Evans v. Evans

453 P.2d 560, 92 Idaho 911, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 245
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1969
Docket10148
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 453 P.2d 560 (Evans v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Evans, 453 P.2d 560, 92 Idaho 911, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 245 (Idaho 1969).

Opinion

DONALDSON, Justice.

Herman Evans, plaintiff-respondent, brought this action for divorce from his wife, Marguarite Evans, defendant-appellant, on grounds of extreme cruelty. He sought a division of the property claiming that most of it was his separate property. Marguarite Evans answered, denying the allegations of the plaintiff. She also cross-claimed for divorce and alleged that most of the property was community. Prior to the trial the court appointed a certified public accountant as master to assist the court in tracing the property and in making an accounting of the assets of the parties.

The trial court after an extensive trial, devoted almost entirely to the determination of what were the assets of the estate and their character, granted a divorce to the wife on grounds of extreme cruelty, divided the property between the parties, finding that the great majority was the husband’s separate property, divided the community property equally, and granted the wife $150.00 a month alimony. The court also, ordered the respondent to pay all court costs including the accountant’s fee of $877.50' and attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,500.-00. The wife thereupon appealed from the decree insofar as the division of the property was concerned; the amount of alimony awarded to her by the court and the amount of attorney’s fees. The appellant’s main specifications of error are to the following amended findings of fact made by the trial court.

“V.
“That at the time of the marriage of the parties hereto the plaintiff and counter-defendant owned a separate estate of a net value in excess of the sum of $187,-034.78; that at the same time the defendant and counter-claimant owned a separate estate of approximately $4,000.00.
“IX.
“That commencing with the marriage of the parties to the above entitled action the plaintiff loaned the credit of his separate estate to the community and that throughout the marriage said separate estate acted and was used as security for the betterment of the community; that further the plaintiff did not at any time-intend that his separate estate should be1 considered as a gift to the community.
“X.
“That the separate estate of the plaintiff did not lose its identity as separate property, neither did said property become co-mingled to such an extent that it lost its. identity.
*913 “XIII.
“That the defendant and cross-plaintiff devoted 13 years of her life to the marriage between herself and the plaintiff and counter-defendant; that the plaintiff and counter-defendant has the ability to pay alimony to said defendant and cross-plaintiff until her death or until she remarries; that the sum of $150.00 per month as and for alimony is a reasonable sum to be paid the defendant and cross-plaintiff until her death or remarriage.
“XV.
“That the net value of the community estate of the parties to this action is the sum of $33,008.72 together with the household furniture and fixtures.
“XVI.
“That the said community property should be awarded to the plaintiff and cross-defendant upon the condition that he pay to the defendant and cross-plaintiff the sum of $16,504.36. That the remainder of the present estate should be awarded to the plaintiff and cross-defendant as his sole and separate property.
“XVIII.
“That the plaintiff and cross-defendant should be ordered to pay the fee of the accountant appointed in this matter in due course. That the plaintiff and cross-defendant should be ordered to pay the defendant and cross-plaintiff’s attorney’s fee in a reasonable sum of $1,500.00 of which $500.00 has been paid heretofore by said plaintiff and cross-defendant, the same to be paid in due course.”

The appellant wife also claims that the court erred in making conclusions of law and entering judgment based on the amended findings of fact objected to.

The pertinent facts are as follows: The parties were married at Payette, Idaho, on May 9, 1954. There were no children born during the marriage. The wife was 59 years old at the time of the filing of the divorce action and the husband was 54 years of age. At the time of the marriage the husband was engaged in the automobile business, the Evans Motor Company. His previous wife had died and the decree of distribution in the estate was entered October 29, 1953. Page 1 of Joint Exhibit 1A, which was a report by the appointed master, shows that the husband’s separate property was worth $202,102.76. The appellant wife had also been previously married and her separate property as set forth in the divorce decree dated July 9, 1951, was listed in Joint Exhibit 1A. At that time her separate property amounted to $28,500.00 but by the time of her marriage to the respondent it had been reduced to some $13,000.00 con-' sisting of the household furniture, fixtures, equipment, etc., one piece of real property worth $4,000.00 and an interest in an automobile which she had purchased shortly before the marriage from the respondent. The piece of real property worth $4,000.00 was later transferred by the appellant to herself and to the respondent approximately four years after the marriage and the court found it therefore became community property. The household furnishings of the parties were divided by agreement during the pendency of the divorce action. On August 1, 1958, the respondent and appellant purchased a cattle ranch at Ola, Idaho, from Leo Marsters. The purchase price was $250,000.00, against which there was a mortgage of $106,500.00 which the purchasers assumed. The balance of the purchase price was paid by the respondent from the assets of the Evans Motor Company and two other pieces of separate property which the respondent owned.

At the time that the ranch was purchased by the parties the respondent entered into a personal property exchange agreement with Leo Marsters in which no purchase price was placed on the equipment. The agreement contained a list of farm equipment that was traded for used cars also listed in the agreement. The agreement for the sale exchange of real estate between the Evans’s and Leo Marsters contained a provision which stated that it recognized that *914 the property involved might be the separate property of either party and it was agreed that where the names Marsters or Evans should appear it should be construed to apply in the plural or singular as the case may be. The assumption of the mortgage held by John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company was signed by both Mr. and Mrs. Evans. The parties operated the property until March 13, 1962. During that time the operations of the ranch were financed through the Production Credit Association. In 1959 a new ranch house was constructed and an additional mortgage of $14,500.00 was taken out by the Farmers Home Administration. The various payments on these two mortgages are set out in Joint Exhibit 1A as follows:

Date Amount
January 10, 1959 3,500.00
January 1, 1960 5,150.00

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Bluebook (online)
453 P.2d 560, 92 Idaho 911, 1969 Ida. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-evans-idaho-1969.