Court Opinion

ID: 2800122
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-05-12 15:13:56.919979+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:29:34.771203
License: Public Domain

This opinion will be unpublished and
                         may not be cited except as provided by
                         Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

                              STATE OF MINNESOTA
                              IN COURT OF APPEALS
                                    A14-1178

                                 In re the Marriage of:
                             Margie Ann Nelson, petitioner,
                                      Respondent,

                                           vs.

                                Merlin Berdeen Nelson,
                                       Appellant

                                 Filed May 11, 2015
                                      Affirmed
                                    Worke, Judge
                             Roseau County District Court
                              File No. 68-F6-05-000771

Nora L. Crumpton, Anderson Law Offices, P.A., Warroad, Minnesota (for respondent)

Kevin T. Duffy, Thief River Falls, Minnesota (for appellant)

      Considered and decided by Connolly, Presiding Judge; Peterson, Judge; and

Worke, Judge.

                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION

WORKE, Judge

      Appellant challenges the district court’s order directing the sale of the marital

home in order to enforce the judgment and decree. We affirm.
                                        FACTS

       As part of the judgment and decree dissolving the parties’ marriage, respondent

Margie Ann Nelson (wife) was awarded exclusive possession of the marital home,

though appellant Merlin Berdeen Nelsen (husband) retained part ownership.            The

dissolution judgment specified that

              [u]pon graduation of the youngest child from high school,
              [the marital home] shall be sold, at the highest price
              obtainable. The sale proceeds shall first be used to reimburse
              [husband] for his non-marital interest of $20,200.00 in the
              property. The balance of the sale proceeds shall be divided
              equally between the parties.

       The parties’ youngest child graduated from high school in 2013. Wife retained a

real estate agent to help sell the property, but husband refused to sign the listing

agreement. The listing agreement specified that certain fees would be paid to the realtor

upon the sale of the property.

       An offer of $158,000 ($160,000 less $2,000 in seller-paid closing costs) was

extended by third-party buyers; wife and the third-party buyers entered into a purchase

agreement in early 2014. Husband did not sign the agreement; instead, he suggested

purchasing the property himself. Wife and the third-party buyers were scheduled to close

on the property on March 28, 2014, but husband had neither signed the purchase

agreement nor made an offer of his own by that time.

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         Wife moved to enforce the judgment and decree. The day before the hearing,

husband offered to buy the property for $158,000.1 Following the hearing, the district

court ordered the sale of the property to the third-party buyers.

         Husband appeals.

                                       DECISION

         A district court “may issue appropriate orders implementing or enforcing the

provisions of a dissolution decree.” Potter v. Potter, 471 N.W.2d 113, 114 (Minn. App.

1991). Decisions of the district court in this regard will not be overturned absent an

abuse of discretion. Id.

         Husband argues that the district court abused its discretion because ordering the

sale of the property to the third-party buyers violated the dissolution decree. The decree

specified that the property be sold “at the highest price obtainable.” Husband contends

that a sale to the third-party buyers will result in “less net proceeds” to the parties and

attempts to characterize the language of the decree as mandating that the parties

“maximize their financial benefit.” The decree does not use husband’s preferred phrases.

Obtaining the “highest price” and distributing the proceeds according to the decree is

consistent with the district court’s order directing the sale to the third-party buyers.

         But even if the decree mandated that the parties maximize their financial benefit,

husband’s arguments fail. Husband argues that $2,000 in seller-paid closing costs need

not be paid if he is the purchaser. But the third-party buyers’ offer was $160,000 with a

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    The specific offer was to buy wife’s interest in the property “for one half of $158,000.”

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proviso that $2,000 of their closing costs would be paid by the seller. Husband’s offer

was $158,000. The prices offered by both prospective buyers are equal.

       Husband also argues that no real-estate-agent commission would be deducted from

the sale proceeds if the sale is made to him instead of the third-party buyers. This is so,

husband asserts, because he did not sign the real estate listing agreement and thus the

agreement is not valid. Husband’s claim is impossible to verify because the listing

agreement is not part of the record. Thus, there is no basis to overturn the district court’s

conclusion that wife “will have to pay [real estate agent] fees for any sale of th[e]

property in accordance with [the] listing agreement.” The district court’s determination

is not against the facts in the record, and therefore not an abuse of discretion. See Rutten

v. Rutten, 347 N.W.2d 47, 50 (Minn. 1984) (stating that a district court abuses its

discretion when a conclusion is against logic and the facts in the record).

       Finally, husband argues that the district court impermissibly altered his substantive

rights. See Ulrich v. Ulrich, 400 N.W.2d 213, 218 (Minn. App. 1987) (“A [district] court

has the power to clarify and construe a [dissolution] judgment so long as it does not

change the parties’ substantive rights.”). This argument depends upon the validity of

husband’s first two arguments: husband argues that his substantive rights were infringed

because he “will receive less net proceeds from the sale . . . to the [third-party buyers].”

Because his prior arguments fail, this argument is robbed of its foundation. Furthermore,

husband’s substantive rights regarding the inevitable sale of the property have not

changed since the judgment and decree. That decree specified that his substantive rights

were: (1) he held part ownership of the property, (2) sale proceeds would first be used to

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satisfy his $20,200 interest, and (3) he would receive an equal share of remaining

proceeds. Husband never had the substantive right to be preferred over an equal bidder,

much less one whose offer was first in time. He never had the right to proceeds free of

real-estate-agent commissions.

       The district court’s order was a valid enforcement of the judgment and decree.

See Potter, 471 N.W.2d at 114 (stating that a district court may choose among different

means of enforcing a dissolution decree and that the “paramount concern is whether the

parties’ substantive rights are changed”).

       Affirmed.

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