In re the Marriage of Franzke

624 P.2d 632, 51 Or. App. 35, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 2, 1981
DocketNo. D 13 784, CA 17673
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 624 P.2d 632 (In re the Marriage of Franzke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Franzke, 624 P.2d 632, 51 Or. App. 35, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2131 (Or. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

GILLETTE, P. J.

Wife appeals from a decree in a dissolution proceeding. She challenges the court’s division of assets, the value placed on certain assets and the amount and duration of spousal support. We modify the decree with respect to both the division of assets and the spousal support.

This is a 24 year marriage. At the time of trial the husband was 44 years old and the wife was 43. The husband is a lawyer admitted to practice in 1960. He had been a partner in a large Portland law firm since 1966. His gross income for 1979 was $139,291. In 1978, he had earnings of $85,283; in 1977, he earned $97,928; and in 1976, he earned $72,490. Husband testified that 1977 and 1979 were unusual years that were not likely to be repeated: In 1977 he received a $10,000 bonus from a client and in 1979 the firm made a special effort to collect accounts due in anticipation of a pending merger with another law firm. Husband testified further that during the last year he experienced physical problems related to high blood pressure and a high cholesteral level which caused him to slow down in his work. He anticipated some effect on his future earning capacity because of his need to reduce his work load, but was uncertain as to whether this would actually occur and to what degree.

Wife worked during the first 4 or 5 years of the couple’s marriage, until the time when husband finished law school in 1960. She worked as an office clerk, as a PBX operator for a trucking firm, and for an insurance firm. At the time of trial she had been employed for the previous three years as a receptionist in a nursing home. As part of her duties she performs general office work and does some of the payroll work. The work is part time; she earns about $780 a month. In 1979, her gross earnings were approximately $8,700; in 1978, she earned $7,163; in 1977, she had earnings of $3,834. Wife testified that she would have to consider working full time but indicated that she had made no arrangements to do so. Wife presently enjoys good health.

The couple have three children, all age 18 or above. The second child attends college and husband indicated [38]*38that he contributes at least $300 a month toward her support. Thé other two children are married.

The parties have assets of considerable value. Husband and wife agree that these assets should be evenly divided. The trial court awarded the wife $21,446 in assets and a judgment of $87,000 against the husband, a total award of $108,446. The judgment is to be paid at the rate of $1,568.61 per month, at 9 percent interest. The husband was awarded the couple’s home worth $149,665 and most of the couple’s antiques, household furnishings and recreational equipment. Wife claims that the husband’s award amounted to $297,685, minus liabilities of $40,400 and the $87,000 judgment in her favor, for a total of $170,285. She argues that she should be awarded a judgment of $117,919 in order to equalize the property division. Husband contends that his award amounts to only $197,780 minus the $87,000 judgment for a total of $110,780. He arrives at a figure of $88,167 as the amount needed to distribute the assets evenly. Husband argues that the lesser judgment of $87,000 is justified because of the nature of the assets he was awarded, tangible property and retirement accounts, as opposed to the liquid assets the wife received and the fact that she will earn 9 percent per annum on the judgment in the form of interest.

The. difference between the figures cited by the parties lies in the treatment of the various accounts the husband has with his law firm. The husband has a capital account worth $10,145 at the time of trial. It consists of a portion of his share of the firm’s profits which he contributes as capital available for the firm’s use. Husband also has an account, which is an investment fund generated by the capital account, in the amount of $14,480 and a Keogh account or retirement plan in the amount of $49,145. These three accounts, presently totalling $73,770, are not available to husband until he leaves the firm. Husband also has a balance of $34,720 in a drawing account which is available to him at any time. This latter account is his share of his law firm’s profits less that portion set aside for the capital account. On his own initiative and without evidence being introduced on the matter, the trial judge reduced the value of the accounts available to the husband when he [39]*39leaves the firm from their face value of $73,700 to $13,000. The judge arrived at this figure by assuming that the value of these accounts would not be realized for another 20 years. He also indicated in his memorandum opinion that he viewed the drawing account as simply a method of distributing earnings and, as such, current income rather than an asset to be distributed.

Wife argues that the trial court erred in reducing the value of the capital, investment and Keogh accounts and in excluding the drawing account from the property settlement. Her figures, noted above, are based on the inclusion of the full value of each of these accounts in the property division. Husband, on the other hand, would exclude the drawing account and now values the other three accounts at only $13,000. However, he fails to consider the $40,400 which he assumed in liabilities, thus overvaluing his own award, if the reductions in value were proper.1 It appears that the trial court also failed to include specifically the parties’ liabilities in the division it made, although it is clear from the record that all agreed that the husband would assume the $40,440 in family debts. Husband argues [40]*40that the drawing account and liabilities were both excluded as an offset to each other.

We turn first to the drawing account. That sum is available to the husband at the present time. As such, it is like a bank account or any other cash asset which is properly part of a property division. The trial court awarded the account to the husband at the same time it indicated that it would not consider it as an asset to be distributed. Upon recalculation of the property division we conclude that the $34,720 in the drawing account as well as the $40,400 in liabilities should be specifically included in determining the proper award.

It is also clear that the retirement benefits and other accounts available to husband upon leaving the firm are to be regarded as "marital assets to be considered in formulating the financial aspects of a dissolution decree.” Rogers and Rogers, 45 Or App 885, 893, 609 P2d 877 (1980), modified 47 Or App 963, 615 P2d 412 (1980), rev den 289 Or 659 (1980). They represented sums earned during the course of the marriage. The question is how these accounts [41]*41are to be treated. The present amount accumulated in the three accounts in question, as represented in husband’s trial memorandum, is $73,700. In that memorandum, husband proposed that wife receive half the value of the parties’ assets, including the amount assigned to these accounts. Wife does not contend that these accounts are presently worth more than husband represents; we therefore take the figure as stated by him.2

Because the trial judge erred with respect to the value assigned to the various accounts belonging to the husband and the specific exclusion of the drawing account, as well as the parties’ liabilities, it follows that the property division must be recalculated. We find that the husband was awarded assets totalling $293,805, minus $40,400 in liabilities, for a total of $253,405.

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Related

In re the Marriage of Goff
820 P.2d 33 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1991)
In re the Marriage of Latimer
795 P.2d 1102 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1990)
In re the Marriage of Snyder
792 P.2d 478 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1990)
LaRue v. LaRue
304 S.E.2d 312 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1983)
In re the Marriage of Sands
651 P.2d 1387 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1982)
Matter of Marriage of Franzke
637 P.2d 595 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1981)
In re the Marriage of Fowler
627 P.2d 1304 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
624 P.2d 632, 51 Or. App. 35, 1981 Ore. App. LEXIS 2131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-franzke-orctapp-1981.