Gabriel Seth Worsham v. Kathleen Bonnie Crispin Worsham ( 2022 )


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  •                                           COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Humphreys, AtLee and Raphael
    PUBLISHED
    Argued at Lexington, Virginia
    GABRIEL SETH WORSHAM, EXECUTOR OF THE
    ESTATE OF RALEIGH ELMORE WORSHAM
    OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 0663-21-3                                   JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL
    JANUARY 11, 2022
    KATHLEEN BONNIE CRISPIN WORSHAM,
    INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE RALEIGH E.
    WORSHAM QTIP TRUST
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF LYNCHBURG
    F. Patrick Yeatts, Judge
    Paul McCourt Curley (Six East Law Group—Curley Law Firm,
    PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.
    Monica T. Monday (Glenn W. Pulley; Amanda M. Morgan;
    Timothy M. Purnell; Gentry Locke; Purnell, McKennett & Menke,
    PC, on brief), for appellees.
    Under the parol-evidence rule, when a written contract unambiguously expresses the
    agreement of the parties, extrinsic evidence of the parties’ prior or contemporaneous discussions
    is inadmissible to contradict the written terms. The primary issue on appeal here is whether a
    post-nuptial agreement is ambiguous about whether—if the parties divorced and the husband
    died first—the wife is entitled to monthly income from a trust that the husband had to establish
    as a “QTIP” trust—a “qualified terminable interest property” trust for a “surviving spouse” under
    § 2056 of the Internal Revenue Code. 
    26 U.S.C. § 2056
    . Following the couple’s divorce and the
    husband’s death, the executor failed to transfer assets to the trust sufficient to pay the monthly
    amount. He asserted that, because the couple divorced, the trust could not be considered a
    “QTIP” trust. He contends that his interpretation is supported by parol evidence that should have
    been considered by the trial court because, he claims, the post-nuptial agreement is at least
    ambiguous about whether the trust’s obligations to the wife survived the divorce.
    We conclude, however, that the post-nuptial agreement unequivocally established the
    wife’s continuing entitlement to monthly payments from the trust, even if the parties’ divorce
    prevented the trust from qualifying for deferred estate-tax treatment as a QTIP trust under the
    Internal Revenue Code. We therefore affirm the circuit court’s ruling that the agreement must be
    enforced as written and that the executor’s proffered parol evidence is inadmissible. We agree
    with the circuit court that the relief it awarded—requiring the executor to restore funds withheld
    from the trust—fell within the relief requested in the prayer for relief. We also agree that the
    attorney-fee award to the wife was proper under the post-nuptial agreement. We affirm and
    remand the case to the circuit court to determine if the wife is entitled to further attorney fees
    and, if so, the appropriate amount.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Kathleen Bonnie Crispin Worsham married Raleigh Elmore Worsham in August 1979.1
    Raleigh had two sons from a previous marriage. Raleigh and Bonnie separated two decades
    later, in 2001.
    In 2002, while still separated, Raleigh and Bonnie agreed to a “Post-Nuptial Agreement.”
    The introductory clause of the agreement named the parties in full but then defined them as
    “Husband” and “Wife.” Those terms were then used throughout the agreement to specify the
    parties’ respective rights and obligations, including after any divorce. E.g., ¶¶ 2, 7. The
    agreement, among other things, provided for Raleigh to pay Bonnie certain spousal support (¶ 1)
    and set forth their respective rights in several parcels of real property (¶¶ 2-4).
    1
    Like the litigants, we refer to the couple as Raleigh and Bonnie.
    -2-
    This appeal centers mainly on paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement, which required
    Raleigh to “establish, at his sole expense, a Qualified Terminable Interest Property (QTIP) trust
    for Wife’s lifetime benefit.” Raleigh promised to transfer to the trust certain real property and
    improvements called “Spring Street.” Income from the trust was “payable to Wife on a monthly
    basis, during her lifetime,” permitting Raleigh “to direct the disposition of the trust assets at the
    time of Wife’s death.” “Additionally,” paragraph 5 provided that, at Raleigh’s death, “additional
    assets will be added” by Raleigh’s personal representative sufficient to generate a “gross
    monthly income equal to what the parties would call the ‘Widow’s Benefit.’” If Raleigh died
    after June 1, 2010—as later happened—the “Widow’s Benefit” would be $10,000.
    The post-nuptial agreement specifically contemplated the possibility of divorce. For
    example, paragraph 24 required that, if the parties divorced, the agreement had to be ratified and
    incorporated into any final divorce decree. Similarly, paragraph 35 provided for the agreement
    to continue “in full force and effect” even after divorce. Paragraph 5 contained no language
    conditioning Bonnie’s “lifetime” benefit on her remaining married to Raleigh. Paragraph 7, by
    contrast, created an explicit financial incentive for Bonnie to stay married to Raleigh, providing a
    $100,000 payment to Bonnie if they were still married when Raleigh died.
    The post-nuptial agreement also contained a fee-shifting provision. Paragraph 21
    provided that, if either party defaulted in their obligations, the other could recover attorney fees
    incurred in suing to “compel compliance” with the agreement.
    The marriage lasted only a short time longer. Raleigh filed for divorce in 2004.
    In February 2005—while the divorce case was pending—Raleigh established The
    Raleigh E. Worsham QTIP Trust, naming Raleigh and Bonnie as co-trustees. Although “QTIP”
    appears in the title, the document does not cite the Internal Revenue Code and does not provide
    that its validity depends on its qualifying as a QTIP trust under federal tax laws. The trust recites
    -3-
    that it was “established pursuant to the terms of Section 5” of the post-nuptial agreement. Article
    8 is entitled “Overriding Tax Purposes” but identifies only “some of [Raleigh’s] purposes in
    creating this trust.” Paragraph A (“Marital Deduction”) said that he intended the “gift of an
    income interest” to be a “completed gift qualifying for the gift tax marital deduction.” Paragraph
    B said that “[w]hile I am married to [Bonnie], this trust shall be a grantor trust for federal income
    tax purposes.” And paragraph C said that the “income interest given to my wife shall give her
    those rights ordinarily associated with ownership of an asset for life.”
