Johnson v. Johnson

419 P.2d 28, 245 Or. 10, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 346
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 419 P.2d 28 (Johnson v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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, 419 P.2d 28, 245 Or. 10, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 346 (Or. 1966).

Opinion

REDDING, J. (Pro Tempore).

This is an appeal by the plaintiff wife from a decree of the circuit court which awarded to her a divorce and which also made distribution of the property belonging to the parties. The decree granted the plaintiff no alimony. Upon appeal, plaintiff does not attack the parts of the decree which awarded to her a divorce and the custody of the children. Bather, she is dissatisfied because of the omission of the decree to grant her alimony, and she is likewise dissatisfied with the distribution of the property of the parties.

At the time of the trial plaintiff was 35 years of age and defendant was 37. They were married on May 16, 1953, more than 12 years prior to the trial. Neither had ever been married before. Plaintiff is a college graduate, and at the time of trial was beginning her second year as a teacher at Multnomah Junior College earning $500 per month. Her take-home pay was approximately $374 per month. Out of this, in addition to other normal living expenses, she was required to pay approximately $60 per month for baby sitting and house payments of $117 per month, plus approximately $60 per month real estate taxes on the family home.

*12 Defendant is the son of wealthy parents, and during substantially his entire married life prior to April 1,1965, had worked for his father’s family corporation, Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. He married after attending college for approximately two and one-half years. In recent years he earned a bachelor of science degree in Social Science by attending night school at Portland State College. On April 1, 1965, when earning $675 monthly, defendant terminated his employment with Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. and accepted employment as a substitute teacher in the Portland school system with monthly earnings of approximately $320. Defendant now, and since the separation of the parties late in 1964 or early in 1965, has resided with his parents.

The trial court, by its decree, awarded plaintiff a divorce, the care, custody and control of the three minor children of the parties, Steven, Eric and Katharine, 11,10 and 7 years old, respectively; $225 monthly for child support; awarded plaintiff the family car, a 1956 Ford station wagon; the household furniture and furnishings; the family home, subject to a remaining unpaid mortgage balance in the approximate sum of $17,000 which the plaintiff, by the terms of the decree, was required to pay (the equity in the home awarded to plaintiff was valued at $10,000); and awarded plaintiff 201 shares of stock in Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. with a book value of $16,800. These shares were in plaintiff’s name prior to the institution of the divorce proceedings and had been given to her by defendant’s parents. The decree required defendant to pay and hold plaintiff harmless from the following financial obligations of the parties, to-wit: A remaining balance of $1,680 on a promissory note payable to defendant’s parents; a bill of approxi *13 mately $250 on account of dental services rendered the children of the parties, prior to the divorce; taxes for years prior to 1965-1966 on the family home in the approximate sum of $700; and $500 fixed by the trial court as a reasonable allowance on account of plaintiff’s attorneys’ fees in the within suit.

Defendant was awarded his personal effects, and 829 shares of stock in Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. with a book value of $69,300. These shares were in defendant’s name and had been given to him by his parents during the marriage. In addition to the stock held by the parties, defendant’s parents had given each of the three children of the parties stock in Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. with a book value of approximately $35,000. All of the stock held by the parties and their children was subject to certain restrictions on transfer, and no dividends had ever been paid thereon.

Plaintiff, in her first assignment of error, contends that the trial court erred in awarding to defendant the 829 shares of stock in Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. which were registered in his name. We will consider this assignment of error after disposing of plaintiff’s second and only other assignment of error, in which she contends the court erred in making no award to her for her support and maintenance.

Plaintiff recognizes that neither the defendant’s property nor earnings warrant an award of alimony at this time, but urges a minimal, or token award, thus empowering the court at a later date to increase the award in the event circumstances change justifying an increase.

Counsel for plaintiff, in his brief, states plaintiff’s position with reference to alimony as follows: “[i]f *14 defendant, at some later date, should inherit great wealth, and if plaintiff, having left her most marriageable years behind, should become ill and incapable of self support, there would be absolutely nothing that any court could do to remedy the situation * * OES 107.130 reads in part as follows: “(1) The court, or judge thereof, has the power at any time after a decree is given, upon the motion of either party, to: (a) * * * modify so much of the decree as may provide * * * for the maintenance of either party to the suit; * *

The decree of the trial judge makes no provision for the payment to plaintiff of alimony or maintenance. We recognize that in the absence of a modification by this court at this time, the court will be forever foreclosed from making any award of alimony, for to do so would be to amend rather than modify the decree. McFarlane v. McFarlane, 43 Or 477, 73 P 203, 75 P 139.

To adopt the suggestion of counsel for plaintiff by making a minimal or token award of alimony for the sole purpose of reserving to the court the power to modify would result in an indirect, if not direct circumvention of the provisions of OES 107.130(1) (a). In the opinion of the court, the mere possibility that the financial circumstances of the defendant might improve in the future through an inheritance from well-to-do parents, thus enabling him, solely by virtue of such inheritance, to contribute to the support of a former wife, is not sufficient grounds for the award of a minimal, token or other allowance of alimony. Boyden v. Boyden, 50 RI 326, 147 A 621.

We now turn to plaintiff’s first assignment of error in which it is contended that the trial court erred in *15 awarding to defendant 829 shares of stock in Interstate Tractor and Equipment Co. A divorce court is granted a broad range of discretion by OES 107.100(4) to “* * * make such division or other disposition between the parties of the real or personal property, or both, of either or both of the parties as may be just and proper in all the circumstances, * * The exercise of that power and the discretion necessitated thereby is illustrated by McCraw v. McCraw, 231 Or 638, 373 P2d 667 (1962). How to employ the discretion demanded by OES 107.100(4) is always a difficult, delicate and solemn problem. The court is required to determine what would be a just division of the property under all of the circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
419 P.2d 28, 245 Or. 10, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-or-1966.