Kathleen M. Grant v. John D. Grant , 199 Wash. App. 119 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                               FILED
    MAY 23, 2017
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    In re KATHLEEN M. GRANT,                       )
    )         No. 34321-9-111
    Appellant,                )
    )
    and                                     )
    )
    JOHN D. GRANT,                                 )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Respondent.               )
    FEARING, C.J. -This appeal pits the importance of finality in litigation against
    the requisite for a full accounting of assets in a marital dissolution. Based on Washington
    statutes and the Supreme Court's wisdom in Yeats v. Estate of Yeats, 
    90 Wash. 2d 201
    , 
    580 P.2d 617
    (1978), we side with an inclusive accounting. In this partition action, we
    reverse the trial court's ruling that a dissolution decree's grant to the husband of the
    "balance of the assets" effectively disposed of the husband's interest in a retirement
    account when the list of assets presented to the earlier dissolution court omitted the
    account.
    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    FACTS
    This appeal arises from an action to partition the former husband's interest in a
    retirement plan never mentioned in a 2010 divorce decree. The subject couple, Kathleen
    and John Grant, married on November 18, 1978, and separated on June 23, 2009. During
    the marriage, John Grant worked for the Washington State Department of Revenue for
    twenty years. John is a certified public accountant. During the marriage, Kathleen Grant
    cleaned houses and later operated a pizza parlor. The pizza business lost money.
    Since Kathleen Grant seeks to partition her former husband's interest in his
    Washington State Public Employees Retirement System (PERS) pension plan, the parties
    filed accusatory declarations that detail their respective views as to whether Kathleen
    knew of John's participation in the plan at the time of the dissolution. John Grant insists
    that the couple often discussed the existence of the retirement plan. Kathleen's father
    labored for the State of Washington and retired with a state pension. Kathleen received
    the parties' mail, which occasionally included PERS statements and newsletters. The
    parties discussed John switching from one PERS plan to another plan. According to
    John, Kathleen saw pay stubs that showed a contribution to the PERS plan. Kathleen told
    the couple's children that John should keep his retirement plan. During the divorce
    action, John provided Kathleen all records needed for her to ascertain the parties' assets.
    John questions how Kathleen came to learn about his retirement plan, if she lacked
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    Grant v. Grant
    knowledge of the plan before the divorce. He observes that Kathleen sought a portion of
    his retirement account only after his payments to her ended.
    In her declaration, Kathleen Grant declares that the couple rarely discussed
    finances. John handled the couple's investments. She did not open mail addressed to her
    husband. Kathleen did not handle John's pay stubs since the State paid John by direct
    deposit. According to Kathleen, John never mentioned a retirement account through his
    employment. When Kathleen referenced "his retirement" to the children and to the
    dissolution court, she spoke of 40l(k)s, individual retirement accounts, and an investment
    account or two, not an unknown retirement plan.
    Without the assistance of an attorney, the couple, in February 2010, petitioned for
    marital dissolution. The petition, prepared by Kathleen, read:
    We have made a marital settlement agreement dividing our property
    and our bills. We are satisfied with this agreement. The attached
    agreement was signed freely and voluntarily by each of us, and we intend to
    be bounded [sic] by it.
    Clerk's Papers (CP) at 36. Our copy of the petition lacks any attachment. Kathleen
    Grant and John Grant may agree on only one proposition-the parties intended to divide
    their assets evenly.
    On May 10, 2010, Kathleen Grant appeared before the Kittitas County Superior
    Court for entry of a decree of dissolution. The trial court, unconvinced of the soundness
    of the proposed decree, rejected the proposed decree. The following colloquy, in part,
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    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    occurred between Kathleen and the dissolution court:
    The Court: Okay. I don't understand what the loan calculator's in
    here for.
    [KATHLEEN GRANT]: Well, as opposed to taking out his
    retirement and all that and get fines, penalties, he's going to pay me
    quarterly. Or, if you wanted to break it down to monthly, it would be 2,000
    a month. And that way he can still, you know, keep his-
    The Court: He is a [Certified Public Accountant]?
    [KATHLEEN GRANT]: Uh-huh. As I said, the reason he set it up
    like that was as opposed to take everything out of his retirement-
    CP at 27 (emphasis added).