    As required by the post-nuptial agreement, Raleigh transferred the Spring Street property
    to the trust. Schedule B of the trust document set forth the same payment amounts that the
    post-nuptial agreement called the “Widow’s Benefit,” but retitled the payment schedule as the
    “Monthly Amount.” Article 4 made the trust “irrevocable,” providing that Raleigh “cannot alter,
    amend, revoke, or terminate it in any way.” Article 5 provided that, during Bonnie’s lifetime,
    the trustee would distribute to Bonnie the net monthly income from the trust.
    Less than a month later, the circuit court entered the couple’s final decree of divorce.
    The final decree provided that “the terms of the post-nuptial agreement dated June 10, 2002 are
    hereby ratified, affirmed, adopted, incorporated, but not merged, approved and expressly made a
    part of this decree, and the parties hereto are ORDERED to comply therewith.”
    A few months after they divorced, Bonnie and Raleigh signed a “Supplemental
    Post-Nuptial Agreement” to settle various disputes that had arisen between them, none of which
    is pertinent here. That document, however, provided that “[a]ll other portions” of the
    post-nuptial agreement “shall continue in full force and effect.” Raleigh and Bonnie agreed to a
    consent order in the divorce case incorporating the supplemental agreement.
    After the divorce, Bonnie began receiving the income from Spring Street. Raleigh died
    testate in December 2017. His grandson, defendant Gabriel Seth Worsham (“Seth”), was
    -4-
    appointed executor. As executor, Seth began paying Bonnie $10,000 a month but stopped
    distributing income from Spring Street. He subsequently claimed that Bonnie was not entitled to
    the monthly payment because she was not Raleigh’s “widow.”
    II. PROCEEDINGS BELOW
    In January 2019, Bonnie—individually and in her capacity as co-trustee of the trust—
    sued Seth, individually and as executor of Raleigh’s estate.2 She claimed that Seth breached the
    post-nuptial agreement and the trust document by withholding the promised Spring Street
    income and by failing to ensure that the trust contained sufficient assets to generate the $10,000
    “Monthly Amount” or “Widow’s Benefit.” Bonnie sought an order compelling Seth to transfer
    to the trust additional income-producing assets sufficient to generate at least $10,000 a month in
    benefits; awarding “Bonnie, as beneficiary of the trust,” judgment against Seth in the amount of
    the Spring Street income withheld from the trust; awarding her costs and attorney fees; and
    awarding “such additional and further relief [as] the Court deems just and proper.”
    The circuit court, Judge R. Edwin Burnette, Jr., presiding, denied the parties’
    cross-motions for summary judgment, concluding that a trial was necessary because the
    post-nuptial agreement was ambiguous and the material facts were in dispute. He reasoned that
    “reasonable people” could disagree whether “the use of wife in one part of the postnup and
    widow in the other . . . creates an inconsistency that the trier of fact is entitled to decide. I can’t
    make that call.” (Emphasis added). Judge Burnette denied Bonnie’s motion for reconsideration
    and set the case for trial.
    2
    Raleigh’s sons—William Travis Worsham and Raleigh Elroy Worsham—were also
    made defendants as residual beneficiaries under the trust. Neither appeared, however, and a
    default was entered against them.
    -5-
    After Judge Burnette retired, the case was assigned to Judge F. Patrick Yeatts. On the
    day set for trial, Judge Yeatts “sua sponte, reopened the summary judgment proceedings and
    heard additional argument” on the parties’ motions. He issued a letter opinion in March 2020,
    granting Bonnie partial summary judgment on the breach-of-contract claims. Judge Yeatts found
    that paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement provides “two separate income sources for Bonnie
    and that the “$10,000 per month for the Widow’s Benefit is a separate income source for Bonnie
    in addition to the Spring Street income.” He rejected Seth’s argument that Bonnie was not a
    “widow” entitled to the “Widow’s Benefit.” Judge Yeatts reasoned that the post-nuptial
    agreement provides income to Bonnie “during her lifetime” and that she is referred to as “Wife”
    throughout the document, even in “situations after divorce.”
    Seth objected to that ruling and moved for reconsideration, submitting two notes
    purportedly from Raleigh and an unsigned letter from December 2001 between Raleigh’s
    attorneys. Seth also tendered the deposition of Raleigh’s lawyer, Paul Feinman, one of the
    attorneys who drafted the post-nuptial agreement. Seth claims that the trial court erred by
    refusing to consider those documents. He says they show Raleigh’s “clear and expressed intent”
    that Bonnie “only receive the ‘Widow’s Benefit’ if the parties were married at the time of his
    death.” Opening Br. 18. Judge Yeatts overruled Seth’s objection and denied the motion for
    reconsideration.
    The final order directed Seth, as executor, to transfer sufficient assets from Raleigh’s
    estate to generate a gross monthly income of $10,000, “independent of any other” assets owned
    by the trust. The circuit court also determined that $248,080 was due to be restored to the trust,
    noting that Seth did not challenge the accuracy of that figure. Bonnie, in her capacity as
    “Co-Trustee of the Trust,” was awarded those “monetary damages against” Seth, as executor.
    -6-
    Bonnie, “in her individual capacity,” was awarded reasonable attorney fees and costs in the
    amount of $132,382.89 under paragraph 21 of the post-nuptial agreement.
