Felt v. Felt

493 P.2d 620, 27 Utah 2d 103, 1972 Utah LEXIS 920
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1972
Docket12409
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 493 P.2d 620 (Felt v. Felt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felt v. Felt, 493 P.2d 620, 27 Utah 2d 103, 1972 Utah LEXIS 920 (Utah 1972).

Opinion

HENRIOD, Justice:

Appeal from a judgment reducing an alimony award of $12,000 per year to $1.00 per year. Reversed and remanded for a new trial, with costs to appellant.

The parties had been wife and husband for about 18 years before Mrs. F filed for divorce. Incident thereto a 13-page “Property Settlement Agreement” was executed by the parties, the significant part of which, so far as this case is concerned, was the following paragraph:

It is further agreed . . . that the aforesaid amount of alimony ($1,-000 per month) ... is a reasonable sum in view of the efforts made by plaintiff in assisting defendant in his *105 professional education and considering the present circumstances and social standing now enjoyed by Lee C. Felt: and that said amount shall not be hereafter adjusted, notwithstanding increases or decreases in any amount in the income of plaintiff, and notwithstanding any changes in the income of the defendant unless said changes are substantial and so decrease the defendant’s income so that defendant is reasonably unable to pay the alimony agreed to herein.

The paragraph above certainly contemplates that plaintiff intended to seek employment for more than the part-time work and its income, in which the record reflects she then was engaged, with no reference to or finding as to her then income.

The court, upon hearing the matter, must have understood that Mrs. F accepted the $1,000 per month alimony on condition that she could supplement it with other income, — otherwise the provision, to which Mr. F, without objection, voluntarily became signatory, made no sense. The court incorporated the paragraph as a part of the decree, with the statement: “which Property Settlement Agreement the court hereby adopts as fair and reasonable.” The findings and decree of the court were supported by Mrs. F’s testimony that she was the main source of income for the first seven years while her husband was completing his medical training, that she presently worked part-time and hoped to work again, which the trial court remarked at that point, by asking what we think was a very significant question to the effect that: “So you can supplement your income to some extent?” to which Mrs. F said “Yes.”

About a year after the divorce, Mr. F was cited for nonpayment of alimony and was ordered to pay $4,000 in arrearages, and again, about eight months later, was ordered to pay another $8,000 for the same reason, and pursuant thereto he was ordered to appear about two months later to determine the issue of contempt at which time he was found in contempt, was sentenced to 10 days in jail, and given an opportunity to purge himself by promptly paying the alimony when it accrued, and by paying off the past due judgments. At the time Mr. F was cited for contempt, he filed a motion to delete the alimony, which was heard at the same time as the contempt issue. Mr. F’s counsel referred to the case of Callister v. Callister 1 which holds in effect that the court has continuing jurisdiction to raise or lower alimony irrespective of any agreement of the parties, if there is a change of circumstances •warranting such modification, — a principle which consistently we have espoused,— and a principle which simply is repeated *106 in the paragraph signed by the parties and quoted above, the only question in the instant case being whether the burden of proof, which in this case was Mr. F’s, was borne with such substantiality as to warrant the emasculation of a $12,000 award of alimony except for a token annual $1.00 that certainly cannot be categorized as deficit financing.

Mr. F’s brief makes much of certain testimony, that the trial court apparently did not believe, or which was not pertinent in the hearing on the motion to amend the decree, since nowhere are the facts reflected in said testimony found in the court’s written Findings, i. e.:

Mr. F said he questioned the advisability of signing the agreement, but his counsel advised him to sign it, saying any district court judge would agree it was fair and equitable. His counsel proved to be right, since the district court in a signed decree said just that, and such evidence is not pertinent since he signed the agreement. Flis counsel questioned Mrs. F as to her role in helping Mr. F in securing his medical education. This had already been canvassed before the divorce decree was entered, and hence was inapropos here, but only a possible matter to consider on a motion for new trial or appeal. He questioned Mrs. F about her present income and the' best he could get from such interrogation was $9,000, without any testimony or adduced facts about what Mrs. F was making part-time at the time of the decree. In such event the $9,000 is not an absolute and at best an elusive factor in determining changed circumstances. He questioned her about her equity in the home and about insurance policies awarded to her in the decree, — facts quite impertinent and inadmissible here. He asked her about her husband’s sterilization that occurred 18 years before the divorce, another matter not pertinent and a fact existing before and merged in the decree. He asked Mr. F about his health problem occurring after the decree, and about the added burdens of his practice and about his being so tired that he stumbled around on going to bed, and about consulting doctors and what they advised him, and about some immaterial matters such as increased seminar costs, insurance costs, etc. It is apparent that the trial court thought the above recitals either were immaterial or that he did not believe Mr. F, since no mention of them was made in the court’s Findings. The fact that Mr. F remarried a woman with a child was not material, but considered so in the Findings.

What seems to be cogent to us in this case that the findings of the trial court, some of which cannot be used in a conclusion to relieve one of alimony payments, did not warrant the termination of a $12,000 annual award. To justify our *107 ■conclusion in this respect we advert to the Findings of the court, set forth in italics, abstracted so far as pertinent here, as follows, without comments thereon in plain type:

6. That plaintiff is qualified by education and experience to support herself, which was demonstrated throughout the marriage and particularly now after she works full time, while only part time at the time of the decree, at which time she was under the doctor’s care.

This finding has to do largely with matters existing before the decree and taken into account in arriving at the alimony award, except that part about full-time employment, and with that exception the Finding is on matters that are res judi-cata and if canvassable at all, were matters to be considered on timely appeal, not three or four years later on motion to amend.

7. That the agreement was based in part on recognition of Mrs. F’s assistance in Mr. F’s education; that such efforts were substantial, but that his education was substantially completed before the marriage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
493 P.2d 620, 27 Utah 2d 103, 1972 Utah LEXIS 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felt-v-felt-utah-1972.