Sign In
    Wisconsin Lawyer
    July 01, 1999

    Wisconsin Lawyer July 1999: A Decade-Post Button v. Button: Drafting Prenuptial Agreements 2

     

    Wisconsin Lawyer July 1999

    Navigation

    Vol. 72, No. 7, July 1999

    <---Previous Page

    A Decade-Post Button v. Button:
    Drafting Prenuptial Agreements

    In Greenwald, however, the parties were not represented by separate counsel. That court's decision underscores the tendency to look for substance over form and the likelihood of an attorney/drafter becoming a witness (that is, if only one counsel is involved). In Greenwald, the appellate court upheld the trial court's finding that there was a meaningful choice even without separate counsel. The attorney testified that he advised the challenger of the contract of her right to separate counsel, which she declined. He also gave a thorough reading and explanation of the proposed agreement to the party. It also was clear that the party had received a handwritten copy and later a typewritten copy of the agreement prior to the date of execution. This underscores a consistent trend of the courts to seek to uphold agreements and not set them aside for what might be perceived as a technical irregularity, if good faith effort is made to comply with the philosophic guidelines of Button. It also underscores the necessity of an attorney/drafter keeping contemporaneous notes and documentation in a file so that appropriate testimony can be given later should the agreement be challenged, especially in the instance where the parties are not represented by separate counsel.

    AgreementWhat is adequate time to review? In Gardner the challenger of the agreement claimed she was presented with the final draft five days before the wedding, which precluded her from having a meaningful choice. The trial court found that significant negotiations had gone on for several months before the final draft was presented. What is most interesting, however, is that the appellate court clearly stated that a party's statement requiring a marital property agreement as a condition of marriage is not coercion. A party is not robbed of a meaningful choice, as perceived in Button, just because one party insists upon the signing of the marital property agreement before a marriage takes place. The other is always free to leave the relationship if he or she finds the agreement objectionable.

    Practice Considerations. The best practice is for each party to have separate counsel. Acting as sole attorney increases the probability of the attorney being called as a witness and excluded as an advocate under Supreme Court Rule 20:3.7. If your client insists on proceeding without separate counsel, draft a disclosure letter to the client that outlines the risks. Acknowledge that you may become a witness and be precluded from representing the client in any later action.

    Even though Wisconsin courts may suggest that a party can say "no" even as the "wedding music plays," as an attorney/drafter you do not have to participate in "eleventh hour" agreements. If you believe you have not had adequate time to review the agreement, do not give your approval to your client. It may not save your client, but it can save you. In Gardner, counsel specifically advised the client not to sign; the client signed, and the court upheld the agreement.

    The burden of removing the presumption of equity, as to procedural fairness at drafting, seems to have grown heavier since Button and the courts repeatedly look to substance over form in evaluating irregularities or deviations from Button's guidelines.

    Test 3: Substantive Fairness - At Time of Execution

    The court in Button freely admitted that this substantive fairness test at execution is "an amorphous concept which must be determined on a case by case basis."7 A determination of substantive fairness should consider:

    • objectives of the parties executing the agreement,

    • economic circumstances of the parties,

    • the property brought to the marriage by each party,

    • each spouse's family relationship and/or obligations to persons other than the spouse,

    • the earning capacity of each person,

    • the anticipated contribution by one party to the education, training, or increased earning power of the other,

    • the future needs of the respective spouses,

    • the age, physical, and emotional health of the parties, and

    • the expected contribution of each party to the marriage given the appropriate economic value to each party's contribution to homemaking and child care.

    The appellate court in Greenwald readily admitted that the above stated factors rarely will lead to a clearly indicated resolution on the issue of substantive fairness.