    Seth moved to set aside the final order, arguing that the damages award to Bonnie as
    “Co-Trustee of the Trust” was inappropriate because the complaint did not allege that the trust
    itself had sustained any damages. He also claimed that the attorney-fee award to Bonnie in her
    individual capacity was improper because her claim arose under the trust, not the post-nuptial
    agreement. Judge Yeatts denied that motion, finding the attorney-fee award proper and the
    damages award within the scope of the “general prayer” for relief on the breach-of-contract
    claim.
    Seth noted an appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia, but the Supreme Court transferred
    the appeal here under Code § 8.01-677.1, concluding that this appeal arises out of a “domestic
    relations” matter.3
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. The post-nuptial agreement unambiguously provides lifetime benefits to
    Bonnie through the trust.
    Seth’s first five assignments of error challenge Judge Yeatts’s decision finding the
    obligations under paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement to be unambiguous and granting
    summary judgment to Bonnie. We review “de novo” a trial court’s decision granting summary
    judgment. VACORP v. Young, 
    298 Va. 490
    , 494 (2020). Moreover, “[w]hether contractual
    provisions are ambiguous is a question of law and not of fact.” Nextel Wip Lease Corp. v.
    3
    Before January 1, 2022, this Court exercised jurisdiction over appeals from the circuit
    court in various “domestic relations” matters arising under Title 20, Code § 17.1-405(3)(f)
    (2020), while the Supreme Court exercised appellate jurisdiction over civil appeals in ordinary
    breach-of-contract disputes outside the domestic-relations context, Code § 8.01-670(A)(3)
    (2015). Effective January 1, 2022, this Court now exercises appellate jurisdiction over all such
    appeals from the circuit court. See 2021 Va. Acts ch. 489, Spec. Sess. I (amending Code
    § 17.1-405(3)).
    -7-
    Saunders, 
    276 Va. 509
    , 515 (2008). We do not defer to the trial court’s determination because
    “we have an equal opportunity to consider the words of the contract within the four corners of
    the instrument itself.” Va. Elec. & Power Co. v. N. Va. Reg’l Park Auth., 
    270 Va. 309
    , 315
    (2005) (quoting Eure v. Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp., 
    263 Va. 624
    , 631 (2002));
    Vilseck v. Vilseck, 
    45 Va. App. 581
    , 588 n.3 (2005) (same).
    Seth maintains that the post-nuptial agreement is at least ambiguous about whether
    Bonnie is entitled to the “Widow’s Benefit” for life under the trust referenced in paragraph 5. He
    claims that the judge should have conducted a trial to evaluate the parol evidence to discern the
    parties’ true intent. We disagree.
    The parol-evidence rule controls these questions. Parol derives from the Anglo-French
    term meaning “word” or “speech.” 2 Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary 2082
    (1971). Our Supreme Court said in the mid-19th century that the parol-evidence rule was
    grounded in “the common law at so early a day [that it] has been uniformly adhered to by the
    courts both of England and this country ever since.” Towner v. Lucas’ Ex’r, 
    54 Va. (13 Gratt.) 705
    , 711 (1857). By the middle of the last century, the rule had “nowhere been more strictly
    adhered to in its integrity than in Virginia.” Pulaski Nat’l Bank v. Harrell, 
    203 Va. 227
    , 233
    (1962). The Supreme Court has commended the rule over the years as “hoary,” White v.
    Commonwealth, 
    158 Va. 749
    , 758 (1932); “venerable,” Ott v. L&J Holdings, LLC, 
    275 Va. 182
    ,
    187 (2008); and “founded in wisdom,” Slaughter v. Smither, 
    97 Va. 202
    , 205 (1899). The rule is
    now “a time-honored fixture in the law of this Commonwealth,” Amos v. Coffey, 
    228 Va. 88
    , 91
    (1984), “extend[ing] to every class of contracts reduced to writing,” Hilb v. Peyton, 
    63 Va. (22 Gratt.) 550
    , 564 (1872).
    At its essence, the parol-evidence rule provides that “where [the] parties have reduced
    their contract to a writing [that] imposes a legal obligation in clear and explicit terms[,] the
    -8-
    writing [is] the sole memorial of that contract, and it is conclusively concluded that the writing
    contains the whole contract, and is the sole evidence of the agreement.” Jim Carpenter Co. v.
    Potts, 
    255 Va. 147
    , 155 (1998) (quoting Pulaski, 
    203 Va. at 233
    ). It is sometimes called “the
    ‘plain meaning’ rule.” Berry v. Klinger, 
    225 Va. 201
    , 208 (1983). When the contract is
    unambiguous, extrinsic evidence of prior or contemporary discussions, understandings, or
    agreements, is inadmissible “to contradict or vary the plain language of the instrument itself.”
    Utsch v. Utsch, 
    266 Va. 124
    , 130 (2003) (quoting 11 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts
    § 33.1, at 556 (4th ed. 1999)).
    Failing to respect the parol-evidence rule “would result in unacceptable uncertainty in the
    law.” Id. at 129. Without it, “no lawyer would be safe” to advise about how a written contract
    would be construed, since at some “future” date another party could “contradict or vary the plain
    language of the instrument itself” by citing “parol evidence of the particular meaning [that] the
    party affixed to his words, or of his secret intention in making the instrument.” Id. at 130
    (quoting Williston on Contracts, supra, at 556).
    The parol-evidence rule excludes extrinsic evidence more broadly when the writing is a
    “complete integration”—a comprehensive expression of the parties’ agreement—than a “partial
    integration”—one that does not address all of the terms of the parties’ understanding. E.g.,
    Renner Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. v. Renner, 
    225 Va. 508
    , 515 (1983). If only
    a partial integration exists, the rule permits the use of some parol evidence, “not to contradict or
    vary its terms but to show additional independent facts contemporaneously agreed upon, in order
    to establish the entire contract between the parties.” 
    Id. at 515-16
     (quoting High Knob, Inc. v.
