Summary
affirming the trial court's entry of a judgment of divorce consistent with the parties' settlement agreement despite the defendant's refusal to consent to the judgment based on her subsequent belief "that the agreement was not fair and equitable"
Summary of this case from Vial v. FlowersOpinion
Docket No. 157080.
Submitted June 21, 1995, at Lansing.
Decided June 30, 1995, at 9:05 A.M.
R. David Wilson, for the plaintiff.
Denise Arnold and Burt A. Bothell, for the defendant.
Defendant appeals as of right the entry of a judgment of divorce, the terms of which were premised upon a domestic relations mediation agreement. We affirm.
In this divorce action, the parties agreed to domestic relations mediation pursuant to MCR 3.216. In the course of mediation, the parties reached agreement regarding all issues. The mediator prepared a handwritten mediation agreement, which the parties and their respective counsel each signed. MCR 3.216(G)(7). None of the four signatures, however, were notarized. Plaintiff subsequently prepared a judgment of divorce that incorporated the parties' mediation agreement. Defendant refused to consent to the judgment, having come to the view that the agreement was not fair and equitable.
Plaintiff filed a motion for summary disposition and entry of judgment. Defendant argued in opposition to the motion that the mediation agreement was unenforceable and could not form the basis of a judgment of divorce because the parties' signatures on the mediation agreement were not "acknowledged" as required by MCR 3.216(G)(7). The trial court rejected defendant's argument and granted plaintiff's motion.
MCR 3.216(G)(7) states as follows:
If a settlement is reached as a result of the mediation, the terms of that settlement must be reduced to writing, signed by the parties and their attorneys, and acknowledged by the parties. The parties must deliver the written settlement agreement to the mediator within 14 days after the session at which the agreement was reached, and the mediator must file it with the mediation clerk within 7 days after receiving it. The parties must take the steps necessary to enter judgment as in the case of other settlements. Unless the parties have agreed otherwise and have so informed the mediator, the mediation will be deemed to have failed to achieve a settlement, and the mediator must prepare a report as provided in subrule (G) (8), if the written settlement agreement has not been delivered to the mediator within 14 days. [Emphasis added.]
On appeal, defendant argues that the phrase "acknowledged by the parties" requires that the settlement be notarized. We disagree.
In support of her position, defendant refers to the Uniform Recognition of Acknowledgments Act (URAA), MCL 565.261 et seq.; MSA 26.607(1) et seq. However, the URAA only addresses who can perform notarial acts, the form language to be used by a notary, and other ministerial measures concerning notarization. The act does not define when this procedure must be used. As a result, the URAA is of no assistance in analyzing MCR 3.216(G)(7).
We must look to the court rules themselves, rather than to the URAA, to determine if "acknowledged by the parties" means that verification is required. We conclude that it does not because, when verification is required, the drafters of the court rules have expressly stated that. See MCR 2.107(D); MCR 2.113(A). Further, MCR 2.114 discusses verification of pleadings, the rules to establish verification, and, most importantly, MCR 2.114(A)(1) expressly states that verification or accompaniment by an affidavit is not required unless specifically provided by rule or statute. Accordingly, if the drafters of the rules had intended the term "acknowledged" in MCR 3.216(G) (7) to mean notarized, they would have used unambiguous terms to indicate their intent. This having not been done, we decline to read a verification or notarization requirement into MCR 3.216(G)(7).
Moreover, our decision in this case is compelled by the unique circumstances that surround a divorce settlement and judgment. Unlike virtually all other civil litigation between competent individuals, a divorce, even when settled, requires a hearing in the circuit court and the taking of proofs before a judgment can be entered. MCR 3.210(B)(2). As we pointed out in Koron v Melendy, 207 Mich. App. 188, 191; 523 N.W.2d 870 (1994), this requirement allows for an exercise of judicial discretion. In contemplation of this judicial activity, when the terms of the parties' agreement are placed on the record there must at least be an admission, i.e., acknowledgment, by the parties that the agreement contains the terms of the settlement and the parties' signatures. This acknowledgment of the settlement's terms and the parties' signatures allows the court to exercise the anticipated discretion in an informed manner. Thus, it is with recognition of this distinctive aspect of divorce litigation that the term "acknowledged" in MCR 3.216(G)(7) should be read.
Accordingly, we conclude that "acknowledged by the parties" in MCR 3.216(G)(7) refers to an indication at the eventual divorce judgment hearing that the agreement between the parties was indeed the agreement they reached at mediation and that their signatures were affixed to it.
Affirmed.