In Re the Marriage of Von Ofenheim

596 P.2d 1007, 40 Or. App. 865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 25, 1979
DocketD 7612 17169, CA 11426
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 596 P.2d 1007 (In Re the Marriage of Von Ofenheim) 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 Von Ofenheim, 596 P.2d 1007, 40 Or. App. 865 (Or. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

*867 CAMPBELL, J.

This is a dissolution of marriage proceeding. At the time of trial, the husband was 44 years of age and the wife was 42. The parties had been married 22 years. There are four dependent children ranging from ten to 19 years of age.

Husband has appealed claiming as his first assignment of error that the trial court did not make an equitable division of the marital assets. We modify the trial court’s decree.

At the time of the parties’ marriage in 1956, wife was attending college and husband was in the military service. Wife completed two years of college and worked during the early days of the marriage as a clerk-typist. After completion of his military service, husband obtained a bachelor’s degree in accounting.

At age 21, wife received $30,000 to $40,000 from a trust previously set up by her father. The parties used approximately $25,000 of this money to buy their first house in California.

In 1964, the parties moved from California to Connecticut where husband began working for Amsinck Corporation in New York City. Amsinck was described as a family corporation investing in stocks, bonds, venture capital, real estate and loans. The corporation is wholly owned by the family’s Etawe Trust. Husband worked for the corporation until 1973 as a vice president and director. His annual salary plus other compensation reached a high of $50,000. He was terminated as a vice president in 1973 but continued with the company in a consulting capacity for a period of three years. He is still a director of the corporation.

In 1976 the parties sold their home in Connecticut for $133,000 and moved to Oregon. Husband purchased Lake Auto Parts in Lake Oswego for approximately $160,000. He borrowed $110,000 from the Etawe Trust-Amsinck Corporation to apply toward the purchase price.

*868 In October 1976, shortly after the parties arrived in Oregon, the marriage broke down and the parties separated. In August 1977, wife and children moved to the state of Virginia. Husband remained in Oregon to operate his automobile parts and supply business. Wife is employed as a clerk-typist in the biology department at the College of William and Mary.

At the time of the trial, there was little or no dispute as to the value of the following assets: $118,900 cash, $31,766 cash value of life insurance, $27,949 in listed common stock, a $14,000 motor home, and $4,500 in vehicles.

There was a dispute as to the value of the auto parts business, furniture and fixtures, and the parties’ personal effects.

Husband is a beneficiary under three family trusts. The "Shurlock Trust” was created by husband’s maternal grandmother. His mother is the income beneficiary for her life and she also has the right to withdraw five percent of the principal or $12,000 per year, whichever is less. The life beneficiary is 74 years old and in good health. The present value of the trust assets is $597,695. Husband has a one-third remainder interest or an expectancy of $199,232, based on present values.

The "Etawe Trust” was created by husband’s granduncle, Baron Ofenheim. The trust assets are presently valued at $6,774,000. The final distribution is scheduled for the end of 1983. Husband has a one-eighteenth interest or an expectancy of $376,333, based on present values.

The "American Grandchildren Trust” is a spin-off from the Etawe Trust. Husband’s interest is the sum of $60,000. This entire amount is pledged to the repayment of the loan to purchase Lake Auto Parts.

*869 The trial court did not give an opinion or make findings of fact. However, the husband has prepared, as a part of his brief in this court, the following table based upon the court’s decree:

"Non-Trust Assets: Husband Wife
Cash 2,898 116,044
Listed Securities 27,949
Life Insurance (CSV) 31,766
Motor Home 14,000
Travelall 1,500
Pontiac 3,000
Superior Auto Parts 160,000
Husband’s Personalty 12,419
Wife’s Personalty 4,498
Storage Personalty 823
Assets Other Than Trusts 223,406 151,491
Liabilities:
Household debts (1,352)
Etawe loan (120,000)
Capital gain tax ( 10,000) _
Total Liabilities (130,000) (1,352)
NON-TRUST TOTAL 93,406 150,139
(38%) (62%)
Trusts:
Etawe 376,333
Shurlock 199,232
Grandchildren 60,000
Total Trusts 635,565
Judgment to Wife (302,491) 302,491
TOTAL 426,480 452,630
(49%) (51%)”

This table shows that the trial court used wife’s values as to the disputed items. The court used the present value of the trust assets; awarded all the trust property to husband; and then to effect a 50-50 division of the total property, gave wife a judgment against husband in the sum of $302,491. 1

*870 Husband claims that the adoption of the present value of the trust assets, in which he has only future interests, totally distorts the property division. He argues that he must outlive his 74-year-old mother to receive the one-third interest in the Shurlock trust and that he must live until December 31, 1983, to receive the one-eighteenth interest in the Etawe Trust.

In Walker and Walker, 27 Or App 693, 557 P2d 36 (1977) we said at 696:

"Regardless of whether the parties’ various trust interests are vested or contingent, they are valuable, alienable property. Cf. Love v. Lindstedt, 76 Or 66, 147 P 935 (1915). Thus, they should properly be considered by the court when making an equitable distribution of the parties’ assets, ORS 107.105(l)(e), and the trial court erred in considering only that trust interest which it found to be presently vested. *

In Rinehart and Rinehart, 26 Or App 513, 552 P2d 1346 (1976), we held that the trial court properly assigned a value to a one-half interest in real property which was subject to the life estate of husband’s 86-year-old mother. At page 515, we said:

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Bluebook (online)
596 P.2d 1007, 40 Or. App. 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-von-ofenheim-orctapp-1979.