Munsey v. Munsey

1963 OK 225, 385 P.2d 902, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 590
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1963
Docket39405
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1963 OK 225 (Munsey v. Munsey) 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
Munsey v. Munsey, 1963 OK 225, 385 P.2d 902, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 590 (Okla. 1963).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Involved herein is the matter of the length of time plaintiff should pay his former wife the amount of $75.00 per month pursuant to a purported written property settlement agreement made with her which was approved by the trial court but which did not fix either the total number of payments to be made or the total amount to be paid. > :

The plaintiff was granted a decree' of divorce from the defendant'on the 17th day of September, 1958, upon the grounds of incompatibility. The parties had been married oh-September 7,. 1951. No children were- born to them. .^t-'Jlie-'time of' their marriage, the plaintiff was forty-eight years of age and the defendant was fifty-sjx years of age, , '

The terms of such agreement entered into by the parties prior hr the filing of plaintiff’s petition in the divorce suit were reflected in the decree of divorce which “confirmed and approved” the “property settlement agreed to as between the parties.”

Such contract, as reflected in such decree, had a provision as follows, to-wit:

“ * * * (T)hat plaintiff should pay to defendant the sum of $75.00 per month in payments of $37.50 upon the 1st and 15th day of each and every month as permanent alimony, .beginning October 1, 1958.”

*904 ' ■ The plaintiff-’cbmplíéd with the agreement to pay the $75!00 per month for, sixteen .months. He then quit and some three : months afterward the defendant filed an “Application for Citation-Indirect Contempt.” After, order had been made and citation issued, plaintiff answered such application, claiming that the decree was “void as to the., alimony” for the reason “the court did not fix a definite amount ultimately to be paid.”

Soon afterward, the defendant filed a motion to modify the decree of divorce as 'to'aliriiony payments. 'Therein she stated:

“That the Court’s order, through no’ fault of defendant, was void as to that portion of the order providing -alimony'.in -that said order did not set ■•■•:th,e> total amount to be paid or a, de- • .termined period of time during which ,' said money would be paid. * * * ”

• She 'alleged that she was then, “a healthy ‘'able-bodied female, aged sixty-five (65) •years' with a life expectancy, of fifteen (15) years. * ' * • * ” She prayed a modification of the decree of divorce to make .;“provisions for..alimony payments for a period of fifteen (15) years, attorney’s fees .•and costs of this action. * * *”

Plaintiff in answer to such motion to .modify, alleged, in part, as follows, to-wit:

• “* * * (T)hat there has been a • change of condition, since the granting ' ■' of the divorce aforesaid, in that the Company with whom he is employed i ,is no longer furnishing plaintiff a ; home, nor paying his utility bills. That plaintiff has remarried, and has pur- ,■ chased a Trailer-home in which to live, and is making payments thereon; that , the only property he owns clear of indebtedness is a 1951 Model Ford Se- ' dan.”

In the hearing in the trial court on motion to modify, defendant testified that before her marriage to him, plaintiff was unabl'e to save his money but that afterward she would take his pay checks to the bank, deposit same and pay the bills; that they were able to accumulate the furniture, funds and bonds to'- which referencé is herein made.

In such hearing defendant sought to show that she used the money plaintiff gave her when the parties were separated to make the down- payment on a - house in Stillwater; that in making such purchase she relied upon the anticipated receipt of the $75.00 monthly payments; that she had two apartments for .rent but which were vacant; that she was paying $65.00 .per month to apply on the balance of .principal and interest still owing on such property; and that she was in financial -stress. She showed a life expectancy of fifteen years and stated that nobody 55 years of age would quit a job such as plaintiff had. She indicated she had figured to receive the $75.00 per month as long as plaintiff lived and was still so employed.

" Plaintiff in such hearing, testified that he was, and had been for about thirty-five years,- employed by an oil company as a pumper; that .his salary was about $400.00 per month; that his take-home pay was about, $325.00 per month; that the -difference went for taxes, hospitalization insurance, retirement.plan and .bonds. On cross-examination, by. his own attorney after having testified- at call of defendant, he testified that he agreed to pay. the defendant $50.00 per month alimony and she agreed to take it. He further testified:

“Q. What was your agreement to pay $50.00?
“A. After we agreed on the $50.00 deal her daughter and her man came out to the wells. Her daughter talked and cried for two hours. Finally she said if I would give her mother $75.00 a month she thought she could get by. I agreed to make it $75.00 a month as long as I was financially able. I told her if the company transferred me ■ and moved me to town or didn’t furnish me a place to live and I had to pay my own utility bills I couldn’t make that payment. She agreed that when we got to that point we would do something about it.”

*905 Plaintiff further testified that he had remarried and had bought and was living in a trailer home; that he made payments of $66.83 per month on it and $20.00 per month for space for it and had to pay his own utility bills. He also testified that all the bonds which were bought for him by his employer from his payroll deductions were cashed in order to make the $75.00 per month alimony payments; and that he continued the payments seven or eight months after the oil company sold the house in which he had been living and after he had moved to town.

Plaintiff further testified as follows, to-wit:

“Q. Did you give her everything you owned at the time of the divorce?
“A. I gave her every last thing I had; money and furniture.
* * ' * ⅜ * *
“A. The money was $3600.00 in cash; and the furniture was worth $5,000.00.”

Defendant, by the settlement agreement of the parties, also was permitted to keep two 40-acre properties she owned prior to her marriage to plaintiff and a 1956 Oldsmobile automobile which she said she bought with the proceeds from sale of her home in Shawnee.

After such hearing, the trial court rendered findings and judgment, in part, as follows :

“There was an agreement between plaintiff and defendant in connection with the original proceeding in this cause whereby plaintiff was to pay certain alimony to defendant, but the Court finds that the Journal Entry and Decree of Divorce heretofore executed by this Court under date of September 17, 1958, is erroneous in that the Court omitted fixing the sum and amount of alimony to be paid by plaintiff to defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1963 OK 225, 385 P.2d 902, 1963 Okla. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munsey-v-munsey-okla-1963.