    Allen, 
    205 Va. 503
    , 506 (1964)); see also Jim Carpenter Co., 255 Va. at 156 (same). For a
    complete integration, by contrast, the rule also bars parol evidence that is offered to “add to or
    explain the terms of a complete, unambiguous, unconditional, written instrument.” Godwin v.
    -9-
    Kerns, 
    178 Va. 447
    , 451 (1941). See generally Kent Sinclair, Law of Evidence in Virginia
    § 19-2[b] (8th ed. 2021).
    No one has suggested that the post-nuptial agreement here is anything but a complete
    integration of Raleigh and Bonnie’s agreement. Paragraph 29, in fact, says that the agreement
    represents “the entire understanding of the parties” and there are “no promises or undertakings,
    written or oral, other than those expressly set forth” in the agreement.4 And even if Seth had
    asserted partial-integration status, it would not matter because the rule, even for partial
    integrations, bars parol evidence that would “contradict or vary” the terms of the writing.
    Renner Plumbing, 225 Va. at 515 (quoting High Knob, 
    205 Va. at 506
    ); Georgiades v. Biggs,
    
    197 Va. 630
    , 634 (1956) (same).
    Virginia has recognized several exceptions to the parol-evidence rule. See generally
    Shevel’s, Inc. v. Se. Assocs., Inc., 
    228 Va. 175
    , 182-83 (1984). But “[t]he only exception
    pertinent to this appeal is that the [parol-evidence] rule, by definition, does not apply if the
    language of the written instrument is ambiguous.” Amos, 228 Va. at 92.
    So the primary question we need to answer is whether paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial
    agreement unambiguously requires that the trust established by Raleigh provide lifetime benefits
    to Bonnie, even after divorce. “The search for this plain meaning does not myopically focus on a
    word here or a phrase there.” Erie Ins. Exch. v. EPC MD 15, LLC, 
    297 Va. 21
    , 28 (2019).
    Rather, the “contract must be construed as a whole and the intention of the parties is to be
    collected from the entire instrument and not from detached portions.” Sweely Holdings, LLC v.
    4
    While such a “merger” or “integration” clause is not dispositive in proving a complete
    integration, it provides strong evidence. See Shevel’s, Inc. v. Se. Assocs., Inc., 
    228 Va. 175
    , 183
    (1984) (noting that a merger clause “may impose . . . a heavy burden of persuasion” on the party
    claiming partial-integration status); Sinclair, supra § 19-2[a] (“Formal agreements, especially
    those with an integration clause, are treated as complete.”).
    - 10 -
    SunTrust Bank, 
    296 Va. 367
    , 376-77 (2018) (quoting Babcock & Wilcox Co. v. Areva NP, Inc.,
    
    292 Va. 165
    , 180 n.8 (2016)). “[E]very word, clause, and provision of the [contract] ‘should be
    considered and construed together and seemingly conflicting provisions harmonized when that
    can be reasonably done, so as to effectuate the intention . . . expressed” by the parties. Erie Ins.
    Exch., 297 Va. at 28 (quoting Floyd v. N. Neck Ins., 
    245 Va. 153
    , 158 (1993)).
    An ambiguity is not present simply because one could “hypothesize ‘opposing
    interpretations’ of the same contractual provision.” 
    Id. at 29
     (quoting Babcock, 292 Va. at 179).
    Rather, “conflicting interpretations reveal an ambiguity only where they are reasonable.” Id. A
    “reasonable” interpretation “is one of two competing interpretations that are ‘equally possible’
    given the text and context of the disputed provision.” Id.
    Reading the text of paragraph 5 in the context of the entire post-nuptial agreement, we
    conclude that it is unambiguous and that Seth’s contrary construction is unreasonable. To start,
    paragraph 5 requires Raleigh to establish a trust “for Wife’s lifetime benefit.” We see nothing in
    that paragraph or any other part of the agreement to support Seth’s claim that Bonnie’s “lifetime
    benefit” would terminate if Raleigh divorced Bonnie.
    We disagree with Seth that a termination-upon-divorce requirement can be inferred from
    the use of defined terms like “Wife” and “Widow’s Benefit” in paragraph 5. True, “wife” and
    “husband” ordinarily denote persons who are married at the time, and Judge Burnette appeared
    to rely on that notion when denying Bonnie’s original summary-judgment motion. The words of
    an instrument “are normally given their usual, ordinary, and popular meaning.” Riverside
    Healthcare Ass’n, Inc. v. Forbes, 
    281 Va. 522
    , 530 (2011) (quoting PMA Cap. Ins. Co. v. U.S.
    Airways, Inc., 
    271 Va. 352
    , 358 (2006)). But the ordinary meaning of such terms does not
    control when, as in this case, “it is manifest from the [instrument] itself that other definitions are
    intended.” Id. at 529-30 (quoting Wallace v. Wallace, 
    168 Va. 216
    , 224 (1937)) (alteration in
    - 11 -
    original) (emphasis added). Judge Yeatts was right that the introductory clause of the
    post-nuptial agreement defined Raleigh and Bonnie in all cases as “Husband” and “Wife,” using
    those terms “throughout” the agreement to describe the parties’ rights and obligations, including
    “after a divorce.” Paragraph 2, for instance, says: “If the parties are divorced, any such property
    will be owned . . . as tenants in common, but Wife shall have the sole right to occupy such
    property during her lifetime.” (Emphasis added). And again: “After divorce, Wife may decide
    to sell the former marital home . . . .” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    The couple used “Widow’s Benefit” as a similar, party-defined term. It was the “gross
    monthly income equal to what the parties would call the ‘Widow’s Benefit,’” the amounts of
    which were set forth in the schedule that followed. (Emphasis added). That what-the-parties-
    would-call qualification shows that the meaning of “Widow’s Benefit” did not turn on whether
    Bonnie was literally married to Raleigh when he died; it was simply their agreed term for the
    required monthly benefits to be paid.
