Hahne v. Hahne

444 N.W.2d 360, 1989 S.D. LEXIS 123, 1989 WL 76204
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1989
Docket16043, 16052
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 444 N.W.2d 360 (Hahne v. Hahne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hahne v. Hahne, 444 N.W.2d 360, 1989 S.D. LEXIS 123, 1989 WL 76204 (S.D. 1989).

Opinions

HENDERSON, Justice.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY/ISSUES

Appellant Anthony Hahne (Anthony) is the ex-husband of Appellee Gloria Hahne (Gloria). He appeals from a judgment of the circuit court for Campbell County, after a show cause hearing, holding him in con[361]*361tempt for (1) failing to make child support payments, and (2) failing to transfer ownership of a life insurance policy to Gloria as directed by the parties’ 1973 Minnesota decree of divorce and subsequent proceedings in that state. The circuit court ordered Anthony to pay $4,316.48 in child support arrearages and interest thereon, and to pay an amount equal to net cash value of the insurance policy, as of June 19, 1983. Anthony, via notice of appeal (Appeal No. 16043), asserts circuit court error in two respects:

(1) There were no child support arrear-ages to pay, per a Minnesota court order dated August 28, 1984; and
(2) Statutes of limitations barred Gloria’s claim regarding the life insurance policy-

Gloria, in turn, filed a notice of review (Appeal No. 16052) alleging that the circuit court erred in refusing to take jurisdiction of her claim for an award of alimony where the Minnesota court had, in 1984, awarded her none, but reserved jurisdiction over the question. We affirm the trial court on the alimony issue raised by Gloria, but reverse the trial court’s determinations regarding child support and the insurance policy.

FACTS

Hahnes were married in South Dakota on October 9, 1959. In 1968, they moved to Hibbing, Minnesota: They were divorced in Minnesota pursuant to a Decree of Divorce dated January 29,1973, issued by the District Court for Itasca County, Minnesota. Three children were born of the marriage, of which only the youngest, Brenda, is relevant to the present case. In addition to providing child support, the 1973 decree contained the following paragraph regarding a life insurance policy:

6. That the Defendant shall continue in force and effect the life insurance policy which he has, in the name of Perpetual Life Insurance Company, and shall designate as beneficiaries on said policy the three minor children of said marriage, and the defendant shall continue paying the premium on said policy and SAID POLICY SHALL BE ENDORSED SHOWING OWNERSHIP THEREIN IN THE PLAINTIFF, but the premiums due and payable thereon shall be paid by the defendant. (Emphasis added).

The divorce decree, provided, inter alia, “[tjhat the Plaintiff [Gloria] shall not be entitled to any alimony but the Court shall reserve jurisdiction of the question of alimony should the Plaintiff become unable to work because of physical impairment.” This provision was the fruit of a stipulation between the Hahnes, as noted in a subsequent order of the Minnesota Court, dated January 15,1974. This 1974 order directed Anthony to pay $1,600 alimony, in monthly payments of $100, after Gloria lost four months employment through temporary physical disability in 1973, due to an injury Gloria suffered during the marriage. That 1974 court order continued:

The granting of this lump sum alimony for the year 1973 should not be considered by the parties as an indication that the Court approves of continued applications for alimony by the plaintiff (Gloria) as it is this Court’s feeling that both parties should readjust their lives so as to become self-supporting without reliance upon each other in the future.

Thereafter, Gloria maintained employment as manager of a lounge or liquor store until September 1984. Her health deteriorated, as evidenced by five hospitalizations in 1981. By September 24, 1984, she became, according to a Social Security Administration ruling, totally disabled, entitling her to disability insurance benefits (now $304 per month). Gloria, by her testimony, has no income other than the disability payments. She owns her own home, worth $45,000, which she paid for with funds she received from an inheritance.

In 1983, Gloria returned to the Minnesota court seeking alimony and child support arrearages. The resulting court order, dated January 11, 1983, noted that Anthony owed no obligations for the older children (Anthony had custody of a son, Paul, while Debra had become emancipated), but established Anthony’s child support payments for Brenda at $200 per month, starting in February 1983.

[362]*362Anthony testified in the current proceedings that he stopped paying child support for Brenda in August 1983, although she was at that time nineteen and support was to be paid until she attained the age of twenty-one or became independent. The Minnesota court held a hearing on August 10, 1984, at which Gloria was represented by counsel, but Anthony appeared pro se. The Minnesota Court’s findings and order, dated August 28, 1984, contains the following provision regarding child support:

5. The Court further finds that the daughter of the parties, Brenda, now age 20, resides with the Petitioner, that she is self-sufficient and under the terms and conditions of the original decree is no longer the obligation of the Respondent to support.

The court denied Gloria alimony at that time, but retained jurisdiction over the issue. The judge who signed the order of August 28, 1984, subsequently wrote, in a letter to Gloria’s counsel, dated October 1, 1984, that:

I have reviewed the file and find that I am unable to amend the same as it relates to child support or attorney’s fees, absent a specific motion to do so.
It was my intention that support be awarded as per the Order, and I was of the opinion that Mrs. Hahne, currently being the moving party, should have provided for her own attorney’s fees.

The above is the entire text of the judge’s letter. On October 16, 1987, Anthony’s counsel sent a letter to the Minnesota judge requesting that he indicate whether his 1984 order meant that no child support was due in 1983 or 1984. The judge responded in a letter dated October 22, 1987: “I have again reviewed my file. I find that I did not make any order requiring Mr. Hahne to pay support. The issue of support was litigated and the Court made no order. To me that obviously means that none was due and owing.” Gloria now maintains that the matter of child support arrearages was not before the Minnesota court in 1984 although Anthony admitted in the current South Dakota proceeding that he had not been paying child support since August 1983. Anthony, on the other hand, testified that the Minnesota court had “told me I didn’t have to pay child support ar-rearages” but produced no court documents substantiating his claim.

In 1987, notwithstanding the Minnesota decree and hearings in Minnesota thereon, before the circuit court for Campbell County, South Dakota, Gloria sought, and was granted, an order for Anthony to show cause why he should not be held in contempt for not paying his past due child support for Brenda. He was also ordered to show cause as to his failure to transfer ownership of his life insurance policy to Gloria, as mandated by the original 1973 divorce decree. Gloria also requested alimony. By then, Gloria was residing in Iowa, and Anthony resided in South Dakota.

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Hahne v. Hahne
444 N.W.2d 360 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
444 N.W.2d 360, 1989 S.D. LEXIS 123, 1989 WL 76204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahne-v-hahne-sd-1989.