Clisham v. Clisham

485 S.W.2d 660, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 712
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1972
DocketNo. 34268
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 485 S.W.2d 660 (Clisham v. Clisham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clisham v. Clisham, 485 S.W.2d 660, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 712 (Mo. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

Plaintiff appeals from an order determining separate and conflicting motions for the modification of the alimony portion of a decree of divorce.

On April 9, 1968, plaintiff was granted a decree of divorce, and was awarded custody of two of the seven children of the parties, child support for the two, and alimony of $250.00 per month. Defendant was given custody of the other five children.

Between December, 1968 and March, 1971, defendant and plaintiff each filed motions for a modification of the decree respecting custody of the children, the allowance • for their support, and the award of alimony. On March 26, 1971, the parties entered into and executed a written stipulation regarding that part of the decree as to custody of the children, visitation rights, and support during such periods of visitation, and both parties testified in support of their stipulation.1 Thus the only issue which remained for trial was plaintiff’s motion for an increase in the amount of her alimony, and defendant’s motion for a decrease. The court on April 22, 1971, overruled plaintiff’s motion, sustained that of defendant, and ordered plaintiff’s alimony reduced to the amount of $125.00 per month. Plaintiff appeals from both the granting of defendant’s motion and the denial of her own.

In accordance with Civil Rule 73.-01(d), V.A.M.R. we review the case upon both the law and the evidence as in suits of an equitable nature. And while we make our own findings of fact, that rule further provides that we are not to set aside the judgment unless it is clearly erroneous, and that due deference is to be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses. Ruelas v. Ruelas, Mo.App., 455 S.W.2d 28.

In reviewing the record in this case in accordance with the foregoing principles the difficulty we encounter is in the paucity of the evidence concerning the conditions in existence at the time the decree of divorce was granted. The sketchiness of the evidence in that respect is pointed out by defendant in his brief, in which he states: “ * * * There is evidence as to the amount required by the Plaintiff-Appellant to provide for her (present) needs but there is no eviclence as to what her needs were in total at the time of the divorce. * * * ” We agree, and add that there is a similar lack of evidence as to the income derived by the plaintiff at the time the decree was rendered, as will be noted. The scarcity of the evidence in the respects mentioned, and the apparent preoccupation of the parties in the development of the evidence regarding their present financial conditions, may have been attributable to the grounds upon which each sought modification of that part of the decree regarding alimony. In her motion plaintiff alleged that, “since the rendition of the decree, defendant is earning substantially more money, and that plaintiff is unable to support herself and requires an additional amount of alimony per month.” On his part defendant pleaded, in his amended motion, that the plaintiff “* * * has been, since the date of the Divorce Decree, gainfully employed and has sufficient income to properly care for herself and her financial means are such that the alimony of $250.00 a month is greatly in excess of what the Plaintiff requires.”

Defendant is a physician who specializes in urology. Plaintiff holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing. We glean from the record that until 1966 the parties lived together in a three bedroom, two-story brick home owned by them, located in Hannibal, Missouri. Prior to that date [663]*663plaintiff voluntarily worked three days a week as an in-service coordinator in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Hannibal, for which she received $28.00 a day. In answer to the question as to when the parties separated plaintiff said that, “Well, I went away to the hospital” in October, 1966, hut to which hospital or what she did was not developed. It was shown that on April 9, 1968, when the decree was granted to plaintiff, she was then going to graduate school at St. Louis University, and that she was working two days a week in the medical intensive care unit of St. Mary’s Hospital in St. Louis. But there was no evidence as to her salary, and whether it was more or less than that she had received about a year and a half before, in another city, was not developed in the evidence. There is a gap in the evidence regarding her activities between April, 1968 and September, 1970. She stated that from September, 1970 until a short time before the hearing, held on March 26, 1971, she was in graduate school and was not employed, subsisting on her alimony of $250.00, a grant for living expenses (we infer from the University) of $250.00 per month, and, until December, 1970, the allowance for the support of the two children in her custody, which totaled $350.00 per month.

Plaintiff discontinued her studies and about a week prior to the hearing was held she secured full time employment as a nurse at Renard Hospital, the psychiatric hospital of the Barnes Hospital complex. She stated that she had received a check for $168.00 for one week’s work, but that no deductions had been made therefrom for Blue Cross and Blue Shield, or for Metropolitan Insurance, and said that while her total salary would be $715.00 per month, her take-home pay, after all deductions, would be $550.00 per month. She made it clear that her full time employment was only temporary, and testified that she had applied for admission, and had been accepted, as a graduate student in the School of Sociology of Washington University, and that she would not be able to work while attending school; particularly when, as stipulated, she would have the children with her on a certain weekend. Her reason for her change in the Masters Degree she sought, she explained, was that it would complement her prior training in nursing, and would enable her to obtain more permanent employment and more security in the future.

The evidence showed that at the time of the divorce and from time to time subsequent thereto plaintiff had rented various apartments, usually consisting of a living room, two bedrooms and a kitchen, for which with utilities she paid about $200.00 per month. She stated, however, that on the infrequent, occasions when she had had with her more than the two children of which she had been given custody an apartment of that size was inadequate. At the time of the hearing plaintiff was temporarily living, because of her financial condition, in a woman’s residence hall provided by the Sisters of Mercy, where she shared a room with another lady, for which, including board, she paid $90.00 a month. She itemized her future monthly living expenses, including a larger apartment to accomodate the children when they would be with her, at $900.00 a month. Her only assets at the time of the hearing, she stated, was a bank account of $168.00 (apparently from her recent salary check), and a 1966 Chevrolet Impala two-door sedan, the value of which she estimated at $1,000.00.

As to defendant the evidence was that since the decree he continued to practice his specialty in Hannibal. He has since remarried, and he and his second wife live in a home he purchased for $34,500, the value of which he stated, had since declined to $28,000 or $30,000. His gross income in 1968, the year when the divorce was granted, was $57,799.00 and he estimated his gross income in 1970 as about $70,000.00 “ * * * after all expenses but before deductions and so forth”; by deductions, he explained, he meant office expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
485 S.W.2d 660, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clisham-v-clisham-moctapp-1972.