Johnson v. Johnson

544 P.2d 65, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 325
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1975
Docket2333
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 544 P.2d 65 (Johnson v. Johnson) 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
Johnson v. Johnson, 544 P.2d 65, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 325 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

This appeal involves the authority of a superior court judge to modify a divorce decree. It is contended that no motion to modify the decree was properly before the judge; that the modification was made without affording Mrs. Johnson an opportunity to be heard in violation of her constitutional due process rights; and that the *67 court lacked jurisdiction to modify the trust provisions contained in the original decree. It is also alleged that the trial court erred in its modification of the decree by appointing a guardian ad litem and trustee, finding that a transfer of property by Mrs. Johnson was unlawful and ordering the use of unpaid back alimony to replenish the trust assets for any loss occasioned by that transfer. Due to the importance of rendering a prompt decision so that the rights of the parties and their children would not be prejudiced by additional delay, we entered an order on September 29, 1975 immediately after hearing oral argument. Our order affirmed the order of the superior court modifying the decree and indicated that this opinion would follow.

On April 27, 1967, Judge Warren W. Taylor entered a judgment and decree granting a divorce to the plaintiff Alta Mae Johnson from the defendant Francis T. Johnson. Pursuant to the decree, plaintiff Mrs. Johnson was awarded the care, custody and control of the four children of the marriage — all of whom were minors at the time of the decree. The plaintiff was also awarded $200.00 a month as alimony, $50.00 a month per minor child as child support and the real property located in Mountain View, California. The defendant was required to make the $100.00 monthly payments on the California property. In addition, it was ordered that the family homestead located at 33 Mile Richardson Highway on Johnson Road, together with the house thereon, and the property at Mile Badger Road be sold, and the monies deposited in trust for the education of the minor children.

Mr. Johnson was brought before the court on a number of occasions due to his failure to comply with the terms of the decree. 1 Prior to June 1973, however, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant made any attempt to comply with that portion of the decree which called for the establishment of a trust fund for the education of the children. The real property at ¼ Mile Badger Road, the proceeds from the sale of which were to form part of the trust res, was quitclaimed on September 16, 1967 by the plaintiff to her father, Elmer H. Houger. The plaintiff contends that the transfer of the property was of no benefit to her and constituted a mere reversion to the grantor (because of her alleged inability to meet the payments) rather than a sale. Nevertheless, no accounting of this transaction was ever made to the court or to the children, nor was permission obtained from the court to transfer the property.

On June 22, 1973, the defendant filed a motion to modify the decree, requesting that each of the four children of the marriage be granted an undivided one-fourth interest in the homestead located at 33 Mile Richardson Highway and nominating himself as trustee for the one-fourth inter *68 est conveyed to Collette Ann, the only child still a minor at that time.

This motion was denied on September 4, 1973 by Judge Edward Davis, who was sitting as a substitute for Judge Taylor. In denying the motion, Judge Davis requested that the file be sent back to Judge Taylor for further proceedings in accordance with the 1967 divorce decree. No subsequent motion to modify the decree was filed.

In July 1973 prior to Judge Davis’ ruling, the plaintiff filed a motion to reduce the arrearages in alimony and child support payments to judgment in the amount of $16,385.20. Mr. Johnson claimed certain offsets. 2

On March 8, 1974, Judge Taylor, without providing the parties an opportunity to brief or argue orally, issued a memorandum decision modifying the 1967 divorce decree in the following manner:

1. Joseph Sheehan was appointed trustee and guardian ad litem under the provisions of AS 09.55.210 and he was ordered to marshal the assets of the trust.
2. The trustee was to establish the present value of the loss to the trust res caused by Mrs. Johnson’s “unlawful transfer” of the ¼ Mile Badger Road property.
3. The trustee was to do everything necessary to collect arrearages in both alimony and child support and to divide them equally among the four children, three of whom were no longer minors, to offset the loss to the res occasioned by the plaintiff’s aforesaid unlawful sale. Once the loss was offset, the balance of child support and alimony due, if any, would go to the plaintiff.
4.A referee was to be appointed and the homestead at 33 Mile Richardson Highway was to be partitioned pursuant to AS 09.45.260 et seq. and each child was to receive an equal share of the property.

Plaintiff moved the court to reconsider its memorandum decision and order, but after argument was heard, that motion was denied on August 26, 1974. The plaintiff appeals from that decision of Judge Taylor. 3

AUTHORITY TO MODIFY THE DECREE

The plaintiff Mrs. Johnson contends that the defendant’s motion to modify the decree filed on June 22, 1973 and denied by Judge Davis on September 4 of that year was not properly before Judge Taylor when he issued his memorandum decision of March 8, 1974. Her argument may be summarized as follows. A proper motion to modify brought by a party to a judgment pursuant to AS 09.55.220 4 was not before the court, and, accordingly, the court lacked jurisdiction and authority to reverse Judge Davis’ prior order. In any event, it would ordinarily be improper for one judge to vacate the order of another judge of coordinate jurisdiction by what was, in effect, an ex parte order. Additionally, the doctrine of res judicata ap *69 plies to decisions on motions where proceedings have permitted a full hearing on the merits, an appeal was available and a similar order or relief is again being sought by a party on the same state of facts in the same action, suit or proceeding. Judge Davis’ order was such a final order; and since no motion for reconsideration or for leave to renew was filed and no appeal taken, the order was conclusive of the matters adjudged and binding on the parties in all subsequent proceedings.

Assuming, without deciding, that the plaintiff’s legal arguments are valid, their success turns upon whether Judge Davis’ ruling on the motion must be construed as a final order or as merely an interim disposition, whether the matters before Judge Davis could be said to have been fully litigated and whether Judge Taylor’s memorandum decision of March 8, 1974, in fact, reversed the September 4, 1973 decision of Judge Davis. The oral opinion in the case taken in its entirety 5 clearly demonstrates the temporary or interim nature of the order emanating from the September proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 P.2d 65, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-alaska-1975.