    That reading is corroborated by the trust document itself. Raleigh sued Bonnie for
    divorce in 2004 but created the trust in 2005, shortly before the final decree of divorce was
    entered. Despite that their marital bonds were about to be severed, Raleigh used the phrase
    “Monthly Amount” in the trust document to describe the same amounts he promised to Bonnie
    as a “Widow’s Benefit” in paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement.
    Seth does not persuade us that the parties used “Widow’s Benefit” to create an incentive
    for Bonnie to stay married to Raleigh. When the parties intended a stay-married incentive, they
    explicitly created one. Paragraph 7 held out the promise of a $100,000 bonus to Bonnie upon
    Raleigh’s death, but “only if Husband and Wife are married at the time of Husband’s death.” No
    similar requirement was attached to the “lifetime benefit” in paragraph 5. The use of an explicit
    stay-married requirement in paragraph 7 shows that the drafters “understood the import of the
    - 12 -
    chosen language and intended to accomplish a different result” when they did not use that
    language in paragraph 5. Elmore v. Va. Nat’l Bank, 
    232 Va. 310
    , 315 (1986).
    What is more, Seth ignores that paragraphs 24 and 35 of the post-nuptial agreement are
    all but dispositive of the parties’ desire that the trust obligations in paragraph 5 survive divorce.
    Paragraph 24 (“Subsequent Divorce”) provided that if either party filed for divorce, each party
    promised to ratify and incorporate “but not merge” the agreement into any final divorce decree to
    ensure that the decree “obligates both of them to perform in accordance with” the agreement’s
    terms. Paragraph 35 (“Effect of Reconciliation”) likewise said that the agreement would
    continue in “full force and effect without abatement . . . following a subsequent separation and/or
    divorce if the parties do reconcile.” (Emphasis added). Those paragraphs unambiguously show
    that the parties intended for the entire post-nuptial agreement to survive divorce, including the
    “lifetime” benefit granted to Bonnie in paragraph 5. Although paragraphs 24 and 35 are key to
    understanding this case, Seth fails to acknowledge them in either his opening brief or reply brief.
    That the parties intended the trust obligations to survive divorce is reinforced again by the
    Supplemental Post-Nuptial Agreement, signed several months after the final divorce decree.
    That agreement resolved various disputes that had arisen between the parties but provided that
    “[a]ll other portions” of the post-nuptial agreement “shall continue in full force and effect.”
    Raleigh and Bonnie would not have said that if the divorce had rendered the trust obligations in
    paragraph 5 inoperative.
    Seth insists that a QTIP trust cannot achieve the tax benefit of deferring estate taxes on
    the trust corpus unless the surviving spouse is married to the grantor at the time of the grantor’s
    death. He says that a QTIP trust “is a creature of federal tax law that permits a married couple to
    defer the collection of estate taxes until both spouses die while allowing the grantor to determine
    how the trust’s assets are distributed upon the death of the surviving spouse.” Opening Br. 1. To
    - 13 -
    obtain that tax deferral until the death of the “surviving spouse,” as provided in 
    26 U.S.C. § 2056
    , the surviving spouse must be married to the grantor at the time of death. 
    Id.
    Assuming without deciding that Seth’s understanding of federal estate-tax law is correct,
    it does not affect our conclusion that paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement unambiguously
    required Raleigh to create a trust to provide lifetime benefits to Bonnie in the scheduled amounts,
    even after their divorce. Seth’s counsel conceded at oral argument that the mere fact that the
    couple divorced before Raleigh died did not defeat or invalidate the trust. Seth agrees that a
    QTIP trust can have multiple purposes, only one of which is to defer estate taxes until the
    surviving spouse’s death. Another purpose is to provide lifetime income to the grantee. Still
    another purpose is to protect the corpus of the trust to benefit the grantor’s heirs, something
    common in estate planning among persons in later marriages who have children from a previous
    marriage (as in Raleigh’s case). See Est. of Shelfer v. C.I.R., 
    86 F.3d 1045
    , 1048-49 (11th Cir.
    1996) (“As divorce and remarriage rates rose, Congress became increasingly concerned with the
    difficult choice facing those in second marriages, who could either provide for their spouse to the
    possible detriment of the children of a prior marriage or risk under-endowing their spouse to
    provide directly for the children.”).
    The trust Raleigh established accomplishes the second and third purposes even if, owing
    to the divorce, it does not successfully defer estate taxes until Bonnie’s death. The trust still
    serves the purpose of providing Bonnie the “lifetime benefit” Raleigh promised in paragraph 5 of
    the post-nuptial agreement. And Seth’s counsel agreed at oral argument that the “corpus” of the
    trust will ultimately pass to Raleigh’s “two sons” upon Bonnie’s death.
    The post-nuptial agreement is not rendered ambiguous, as Seth claims, because Judge
    Burnette and Judge Yeatts disagreed about how to read it. For one thing, Judge Burnette did not
    address paragraphs 24 and 35, or the other points set forth above. For another, ambiguity is not
    - 14 -
    created simply because the parties disagree about the proper interpretation, Babcock, 292 Va. at
    179, or even when “courts in different jurisdictions” disagree, Bartolomucci v. Fed. Ins. Co., 
    289 Va. 361
    , 371 (2015). This Court in Utsch found ambiguous the instrument by which the husband
    conveyed his separately owned real estate to his wife—the wife claimed it was a “true gift,”
    while the husband insisted that it was intended simply to obtain refinancing. Utsch v. Utsch, 
    38 Va. App. 450
    , 462-63 (2002), rev’d, 
    266 Va. 124
     (2003). But the Supreme Court reversed,
    holding that we erred in going beyond the “four corners of the instrument,” which declared itself
    a “deed of gift” and recited that it was in consideration of “love and affection.” 
    266 Va. at 129
    .
