Matter of Marriage of Reiling

673 P.2d 1360, 66 Or. App. 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 21, 1983
Docket15-80-07904; CA A25833
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 673 P.2d 1360 (Matter of Marriage of Reiling) 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
Matter of Marriage of Reiling, 673 P.2d 1360, 66 Or. App. 284 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

*286 NEWMAN, J.

Wife appeals and husband cross-appeals from a dissolution decree. Wife assigns as errors the trial court’s failure to include a value for good will of her husband’s law practice in valuing his professional corporation, the amount and duration of spousal support, the award of more than one-half of the marital assets to husband, the duration of payment of a money judgment in her favor, the procedure followed to determine attorney fees and the failure to include her attorney’s fees in the marital indebtedness.

On his cross-appeal husband assigns as errors that the trial judge over-valued his minority interest in Al-Ore, Inc., a closely held corporation, included accounts receivable and work in progress in valuing his professional corporation and did not discount those items for income taxes. Husband does not contest the award of custody to wife of the two children, ages 16 and 9, the award of $400 per month per child for child support or the award of spousal support of $800 a month for five years and $300 for an additional three years.

Wife and husband were married for 15 years. She is 42. He is 46. She has not been employed outside the home since 1961. She received a master’s degree in Home Economics Education from Oregon State University in 1967. She hopes to receive a PhD in Family Resource Management to be qualified to teach at the university level before 1986. Husband has practiced law for 19 years and has incorporated his sole practice. He is also an Albany municipal judge. The court awarded wife assets totaling approximately $127,000, consisting of the family residence worth $127,000 (subject to an encumbrance of $35,000, which she must pay), its furnishings and other personal property worth approximately $12,500, a car worth $4,500 and an $18,000 judgment against husband. Husband received the interest in his law office building, his minority stock interest in Al-Ore, Inc., his interest in his professional corporation, his retirement plan, the cash value of his life insurance and furnishings in his possession, for a total value of approximately $186,000. His responsibility for paying $28,000 in marital debts, the judgment in favor of wife and her attorney fees of $5,000 reduce the award to approximately $135,000.

*287 Wife argues that the trial court failed to consider the good will of husband’s law practice in valuing his professional corporation. The court stated:

“* * * [W]ith respect to the valuation of the professional corporation, the court has declined to consider good will as an asset of the professional corporation. The court has likewise not included either accounts receivable or work in progress in its valuation of husband’s law practice given the fact that the issue of future income is considered by the court in its award of support.”

After wife’s motion to reconsider, 1 the court placed a value on the accounts receivable and work in progress but did not discuss further the matter of good will. Wife contends that husband’s law practice has a good will value of $57,966, but husband argues that the good will is nonexistent or speculative.

Oregon cases have included good will of a professional practice in valuing a spouse’s interest. See Steinbrenner and Steinbrenner, 60 Or App 106, 652 P2d 845 (1982) (medical); Maurer v. Maurer, 49 Or App 355, 619 P2d 964 (1980) (veterinary); Goger v. Goger, 27 Or App 729, 557 P2d 46 (1976) (dental). No Oregon case, however, has considered whether good will should be included in valuing a law practice and, in particular, that of a sole practitioner. Husband contends that good will should not be included. 2

Courts in other jurisdictions have included good will in valuing law practices. In Stern v. Stern, 66 NJ 340, 331 A2d 257 (1975), the court stated that good will in a law practice should be included in determining the worth of a professional corporation for dissolution purposes:

“* * * [I]t may * * * in a given case, be possible to prove that [good will] does exist and is a real element of economic worth. Concededly, determining its value presents difficulties.” 331 A2d at 261, n 5.

In Lopez v. Lopez, 38 Cal App3d 93, 113 Cal Rptr 58 (1974), the court also, recognized that “professional good will” in a law partnership should be considered in a marital dissolution:

*288 “The fact that ‘professional goodwill’ may be elusive, intangible, difficult to evaluate and will ordinarily require special disposition is not reason to ignore its existence in a proper case.” 38 Cal App 3d at 108.

The court recognized the need for caution:

“While ‘market value’ and the value for marital dissolution purposes of ‘professional goodwill’ may be synonymous, in our view such value should be determined with considerable care and caution, since it is a unique situation in which the continuing practitioner is judicially forced to buy an intangible asset at a judicially determined value and compelled to pay a former spouse her share in tangible assets.” 38 Cal App 3d at 110. (Emphasis in original.)

It listed factors for determining good will, including:

“* * * the practitioner’s age, health, past demonstrated earning power, professional reputation in the community as to his judgment, skill, knowledge, his comparative professional success, and the nature and duration of his business as a sole practitioner or as a member of partnership or professional corporation to which his professional efforts have made a proprietary contribution. * * *” 38 Cal App 3d at 109.

Here, the trial court may have believed that good will should not be considered in the property division, that husband’s law practice had no good will or that the evidence of value was speculative. Wife’s expert witness determined his value for good will by taking the median income of lawyers in Linn County with more than 20 years’ experience, subtracting 25 percent from that to account for the salary husband receives as a judge, taking an average of the excess of husband’s earnings above the median income for the past three years and multiplying that by 4.5. Husband’s expert witness testified that, because law practices are not sold in the state and because clients are attracted by the quality of the attorney, good will of a sole practitioner’s law practice is speculative.

We find that the evidence that wife presented does not adequately consider the factors of health, professional reputation, skill, knowledge, work habits and the nature and duration of husband’s law practice. Assuming that the value of good will could be considered in a dissolution proceeding in valuing a sole practitioner’s law practice, we do not find that *289 the testimony of wife’s expert provides a basis on which to assign a value to good will. We do not, accordingly, include any value for good will.

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Bluebook (online)
673 P.2d 1360, 66 Or. App. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-marriage-of-reiling-orctapp-1983.