Krick v. Krick

348 P.2d 752, 76 Nev. 52, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 84
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1960
Docket4225
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 348 P.2d 752 (Krick v. Krick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krick v. Krick, 348 P.2d 752, 76 Nev. 52, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 84 (Neb. 1960).

Opinion

*54 OPINION

By the Court,

Pike, J.:

Appeal from order denying a motion to enter satisfaction of judgment.

The parties hereto were married in California on May 23, 1930 and separated about March 17,1945.

On November 18,1946 respondent, hereinafter referred to as “wife,” was granted a decree of absolute divorce from appellant, hereinafter referred to as “husband.” Such decree awarded to the wife the custody of the minor daughter of the marriage, then nine years of age, and ratified, approved, and incorporated into the decree a property settlement agreement between the parties dated July 24, 1945. The parties were ordered to comply with the terms and conditions of such agreement.

Following the decree provisions just referred to, the decree provided as follows:

“IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the provision contained in Paragraph I of the property settlement agreement hereinabove set forth for the payment of $750 monthly during the life of defendant and cross-complainant is a part of the property settlement and that said monthly payments constitute a part of the consideration received by defendant and cross-complainant for her release and conveyance to plaintiff and cross-defendant of all community property claims to the Krick Weather Service, except as in said agreement provided, and for her release and conveyance to plaintiff of all other claims to the property retained by the plaintiff and cross-defendant, or hereafter acquired by him, and that by reason of said facts, the order made herein required the payment of said monthly payments hereafter may not be modified or changed in any particular, and said monthly payments shall be made by plaintiff and cross-defendant to defendant and cross-complainant during the defendant and cross-complainant’s life.

“Without affecting in any way the foregoing provisions of this decree with respect to the finality of the order requiring the monthly payments of $750 to be *55 made by plaintiff and cross-defendant to defendant and cross-complainant, IT IS FURTHER. ORDERED that until the further order of the Court herein making other or different provision for the support, maintenance, and education of the minor child of the parties hereto, one-third of each monthly payment shall be fixed as the portion thereof payable for the support, maintenance, and education of the minor child of the parties hereto. The making of other provision for the support, maintenance, and education of said minor child, or any change which hereafter may be made in the apportionment of said monthly payment fixed as the amount payable for the support, maintenance, and education of said minor child, or the termination of the obligation to support, maintain, and educate said minor child through her death, marriage, or attaining of majority, shall not in any way affect the requirement of this decree for the payment to defendant and cross-complainant during her life of the full amount of the monthly payment of $750 pi’ovided for by way of property settlement in said agreement.” (Italics supplied.)

Subsequent to the remarriage of the wife on October 24, 1956, and the attainment of her majority by the daughter on December 9, 1957, the husband moved the trial court to enter satisfaction of judgment based upon the wife’s remarriage and the child’s becoming of legal age. Such motion was made pursuant to Rule 60 (b) (4) NRCP. 1 The husband appeals from the order of the trial court entered on April 6, 1959 denying such relief to the husband.

The husband contends that the payments required to be made by him to the wife under the above quoted provisions of the decree were “alimony” as contrasted with payments made in connection with a settlement of property rights between the parties, and that his obligation to make further payments terminated upon the wife’s *56 remarriage. Appellant cites NRS 125.150 which reads in part, “In the event of * * * the subsequent remarriage of the wife, all alimony awarded by the decree shall cease, unless it shall have been otherwise ordered by the court.” The quoted statutory provision, however, applies only to “alimony” awarded by the decree. The decree does not order the husband to pay “alimony” but, on the contrary, provides that the monthly sums to be paid by the husband under the terms of the property settlement agreement, are “* * * a part of the property settlement and that said monthly payments constitute a part of the consideration received by [the wife] for her release and conveyance to [the husband] of all community property claims to the Krick Weather Service, * * * and for her release and conveyance to [the husband] of all other claims to the property retained by [the husband] or hereafter acquired by him, and that by reason of said facts, * * * said monthly payment shall be made by [the husband] to [the wife] during [the wife’s] life.

The husband’s motion, seeking relief from making further payments, was presented to the trial court nearly 12 years after the entry of the decree. During the interim the husband had complied with the decree provisions requiring monthly payments by him. Upon the hearing of the husband’s motion the trial court was required to construe the language of its own decree, and such construction must be given great weight in determining the intent of the trial court with which we are here concerned. Wilde v. Wilde, 74 Nev. 170, 326 P.2d 415. The trial court, in denying the motion, construed the decree to provide that the monthly payments shall be made by the husband during the wife’s lifetime.

We agree with this conclusion of the lower court. In view of the above quoted language from the decree, which provides specifically that the monthly payment shall be made by the husband during the wife’s life, even though the monthly payments should be construed to be alimony, NRS 125.150 would not be authority for *57 the payments to cease upon the wife’s remarriage, as here the trial court “otherwise ordered” that the payments continue during the wife’s life.

The record shows that at the trial on the merits of the divorce case, the husband and the wife had settled their property rights by the agreement above mentioned, and that each had been represented by independent counsel in its execution and preparation. He also testified that he considered that the agreement was fair, .just and equitable. As indicative of the intent of the parties with reference to the settlement of property rights and the period through which monthly payments should continue, certain recitals and provisions of the agreement are significant.

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Bluebook (online)
348 P.2d 752, 76 Nev. 52, 1960 Nev. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krick-v-krick-nev-1960.