    We would likewise err to venture beyond the four corners of the post-nuptial agreement,
    paragraph 5 of which confers a lifetime benefit on Bonnie without regard to whether she stayed
    married to Raleigh.
    Finally, Seth cannot prevail by relying on parol evidence of Raleigh’s intent when
    negotiating the post-nuptial agreement. After Judge Yeatts issued his letter opinion granting
    summary judgment to Bonnie, Seth asked the court to consider various extrinsic evidence. He
    offered Raleigh’s personal notes from November 2001 that Raleigh had shared with his sons (but
    not with Bonnie), and a letter from one of Raleigh’s lawyers, Paul Feinman, to another of
    Raleigh’s lawyers in December 2001—six months before Raleigh and Bonnie signed the
    post-nuptial agreement. Opening Br. 17-21.5 Seth also proffered that Feinman would testify at
    trial about Raleigh’s state of mind and intentions.
    The circuit court did not err in rejecting Seth’s parol evidence and denying his motion for
    reconsideration. As already noted, parol evidence “may not be admitted to contradict or vary the
    5
    These are written documents, not oral statements. But while the term parol might
    suggest that the parol-evidence rule excludes only “oral” statements, the rule also excludes
    “written” evidence offered to contradict the terms of the parties’ written agreement. Sale v. Figg,
    
    164 Va. 402
    , 409 (1935).
    - 15 -
    clearly expressed terms of a written agreement.” Anden Grp. v. Leesburg Joint Venture, 
    237 Va. 453
    , 458 (1989). Put another way, a party cannot use parol evidence “to first create an
    ambiguity and then to remove it.” Doswell Ltd. P’ship v. Va. Elec. & Power Co., 
    251 Va. 215
    ,
    223 (1996). “Here, the parol evidence relied on . . . directly contradicts the written documents.”
    Anden Grp., 237 Va. at 458. So Seth’s evidence was inadmissible at the outset.6
    In short, the failure of the trust to achieve the federal-estate-tax-deferral benefit of a
    “QTIP” trust does not prevent it from achieving its other purposes. We see nothing in the text of
    the post-nuptial agreement or trust to suggest that Bonnie or Raleigh thought otherwise. Raleigh
    kept his promise to Bonnie: he made the trust “irrevocable,” providing the same lifetime benefits
    to Bonnie that he had promised in paragraph 5 of the post-nuptial agreement. Accordingly, the
    trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to Bonnie.
    B. The damages award fits the relief sought in the complaint.
    Seth’s sixth assignment of error challenges the circuit court’s refusal to strike Bonnie’s
    damages evidence and set aside the monetary award of $248,080 to Bonnie in her capacity as
    “Co-Trustee of the Trust.” Seth does not dispute the amount. The monetary award consists of
    the value of assets sufficient to generate a gross monthly income of $10,000, along with the
    income stream from Spring Street. While Seth argued below that Bonnie was not entitled to both
    income streams, the trial court resolved that controversy in Bonnie’s favor, and Seth has not
    challenged that ruling on appeal. Instead, Seth contends in this assignment of error only that the
    monetary award conflicted with the prayer for relief in Bonnie’s complaint, where she
    6
    Parol evidence is also “never competent to show merely what one of the parties to a
    contract thought.” Title Ins. Co. of Richmond v. Howell, 
    158 Va. 713
    , 718 (1932). Because our
    conclusion that the post-nuptial agreement is unambiguous makes parol evidence inadmissible to
    contradict its plain terms, we need not reach whether Seth’s parol evidence was also inadmissible
    because he failed to proffer that Raleigh’s personal notes and the letter between Raleigh’s
    lawyers were shared with Bonnie or her lawyer before Bonnie signed the agreement.
    - 16 -
    requested—among other things—a monetary award in her capacity as beneficiary of the trust,
    not as trustee of the trust.
    In evaluating the trial court’s decision on Seth’s motion to strike, we take the evidence in
    the light most favorable to Bonnie, the non-moving party. Dill v. Kroger Ltd. P’ship I, 
    300 Va. 99
    , 109 (2021). But whether “a cause of action is sufficiently [pleaded] is a legal issue [that] we
    review de novo.” TC MidAtlantic Dev., Inc. v. Commonwealth, 
    280 Va. 204
    , 210 (2010).
    Seth invokes the general rule that “no court can base its judgment or decree upon facts
    not alleged or upon a right which has not been pleaded and claimed.” Ted Lansing Supply Co. v.
    Royal Aluminum & Constr. Corp., 
    221 Va. 1139
    , 1141 (1981). Ted Lansing makes clear that
    “[p]leadings are as essential as proof, and no relief should be granted that does not substantially
    accord with the case as made in the pleading.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Bank of Giles Cnty. v. Mason, 
    199 Va. 176
    , 180 (1957)). “Every litigant is entitled to be told by his adversary in plain and explicit
    language what is his ground of complaint or defense.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Potts v. Mathieson Alkali
    Works, 
    165 Va. 196
    , 207 (1935)).
    But Bonnie did not violate the Ted Lansing rule.7
    Seth overlooks that the complaint here sounds in equity, seeking both specific
    performance and injunctive relief—equitable remedies that permit a trial judge, sitting as
    chancellor, to award additional, equivalent, or alternative relief in the form of money damages.
    “Specific performance is an equitable remedy . . . .” Allen v. Allen, 
    66 Va. App. 586
    , 599 (2016)
    (quoting Chattin v. Chattin, 
    245 Va. 302
    , 306 (1993)). So is injunctive relief. E.g., Wright v.
    Castles, 
    232 Va. 218
    , 224 (1986). By contrast, “an action for money damages was ‘the
    7
    When asked at oral argument what prejudice Seth suffered because of the alleged
    pleading deficiency, his counsel identified no unfair surprise or impairment to Seth’s ability to
    defend the case. Because Seth’s arguments fail as a matter of law, we do not address whether
    lack of prejudice is a relevant factor in determining if the relief awarded was properly pleaded.
