Dahl v. Dahl

97 N.W.2d 844, 1959 N.D. LEXIS 93
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1959
Docket7817
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 97 N.W.2d 844 (Dahl v. Dahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dahl v. Dahl, 97 N.W.2d 844, 1959 N.D. LEXIS 93 (N.D. 1959).

Opinion

CLIFFORD SCHNELLER, District Judge.

The above action is one for divorce, The grounds for divorce as stated in plaintiff’s complaint was extreme cruelty.

The defendant by his amended answer admits acts on his part which caused mental cruelty to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff was permitted to prove her grounds for divorce as by default. The matter of the property accumulated by the parties during their marriage and its equitable division was litigated and is here for trial de novo upon the defendant’s appeal.

The facts and circumstances involved herein are substantially as follows: Plaintiff was fifty-six years of age and defendant fifty-three years of age at the time of the trial. Both parties have physical disabilities, plaintiff having an operation for a slipped disk in her vertebrae, and defendant having bade trouble. The parties were married July 3, 1928, and have two children as an issue of their marriage. Both children have reached their majority, are married and have families and homes of their own. Neither of the parties brought much of wordly goods into their marriage. Defendant was a barber and after his marriage he continued to work at his trade until the year 1938. At that time he decided to farm and rented a farm in Pierce County, and the parties continued to farm as tenants until 1944, when it was determined that a half section farm could be purchased for $10,000. At the time the parties had approximately $2,000 in cash and the defendant made arrangements with a bank to borrow the additional $8,000 needed to complete the purchase. When plaintiff’s father heard of the proposed purchase he offered to loan the parties $8,000 at 2 per cent interest secured by a first mortgage on the land being purchased. This offer was accepted, title was taken in the defendant’s name, and a mortgage for $8,000 was given by the parties to plaintiff’s father. At about the same time an option was taken by defendant on the other half-section of land in the same section as the half-section purchased. The option was exercised, the defendant took title in his name, and the parties then had a square section of land, described as Section 26, Township 156, Range 73, Pierce County, North Dakota, as a farming unit. The farm home and the other buildings were located in the South Half of said Section. As the land purchased was subject to a tenant’s lease, the parties could not gain possession until 1945. Being unable to gain possession in the year of purchase, the parties moved into the farm home of plaintiff’s father and assisted with his extensive farming operations.

Defendant testified that he made an agreement with his father-in-law that with the assistance of a brother of his wife the two of them would work on the farm during 1945 and were to receive as their compensation one third of the crops or one sixth to each; that some 20,000 bushels of wheat was raised in that year, which was worth about $1 a bushel, and that on those figures defendant should receive about $3,300 hut actually was paid only $240. Plaintiff testified that she knew of no such agreement, and her father, while testifying in the action, was never asked concerning such agreement.

The year following, the parties operated their own farm and continued to do so successfully until the divorce proceedings *846 were commenced on June 5, 1958. There was paid to plaintiff’s father on the $8,000 note and mortgage the sum of $4,000, and the father later, without additional consideration, returned to the parties the mortgage indebtedness and satisfied the mortgage.

During the years from 1945 to 1958 the parties individually and together accumulated other property as follows:

The plaintiff received by gift or inheritance from her father a quarter section of land valued at $8,000.

The defendant received by inheritance a one-fourth interest in 400 acres of land, and purchased an additional one-fourth interest in this land from joint income for $1,200.

The trial court found that the 400 acres was of the net value of $9,000, and that the one-fourth joint interest of the parties in this land was of the value of $2,250.

Section 26 was valued by the trial court at $32,000, with the South half having a value of $18,500 and the North half a value of $13,500.

In addition to this real estate, the parties accumulated during their married life additional property described and valued as follows:

Mineral acres $25.00

Farmers Union Elevator stock and credits 730

Farm Machinery 3,500

1948 pickup truck 450

1953 Chevrolet automobile 600

1956 Ford station wagon 800

Uranium shares 20

Government bonds 700

Grain on hand 2,363

Lot 18, Block 10, City of Rugby 4,500

Household furniture and equipment, on which no value is placed.

The total of all property is valued at $57,888 plus the value of the household furniture and equipment.

The trial court then awarded to plaintiff the following property:

The South half of Section 26-157-74
The Southeast quarter of Section 3-158-73
Lot 18 of Block 10, City of Rugby; 1953 Chevrolet;
United States Government bonds;
Cash to be paid to plaintiff by defendant of $1500;
And the household furniture and equipment;

And awarded to the defendant:

The North half of Section 26-157-74
The one-half interest in the 400-acre farm, one fourth of which was inherited by defendant, and one-fourth interest purchased;
The mineral acres;
The elevator stock and credits;
Farm machinery;
The pickup truck;
The station wagon;
The uranium shares;
The grain on hand; and
$200 of Government bonds;

The trial court considered the $4,000 balance unpaid upon the note and mortgage given to plaintiff’s father as her separate and individual property, and also considered the southeast quarter of Section 3-158-73 as plaintiff’s individual and separate property, which it deducted from the gross value of the property awarded to plaintiff, thus awarding her joint property of the net value of $21,300.

With what the trial court considered the individual property of the plaintiff, it awarded her $33,300 together with the household furniture and equipment.

The property awarded to the defendant, according to the trial court’s figures, amounted to $23,838, plus $2,250 value of property individually inherited, less cash to be paid plaintiff of $1,500, making the award to defendant of the net value of $24,588.

*847

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.W.2d 844, 1959 N.D. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahl-v-dahl-nd-1959.