011. As relevant here, the Stipulated Judgment provided:
JUDGMENT IS ENTERED IN FAVOR OF PLAINTIFF [DSE]
AND AGAINST JOHN MORENO’S UNDIVIDED ONE-
HALF INTEREST IN HIS MARITAL COMMUNITY WITH
BERNADETTE BRUCE-MORENO . . .
THE CLAIM AGAINST JOHN MORENO’S SOLE AND
SEPARATE PROPERTY IS DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
(Emphasis added.)
¶6 The Morenos remarried two years later. In December 2015,
DSE served a Writ of Garnishment on John’s employer. The Morenos
objected to the garnishment on the grounds that: (1) the Stipulated
Judgment is, by its terms, limited to recovery from John’s interest in the
prior marital community; (2) under Arizona law, the Morenos’ remarriage
after divorce did not “resume” their prior marital community, but instead
created a new and distinct community, beyond the reach of the Stipulated
Judgment; (3) John’s current wages are property of the new community,
and not the prior; and (4) Arizona law supports limiting an innocent
spouse’s liability to the community property that existed at the time of any
tortious acts. In response, DSE argued that the Stipulated Judgment was a
community debt that the Morenos could not discharge in divorce and that
John’s wages are garnishable after divorce and remarriage.
¶7 A garnishment objection hearing was held on January 26,
2016. Relying on Community Guardian Bank v. Hamlin, 182 Ariz. 627, 898
P.2d 1005 (App. 1995), the superior court denied the Morenos’ objection and
affirmed the Writ of Garnishment, ordering that John’s wages “are
garnishable.”
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DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
¶8 The Morenos timely appealed the ruling. We have
jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) sections 12-
120.21 (2016) and -2101(5)(c) (2016).3
DISCUSSION
¶9 In relying on Hamlin in ruling John’s wages are garnishable,
the court specifically found that:
[P]ursuant to Community Guardian Bank v. Hamlin, 182 Ariz.
627, 898 P.2d 1005 (Ariz. App. 1995), separate wages of a
spouse can be garnished to satisfy the community obligation.
The fraud claim created a community obligation for which
John Moreno is jointly liable. Id. Divorce does not absolve
spouses of community obligations, and a judgment creditor
has the right to pursue collection from both spouses including
garnishing wages to satisfy a community obligation. Id.
Because the court’s ruling raises issues of law, we review de novo. Citibank
(Arizona) v. Bhandhusavee, 188 Ariz. 434, 435, 937 P.2d 356, 357 (App. 1996).
Ultimately, we hold that the trial court erred by relying on Hamlin in this
context, and in simultaneously disregarding community property
distinctions.
¶10 We first address certain preliminary matters to clarify the
arguments presented on appeal. DSE mischaracterizes the Morenos’
argument in objecting to its garnishment of John’s current wages. On
appeal, DSE essentially purports that the Morenos ask this court to find that
divorce and remarriage terminated John’s obligation under the Stipulated
Judgment. Not only would such an argument be unsupported by the
chronological order of the facts in this case, it would broaden the scope of
the issues the Morenos actually present. The record clearly shows the
Morenos were divorced two years prior to the Stipulated Judgment. Thus,
contrary to inferences that may be drawn from DSE’s overarching
argument, the evidence does not compel the conclusion that the Morenos
divorced each other to avoid liability pursuant to a not-yet-existing
3 We cite the current version of the applicable statutes, unless
revisions material to this decision have occurred since the events in
question.
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DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
Stipulated Judgment.4 As to the Morenos’ related request, as properly
presented, they ask this court, as they did the trial court, to limit
enforcement of the Stipulated Judgment to its terms. The Stipulated
Judgment was rendered specifically against John’s “undivided one-half
interest in his marital community with [Bernadette,]” and disclaimed any
effort by DSE to execute on John’s separate property. The paramount issue
before us is whether the superior court erred in relying on Hamlin for its
ruling, which, as the court pronounced, stands for the proposition that
“[d]ivorce does not absolve spouses of their community obligations.”
Hamlin, 182 Ariz. at 631, 898 P.2d at 1009.
¶11 “[S]tipulation as to ‘judgment’ necessarily imports a finality
of determination of the controversy” between parties. Wolf Corp. v. Louis,
11 Ariz. App. 352, 355, 464 P.2d 672, 675 (1970). “If the trial court’s finding
is contrary to a deliberate stipulation, it must fall.” Id. A stipulation
“constitut[es] an abandonment of any contention to the contrary,” and is
foreclosed from being repudiated on appeal. Id. Accordingly, here, the
Stipulated Judgment to which both John and DSE consented guides our
analysis.
