|
|
|
|
|
Fraudulent
Transfers and Marital Property Settlements
by James P. Reape, Esq., Law Offices
of James P. Reape, APC
In the case of Mejia v. Reed, 2002 DJDAR 3455 the Court of
Appeal for the Sixth Appellate District concluded that a Marital
Property Settlement Agreement and judgment of dissolution are subject
to creditor claims under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act. In
reaching this conclusion the court disagreed with the prior decision
from the Fourth District in Gagan v. Gouyd (1999) 73 CA4th
835. Mejia first filed and action against Reed to establish paternity
of their child. Less than a month after Reed was ordered to pay
child support his wife petitioned for dissolution of their marriage.
The following day a marital settlement agreement was signed. The
agreement awarded husband his medical practice and wife the former
family residence. Sometime later husband abandoned his medical practice
leaving him with only his car and pension plan as assets. Reed moved
in with his mother in San Francisco.
Mejia sued Reed and his ex wife alleging that the property settlement
agreement awarding the residence to wife was a fraudulent transfer
that was intended to defraud, hinder and delay her in collection
of future child support.
Reed sought judgment on the ground that there was no evidence
of an intent to defraud. The trial court granted that motion.
On appeal, the court addressed the complex issue of competing statutory
schemes. One statutory scheme related to dissolution of marriage
protects the assets awarded to a spouse in a dissolution from debts
of the other spouse and the other scheme is the Uniform Fraudulent
Transfer Act intended to protect creditors from improper action
by debtors seeking to avoid liability. Neither code references the
application of the other. In construing the statutes the Court of
Appeal decided that the policy of deterring misconduct outweighs
the policy of assuring finality of a judgment.
|
|
|
|
|
|
{b
|