Duncan v. Duncan

172 P.2d 210, 25 Wash. 2d 843, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 444
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1946
DocketNo. 29839.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 210 (Duncan v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. Duncan, 172 P.2d 210, 25 Wash. 2d 843, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 444 (Wash. 1946).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the superior court for King county denying defendant’s petition to modify the provisions for alimony as contained in an interlocutory order of divorce entered seven years previously.

Appellant, James B. W. Duncan, and respondent, Hazel Bervin Duncan, were united in marriage on August 3, 1920. A child, Barbara Jean, was born to them in 1927.

On October 10, 1938, respondent instituted an action for divorce from appellant, on the grounds of cruelty and abandonment. Appellant defaulted in the action. Prior to the hearing of the cause, however, respondent and appellant on October 21, 1938, entered into a written agreement, denominated a “property settlement and agreement,” in which the parties agreed that respondent was to have the care, custody, and control of the daughter, Barbara Jean, then eleven years of age, and that appellant should have the right to visit the child at reasonable times. Appellant further agreed therein to pay to the respondent “the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars per month each and every month hereafter as alimony until and unless she should remarry, at which time said payments are to stop,” and to pay to the respondent the additional sum of twenty-five dollars a month for the support of the daughter until she should become of the age of twenty-one years. The written agreement also provided that respondent should have, as her sole and separate property, the home in which the parties had resided, subject to an outstanding mortgage, and the furniture therein, also a Nash sedan and an insurance policy on her life; and that appellant should have, as *845 his sole and separate property, a half-section of land in the eastern part of this state, a designated amount of capital stock of the Bemis Brothers Bag Company, by whom appellant was then employed, and certain mining stock. In the agreement was a provision wherein the respondent wife agreed “not to bring any separate action for damages other than this divorce action, involving the defendant [appellant] in, or could be based upon any charges arising out of this suit.”

At the hearing on November 16,1938, the trial court made and entered findings of fact and conclusions of law establishing the grounds of divorce as alleged in respondent’s complaint, also reciting the written agreement in haec verba, and specifically approving the terms thereof. On the same day, an interlocutory order of divorce was entered, which also recited and approved the terms of the written agreement.

At the time of the entry of the interlocutory order, appellant was earning a salary of $315 a month. About three years prior to the divorce, respondent had taken a course in library training, but, so far as the record discloses, had no actual employment until September, 1938, which was about a month prior to the commencement of the divorce action.

A final decree of divorce, approving all of the provisions of the interlocutory order, was entered May 17, 1939. From the time of the execution of the written agreement between the parties, appellant has regularly paid to the respondent the alimony and support money as called for both in the agreement and in the interlocutory order, and at the time involved herein he was not in default of any required payment.

In the meantime, from about March, 1939, until July 1, 1945, respondent was employed as a librarian by the Kitsap county rural library district at a salary which averaged about $150 a month. In the spring of 1945, she “audited” a library course in the University of Washington, and on July 1st of that year her salary as librarian was increased to $245 a month. She has never remarried.

*846 In the month of May, 1942, appellant married his second wife and has been living with her since that time. On May 30,1945, the daughter, Barbara Jean, then eighteen years of age, married and since then has been living with her husband.

Up to this point, we have presented the situation existing between the parties at the time the present proceeding was instituted by the appellant on July 13, 1945. He was then forty-six years of age and respondent was forty-five.

On the date last mentioned, appellant filed a petition seeking a modification of the interlocutory order of divorce entered November 16, 1938. In his petition, he recited briefly the factual situation narrated above, and then alleged that respondent was a trained and skilled librarian, able-bodied, and capable of earning in excess of two hundred dollars a month; that he himself was in frail health; that it was with difficulty that he was able to pursue his occupation as office man and salesman; that he had very little income “other than his salary of about four hundred dollars per month”; and that because of such changed conditions ánd status of the parties he believed that the interlocutory order and final decree should be modified by eliminating therefrom the provisions relative to the payment of alimony to the respondent and support money for the daughter. Respondent joined issue upon the petition, and the cause came on for hearing by the court upon the oral testimony of the parties.

Appellant testified that ever since September, 1938, which was prior to the commencement of the divorce action, he had been “more or less, off and on, under a doctor’s care,” due to a neurotic condition, caused by thirty-one years of hard work; that during the intervening period he had lost weight to the extent of about thirty-three pounds and presently weighed only about one hundred sixty-six pounds; that in the previous year a major operation had been performed upon his wife and that her health was still poor; and that his doctor’s bills for himself and for his present wife during the year 1944 amounted to approximately eleven hundred dollars. However, he also testified that he was *847 still employed by his original firm of employers; that his salary was $450 a month; that his bonus from the same firm during the preceding year amounted to one hundred dollars a month, although he did not expect to receive any bonus during the year 1945; and that his stock dividends amounted to $280 a year.

Respondent did not testify in her own behalf, but, upon cross-examination by appellant’s counsel, she admitted that, since the date of the divorce, her salary had averaged about $150 a month, and that, beginning July 1, 1945, just before the hearing in court, it had been increased to $245 a month.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court rendered an oral decision indicating that the interlocutory order and final decree would be modified to the extent of eliminating therefrom the provision of twenty-five dollars for the support of the daughter, who since had married, but not to the extent of eliminating the provision of one hundred dollars monthly alimony to the respondent. On a motion •for new trial filed by the appellant, the court heard argument and thereafter rendered a memorandum decision, followed by findings, conclusions, and order in conformity with the original decision. This appeal is directed to the refusal of the trial court to modify the decree of divorce by eliminating therefrom the provision with reference to the further payment of alimony to the respondent.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 210, 25 Wash. 2d 843, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-duncan-wash-1946.