OP ALA, Justice.
This appeal from an order in a post-divorce accounting proceeding tenders for our review the question whether the challenged provisions of a divorce decree — by which one spouse received as support alimony a share of property inherited by, but not yet fully distributed to, the other
spouse
— axe
facially void
for lack of definiteness. We answer in the negative.
A 1970 divorce decree granted the wife as support alimony a monetary award, as well as an undivided one-fourth interest in a certain portion of the husband’s distributive share in the estates of his deceased parents, only one of which estates was then
in probate.
Neither party sought appellate review of this decree.
In a post-decree proceeding
brought ten years later, the wife sought to enforce the alimony award against her former spouse and some members of his family by an accounting of the proceeds from the sale or transfer of certain qualifying assets. The wife’s goal was to have her decreed interest in those assets quieted and her lien impressed upon them. The proceeding culminated in an order vacating that part of the decree which granted the wife — as alimony — a portion of the husband’s distributive share of the estates. The trial court held that alimony award void for failure to meet the legal standards of definiteness. The wife sought corrective relief by a petition for certiorari to review the trial court’s ruling as a certified interlocutory order. By this court’s earlier direction the present case came to be recast as an appeal.
We now reverse the trial court’s order.
The wife s contention is that her alimony award in contest here is valid under our decision in
Frensley v.
Frensley.
The husband argues that the award of an “undivided one-fourth interest” constitutes an impermissibly indefinite quantum and asserts that there is neither a definite time period within which the total amount of the husband’s obligation will come due, nor is it possible to determine the total amount of the net proceeds of which the award is comprised.
The posture in which this ease comes does not call upon us either to place a construction on the terms of the contested alimony award
or to pronounce it free from errors which would be reversible if this were a direct appeal from the divorce decree.
Rather, the task presently before us is to determine whether the terms of the disputed award are so indefinite as to render it
facially
void.
The validity of a judgment must be determined by the law in force when judgment was rendered. It is axiomatic that a judgment that is valid when rendered cannot have its efficacy impaired by
any
after-enacted legislation.
At the time the decree was rendered in 1970, the language of the governing statute — 12 O.S. 1961 § 1278 — was the same as that considered by us in Frensley.
Frensley,
which upheld an alimony award consisting of the husband’s one-half interest in the net proceeds of a trust established by the will of his deceased father, stands as authority for the rule that Oklahoma’s statutory law recognizes two distinct classes of alimony awards: (1) an in-kind award effected by an
in praesenti
transfer of the obligor’s property and (2) a monetary allowance.
When alimony is in the form of money payments, the award is void if the
total
amount of the adjudged obligation is not fixed in a sum certain or is not in a sum capable of being made certain by reference to the terms of the decree.
On the other hand, an in-kind alimony award, by the terms of which a transfer of the obligor’s property, or of some interest therein, is effected, is not subject to the same sum-certain requirement.
The district court attempted to take this case out of the
Frensley
rule by pointing out that there the trust created for the benefit of the husband, in which the wife was granted an interest, had a fixed, 20-year duration, whereas here the ultimate point in time at which the husband’s interest will be distributed from the parents’ estates, as well as the total amount to be received and transferred to the wife are unascertainable.
Because the terms of 12 O.S. 1961 § 1278 — as well as those of its current version, 12 O.S.Supp.1985 § 1278 — require that an in-kind alimony award be “just and equitable,”
it would be a better practice for the trial court, when fashioning an in-kind support alimony award, to ascertain the present value of the entire interest in the property being set apart to the obligee. This would tend to aid an appellate court’s review when the award is challenged for excessiveness on a direct appeal. A failure to establish and recite the total value of the interest that was here the subject of an in-kind alimony award does not impair the facial validity of the award under consideration. Because in this case the husband did not bring a direct appeal for review of the award in controversy, he cannot now challenge it for exces-siveness.
His belated attack, launched as a defense to the post-decree accounting proceeding, also came too late for any vacation relief upon the grounds authorized in 12 O.S.1981 § 1031.
His attack may succeed
only if
the in-kind alimony award in contention can be viewed as void upon the face of the judgment roll.
The trial court obviously misconstrued the rationale of our pronouncement in
Frensley.
The life span of the trust was not critical to our holding in that case. Our opinion explained that the right to receive the proceeds of a trust is a property interest,
and since the
Frensley
decree set apart to the wife an interest in the
husband’s property,
the award to her was not governed by the same rules of definiteness as those which apply to
money awards.
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OP ALA, Justice.
This appeal from an order in a post-divorce accounting proceeding tenders for our review the question whether the challenged provisions of a divorce decree — by which one spouse received as support alimony a share of property inherited by, but not yet fully distributed to, the other
spouse
— axe
facially void
for lack of definiteness. We answer in the negative.
A 1970 divorce decree granted the wife as support alimony a monetary award, as well as an undivided one-fourth interest in a certain portion of the husband’s distributive share in the estates of his deceased parents, only one of which estates was then
in probate.
Neither party sought appellate review of this decree.
