Marriage of Burrell v. Burrell

2007 OK 47, 192 P.3d 286, 2007 Okla. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 1695688
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 2007
Docket102,470
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2007 OK 47 (Marriage of Burrell v. Burrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Burrell v. Burrell, 2007 OK 47, 192 P.3d 286, 2007 Okla. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 1695688 (Okla. 2007).

Opinion

WATT, J.

T1 Certiorari was granted to address a single issue. The question presented is whether support payments are subject to termination on remarriage under a Georgia divorcee decree requiring payment of support until the death of the wife.

12 We hold that the support alimony provision providing for payment of support until the wife's death terminates the husband's duty to make alimony payments upon the wife's remarriage under both Georgia 1 and Oklahoma statutory and jurisprudential law. 2 *288 The alignment of Georgia and Oklahoma law extinguishes any necessity to discuss full faith and credit, 3 comity 4 or public policy arguments. 5

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

T3 On September 20, 1997, the parties were divoreed. The Georgia decree incorporated the agreement of the parties that: 1) the husband would pay the wife support alimony on the fifteenth of each month "until the Wife dies;" 6 and 2) the agreement, its application and interpretation should be governed "exclusively by the laws of the State of Georgia." 7

T4 After the divorce, the husband moved to Michigan and the wife relocated to Oklahoma, where she remarried on May 31, 2008. Almost six months later, on November 21, 2003, the husband registered the Georgia decree in the District Court of Choctaw County pursuant to the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, 12 0.98.2001 § 719, et seq. The husband filed a petition to terminate the support obligation on January 16, 2004. He asserted that the wife had failed to make an application for continued support within 90 days of her remarriage as required by 48 0.8.2001 § 134(B) 8 and that, pursuant to Georgia law, the support obligation terminated upon the wife's remarriage. In response, the wife filed a motion for the declaration of her rights under the foreign divorcee decree asserting that Oklahoma law should apply and that the alimony payments should continue despite her remarriage.

1 5 By agreement of counsel, the cause was submitted to the trial court on the pleadings and the briefs. The trial court found that: application of the choice of law provision contravened Oklahoma's fundamental policy *289 favoring settlements and compromises; Oklahoma law should apply because of the lack of a substantial relationship between the parties and Georgia; and the right to terminate support alimony was waived by the provision in the agreement providing that the husband should pay support until the wife's death. In an opinion promulgated on September 22, 2006, the Court of Civil Appeals read the term "only" into the settlement, 9 agreeing with the trial court's analysis and affirming the judgment. - The appellate court denied rehearing on November 18, 2006. We granted certiorari on March 12, 2007.

T6 UPON THE WIFE'S REMARRIAGE SUPPORT ALIMONY DESIGNATED AS PAYABLE UNTIL THE WIFE'S DEATH IS SUBJECT TO TERMINATION UNDER BOTH GEORGIA AND OKLAHOMA STATUTORY LAW AND JURISPRUDENCE.

T7 Despite the provision in the agreement calling for the application of Georgia law, the wife asserts that the cause should be governed by 48 00.98.2001 § 134(B) 10 and the Jurisprudence which interprets the statutory provision. 11 The wife contends that, when the agreement is measured by these standards, the husband's duty to continue to pay support survives her remarriage. Conversely, the husband argues that his support obligation has been extinguished under both Georgia and Oklahoma law. We agree that the husband's argument is convincing under both states' statutes and jurisprudential standards.

a. Analysis of Georgia statute and caselaw.

18 The applicable Georgia statutory provision is Ga.Code 1982 $ 19-6-5. It provides in pertinent part:

"... (b) All obligations for permanent alimony, however created, the time for performance of which has not arrived, shall terminate upon remarriage of the party to whom the obligations are owed unless otherwise provided...."

The Georgia Supreme Court has specifically addressed the "otherwise provided" language of the statute. In Daopoulos v. Daopoulos, 257 Ga. 71, 73, 354 S.E.2d 828 (1987), it held that, in order to avoid the general rule of termination of support on remarriage, the agreement must expressly refer to the remarriage of the recipient and specify that the event shall not terminate the permanent alimony obligations. Here, the language of the alimony provision provides only that the alimony will continue until the wife's death. It does not, as Daopoulos requires, address the remarriage issue nor does it provide that, in such an event, alimony will continue.

19 Georgia's highest court has remained faithful to Daopoulos. The appellate court has determined that utilization of the term "permanently" in association with alimony obligations is insufficient to require continued payment after remarriage. 12 Particularly instructive here are Findley v. Findley, 280 Ga. 454, 629 S.E.2d 222 (2006) and Met *290 zler v. Metzler, 267 Ga. 892, 485 S.E.2d 459 (1997). In Findley, the Georgia court determined that the obligation to pay support terminated upon the death of the obligor unless there was a clear expression of intent to extend payments beyond death. More importantly, in Metzler, where the support provision provided that alimony would terminate upon the death of either party, the language was held insufficient to preserve the wife's right to support after she remarried.

110 Here, the alimony provision merely provides that the wife is entitled to receive alimony payments until her death. 13 There is no reference in the agreement regarding the wife's remarriage, nor any indication that alimony should continue beyond that event. Undoubtedly, when measured by Georgia statutory and jurisprudential standards, the wife is not entitled to continued alimony payments subsequent to her remarriage.

b. Application of Oklahoma statutory and jurisprudential standards.

111 The clear, explicit, unmistakable and mandatory 14 language of 48 0.8. 2001 § 184(B) 15 directs trial courts to provide in divorce decrees that, upon death or remarriage of the recipient, unacerued alimony payments shall cease.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 OK 47, 192 P.3d 286, 2007 Okla. LEXIS 78, 2007 WL 1695688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-burrell-v-burrell-okla-2007.