    On May 24, 2010, Kathleen and John Grant appeared before the Kittitas County
    Superior Court for entry of the same dissolution decree. The trial court then entered
    findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a decree of dissolution. Two sections of the
    decree respectively divided the property among husband and wife as:
    3.2 Property to be Awarded the Husband
    The husband is awarded as his separate property the property set
    forth in Exhibit copy attached A [sic]. This exhibit is attached or filed and
    incorporated by reference as part of this decree.
    The husband is awarded as his separate property the property set
    forth in the separation contract or prenuptial agreement executed by the
    parties on (date) Feb. 1, 2010. The separation contract or prenuptial
    agreement is incorporated by reference as part of this Decree. The
    prenuptial agreement or, pursuant to RCW 26.09.070(5), the separation
    contract is filed with the court.
    The husband is awarded as his separate property the following
    property (list real estate, furniture, vehicles, pensions, insurance, bank
    accounts, etc.): See attachement.
    3 .3 Property to be Awarded to the Wife
    The wife is awarded as her separate property the property set forth in
    Exhibit copy attached B [sic]. This exhibit is attached or filed and
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    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    incorporated by reference as part of this decree.
    The wife is awarded as her separate property the property set forth in
    the separation contract or prenuptial agreement referenced above.
    The wife is awarded as her separate property the following property
    (list real estate, furniture, vehicles, pensions, insurance, bank accounts,
    etc.): See attachment.
    CP at 77-78 (boldface omitted). The decree lacked any attachment. The parties,
    nonetheless, attached two signed pages to the findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    The first page read:
    Marital Settlement Agreement
    AGREEMENT TO DISTRIBUTION OF ASSETS
    WE (JOHN D. AND KATHLEEN M. GRANT) AGREE THAT
    KATHLEEN RECEIVES $178,000 AND OWNERSHIP AND ALL
    RIGHTS TO GRANT'S PIZZA PLACE. JOHN RECEIVES THE
    BALANCE OF THE ASSETS AND OWNERSHIP OF THE HOUSE.
    NOTE: THIS AGREEMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE PERSONAL
    PROPERTY WHICH WILL BE DIVIDED BASED ON OTHER
    METHODS AS AGREED.
    METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION TO KATHY.
    $$$ DUE TO KA THY                                 $178 000
    WELLS FARGO - CHECKING
    (12/21/09)                                          (20,000)
    WELLS FARGO - CD (MAT 3/15/10)                       (31,000)
    LOAN RECEIVABLE - KT                                (20,000)
    NOTE RECEIVABLE - PAYABLE ON
    DEMAND                                              (107,000)
    BALANCE                                                    0
    CP at 73. The parties did not define or identify the personal property to be divided on
    other methods. Page two repeated page one, but, on page two, someone wrote "paid"
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    No. 34321-9-111
    Grant v. Grant
    next to the two Wells Fargo entries and "due" next to the loan and note receivable entries.
    CP at 74.
    John Grant testifies that the parties attached a third page to the findings of fact,
    although our copy of the findings of fact omits any such attached page. The third page,
    according to John, explained how the parties reached the division of assets. The page
    read:
    ASSET DISTRIBUTION
    $$$$$                    KATHY          JOHN
    PERSHING- JOINT ACCT      120,000                  60,000         60,000
    WELLS FARGO - CHECKING 32,000                      16,000         16,000
    WELLS FARGO - CD          31,000                   15,500         15,500
    WELLS FARGO SAVIN GS      25,000                   12,500         12,500
    LOAN RECEIVABLE - KT      20,000                   10,000         10,000
    PERSHING - IRA            40,000                   20,000         20,000
    WA STATE DEFERRED COMP 88,000                      44,000         44,000
    GPP [Grant's Pizza Place] 100                      100            0
    HOUSE                     100                      0              100
    TOTAL ASSETS              356,200                  178,100        178,100
    $$$ DUE TO KA THY                                  178,000
    WELLS FARGO - CHECKING (12/21/09)                  (20,000) Paid
    WELLS FARGO - CD (MAT 3/15/10)                    (31,000) Paid $31,600
    LOAN RECEIVABLE - KT                               (20,000) Starting 6/1/2010
    NOTE PAYABLE ON DEMAND                           (107,000) Starting 6/1/2010
    BALANCE                                                  0
    WE AGREE THAT KATHLEEN RECEIVES $178,000 AND
    OWNERSHIP AND ALL RIGHTS TO GRANTS PIZZA PLACE. JOHN
    RECEIVES THE BALANCE OF THE ASSETS AND OWNERSHIP OF
    THE HOUSE.