In a post-decree proceeding
brought ten years later, the wife sought to enforce the alimony award against her former spouse and some members of his family by an accounting of the proceeds from the sale or transfer of certain qualifying assets. The wife’s goal was to have her decreed interest in those assets quieted and her lien impressed upon them. The proceeding culminated in an order vacating that part of the decree which granted the wife — as alimony — a portion of the husband’s distributive share of the estates. The trial court held that alimony award void for failure to meet the legal standards of definiteness. The wife sought corrective relief by a petition for certiorari to review the trial court’s ruling as a certified interlocutory order. By this court’s earlier direction the present case came to be recast as an appeal.
We now reverse the trial court’s order.
The wife s contention is that her alimony award in contest here is valid under our decision in
Frensley v.
Frensley.
The husband argues that the award of an “undivided one-fourth interest” constitutes an impermissibly indefinite quantum and asserts that there is neither a definite time period within which the total amount of the husband’s obligation will come due, nor is it possible to determine the total amount of the net proceeds of which the award is comprised.
The posture in which this ease comes does not call upon us either to place a construction on the terms of the contested alimony award
or to pronounce it free from errors which would be reversible if this were a direct appeal from the divorce decree.
Rather, the task presently before us is to determine whether the terms of the disputed award are so indefinite as to render it
facially
void.
The validity of a judgment must be determined by the law in force when judgment was rendered. It is axiomatic that a judgment that is valid when rendered cannot have its efficacy impaired by
any
after-enacted legislation.
At the time the decree was rendered in 1970, the language of the governing statute — 12 O.S. 1961 § 1278 — was the same as that considered by us in Frensley.
Frensley,
which upheld an alimony award consisting of the husband’s one-half interest in the net proceeds of a trust established by the will of his deceased father, stands as authority for the rule that Oklahoma’s statutory law recognizes two distinct classes of alimony awards: (1) an in-kind award effected by an
in praesenti
transfer of the obligor’s property and (2) a monetary allowance.
When alimony is in the form of money payments, the award is void if the
total
amount of the adjudged obligation is not fixed in a sum certain or is not in a sum capable of being made certain by reference to the terms of the decree.
On the other hand, an in-kind alimony award, by the terms of which a transfer of the obligor’s property, or of some interest therein, is effected, is not subject to the same sum-certain requirement.
The district court attempted to take this case out of the
Frensley
rule by pointing out that there the trust created for the benefit of the husband, in which the wife was granted an interest, had a fixed, 20-year duration, whereas here the ultimate point in time at which the husband’s interest will be distributed from the parents’ estates, as well as the total amount to be received and transferred to the wife are unascertainable.
Because the terms of 12 O.S. 1961 § 1278 — as well as those of its current version, 12 O.S.Supp.1985 § 1278 — require that an in-kind alimony award be “just and equitable,”
it would be a better practice for the trial court, when fashioning an in-kind support alimony award, to ascertain the present value of the entire interest in the property being set apart to the obligee. This would tend to aid an appellate court’s review when the award is challenged for excessiveness on a direct appeal. A failure to establish and recite the total value of the interest that was here the subject of an in-kind alimony award does not impair the facial validity of the award under consideration. Because in this case the husband did not bring a direct appeal for review of the award in controversy, he cannot now challenge it for exces-siveness.
His belated attack, launched as a defense to the post-decree accounting proceeding, also came too late for any vacation relief upon the grounds authorized in 12 O.S.1981 § 1031.
His attack may succeed
only if
the in-kind alimony award in contention can be viewed as void upon the face of the judgment roll.
The trial court obviously misconstrued the rationale of our pronouncement in
Frensley.
The life span of the trust was not critical to our holding in that case. Our opinion explained that the right to receive the proceeds of a trust is a property interest,
and since the
Frensley
decree set apart to the wife an interest in the
husband’s property,
the award to her was not governed by the same rules of definiteness as those which apply to
money awards.
Here, the husband’s interest in the proceeds of his deceased parents’ estates constitutes a species of property which the decree may transfer, in whole or in part, to the wife as her alimony without an antecedent conversion of the interest to a fixed sum of money or its commutation to a monetary award. The interest awarded operates as a transfer thereof to the wife. Although the
res
so transferred is in assets to be received and accounted for at some unspecified time in the future, the
quantum
awarded does not appear incapable of ascertainment by periodical accounting. In short, the face of the judgment roll utterly fails to reveal
any
jurisdictional defect in the challenged alimony adjudication.
The trial court erred in concluding that if it is uncertain
when
and
how much
money the obligee will ultimately receive from an interest transferred by in-kind alimony provisions of a divorce decree, the alimony award is fatally flawed on the face of the judgment roll.
The award under review
clearly does not offend Oklahoma’s statutory policy against judicial imposition of open-ended monetary obligations for support alimony. It is hence free from facial jurisdictional defects.
The trial court’s order is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this pronouncement.
DOOLIN, V.C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, HARGRAVE, ALMA WILSON, KAUGER, and SUMMERS, JJ., concur.
SIMMS, C.J., concurs in judgment.