Hammer v. Hammer

991 P.2d 195, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 146, 1999 WL 1025219
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1999
DocketS-8415
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 991 P.2d 195 (Hammer v. Hammer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammer v. Hammer, 991 P.2d 195, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 146, 1999 WL 1025219 (Ala. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The superior court awarded long-term alimony to Kenneth Hammer’s former spouse, Katherine (Kathi), in light of her physical disability, lack of employment skills, and minimal job prospects. The court also ordered Ken to pay child support for the Hammers’ son, who resides with Kathi. Ken contends that Alaska law does not permit long-term alimony and that the evidence did not justify awarding alimony here. He also contends that the superior court erred in establishing his child support obligation without calculating his adjusted annual income. We affirm the award of alimony, concluding that Alaska law allows long-term alimony awards and that the evidence establishes that the award [197]*197actually entered was just and necessary. But we hold that a remand is necessary because the superior court erred in failing to calculate Ken’s adjusted annual income — an error potentially affecting its child support and alimony decisions.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ken and Kathi Hammer married in Pe-tersburg in 1973; Kathi filed for divorce in July 1996. While married, they had three children. Only the youngest, Jens, was still a minor at the time of trial.

Kathi was forty-five years old at the time of trial. She has been deaf since infancy. Her education includes high school and bookkeeping training. Kathi’s primary employment was as a homemaker and mother. Although Kathi had few employment skills, she occasionally worked as a bookkeeper, spending a total of about four and one-half years of her twenty-three-year marriage in bookkeeping jobs. At the time of divorce, she was capable of earning about $15,000 annually.

Ken was forty-six years old at the time of trial and had worked for the Alaska Marine Highway System since 1974. He had received steady salary increases in this position and by the time of trial enjoyed gross earnings of $91,000. As time permitted, Ken also worked as a commercial fisherman and diver. Although his income from these activities varied annually, his gross earnings from fishing for the year before trial totaled $9,600.

The Hammers’ primary marital assets included the family residence, a Petersburg warehouse with adjacent tidelands property, and five retirement accounts related to Ken’s marine highway employment. The court awarded the family residence to Kathi and the warehouse to Ken. It awarded the benefits from two of the five retirement accounts to Kathi, ordered Ken and Kathi to share equally in the proceeds from two other accounts, and retained jurisdiction over the remaining account, which had not yet vested. In total, the court awarded property valued at $148,720 to Kathi and $148,574 to Ken, exclusive of the two retirement accounts that Kathi and Ken will share equally.

The court also awarded Kathi primary physical custody of Jens and ordered Ken to make child support payments to Kathi. In establishing Ken’s child support payment, the court noted that his gross annual income exceeded $95,000. But it did not calculate his adjusted annual income. Instead, evidently assuming that a gross income that high left no need for more precise calculation, the court simply concluded that Ken’s adjusted annual income exceeded $72,000— the income cap established in Alaska Civil Rule 90.3(c)(2) for purposes of calculating child support payments. Accordingly the court ordered Ken to make monthly child support payments to Kathi of $1,200 — the payment specified under Rule 90.3(a)(2) for a non-custodial parent with one child whose adjusted annual income equals or exceeds the $72,000 cap.

The court went on to find that “Kathi’s unique circumstances and the illiquidity of most of the marital assets justify the award of long-term alimony.” More specifically, the court found that Kathi’s need for long-term alimony resulted from her disability, her limited work experience and job prospects, her continuing parental obligations, and the lack of readily available marital funds to meet her ongoing needs:

Her circumstances include very little job experience gained during a marriage of long duration while she eared for [three] children, physical impairment (deafness) which severely limits her income-earning potential and necessitates medical bills and the need to travel for medical services, and her responsibility to provide single parenting to the parties’ child for three more years. The great bulk of the marital assets are tied up in retirement accounts and the parties’ home.

Relying on these findings, the court ordered Ken to pay Kathi alimony of $1,400 per month until July 2000, when Jens reaches age eighteen, and $1,600 per month thereafter until Kathi remarries or begins to receive payments from Ken’s retirement accounts.

The court based the amount of this award on its estimate of Kathi’s financial needs and employment prospects. It began by determining that Kathi’s reasonable monthly expenses would total $2,600 and that her monthly earning capacity after taxes would be $1,000. But the court concluded that Kathi “should not be required to seek employment while she has the responsibility of [198]*198caring for Jens.” Thus, by setting alimony at $1,400 per month during this period, the court supplemented Kathi’s child support income in an amount that yielded total payments equaling Kathi’s monthly needs. And by increasing Kathi’s alimony from $1,400 to $1,600 after Jens’s eighteenth birthday, the court sought to maintain payments commensurate with Kathi’s needs, since Kathi would then lose $1,200 in monthly child support payments but would be free to work and could expect to gain approximately $1,000 in monthly earnings.

Ken appeals, contending that the award of long-term alimony is legally improper and factually unwarranted and that the amount of the child support award is based on a flawed calculation of his income.

III. THE SUPERIOR COURT PROPERLY AWARDED LONG-TERM ALIMONY TO KATHI BUT BASED THE AMOUNT OF THE CHILD SUPPORT AWARD ON AN INCORRECT DETERMINATION OF KEN’S INCOME.

A. Alaska Law Permits Long-Term, Alimony When “Just and Necessary.”

In challenging the superior court’s alimony order, Ken first questions whether Alaska law permits long-term awards of alimony.1 But the plain language of AS 25.24.160(a)(2) expressly authorizes courts to award alimony “for a limited or indefinite period ... as may be just and necessary.”2 In ordinary usage, an “indefinite” award is one of “unlimited” duration or one “continuing with no immediate end.”3 We must interpret this statutory language according to its common meaning unless it has acquired a particular meaning through legislative definition or prior judicial construction.4

Ken suggests that our recent case law has applied AS 25.24.160(a)(2) narrowly, defining only two permissible categories of alimony— rehabilitation and reorientation alimony— each involving awards of brief duration.5 But Ken is mistaken. We have acknowledged the concept of long-term alimony in a number of cases.6 Thus, in keeping with AS 25.24.160(a)(2), our case law allows alimony of indefinite duration when it is “just and necessary.”7

B. The Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Finding Long-Term Alimony Just and Necessary.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Farr v. Little
411 P.3d 630 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2018)
Hockema v. Hockema
403 P.3d 1080 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2017)
Swaney v. Granger
297 P.3d 132 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2013)
Odom v. Odom
141 P.3d 324 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)
Fernau v. Rowdon
42 P.3d 1047 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2002)
McDougall v. Lumpkin
11 P.3d 990 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2000)
Hammer v. Hammer
991 P.2d 195 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
991 P.2d 195, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 146, 1999 WL 1025219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammer-v-hammer-alaska-1999.