    The Greenwald court then considered the two principal legislative concerns reflected in section 767.255(11) of the Wisconsin Statutes: 1) protection of the parties' right to contract; and 2) the protection of the parties' financial interest in divorce. A significant addition to case law was made by concluding that all factors must be considered with a view toward giving effect to the parties' right to contract. In Greenwald the trial court decision was overturned for failure to meaningfully apply that right of freedom to contract. This freedom of the parties to contract, which is a virtual raison d'etre of prenuptial agreements, is a critical factor in determining substantive fairness.

    Case law has further acknowledged that an agreement on divorce is not unfair simply because the application of the agreement results in a property division not equal between the parties or which the court may not have ordered under section 767.255. In Greenwald the appellate court overturned a trial court's determination that the marital property agreement was unenforceable because is was substantively unfair, as it precluded the wife from becoming a "full economic equal in the marriage."8 The appellate court appropriately determined that the preclusion of one spouse from ever becoming the full economic equal in the marriage was precisely what the parties intended with the agreement in the first place. An agreement that is equitable and fair does not have to be equal in its division of property. As the Gardner court noted, "any other ruling would in effect say that no agreement of this type would ever be valid."9

    Practice Considerations. The idea of an "equitable" marital agreement being synonymous with an "equal" division of marital assets should be dead once and for all. The emphasis on the parties' freedom to contract appears to be an attempt by the courts to make this test a bit less amorphous by relying more on sound contract law principles. The Gardner court found an agreement denying maintenance as valid and enforceable. It even denied temporary maintenance during the challenge of the agreement. However, substantive fairness has some limitations. If an agreement exceeds these limitations it may be set aside and thereby defeat its very purpose. Agreements that deny a party completely from sharing in the marital estate, when they have no separate assets or where they make significant contributions to it, are illogical and probably substantively unfair.10 Public policy may invalidate any agreement that forced one party, upon divorce or death/probate, on to public assistance.11

    Test 3 (later): Substantive Fairness - At Time of Divorce

    In Button fairness at the time of divorce involved consideration of significant changes in circumstances from those at the time of execution. Those changes made the results of the agreement's application at divorce different from the reasonable expectations of the parties (at the time of drafting). A significant change in circumstances must not have been reasonably foreseeable. The adoption of this unforeseeable change in circumstances has been articulated in Wisconsin and other states. It is another effort to remove the "amorphous" label from the concept of fairness.

    Warren v. Warren stated: "'Fairness' without further elaboration, gives no guidance concerning which agreement should be binding and which should be struck down. Measuring an agreement by an undefined judicial standard of 'fairness' is an invitation to the very wealth redistribution that these agreements are designed to prevent."12 In Warren the appellate court reviewed the trial court's determination that the premature retirement of one of the parties was not a "contracted for consequence" of the agreement. The trial court had found the agreement substantively unfair at the time of divorce. The appellate court viewed this as the wrong analysis. It stated that the proper test was to determine if the parties were reasonably able to predict a particular event. The test was not to be whether the parties would actually agree or contract as to whether the event would occur or would not occur. The appellate court overruled the trial court and stated that when an elderly party marries and then later retires, it is a foreseeable event.

    Examples of significant changes of circumstances not reasonably foreseeable by the parties involved a substantial deterioration of health of one of the parties after marriage or a middle-aged couple with grown children suddenly facing an unplanned pregnancy. Absent these types of unforeseen changes in circumstances, the court goes back to basic contract law and underscores the fact that a person signing an agreement undertakes all the normal anticipated risks, including that the agreement may not prove to be a wise one.

    A more usual change of circumstance is set forth in Brandt v. Brandt.13 In that case, the significant change in circumstance at the time of divorce was the commingling of the parties' assets. That commingling resulted in an inability to trace those assets. That change made enforcing the marital agreement an impossibility. The court concluded that the "party's request to enforce the marital agreement carries with it a concomitant responsibility to trace the property such that a reliable identification and valuation of the assets governed by the agreement can be made."14 The appellate court further concluded that the trial court was absolutely correct in its determination that the enforcement of the agreement under these circumstances would not only have been inequitable, it would have been impossible.

