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Vol. 72, No. 7, July 1999 |
A Decade-Post Button v. Button:
Drafting Prenuptial Agreements
When drafting prenuptial agreements, attorneys should take
care to follow the
procedural and substantive fairness tests used to evaluate such
agreements.
By Randall R. Garczynski
ll marriages will
end in a divorce or death. In either case, any prenuptial agreement
you draw - your work product - likely will come under
critical scrutiny by adversarial parties seeking to have it put
aside, or rendered invalid or unenforceable. It will be analyzed
more than any other document you will ever draft.
Newsmakers and celebrities have touted the fact that a good
prenuptial agreement is a necessary prerequisite for any marriage.
Ivana Trump on her remarriage stated, "Get a good prenuptial
and be prepared to live with it." Whether it be to create
certainty in the event of divorce or to preserve estates in the
event of death, the drafting and use of marital agreements is
unquestionably a growth "industry."
Over a decade ago, the Wisconsin Supreme Court in Button v.
Button1 set forth some well-reasoned guidelines and tests by
which to measure premarital agreements. That case set up a series
of procedural and substantive fairness tests that are used to
evaluate agreements upon their drafting and, pursuant to Wisconsin
Statutes section 767.255(11),
at the time of divorce.
At the time of drafting, an agreement must meet three fairness
tests. An agreement meets the procedural fairness tests, if:
- 1) each spouse makes a fair and reasonable disclosure to
the other of his or her financial status; and,
-
- 2) each spouse enters into the agreement voluntarily and
freely.
An agreement meets the substantive fairness test, if:
- 3) upon drafting, the provisions of the marital property
agreement dividing the property are fair to each party.
Agreements are presumed to be equitable as to both parties.
The party who wishes to set aside such agreements must produce
evidence to overcome the presumption. If the agreement fails
any one of the three tests, the agreement will be deemed inequitable
and set aside. Following Button v. Button, litigation has further
defined these guidelines. That litigation involved some lawyers'
work product.
Test 1: Procedural Fairness - Financial Disclosure
A written disclosure, actual knowledge, or a waiver can meet
this test.
Written Disclosure. A written disclosure of all assets
and income, attached to the marital agreement, should suffice.
Since most clients seeking such agreements have significant assets
and/or income, a financial statement prepared by their accountant
is preferable. However, even such attachments have been challenged
in courts. Since the financial status of your client may be subject
to change, the courts determined early on that the de minimus
failure to disclose would not invalidate an agreement.2 A de
minimus amount, however, is a relative figure and can be
a rather large number.3
Valuation Caveat. Valuing an asset for disclosure,
like a privately held business, can be a problem. In Gardner
v. Gardner4 book value of stock at $2 million was challenged
as not being a fair and reasonable disclosure. Expert testimony
put the fair market value, as of the same date, between $18 -
20 million. The appellate court upheld the trial court's
finding there was a fair and reasonable disclosure. The difference
between various valuation methods of stock was explained. In
a footnote on the financial disclosure, the parties indicated
the particular formula used (that is, book value) and identified
the fact that a market value approach may be substantially higher.
What is interesting in Gardner is the fact that the
trial court evaluated the drafting attorney's performance.
The court determined that the party challenging the agreement
had the difference between book and fair market value explained
by its attorney. That attorney had a background in accounting.
In addition, the court found there was an independent decision,
by counsel, that it was unnecessary to seek an appraisal of the
assets. Finally, the court even noted that the attorney told
his client that it was not in her best interest to sign the agreement.
The statements and actions of the drafting attorney were critical
evidence; unfortunately that evidence ultimately weighed against
the former client's claims.
Actual Knowledge. In Greenwald v. Greenwald5
there was no formal exchange of financial records and the challenger
of the agreement claimed an ignorance of the other party's
true worth. The court found that the spouse challenging the agreement
had certain factual knowledge of the financial status of her
husband because she assisted in keeping the financial records.
That knowledge included entries of income in ledger books (for
example, from mortgages, rentals, and interest), payment of mortgages
and discussions of property values during objections to tax assessments
on various properties. The court denied the challenge to fair
disclosure as form over substance when the challenger clearly
had actual knowledge of the finances.
Waiver of Specific Knowledge. A waiver, de facto or
in writing, is consistent with case decisions. In Greenwald
the court acknowledged that, despite the less than exact knowledge
regarding finances, the party "desperately wanted to marry"
and "was set on marrying ... and whose headstrong belief
could hardly be deterred by the revelation of more assets."
The court cited Button's concerns that "if a
party's conduct demonstrates that a specific knowledge of
the other party's finances is not important to the marital
decision and if the agreement is otherwise freely and voluntarily
made, there is no sound reason why the law should later intervene
and undo the parties' contract." The appellate court
in Gardner acknowledged the purpose of the financial disclosure
and agreed that "the conduct of the party demonstrated specific
knowledge of the assets and finances was not an important component
in the decision to marry." A drafter could certainly put
in writing the type of de facto waiver the courts have recognized.
Practice Considerations. When possible, use a written
comprehensive financial statement compiled by the client's
accountant or other suitable third party knowledgeable of the
finances.6 In cases where an asset is subject to alternative
valuations, it should be the practice to include an explanation
of precisely what formulas were used to arrive at the values
and the statement that there are alternative formulas that may
result in different values. This especially should be done where
there is no independent valuation and parties simply use the
book value. On any waiver, clearly state what rights or information
are being waived and affirm that specific knowledge of the other
party's assets are not important to the marital decision.
If there is actual knowledge, still obtain a written waiver and
cite specifically the basis of the actual knowledge. Reliance
on undocumented actual knowledge may become a necessary trial
tactic, but should not be a drafting practice
Test 2: Procedural Fairness - A Meaningful Choice
Do both parties need counsel and, if so, how long before the
wedding?
Button put forth basic touchstones to see if a meaningful
choice existed. They were:
- each party is represented by independent counsel;
- each party has adequate time to review the agreement;
- the parties understand the terms of the agreement; and,
- the parties understand their financial rights absent an agreement
(or what rights they are giving up).
It clearly is preferred that each party have separate counsel.
Independent counsel is the first touchstone set forth in Button
and basically creates a presumption that touchstones 3 and 4
are met.
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