In Re the Marriage of Knudson

622 P.2d 1025, 191 Mont. 204, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 633
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1981
Docket80-267
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 622 P.2d 1025 (In Re the Marriage of Knudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court 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 Knudson, 622 P.2d 1025, 191 Mont. 204, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 633 (Mo. 1981).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HARRISON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Stanley Knudson and Frances Knudson obtained a decree of dissolution in the Hill County District Court on October 12, 1978. The husband appealed from the property settlement provisions of the decree. The judgment was reversed in part and affirmed in part by this Court. Knudson v. Knudson (1980), 186 Mont. 8, 606 P.2d 130, 37 St.Rep. 147. Post-appeal motions were filed by both parties, and the husband now appeals from orders of the District Court requiring him to pay interest from the date of the decree and to pay the wife a reasonable rental value for the real property awarded to her under the decree and disposing of the parties’ personal property.

In August 1978 the parties obtained a divorce decree purporting to divide the estate 60 percent to the husband and 40 percent to the wife. Under this decree the wife was to receive the farmhouse and out buildings, valued at $87,000, and $113,000 in cash, payable $13,000 in September 1978 and $6,000 annually thereafter. The wife moved to amend this decree, and in October 1978 the District Court granted her motion. The court found that she was entitled to an additional $20,000, representing her share of her husband’s railroad retirement pension which had not been originally considered by the court. The husband appealed to this Court solely on the basis of the inclusion of the pension. We reversed with regard to the inclusion of the pension and affirmed the balance of the decree. See Knudson v. Knudson, supra.

Both parties then filed post-appeal motions. The District Court found that the wife was entitled to a reasonable rent from the hus *206 band for the time he occupied the farmhouse awarded to her. The court determined that $6,000 was a fair rent for the period between October 1978 and April 1980. The court also required the husband to pay interest on the $13,000 payment which was due in September 1978 and the $6,000 payment due in September 1979. The District Court also reconsidered the property distribution and purported to equally divide certain personal property not mentioned in the original decree.

Stanley Knudson offers three issues for this Court’s review:

1. Did the District Court err in reconsidering distribution of personal property after the cause had been remanded by this Court?

2. Did the District Court err in its actual distribution of the personal property?

3. Did the District Court err in directing Stanley Knudson to pay to his wife rent and interest dating from the court’s decree?

In our resolution of the first appeal of this case, we ruled:

“The decree of the District Court is affirmed except insofar as it awards the wife a share of the husband’s railroad retirement pension. This cause is remanded to the District Court for amendment of judgment in accordance with this opinion.” 606 P.2d at 135, 37 St.Rep. at 153.

The husband contends in this appeal that the District Court is relitigating issues regarding the couple’s personal property. He argues that the personal property disposed of by the District Court had already been distributed and that distribution affirmed by this Court in Knudson v. Knudson, supra. We do not agree.

On May 14, 1980, the District Court found that, “[t]he issue of the division of personal property, mainly household furnishings, located at the family residence and respondent’s apartment, was not raised at the original proceedings or disposed of by the court’s decree.” This Court can find no specific distribution of property which was already disposed of by the first decree. To the extent the District Court determined the parties’ rights in personal property previously unaccounted for, or excluded from, the first decree, the husband’s argument that the judge was relitigating the personal *207 property distribution is unpersuasive. We conclude that the judge was merely completing his initial task of settling the marital estate. In view of the fact that the distribution of the household furnishings was a continuation of the court’s original proceeding, we are obliged to respect its judgment in the absence of arbitrary action or the failure to employ conscious judgment. In re the Marriage of Jacobson (1979), 183 Mont. 517 600 P2.d 1183, 36 St.Rep. 1773, 1776.

Nor do we accept husband’s argument regarding the District Court’s imposition of rent. Husband maintains that had the wife either made application for a posting of a supersedeas bond, moved to dissolve the stay of execution, or asked the court to impose a rental as part of the stay of execution, he would have had the option of continued occupancy or removal. Because of his wife’s inaction, the husband contends he was limited in his choices and should not be required to pay rent.

We will not allow the husband to benefit from his own recalcitrance. From the date of the initial decree granting his wife the property, he knew or should have known that he was using and occupying realty which was not his own. We find that it was his responsibility, not the wife’s, to proceed toward a determination and protection of his rights. This Court will not allow a person to benefit from his own inaction. As a matter of fairness, we conclude that the husband’s occupancy of his wife’s property from the date of the initial decree makes him liable to her for reasonable rental value. In determining that value, we are obliged to respect the District Court’s judgment, and in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion, that judgment will not be disturbed on appeal. No such abuse took place here. Lumby v. Doetch (1979), 183 Mont. 427 600 P.2d 200, 202, 36 St.Rep. 1684, 1687.

In the District Court the wife claimed interest on $13,000 from the date of the judgment and on $6,000 from September 1, 1979. Husband does not deny liability for the interest on the $6,000 but asserts that because of the stay of execution, he owes no interest on the $13,000.

*208 Section 25-9-205, MCA, provides that interest is payable on judgments at the rate of 10 percent per annum; but, under Section 2, Chap. 649, Laws of 1979, that rate applies only to the balance owing on judgments from and after July 1, 1979. Prior to that date, the previous legal rate of 6 percent applies.

Rule 31, M.R.App.Civ.P., provides in relevant part that, “[i]f a judgment for money in a civil case is affirmed, whatever interest is allowed by law shall be payable from the date the judgment was rendered or made in the district court.”

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Bluebook (online)
622 P.2d 1025, 191 Mont. 204, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-knudson-mont-1981.