¶12 The trial court’s ruling improperly deflects the focus of the
Morenos’ objections from the language of the Stipulated Judgment, to an
inquiry about whether divorce discharges community liabilities. The
court’s ruling also fails to reflect this court’s 2010 ruling limiting John’s
liability. See Digital Sys. Eng’g, Inc., 1 CA-CV 09-0574, 2010 WL 5030808, at
* 7, ¶ 36 (affirming the ruling that “only [John’s] undivided one-half interest
in the marital community is liable for the judgment in this matter”).
Moreover, Hamlin concerned a default judgment against a community
while the parties were married, in contrast to the Stipulated Judgment here,
which occurred after the Morenos had divorced. See Hamlin, 182 Ariz. at
630-31, 898 P.2d at 1008-09. Therefore, it is irrelevant to this appeal.
¶13 We agree with the Morenos that the Stipulated Judgment
limits DSE’s recovery from John to his “undivided one-half interest” in the
only marital community to which the Stipulated Judgment could have
referred. See Reese v. Cradit, 12 Ariz. App. 233, 238, 469 P.2d 467, 472 (1970)
4 Any argument that DSE may posit suggesting that John divorced
Bernadette to avoid his liability pursuant to the Stipulated Judgment is
speculative at best. In fact, John’s position on appeal is that “the Stipulated
Judgment [declaring his liability] remains in effect.” It is also noteworthy
that DSE knew of the divorce prior to consenting to the Stipulated
Judgment.
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DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
(stating that when one spouse did not participate in the tort of the other, the
innocent spouse may be held liable only as a member of the community and
such liability is limited to the extent of the community property “as it
existed at the time of the [tort]”). The marital community formed by the
remarriage between Bernadette and John in 2013 is a new and distinct
community which, by the very terms of the Stipulated Judgment, does not
fall within its ambit. See, e.g., Mejak v. Granville, 212 Ariz. 555, 557, ¶ 9, 136
P.3d 874, 876 (2006) (applying the principle of interpreting a document “so
that no provision is rendered meaningless, insignificant, or void[,]” to
interpretation of a statute); Aztar Corp. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 223 Ariz. 463, 476,
¶ 45, 24 P.3d 960, 973 (App. 2010) (applying similar principles to contract
interpretation).
¶14 DSE argues that John remarried Bernadette and now “seeks
to reinstate the ‘two-dollar bankruptcy’” which was repealed by Arizona’s
legislature in 1973. See A.R.S. § 25-216 (repealed 1973); A.R.S. § 25-215
(2007).5 The “two-dollar bankruptcy” scheme involves a situation where
an individual has separate debts that he then attempts to avoid by pointing
to the fact of his subsequent marriage (or remarriage). Here, John has never
been determined to be individually liable to DSE—every pertinent
judgment, and most importantly, the Stipulated Judgment, foreclosed any
possibility of John (or his separate property that had not been a part of the
community) being so liable. See supra ¶¶ 2, 3, 5, and 12. Of course, John’s
earnings after divorce were his separate property, and after DSE’s own
stipulation, DSE could not have reached those earnings while John
remained divorced. This point is bolstered by the fact that there is no
evidence in the record that DSE attempted to garnish John’s wages
pursuant to his liability under the Stipulated Judgment during the time he
was unmarried. It thus appears DSE’s Writ of Garnishment rests on some
novel legal claim that John’s remarriage to Bernadette reactivates some
foregone right to garnish his wages. Such a “reactivation” claim would be
without legal grounding.
¶15 Therefore, in light of the Stipulated Judgment, we hold that
the trial court erred in ruling that DSE could garnish John’s wages, which
constitute community earnings of the marital community existing as of
2013, to satisfy the community liabilities of the marital community that
5 Stating “[t]he community property is liable for the premarital separate
debts or other liabilities of a spouse, incurred after September 1, 1973 but only
to the extent of the value of that spouse’s contribution to the community
property which would have been such spouse’s separate property if
single.” (Emphasis added.)
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DIGITAL v. MORENO and BRUCE-MORENO
Opinion of the Court
ended in 2009. Further, given our holding, we grant the Morenos attorneys’
fees and costs pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-1598.07 (2016), in an amount to be
determined upon compliance with Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate
Procedure 21. We deny DSE’s request for attorneys’ fees, as sought
pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 12-1598.07 (awarding costs and fees only to the
prevailing party), -349 (2016) (allowing for fees where a party “[b]rings or
defends a claim without substantial justification,” among other things), and
13-2314.04 (2010) (discussing civil remedies a private person injured by
racketeering may obtain).
CONCLUSION
¶16 For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s order
rendering John’s current wages garnishable. We vacate the Writ of
Garnishment.
AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
FILED: AA
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