    CP at 164. We assume that the entry for Washington State Deferred
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    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    Compensation refers to an asset other than John's pension plan. At the time of the
    divorce, John Grant worked for the State of Washington and participated in the
    State's PERS pension plan. We lack any information as to the value of the PERS
    account at the time of the divorce. John Grant drafted all of the lists and divisions
    of property.
    The litigation between the parties includes more than the dissolution action and
    this later partition suit. On May 3 1, 2013, Kathleen Grant moved in Clark County
    Superior Court for relief from the 2010 dissolution decree and alleged that she knew not
    of John's PERS pension at the time of dissolution. By agreement of the parties, the trial
    court dismissed the motion for relief from judgment.
    Kathleen Grant did not relent. On January 6, January 15, and March 31, 2014,
    she, in Kittitas County Superior Court, again moved for relief from the 2010 decree of
    dissolution. We do not know the purpose of three motions, rather than one motion. In
    her motions, she argued that John Grant's failure to disclose his PERS plan constitutes an
    extraordinary circumstance that invalidated the divorce decree. The trial court denied the
    motions for relief.
    On June 13, 2014, Kathleen Grant filed an amended motion for relief from the
    decree. Kathleen supported the June motion with attachments and a declaration that
    provided:
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    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    I was led to believe by a lack of financial disclosure in discussions
    with John that the 40l(k)s and IRAs, personal investments, and savings was
    the sum total of all our assets. This was to be our entire savings and
    investments for retirement in conjunction with his social security. The
    State of Washington PERS Plan was not included in this envisioned
    retirement scenario. A review of the Distributions of Assets attached to the
    Decree of [Dissolution] and Findings of Fact make no mention of a
    retirement plan through the State of Washington.
    CP at 156. John Grant filed a responsive declaration that listed the reasons why Kathleen
    knew of his PERS pension plan. On August 11, 2014, Kathleen filed a second amended
    motion for relief from judgment and responsive declaration. The trial court denied the
    motion and awarded John $6,762.72 in attorney fees.
    PROCEDURE
    We now move to the lawsuit on appeal. On March 30, 2015, Kathleen Grant filed
    a complaint for partition of personal property on the ground that the 2010 trial court did
    not divide John Grant's PERS pension in the marriage dissolution decree. In response,
    John did not assert as affirmative defenses res judicata or collateral estoppel arising from
    earlier litigation. In his answer to the complaint, John raised the affirmative defense of
    waiver. He does not assert this defense on appeal.
    John Grant filed a motion for summary judgment, which motion he supported with
    a declaration. Kathleen Grant responded with a supporting declaration. She declared
    facts undermining John's evidence of her knowledge of his state pension account. John's
    responsive declarations included a response to a request for admission sent him by
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    No. 34321-9-111
    Grant v. Grant
    Kathleen, wherein John stated "that [he] provided to Kathleen Grant all records,
    statements and other written information necessary for her to determine and verify the
    extent of and accuracy of the values of all assets acquired during the marriage." CP at
    275,280.
    The trial court granted John Grant summary dismissal of Kathleen Grant's suit for
    partition. The trial court also granted John's request for $10,120.00 in attorney fees and
    $38.15 in costs.
    Kathleen Grant moved for reconsideration. She listed the material contested facts
    as:
    • That Kathleen Grant had knowledge of the contested asset;
    • That the family court had knowledge of the contested asset;
    • That the language in attachment "A" to the decree of dissolution
    awarding "the balance of the assets" was sufficient to put both Ms. Grant
    and the court on notice that the PERS account existed;
    • That Kathleen Grant and the court in the dissolution matter
    intended the language in attachment "A" to the decree of dissolution
    awarding "the balance of the assets" to the Defendant in this matter.
    CP at 318-19. The trial court denied the motion for reconsideration.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Kathleen Grant asserts two principal arguments. First, John Grant and
    she own the PERS retirement plan as tenants in common because the 2010 dissolution
    decree failed to mention and allot the plan to John. Kathleen's knowledge of the PERS
    plan is irrelevant to this first contention. Second, John breached his fiduciary duty by
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    No. 34321-9-III
    Grant v. Grant
    hiding the existence of the PERS plan from her, and this concealment invalidates the
    decree's disbursement of property. We rule in favor of Kathleen on her first argument
    and thus do not address the second contention.
