DEWBERRY V. GEORGE
62 P.3d 525 (2003)
NATURE OF THE CASE: The Superior Court found that the parties entered into an oral
prenuptial agreement, despite George's (D) denial of the agreement's existence. D appealed
the court's property division and its order of child support.
FACTS: D and P started dating in 1980 while they were both living in California. P had
just graduated from Boalt Hall School of Law and was working toward becoming a CPA at Arthur
Andersen. George was a college-educated music industry executive. They agreed to marry if
(1) P would always be fully employed, (2) each party's income and property would be treated
as separate property, (3) each party would own a home to return to if the marriage failed,
and (4) P would not get fat. P agreed to these conditions. This discussion took place in
California, a community property state. Neither party was particularly wealthy at the
beginning of their relationship. They married in 1986. They continually affirmed this
agreement through words and actions. They deposited their incomes into separate accounts,
which they used for their personal expenses and investments. After the birth of their first
child, they opened a joint checking account in order to handle certain agreed household
expenses. By 2000, when they separated, they had accumulated minimal community property in
the form of joint accounts and jointly purchased possessions. They held numerous investment,
bank, and retirement accounts as individuals, and the spouse who had created and contributed
to those accounts was considered the sole owner and manager of the assets in those accounts.
The primary beneficiaries of their individual accounts were the parties' children, or
alternatively, the estate of the spouse who funded them. P purchased three houses as her
separate property, securing financing separately in all instances by signing promissory
notes or asking her sister to cosign. One she purchased to fulfill the third condition of
the prenuptial agreement. The latter two houses, both located in Seattle, served as the
family's primary residences. P treated these houses as her separate property by paying for
maintenance, improvements, and the down payment and mortgage with funds from her separate
accounts. D paid P a set amount each month toward living expenses, such as utilities, and P
repaid D for any maintenance costs he incurred. D already owned real property in Texas and
California that he had acquired before their marriage. P left Arthur Andersen to become an
associate in a Seattle law firm. P worked in sales and marketing in the entertainment and
hospitality industries. P eventually became a partner at her law firm, her annual salary
increased rapidly, totaling over $1 million in 2000. D's salary remained constant in the
$40,000 to $50,000 range. The trial court found by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence
that the parties had entered into an oral prenuptial agreement, despite D's denial of the
agreement's existence. The trial court also found that there had been 'complete performance'
of that agreement during the parties' marriage and, thus, the parties' property consisted
primarily of separate property. It awarded P $2.3 million, or approximately 82 percent of
the parties' property, which consisted almost entirely of real and personal property that P
had acquired during the marriage, as well as her premarriage separate property. D received
property worth $600,000, consisting of his real and personal separate property from before
and during the marriage, the bulk of the parties' community property, plus $300,000 cash
from P's separate accounts. Part of the trial court's award to D consisted of a cash
equivalent of 11 percent of the Thorndyke house value, or $74,250, based upon evidence of
some commingling of property interests in the Thorndyke house (i.e., George's possible
liability on the mortgage, his reliance on the house as a primary residence, and traceable
community funds used for the down payment).
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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