Dowdell v. Dowdell

463 P.2d 948
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 19, 1970
Docket42704
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 463 P.2d 948 (Dowdell v. Dowdell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dowdell v. Dowdell, 463 P.2d 948 (Okla. 1970).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice:

The judgment involved here is a divorce decree dissolving the marriage of the parties to this appeal. These parties’ order of appearance in the trial court was in reverse of what it is here, but their trial court *949 designations of “plaintiff” and “defendant’ will be used in this opinion.

Plaintiff was granted a divorce against defendant, a physician, on the ground of incompatibility. The only property the parties then owned that had been accumulated during their marriage (other than his medical equipment, their personal effects, and two used automobiles that had been turned over to their two older daughters), consisted of an equity in a home they had purchased in Moore, its furnishings, and a Pontiac Sedan, all of which was awarded-to plaintiff. By the wording of the divorce decree, defendant was ordered to pay plaintiff “in lieu of further property division and as alimony”, the total sum of $150,000.00 in monthly installments.

This alimony award is the divorce decree’s only feature, of which defendant complains in this appeal. In his brief, defendant states that he is not challenging the trial court’s awarding to plaintiff the proportion of the parties’ property that was decreed to her; but, under his first proposition, he maintains that the ground upon which plaintiff was granted the divorce against him, i.e., “incompatibility”, does not connote fault on his part, and, upon this hypothesis he further argues that the divorce was not granted “on account of the fault of the husband * * as the statute requires, and, consequently, the trial court had no jurisdiction to award the alimony in addition to the property. The statute defendant cites, and refers to, is Tit. 12 O.S.1961, § 1278, which, in material part, reads as follows:

“When a divorce shall be granted by reason of the fault * * * of the husband, the wife * * * shall be allowed * * * alimony * * *; which alimony may be allowed to her in * * * property, * * *. As to such property, whether real or personal, as shall have been acquired by the parties jointly during their marriage, * * * the court shall make such division between the parties respectively as may appear just and reasonable, by a division of the property in kind, or by setting the same apart to one of the parties, and requiring the other thereof to pay such sum as may be just and proper to effect a fair and just division thereof * * *». (Emphasis added.)

In an effort to convince us that this divorce was not granted on account of his “fault”, defendant points out that there is no specific finding in the decree that he was at fault; and he advances further argument the substance of which is that, in •Oklahoma, a divorce on the ground of “incompatibility” is a divorce granted without the fault of either party. We do not agree. The excerpts defendant cites from American Jurisprudence and certain Oklahoma cases do not support his contention that the divorce in this case was not one granted by reason of some fault on his part. While we recognize that divorces have been granted without determining whether either, both, or neither of the parties is responsible for the “incompatibility” (24 Am.Jur.2d, “Divorce and Separation,” § 166), we think it is evident that such did not occur in this case. Here, it appears clear that the thing that precipitated the parties’ estrangement and separation was defendant’s association with another woman; and, though he prayed, in his answer, that the parties be divorced, after alleging that the cause of their incompatibility was plaintiff’s “continual harassment”, and, on the witness stand, he maintained that there was nothing improper in his association with the other woman, and gave other testimony contemplated to leave the impression that the plaintiff was groundlessly suspicious and jealous, he admitted that he may have told her he loved the other woman and was with the woman one night in a motel, though he testified he said this, just to get plaintiff “off his back” or make her quit harassing him. And it is undisputed that he did not quit seeing the woman, as plaintiff requested but, on the contrary, left home and continued seeing her after-wards.

On the basis of the parties’ pleadings and evidence, and the trial court’s determi *950 nation that the divorce should be granted plaintiff, we cannot say that it was not granted by reason of the fault of the defendant husband. All indications are to the contrary. We recognize that incompatibility is bilateral (Hughes v. Hughes, Okl., 363 P.2d 155, 158), and has been referred to as a “two way proposition” (Chappell v. Chappell, Okl., 298 P.2d 768, 771, 58 A.L.R.2d 1214, 1217). But, regardless of whether there was factual ground for plaintiff’s quite obvious belief as to the nature of the defendant’s association with the other woman, it is clear that what she believed to be its nature did not conform to, and was not compatible with, her conception of how a faithful husband should conduct himself. We cannot say that her attitude was unusual or unnatural, or that she is to be faulted, or blamed, for finally reaching the point where she found that association intolerable, and for this apparent reason, finally joined in the parties’ agreement that a divorce was the only solution to their incompatibility and discord.

The decree which was entered in this case during July, 1967, ordered defendant to pay the $150,000.00 in monthly installments of $500.00 each, until paid in full, with the following proviso: “* * * provided that the same shall terminate upon and in the event of the death of the plaintiff, prior to the payment of the same in full.” Under his “PROPOSITION II”, to the effect that the quoted proviso renders the alimony’s sum indefinite and dependent upon a contingency which may, or may not, occur (prior to full payment), defendant argues that the alimony award is void and contrary to the rule enunciated and followed in Trosper v. Trosper, Okl., 308 P.2d 320; Vanderslice v. Vanderslice, 195 Okl. 496, 159 P.2d 560, and other cases. He recognizes that the award would be valid under H. B. No. 836, enacted by the Thirtieth Legislature (S.L.1965, Chap. 344 § 1, p. 603; Tit. 12, O.S.1965, Supp., § 1289), if.the proviso in question had declared that his payment of monthly payments of alimony should cease on plaintiff’s death or remarriage. But he says, in effect, that since it did not provide for cessation of such payments in the event of either contingency, the decree cannot be saved from application of the rule in the cases cited. Defendant seeks to support his theory of the Legislature’s intention in the 1965 enactment by pointing to said Law’s 1967 amendment (Tit. 12, O.S.1967 Supp., § 1289), which, among other things, authorizes courts, in divorce decrees entered after December 31, 1967, providing for periodic alimony payments, to designate “all or a portion of each such payment as support * * and requires such decrees to specify that such support payments “shall terminate * * * upon the death of the recipient” and also provides for their termination upon the recipient’s remarriage, unless certain court procedure occurs. In this connection, see 50 Am.Jur., “Statutes”, § 427, at footnote 11.

On the other hand, plaintiff says that the Vanderslice case is not applicable to this one, and that H. B. No.

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Bluebook (online)
463 P.2d 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowdell-v-dowdell-okla-1970.