    The 2010 marital dissolution decree did not list John Grant's PERS pension plan
    as an asset, and the decree awarded John "the balance of assets" not specifically awarded
    to Kathleen Grant. On appeal, Kathleen contends the divorce decree provision "the
    balance of the assets" failed to divest the community interest in John's pension because
    of the pension's significance and her lack and the trial court's lack of knowledge of the
    existence of the asset. .
    RCW 26.09.050 declares, in part:
    (1) In entering a decree of dissolution of marriage ... , the court
    shall ... make provision for the disposition of property and liabilities of the
    parties.
    RCW 26.09.080 controls the court's division of property and debt:
    In a proceeding for dissolution of the marriage ... , the court shall,
    without regard to misconduct, make such disposition of the property and
    the liabilities of the parties, either community or separate, as shall appear
    just and equitable after considering all relevant factors including, but not
    limited to:
    (1) The nature and extent of the community property;
    (2) The nature and extent of the separate property;
    (3) The duration of the marriage or domestic partnership; and
    (4) The economic circumstances of each spouse or domestic partner
    at the time the division of property is to become effective, including the
    desirability of awarding the family home or the right to live therein for
    reasonable periods to a spouse or domestic partner with whom the children
    reside the majority of the time.
    10
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    I
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    II   No. 34321-9-111
    Grant v. Grant
    I
    RCW 26.09.070 permits the parties to enter into property settlement agreements.
    The statute reads:
    ( 1) The parties to a marriage ... upon the filing of a petition for
    dissolution of their marriage ... , may enter into a written separation
    contract providing for ... the disposition of any property owned by both or
    either of them . . . .              ·
    (3) If either or both of the parties to a separation contract shall at the
    time of the execution thereof, or at a subsequent time, petition the court for
    dissolution of their marriage ... , the contract ... shall be binding upon the
    court unless it finds, after considering the economic circumstances of the
    parties and any other relevant evidence produced by the parties on their
    own motion or on request of the court, that the separation contract was
    unfair at the time of its execution.
    These three marital dissolution statutes promote a just, equitable, and fair allocation of
    property between the parties regardless of any agreement earlier reached. The statutes
    direct the dissolution court to ensure a fair distribution.
    A dissolution court cannot decree a fair allocation of assets and debts without the
    court gaining thorough knowledge of the parties' property and liabilities. Thus, the
    Supreme Court has held that a settlement agreement or decree of dissolution must
    adequately identify the assets so as to permit the court to approve the agreement or make
    proper division. Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 206
    (1978). At a minimum, the
    documents must put the parties and the court on notice that the assets exist. Yeats v.
    Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 206
    . On this basis, we hold that the 2010 divorce decree
    failed to distribute John Grant's interest in his PERS retirement plan and the parties hold
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    Grant v. Grant
    an equal share in the plan as of the date of the divorce.
    Community property not disposed of in a dissolution is owned thereafter by the
    former spouses as tenants in common. Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 203
    ; Chase
    v. Chase, 74 Wn.2d 253,258,444 P.2d 145 (1968); Northwestern Life Insurance Co. v.
    Perrigo, 47 Wn.2d 291,293,287 P.2d 334 (1955). Likewise, a spouse's pension plan not
    disposed of in a divorce decree is owned by the former spouse as tenant in common. In
    re Marriage of Buchanan, 
    150 Wash. App. 730
    , 735-36, 
    207 P.3d 478
    (2009); Barros v.
    Barros, 
    34 Wash. App. 266
    , 269, 
    660 P.2d 770
    (1983). The reason for this rule is that the
    court did not exercise its jurisdiction over the property. Sears v. Rusden, 
    39 Wash. 2d 412
    ,
    416, 23 5 P .2d 819 (1951 ). If the property rights of the parties are not brought before the
    court in some manner, such rights are not and cannot be affected by the decree. Sears v.
    
    Rusden, 39 Wash. 2d at 416
    . The undistributed property becomes subject to partition or
    other appropriate declaratory relief. Lambert v. Lambert, 
    66 Wash. 2d 503
    , 510, 
    403 P.2d 664
    (1965); Olsen v. Roberts, 42 Wn.2d 862,864,259 P.2d 418 (1953).
