Bauer v. Bauer

490 P.2d 1350, 5 Wash. App. 781, 1971 Wash. App. LEXIS 1120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 15, 1971
Docket967-41728-1
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 490 P.2d 1350 (Bauer v. Bauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bauer v. Bauer, 490 P.2d 1350, 5 Wash. App. 781, 1971 Wash. App. LEXIS 1120 (Wash. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Horowitz, C.J.

This is an appeal from an order denying petitioner husband’s petition to modify a so-called child support trust ordered to be created under an agreed divorce decree.

The Bauers were married in 1947. Three children were born to them: Kristine, Peter, and Liesa. In 1965, 18 years later, the parties were divorced. At that time Kristine was 16, Peter 13, and Liesa 10. The divorce decree entered by the court was a decree supported by findings and conclusions, all of which were agreed to after extensive negotiations by the spouses through competent counsel representing them. The decree distributed the property of the parties to each and made special provision for the creation of a trust for the benefit of the children in the following language:

It is ordered and directed that 1,000 shares of the capital stock of Modem Homes Investment, Inc. shall be deposited with the National Bank of Commerce of Seattle under the provisions of the Trust Agreement, copy of which is attached to the Findings of Fact hereof and marked Exhibit B to said Findings of Fact and which by this reference is incorporated in this Decree as so fully set forth. The said shares of stock and the proceeds *783 thereof to be held, kept and disbursed and used for the benefit of the said minor children under the provisions of said Trust Agreement and not otherwise and the plaintiff and defendant are ordered and required to deposit said shares and to enter into said Agreement. By reason of the provision hereby made for the care, support, maintenance and education of said minor children and of each of them, the defendant is relieved of any further responsibility for such care, support, maintenance and education subject only to modification hereafter in case of necessity as provided by law.

The trust instrument which is referred to names the trustee; provides for segregation of trust assets for each child with management of each child’s share as a separate trust; provides for discretionary distributions of income and principal to each child for his or her care, support, health and/or education during minority; provides that when each child respectively reaches 21 years of age, mandatory distribution of all trust income from that child’s trust must be made. When each child respectively reaches 25 years of age, the remainder of all principal and income of that child’s trust is to be distributed to that child or his or her heirs, but not including petitioner.

Shortly after the entry of the decree, the National Bank of Commerce of Seattle took possession of the 1,000 shares of capital stock of Modem Homes Investment, Inc. and proceeded to administer the trust. The husband took the benefits of the decree and at no time was called upon to contribute anything further to the care, support, maintenance and education of any of the minor children.

In July 1966, a year and 3 months after the divorce, Modem Home Builders, Inc., in which Modem Home Investment, Inc. had substantial holdings, was sold on contract for $8.5 million, with a downpayment in excess of $2 million, interest payments for 2 years and principal payments thereafter. Modem Home Investment, Inc. was liquidated. The 1,000 shares in the trust jumped in value from what the husband had estimated was $40,000 ($40 per share) to $202,000 ($202 per share). Accordingly, each *784 child’s share of the contracted purchase price was not $13,333, but $67,333. The husband immediately sought legal advice regarding modification of the trust, but was told by his then attorney that the trust was irrevocable.

In May 1970, the husband filed a petition for modification of child support. He sought, with respect to Peter and Kristine, that the trust be revoked and the trust assets returned to him. He asked in Liesa’s case that the trust be modified in order that trust assets be used only for her educational needs before majority or emancipation, and that the trust terminate and the trust assets be returned to him when the latter purposes had been served. Grounds for modification listed in the petition were the fact that the respondent’s financial condition had improved quite substantially while his own ability to pay support remained relatively static, the corresponding absence of the children’s need for support by their father, the contention that the support trust was void insofar as it made distribution of the father’s estate to the children or provided support after they reached majority or first became emancipated, failure of the trust to achieve its purposes, and the doctrine of resulting trusts. At trial the petitioner also proceeded on the theory that the trust corpus had increased dramatically beyond what he had intended to provide for support.

The facts are not in dispute. Thus, Kristine at the time of the petition was 21 years of age, had been married and then divorced, and she, not working, together with her 3-year-old son, was living with her mother. Peter, 18, was married, employed part time, and was living with his wife. Liesa, 15, was attending public school and living with her mother. Petitioner and his former wife had both remarried, and the wife’s second husband had died the preceding year. There was evidence that by reason of the financial help given by the mother, the assets of the trust established following the decree of divorce had been sparingly used. Of the $67,000 in each child’s trust following the 1966 stock sale, receivables in each account still approximate $45,000 with additional cash in the three accounts varying from nearly $8,000 to *785 $10,000. The petitioner testified that the attitude of the two oldest children is to forego education expenses in favor of preserving trust assets for distribution at age 25. He also testified that in his opinion a reasonable amount for educational expenses of Liesa before she reaches her majority would be $10,000. In addition to the trust assets, the petitioner was given additional shares of Modem Homes Investment, Inc. stock as custodian for the parties’ children. Proceeds from the stock were placed in separate savings accounts which petitioner still holds for the benefit of the two youngest children, having already disbursed Kristine’s account to her. A portion of these funds was invested by the petitioner in real property on behalf of the children. The accounts of Peter and Liesa, inclusive of the property investment, are valued at approximately $30,000 and $15,000, respectively, and will be turned over to them at age 21. There was also evidence that the use of the funds by the children may have had something to do with neglect by the children of their educational opportunities.

The wife, whose mother had died prior to the divorce decree and from whom an inheritance of approximately $350,000 was expected, in fact inherited a total of over $1,300,000 by reason of the sale of Modern Homes Investment, Inc. The property awarded to the wife in the divorce decree had increased very substantially. The petitioner’s income, derived from his Boeing salary, had increased from $17,700 to $22,000 annual gross, and his net worth had decreased by $6,000 or $7,000, his net worth at the time of the modification proceedings being approximately $41,000.

The trial court denied the petitioner any relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 P.2d 1350, 5 Wash. App. 781, 1971 Wash. App. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauer-v-bauer-washctapp-1971.