    - 17 -
    traditional form of relief offered in the courts of law.’” Ingram v. Commonwealth, 
    62 Va. App. 14
    , 27 (2013) (quoting Chauffeurs, Teamsters & Helpers, Loc. No. 391 v. Terry, 
    494 U.S. 558
    ,
    570 (1990)). Even so, “[w]hen a court of equity acquires jurisdiction of a cause for any purpose,
    the court may retain the entire cause to accomplish complete justice between the parties. Thus,
    the chancellor may hear legal claims and enforce legal rights by applying remedies available
    only at law.” Advanced Marine Enters, Inc. v. PRC Inc., 
    256 Va. 106
    , 122 (1998). The power of
    equity to award complete relief is sometimes called the “clean-up doctrine.” Funny Guy, LLC v.
    Lecego, LLC, 
    293 Va. 135
    , 144 (2017); see W. Hamilton Bryson, The Merger of Common-Law
    and Equity Pleading in Virginia, 
    41 U. Rich. L. Rev. 77
    , 81 (2006). Indeed, “even where no
    prayer for general relief is included in the bill of complaint, a court in equity may properly grant
    appropriate relief not specifically requested.” Johnson v. Buzzard Island Shooting Club, Inc.,
    
    232 Va. 32
    , 36 (1986).8
    Put another way, a claim for injunctive relief or specific performance necessarily implies
    a request for monetary relief as a lesser-included remedy, so much so that a plaintiff need not
    explicitly pray for money damages as a fallback position. Winston v. Winston, 
    144 Va. 848
    , 858
    (1925). In Winston, for instance, the Court held that a complaint praying for specific
    8
    Since the General Assembly provided for the merger of law and equity, effective
    January 1, 2006, see 2005 Va. Acts ch. 681, § 3, there is now only “one form of civil case,
    known as a civil action,” Rule 3:1. Although that merger created “a single procedure system for
    civil cases in the Commonwealth, it preserves in all respects the distinctions between law and
    equity, concerning the substance of equitable claims and defenses, rights of action, limitations
    principles, and the powers and limits on the courts in entertaining such actions.” Kent Sinclair &
    Leigh B. Middleditch, Virginia Civil Procedure § 1.14 (7th ed. 2021). See, e.g., Henderson v.
    Ayers & Hartnett, P.C., 
    285 Va. 556
    , 563 (2013) (applying the clean-up doctrine to uphold the
    trial judge’s attorney-fee ruling “because an equity court may decide a collateral legal issue once
    it has the res necessary for the exercise of its jurisdiction”); accord Grupo Mexicano de
    Desarrollo, S.A. v. Alliance Bond Fund, Inc., 
    527 U.S. 308
    , 322 (1999) (“Notwithstanding the
    fusion of law and equity by the [federal] Rules of Civil Procedure, the substantive principles of
    Courts of Chancery remain unaffected.” (quoting Stainback v. Mo Hock Ke Lok Po, 
    336 U.S. 368
    , 382 n.26 (1949))).
    - 18 -
    performance alone is “in all respects the same” as a complaint seeking both specific performance
    and money damages, in the alternative. Id. at 859-60.
    This long-established principle of equity practice is fatal to Seth’s argument. Bonnie
    sought specific performance of Seth’s obligation as executor to “transfer additional income
    producing assets from the Estate to the Trust” to generate the $10,000 monthly benefit. She also
    asked the court for an order “enjoining” Seth from “taking further action . . . other than the
    transfer of income generating assets from the Estate to the Trust . . . and issuing a directive to the
    tenant of Spring Street to remit all rent payments to Bonnie and any successor co-trustee, as
    trustee(s) of the Trust.” The trial judge awarded the functional equivalent of that relief. He
    ordered Seth (as executor of Raleigh’s estate) to transfer sufficient income-generating assets to
    the trust to meet the $10,000-per-month income obligation. He also ordered Seth to pay the
    monetary judgment to Bonnie (in her capacity as trustee of the trust) in the amount that Seth had
    failed to transfer. That monetary award was well within the scope of the equitable relief that
    Bonnie requested.
    The rule in Ted Lansing is inapplicable for another reason: the monetary award to
    Bonnie in her capacity as trustee fit the general prayer for relief in the complaint, which
    requested “such additional and further relief [as] the Court deems just and proper.” Compl. 10.
    “Generally, ‘a court of equity may grant proper relief under the general prayer that is consistent
    with the case stated in the bill of complaint.’” D’Ambrosio v. D’Ambrosio, 
    45 Va. App. 323
    , 336
    (2005) (quoting Jenkins v. Bay House Assocs., L.P., 
    266 Va. 39
    , 44 (2003)).
    Seth argues that the monetary award to Bonnie in her capacity as “trustee” of the trust
    conflicts with her separate request for a monetary award in her individual capacity as the trust’s
    “beneficiary.” It is true, of course, that “a litigant cannot take inconsistent positions, and for the
    same reasons, when there is a special prayer, the court cannot under a general prayer grant a
    - 19 -
    relief inconsistent therewith.” Winston, 144 Va. at 859; see also Jenkins, 
    266 Va. at 45
     (“[A]
    general prayer will support relief only for those matters placed in controversy by the pleadings
    and, thus, any relief granted must be supported by allegations of material facts in the pleadings
    that will sustain such relief.”).
    But as shown above, the monetary award to Bonnie as trustee aligns with the equitable
    relief requested, which included specific performance of Seth’s obligations to properly fund the
    trust. That congruence does not become misaligned simply because the complaint also
    requested, as additional or alternative relief, compensatory damages for Bonnie in her capacity as
    the trust’s beneficiary.