    Yeats v. Estate of Yeats informs our decision. Agnes and William Yeats divorced
    after twenty-four years of marriage. A property settlement agreement, approved by the
    dissolution court, read:
    "With respect to property both real and personal acquired by
    Husband and Wife during their marriage and owned by them or either of
    them at the time of their separation, the same has heretofore been equitably
    divided and apportioned between the parties as set forth in Exhibit "A"
    attached hereto and they hereby ratify and confirm such division.
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    Grant v. Grant
    Section 6 Support and Maintenance of Wife
    Wife accepts the payments specified in and to be made under this
    Section ... in lieu of any interest in and to any and all property which
    Husband now owns or may hereafter acquire ...
    II. INSURANCE:
    The Husband shall maintain in effect for the benefit of the Wife life
    insurance on the life of the Husband in the amount of $10,000.00 naming
    the Wife as sole beneficiary thereof."
    Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 204
    . At the time of the execution of the agreement,
    nine life insurance policies insured the life of William in the face amount of $28,000 with
    a cash surrender value of approximately $1,000 and three policies insured Agnes with a
    face amount of $7,550 and a cash surrender value of$1,775. An additional $75,000
    policy, for which William's employer paid, insured William's life. Five months after the
    dissolution, William married Jeanie. Six months later, William died. Jeanie brought suit
    to recover her community share in the policies insuring William.
    The trial court and the Supreme Court granted Agnes Yeats her requested
    recovery. The Supreme Court wrote:
    None of the policies is mentioned, much less fully described in the
    settlement agreement. The boilerplate language quoted above was not
    adequate to dispose of the policies. While one might assume that the
    parties intended that each receive the policies on his or her life, one cannot
    learn that from the terms of the agreement. It is pure speculation to
    determine what the parties intended or what the agreement meant. We hold
    that there must be sufficient specificity in settlement agreements or decrees
    of dissolution to identify the assets and their disposition. The requisite
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    No. 34321-9-111
    Grant v. Grant
    specificity is not present here inasmuch as the policies were not even
    mentioned.
    Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 205
    . The high court also observed:
    It is impossible for the court to perform its statutorily mandated
    duties if it is unaware of the nature and extent of the property. Even a
    general description of the insurance policies would make known that such
    assets existed. This is necessary before the court or the parties can consider
    them in evaluating the dispositive scheme.
    Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 205
    .
    John Grant principally relies on the language in his settlement agreement
    allocating the "balance of the assets" to him. We observe that the agreement in Yeats
    contained similar language in that Agnes disclaimed any interest in any and all property
    of William. This language did not suffice to distribute unlisted assets to William Yeats.
    Other Washington decisions support our conclusion. In Lambert v. Lambert, 
    66 Wash. 2d 503
    (1965), the Supreme Court reversed the trial court's refusal to partition a
    minor stock account undistributed at the time of the divorce. Since the decree failed to
    mention the account, the wife retained a one-half interest in the account.
    Inln re Marriage of Monaghan, 78 Wn. App. 918,899 P.2d 841 (1995), the
    dissolution decree divided the parties' community property equally, designated by two
    separate property schedules. The property schedule awarded to Robert Monaghan,
    among other items, his dental practice, subject to an interest in favor of Dolores
    Monaghan, in an amount computed as fifty percent of the gross funds received in excess
    14
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    Grant v. Grant
    of $80,000.00, from the sale of the dental practice. The husband shortly thereafter sold
    his dental practice, but the sale did not include the practice's accounts receivable. The
    wife brought a partition action to recover one-half of the accounts accrued during the
    marriage. This court awarded her a community share in the accounts since the divorce
    decree failed to list the asset. We noted that, when property is held as tenants in
    common, our Supreme Court has held that the parties intended them to share the property
    equally, unless the court is shown otherwise.
    The Washington high court's ruling in Robinson v. Robinson, 37 Wn.2d 511,225
    P.2d 411 (1950) may conflict with our holding. The dissolution decree awarded to the
    husband "all other property" and the wife renounced any interest in such property. The
    Supreme Court held that the decree granted the husband all assets, even assets about
    which the wife had no knowledge. We choose to follow the more recent and better
    reasoned Yeats v. Estate of Yeats, rather than Robinson v. Robinson. Washington public
    policy supports a full accounting before the dissolution court so that the court may
    equitably allocate assets.
