Garber v. Robitshek

33 N.W.2d 30, 226 Minn. 398, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 610
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 18, 1948
DocketNo. 34,645.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 33 N.W.2d 30 (Garber v. Robitshek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garber v. Robitshek, 33 N.W.2d 30, 226 Minn. 398, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 610 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

Peterson, Justice.

Appeal from order modifying a judgment for divorce after defendant’s (the husband’s) death so as to increase the award of alimony for plaintiff, the wife, and support money for the children.

The question for decision is whether a provision for alimony for the wife and support money for minor children in a divorce judgment is subject to'modification and amendment after the husband’s death, where it provides for monthly payment until the further order of the court of a certain sum to the wife as alimony for the wife and support money for the minor children of the parties, whose custody was awarded to the wife during their minority, but without specifying how much thereof shall be alimony for the wife and how much shall be support money for the children, and declares the payments a lien upon real estate, which the wife is adjudged to convey to the husband, prior to all encumbrances thereon of record.

On November 21, 1938, judgment was entered granting plaintiff a divorce from her husband which provided among other things that she be awarded the care and custody of the four children of the parties, then of the ages of 17, 14, 10, and 5 years, “during the period of their minority”; that the defendant pay to plaintiff “alimony and support money for herself and the four minor children” the sum of $100 per month “until the further order of the court”; that the sums to be so paid “shall be a lien prior to all encumbrances not now of record against the real estate of parties other than the homestead”; that plaintiff be awarded absolutely the homestead in fee, together with the household goods and furnishings therein; that plaintiff convey to defendant three tracts of land on which he was operating an automobile parts business; that she transfer and assign to him the automobile parts business; and that the *400 parties forthwith execute the necessary deeds and other instruments to effectuate the terms of the judgment.

Apparently, defendant paid the purchase price of the property to which plaintiff held legal title, and regardless of the fact that he could not recover any of the property from her and could not enforce any trust, constructive, resulting, or otherwise, she consented in the divorce action to judgment transferring the property to him upon provision being made for herself and their children. In 1938, when the judgment was entered, defendant’s income was $2,513. Thereafter his income increased substantially annually, and in 1946, the year of his death, it amounted to $36,530.98. The three tracts of land were appraised at $9,080, and the automobile parts business at a little over $40,000.

The deeds and other instruments necessary to effectuate the judgment were not executed or delivered. The reason why this was not done does not appear. Defendant paid the $100 alimony and support money monthly as required by the judgment up to the time of his death, except for a payment of only $50 in November 1946. Consequently, at the time of defendant’s death plaintiff had legal title to all the property the same as she did when judgment was entered.

In 1942 defendant married Fannie Garber, who is now his widow.

In March 1947, about four months after defendant’s death, plaintiff moved to amend the divorce judgment as follows: (1) To substitute as defendant the defendant’s administrator; (2) to require the administrator to pay alimony and suit money unpaid when defendant died; (3) to amend the judgment so as to award plaintiff $200 per month as alimony and support money; and (4) to grant certain other incidental relief. The widow and the children, as well as the administrator, were made parties.

The widow filed a special appearance and objected to the court’s jurisdiction of the subject matter, which was overruled. Thereupon the motion was heard over her objection. The administrator adopted a neutral position and indicated a willingness to abide the court’s order or judgment. In a helpful statement, counsel for the administrator informed both the trial court and this court concerning the *401 facts and rules of law governing the rights of the parties. They expressed the view that plaintiff was entitled to modification of the judgment. Although plaintiff’s affidavit in support of the' motion asserted “that the legal effect and conscious purpose of the court in creating the lien was to insure the continuance of such payments, or their equivalent, in such amount as the court might upon proper application redetermine, during the full remainder of plaintiff’s life and the minority of parties’ children, irrespective of defendant’s personal survival,” there was no denial thereof.

The court found “that the intent of said judgment and decree was to provide, subject to the further order of the court, an allowance to plaintiff by way of alimony and support money for herself and her four children, not terminable at the death of the original defendant, should plaintiff survive him, but for the balance of her lifetime and during the minority of the children, respectively” (italics supplied) ; that the parties intended to make the liability for alimony and support money “a specific lien” on the land on which defendant conducted the automobile parts business; that the judgment should be modified by increasing the amount of the alimony and support money to $170 per month; that the administrator, on behalf of defendant’s estate and plaintiff execute and deliver the several instruments necessary to effectuate the judgment as modified; that if within 30 days the terms of the order should not be complied with the judgment be so “construed, interpreted, clarified and adjusted” as to pass title without act of the parties; and that the court retain jurisdiction of the case for further amendment and revision of the judgment.

The widow appeals from the order.

The legal question to be decided has been narrowed by concessions as to what the applicable rule of law is. Counsel agree that the court has the power to provide in a divorce judgment that the husband’s liability to pay alimony and support money shall continue after his death as a charge upon his estate; that whether the judgment in a particular case so provides depends on whether the court manifested an intention that it should do so either by explicit pro *402 vision to that effect in the judgment or by clear implication from its provisions; and that, where such an intention is manifested, the provisions with respect to alimony and support money may be modified and amended after the husband’s death. See, Clarizio v. Castigliano, 201 Minn. 590, 277 N. W. 262; Gunderson v. Gunderson, 163 Minn. 236, 203 N. W. 786; Fitzpatrick v. Fitzpatrick, 127 Minn. 96, 148 N. W. 1074; Murphy v. Shelton, 183 Wash. 180, 48 P. (2d) 247. The dispute here is whether the judgment of divorce manifests an intention that provision for the payment of alimony and support money shall survive defendant’s death.

We think that the' judgment upon its face manifests an intention to make defendant’s liability for alimony and support money continue after his death as a charge against his estate.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.W.2d 30, 226 Minn. 398, 1948 Minn. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garber-v-robitshek-minn-1948.