    Ted Lansing was materially different. The counterclaim there relied exclusively on an
    express-warranty theory, but the trial judge “sua sponte . . . interjected” in the jury charge an
    implied-warranty-of-fitness theory. Ted Lansing, 221 Va. at 1140. That “variance” between the
    proof and pleading was problematic because the facts pleaded “did not support the legal theory
    for the judgment sought.” Chesterfield Meadows Shopping Ctr. Assocs., L.P. v. Smith, 
    264 Va. 350
    , 356 (2002). In this case, by contrast, the judgment rendered is in harmony with the theory
    of the complaint and the relief requested. So Ted Lansing is “inapposite.” 
    Id.
    C. The trial court did not err in awarding attorney fees to Bonnie.
    Under the “American rule” applied in Virginia, prevailing litigants generally cannot
    recover their attorney fees9 unless permitted by statute, contract, or some other recognized
    9
    We use attorney fees rather than the possessive form attorney’s fees unless quoting the
    parties’ own documents. Several variations of the term are grammatically correct: attorney’s
    fees; attorneys’ fees; attorney fees; counsel fees. See Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s Dictionary of
    Legal Usage 94 (3d ed. 2011). Although attorney fees may be “inelegant,” it is “increasingly
    common,” operating as “a means to avoid having to get the apostrophe right.” 
    Id.
     The Rules of
    the Supreme Court of Virginia repeatedly use attorney fees. E.g., Rules 1:1A, 5:20(g), 5:35 (last
    amended Nov. 1, 2021). We follow that convention here too.
    - 20 -
    exception. E.g., W. Square, L.L.C. v. Commc’n Techs., Inc., 
    274 Va. 425
    , 433 (2007). The
    post-nuptial agreement here contained a fee-shifting provision, but the trust document did not.
    The trial court awarded Bonnie, “in her individual capacity,” attorney fees and costs in the
    amount of $132,382.89 under paragraph 21 of the post-nuptial agreement.
    In his seventh and final assignment of error, Seth objects to that award on the ground that
    this “case arose under the QTIP trust, which does not contain an attorney’s fee provision.” Seth
    does not assign error either to the amount of the fee award or to the award of fees to Bonnie in
    her individual capacity. He argues only that Bonnie’s claim arose under the trust, not the
    post-nuptial agreement. Whether a contract entitles the prevailing party to attorney fees is a
    question of law that we review “de novo.” Online Res. Corp. v. Lawlor, 
    285 Va. 40
    , 61 (2013).
    Seth is mistaken that this case arose only under the trust. That claim contradicts Seth’s
    own arguments, which focus on terms like “Wife” and “Widow’s Benefit” in the post-nuptial
    agreement to support his ambiguity theory. Seth also overlooks that paragraph 5 of the
    post-nuptial agreement specifically required him, as executor, to transfer “additional assets . . . to
    the Trust at Husband’s death” sufficient to generate the specified monthly amount (called the
    “Widow’s Benefit” in the post-nuptial agreement and the “Monthly Amount” in the trust).
    Because the trial court found that Seth defaulted in carrying out that obligation, it properly
    awarded attorney fees to Bonnie under the fee-shifting provision in paragraph 21 of the
    post-nuptial agreement.
    D. The trial court should decide on remand whether Bonnie is entitled to more
    attorney fees and costs.
    Bonnie claims that she is entitled to attorney fees and costs under paragraph 21 of the
    post-nuptial agreement for the expense of defending this appeal. She asks us to remand the case
    under Rule 5A:30(b) for the trial court to make another fee award.
    - 21 -
    Bonnie’s request raises a question that the parties have not addressed. As just discussed,
    the final order here awarded Bonnie her attorney fees and costs, but only “in her individual
    capacity.” The award of monetary damages, by contrast, was made to Bonnie in her capacity as
    “Co-Trustee of the Trust.” The parties have not briefed whether Bonnie’s defense of the appeal
    of the monetary judgment, awarded to her as trustee under the trust (which contains no
    fee-shifting provision), entitles her to attorney fees in her individual capacity under the
    post-nuptial agreement (which provides the only contractual basis for fee-shifting). Furthermore,
    the first six assignments of error addressed the monetary award; only the seventh addressed the
    attorney-fees award.
    If Bonnie is entitled to appellate fees, it is only under the post-nuptial agreement, not the
    trust. “Even though claims may be intertwined and have a common factual basis,” the moving
    party must “‘establish to a reasonable degree of specificity’” that the attorney fees sought were
    incurred to litigate issues arising under the contract containing the fee-shifting provision.
    W. Square, 274 Va. at 435-36 (quoting Ulloa v. QSP, Inc., 
    271 Va. 72
    , 83 (2006)).
    We leave it to the trial court on remand to sort out whether Bonnie is entitled to
    appellate-attorney fees and costs under paragraph 21 of the post-nuptial agreement, and if so, the
    proper amount. We likewise leave it to the trial court to decide in the first instance if Bonnie is
    entitled to attorney fees for litigating the fee issues on remand.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    The trial court properly construed the post-nuptial agreement and trust to require a
    lifetime benefit to Bonnie even if she and Raleigh later divorced. Because the contract
    documents are unambiguous on this point, the trial court correctly rejected Seth’s proffered parol
    evidence and granted summary judgment to Bonnie. The trial court also properly awarded
    monetary damages to Bonnie as trustee. The monetary award accomplished the same purpose as
    - 22 -
    the equitable relief she requested: remedying Seth’s breach of the post-nuptial agreement,
    making the trust whole, and enabling the trust to carry out its obligations to Bonnie. The
    attorney-fees award was also proper.
    We therefore affirm the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion. Upon remand, Bonnie may submit to the circuit court a claim for further
    attorney fees and costs. The circuit court should award Bonnie additional fees and costs to the
    extent it determines that they were reasonably and necessarily incurred under paragraph 21 of the
    post-nuptial agreement.
    Affirmed and remanded.
    - 23 -