    John Grant insists that Kathleen Grant knew of his PERS retirement account, and
    he then attacks the fairness of her years later claiming an interest in the account. We
    observe that Kathleen mentioned "his retirement" during the first attempt to gain the
    dissolution court's signature on the 2010 decree. John may be correct that Kathleen
    knew of the account, but she denies such knowledge. Kathleen could have been confused
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    Grant v. Grant
    with John's deferred compensation program with the State or other retirement accounts
    when she referred to "his retirement." John was a certified public accountant. As an
    accountant, John should have known to thoroughly list assets on an asset sheet. Although
    Kathleen managed a pizza parlor, we do not know the extent of her financial acumen.
    With certain contracts, we require the parties place contractual terms in writing so that
    the parties do not later dispute the character of those terms. The law also encourages
    divorcing parties to fully disclose and consign all assets to writing to preclude future
    disputes.
    We note that both John Grant and Kathleen Grant testify that the parties intended
    to split their assets in half. We question how the parties could evenly pare their property
    when the division fails to account for a major asset such as a retirement account. We do
    not know the value of the account at the time of dissolution, but presuppose a generous
    worth because John had worked for the State for twenty years. We also question how the
    dissolution court could determine the fairness of the division of property without John
    Grant listing his PERS plan on a sheet of assets shown to the court and attaching a value
    to the plan.
    John Grant argues that this court's ruling will lead to a requirement that a
    divorcing couple list each fork, spoon, pen, and pencil on a list of assets presented to the
    trial court at the time of the divorce decree at the risk of a later legal squabble. We do not
    worry about this horrible. We doubt parties will incur the expense of a later partition
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    Grant v. Grant
    action to untine a fork or parcel a pencil. Also Our Supreme Court addressed this
    concern in Yeats v. Estate of Yeats. Settlement agreements and decrees of dissolution
    must include sufficient specificity to identify the assets and their disposition. Yeats v.
    Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 205
    . Nevertheless, a property description suffices if it
    allows the court to perform its statutorily mandated duties while aware of the nature and
    extent of the property. A general description of an asset and lumping some common
    assets together may dispose of most personal property so long as doing so does not
    impinge on the court's equitable duties. Yeats v. Estate of 
    Yeats, 90 Wash. 2d at 205
    .
    We conclude that, based on the undisputed facts, the 2010 dissolution decree
    failed to allocate the PERS retirement pension to John. Although Kathleen did not seek a
    summary judgment ruling in her favor before the trial court, when the facts are not in
    dispute, this court may grant summary judgment to the nonmoving party. lmpecoven v.
    Department of Revenue, 120 Wn.2d 357,365,841 P.2d 752 (1992); Lelandv. Frogge, 71
    Wn.2d 197,201,427 P.2d 724 (1967); Washington Association a/Child Care Agencies v.
    Thompson, 
    34 Wash. App. 225
    , 234, 
    660 P.2d 1124
    (1983).
    The trial court entered findings of fact challenged by Kathleen Grant on appeal.
    Because we may resolve this appeal without addressing the findings, we do not discuss
    them.
    Tenants in common are presumed to own equal shares in the property unless they
    prove otherwise. We remand to the trial court for entry of an order declaring Kathleen
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    Grant v. Grant
    Grant to hold a one-half interest as a tenant in common in John Grant's PERS pension
    plan to the extent of the plan's value at the time of marital dissolution.
    By motion filed after she filed her opening and reply briefs, Kathleen Grant seeks
    an award of reasonable attorney fees and costs on appeal pursuant to RCW 26.09.140.
    RAP 18.1 (b) requires a party seeking an award of reasonable attorney fees to devote a
    section of her opening brief to the request. Kathleen failed to comply with this rule.
    Therefore, we deny her request for an award of reasonable attorney fees and costs.
    CONCLUSION
    We vacate the trial court's order dismissing Kathleen Grant's partition action and
    grant of reasonable attorney fees and costs to John Grant. We remand to the trial court
    for entry of an order declaring Kathleen an equal tenant in common with John in John
    Grant's PERS pension plan to the extent of the plan's value at the time of marital
    dissolution.
    WE CONCUR:
    us