    GarczynskiRandall R. Garczynski, Marquette 1980, a shareholder in Garczynski & Brennan Law Offices S.C., Elkhorn, argued Button v. Button for the appellant before the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Garczynski has presented numerous seminars on marital property law and agreements, and has litigated agreements in divorce and probate courts for plaintiffs and defendants.

    Practice Considerations. It is appropriate to annually remind clients who have outstanding marital agreements that they should determine, identify, and address any significant changes in their circumstances. A timely amendment, if acceptable to both parties, can address the new issue. Agreements during the marriage are permitted under section 767.255(3)(L) of the Wisconsin Statutes. Anything the agreement drafter can do to help the courts further remove "amorphous" as a modifier in this concept of "substantive fairness" is appropriate and a significant service to clients. It is absolutely necessary to advise clients of the need to be able to trace and identify the assets that the agreement controls. This also involves an understanding of whatever business venture or financial opportunities the client is, or is likely, to become engaged in. This often can mean that concurrently with drafting the marital agreement, attorneys must establish holding companies, corporations, business entities or procedures necessary to reasonably ensure the enforceability of the agreement at a later date.

    A Parting Caveat

    Litigation of a marital property agreement is litigation of an attorney's work product. The courts have stated that the drafter is not an insurer of the agreement, but at least one court has allowed a professional negligence claim against the drafter ... even where experts agreed the document was enforceable.15 When drafting an agreement, attorneys should think like a litigator. At the time of drafting, consider what evidence would be necessary to defend the agreement. Briefly outline a strategy and list supportive evidence. Remember, at divorce or death - two highly charged emotional times - is when the drafting attorneys' work product, maybe your work product, will be scrutinized by others.

    Endnotes

    1 Button v. Button, 131 Wis. 2d 84, 388 N.W.2d 546 (1986).

    2 Schumacher v. Schumacher, 131 Wis. 2d 332, 388 N.W.2d 912 (1986).

    3 An unpublished case gives an idea of how "relative" a de minimus amount can be; a $129,000 deviation was viewed as de minimus in light of the $1.3 million of assets being valued - a 10 percent error was tolerable. Stayer v. Stayer, (Ct. App., No. 95-2534, Nov. 27, 1996).

    4 Gardner v. Gardner, 190 Wis. 2d 216, 527 N.W.2d 701 (Ct. App. 1994).

    5 Greenwald v. Greenwald, 154 Wis. 2d 767, 454 N.W.2d 34 (Ct. App. 1990).

    6 The court in discussing professional negligence has said, "If an attorney drafts a prenuptial agreement without attaching a financial statement, the factfinder could conclude that the attorney failed to use reasonable care, that is, that the attorney was negligent. It is immaterial that the agreement might later be enforced after a finding that the widow already knew the financial information." Estate of Campbell v. Chaney, 169 Wis. 2d 399, 485 N.W.2d 421 (Ct. App. 1992).

    7 Button, at 551.

    8 Greenwald, at 41.

    9 Gardner, at 707.

    10 An unpublished case found an agreement "substantively" unfair when it excluded the farm wife from a share of the marital estate after working diligently at the farm for 12 years; she had no independent assets or significant outside employment. In re Marriage of Seefeldt v. Seefeldt, (Ct. App., No. 96-3708, Oct. 28, 1997).

    11 Wis. Stat. §§ 266.58(9)(a) and (b).

    12 Warren v. Warren, 147 Wis. 2d 704, 434 N.W.2d 295 (Ct. App. 1988).

    13 Brandt v. Brandt, 145 Wis. 2d 394, 427 N.W.2d 126 (Ct. App. 1988).

    14Id., 145 Wis. 2d at 416, 427 N.W.2d at 134.

    15 Estate of Campbell v. Chaney, 169 Wis. 2d 399, 485 N.W.2d 421 (Ct. App. 1992).


Join the conversation! Log in to comment.

News & Pubs Search

-
Format: MM/DD/YYYY