Dresser v. Dresser

1933 OK 222, 22 P.2d 1012, 164 Okla. 94, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 769
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 11, 1933
Docket20646
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1933 OK 222 (Dresser v. Dresser) 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
Dresser v. Dresser, 1933 OK 222, 22 P.2d 1012, 164 Okla. 94, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 769 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

This is an appeal from an alimony judgment rendered on a petition filed October 30, 1928, subsequent to a divorce judgment of April 20, 1927, m which a purported award of alimony to the wife was later held void on the authority of Dutton v. Dutton, 97 Okla. 234, 223 P. 149, aucl Boulanger v. Boulanger, 127 (Okla. 103, 260 P. 491, because not rendered for a definite sum, it having followed the language of an agreement of' the defendant to pay plaintiff $1,000 a month, payable in amounts of $3,000 every three months, with no definite total amount or definite number of installments.

He paid $12,000 and refused to pay more, and, the alimony award having been held void, she proceeded by petition to recover reasonable alimony and obtained judgment for $125,000, from which ho has appealed.

To avoid doubt as to a right to recover otherwise, she contended that fraud, not as to the divorce but as to alimony, brought her under the exception in section 509, C. O. S. 1921 [O. S. 1931, see. 673], which provides that a divorce shall operate as a dissolution of the marriage as to both parties and shall be a bar to any claim of either in or to the property of the other, except in cases where actual fraud shall have been committed by or on behalf of *95 the successful party. She did not ask primarily to recover on the contract, hut contended that because of fraud she could rescind the contract; she also contended that for mere breach she could rescind; and that upon rescission she would be remitted to the right possessed prior to making the contract. She prayed for such alimony as was equitable, and, that if jurisdiction to award it subsequent to the divorce judgment was denied by the court, then for damages on the contract. So, she claimed recovery on the contract only if on denial of jurisdiction to award alimony there would be no condition permitting an election, no choice of rights.

He denied jurisdiction to award alimony under section 509, supra. If there were no fraud, her contention on that point would fail.

Besides\charging a fraudulent intent not to perform the contract, she charged fraudulent representations inducing- it, as follows:

“Plaintiff alleges that defendant made representations to her and her counsel, upon which representations she l-olied in entering into said property settlement contract, that he had conditionally sold 400 shares of his stock in the Dresser Manufacturing Company of Bradford, Pennsylvania, and had only until the fall of 1927 to redeem it; that his other stock was all hypothecated with the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, Oklahoma, to secure a loan of approximately $100,000; that he owed large sums of ¡money to various creditors, and that the government had assessed himi about $30,000‘ ¡back income taxes; that the Dresser Manufacturing Company was a close corporation and that the stock had no market value, whereas she alleged the truth to be that he was at that time and is now the owner of 1,000 shares of said stock of approximately the value of $800 per share; that she did not know the value of said stock at the time she entered into said settlement agreement, but was led to believe by representatives of defendant that said stock did not exceed in value $300 a share; that defendant represented his financial condition to be so desperate that he was unable to pay his dues in the Tulsa Country Club and dues in other clubs to which he belonged and that he was not worth over and above his debts and liabilities more than $200,-000, and she alleges that she relied upon these representations, which were false.”

She also alleged that the home, title to which was in her, was mortgaged for $70,-OOO. which was turned to and used by him, and that while married she had loaned him sums aggregating $100,000. Before reviewing the evidence as to ’fraud, we observe that this mortgage yielded no money to be used by him, but was executed in the year 1925 to obtain the release of a ¡mortgage executed in 1921 for $68,723.24 to the Exchange Ti-ust Company of Tulsa, Okla., as trustee for various creditors who in 1920 had sold fur-nishipgjs for the home, the trust mortgage having listed the accounts by names of creditors and amounts of their respective accounts. As to the alleged loans aggregating $100,000, she was credited on his books with $54,000, but most of that came from the sale of some stock which he gave her in 1919 and was sold in 1919 and went directly or indirectly into the building and furnishing of the home. The house and furnishings cost over $342,000, and all but the amount secured by the trust mortgage and $13,500 borrowed and paid by her for part of the lots was paid by the defendant, so that any of her money used by him was many times made up by what he put into the home, and the alleged loans were merely inconsequential matters of bookkeeping.

They were married in 1916, he being 25 years old, the son of wealthy parents, and worth over $1,000,000, among his assets being some Dresser Manufacturing Company stock upon which this litigation principally turns. That was a close corporation, and the stock was held in the family. She was 26 years of age, but in both marital and financial experience was much older than he, having been married and divorced, then facing the, world with one child six years, and one three years, of age, with a total financial worth, according to her own testimony, of about $15,000, principally the proceeds, over attorney’s fees, of $23,000 alimony. He owned a gas company and a torpedo company, but later sold. them. About two years after marriage they moved to Tulsa, Okla., and he was reported in 1919 and 1920 as worth $2,000,000, largely speculative, paper value of oil leases, although he did have considerable production. In 1919 and 1920 and subsequently he spent about $750,000 in drilling many dry wildcat wells, but much of that was paid from production, of which he once had considerable, and much was met from the proceeds of the sale of leases around the drilling sites. That did not put him on the verge of bankruptcy and in the terribly em *96 barrassing condition existing at the time of the divorce. That condition was due to expenditures for living expenses, which ran about $100,000 a year, and which she refused to appreciably reduce. His stock in the Dresser Manufacturing Company in 1925 and 1926 paid about $00,000 in dividends each year, and in 1927 about $70,000.

Both liked high living, but the following indicates their attitudes as to exorbitant expenses when they became dangerous :

“Q. You knew he .had some stock there. Did he get any dividends on that stock? A. Oh, yes, of course. "We lived on it. Q. You lived on that? A. Yes. Q. How much did the dividends amount to, if you recall? A. Well, as I remember it, they were extra dividends and the regular dividends at that time I imagine amounted to about sixty or seventy thousand dollars a year. ”

She meant that the dividends were used for living expenses, but not that they were sufficient to pay those actually incurred.

“Q. Mrs. Dresser I will ask you if it is not a fact that during the married life of yourself and Mr. Dresser he gave you approximately a million dollars-expenses? A. In what form, Mr. Spillers? Q. From time to time, if he did not give you in the neighborhood of a million dollars to spend during the time that you and he were married? A.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 222, 22 P.2d 1012, 164 Okla. 94, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dresser-v-dresser-okla-1933.