Norris v. Norris

186 P.2d 67, 182 Or. 101, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 228
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 67 (Norris v. Norris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. Norris, 186 P.2d 67, 182 Or. 101, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 228 (Or. 1947).

Opinion

*102 KELLY, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Jerome Norris, from an order made and entered on December 26,1946, by the circuit court of Multnomah County, modifying a former order in a decree dated May 17, 1945, and entered on May 19, 1945, that granted plaintiff a divorce from defendant, awarded plaintiff the care and custody of the two minor children of plaintiff and defendant, prescribed the amount, namely, $82.50 that defendant should pay in money each month to plaintiff for the support and maintenance of said children and provided further to the effect that plaintiff should have the exclusive control of certain improved real property in Multnomah County then being purchased by plaintiff and defendant; that defendant should furnish the money to pay the unpaid installments upon the purchase price of said real property, and that plaintiff should have a right to the rent paid by the tenant of the portion of said real property not occupied by plaintiff and said children.

The order of the trial court entered on December 26, 1946, from which this appeal is being prosecuted, resulted from the interposition of respective motions herein by plaintiff and defendant respectively as follows:

Upon April 24, 1946, defendant filed a motion for a modification of the order and decree of May 17, 1945. By that motion, defendant sought an order nullifying and declaring void the portion of said order and decree of May 17, 1945, that granted plaintiff the rental derived from the rented portion and the exclusive control, occupancy and use of the remainder of said real property, and required defendant to keep *103 up all payments on the contract for the purchase thereof.

On November 19, 1946, plaintiff filed a motion for an order modifying said order of May 17, 1945, so as to increase the monthly payments required of defendant for the support and maintenance of said minor children by the sum of $45.00 per month, which would make $127.50 the total amount defendant would be required to pay monthly to plaintiff for said purpose.

On December 9, 1946, defendant filed another motion. By this motion of December 9, 1946, defendant sought an order modifying said order of May 17, 1945, so as to decrease the monthly payments required of defendant by the sum of $32.50 per month, which, if granted, would have reduced the amount of said monthly payments to $50.00.

In his order of December 26, 1946, which, as stated, is the order from which this appeal is taken, the trial court sustained defendant’s motion filed on April 24, 1946, denied defendant’s motion filed on December 9, 1946, and ordered that defendant thereafter pay, or cause to be paid, the sum of $105.00 per month toward the support and maintenance of the minor children of plaintiff and defendant.

In his brief, defendant treats the order of December 26, 1946, as increasing the amount formerly allowed plaintiff. We do not so consider the facts.

As we understand the record, the order from which this appeal is prosecuted, has the effect of requiring the defendant to pay plaintiff in money an amount equal to that which in the aggregate plaintiff derived, because by the decree of May 17, 1945, plaintiff was relieved from accounting to defendant for his share of rent paid by the tenant of the rented part of said property, from paying her share of the monthly install *104 ments of the purchase price of said real property and from paying the portion of the rental of said real property occupied by plaintiff that otherwise would be due from plaintiff to defendant and by the receipt of the $82.50 per month that the original decree of divorce required defendant to pay her.

In effect, this resulted in no alteration or modification of the original order of May 17,1945, with respect to the amount of contribution defendant was required to make to plaintiff for the maintenance and support of his children.

Bearing in mind that each monthly installment to be paid on the purchase price of the real property in suit was $15.00, the monthly rental collected from the portion of the real property, occupied by third parties was also the sum of $15.00, and, as we view the showing made by plaintiff, the reasonable value of the use and occupancy of the portion of the real property, occupied by plaintiff, and the minor children of the plaintiff and defendant was also $15.00 per month, these three items aggregate $45.00 per month. Of this, except for the provision to the contrary in the divorce decree of May 17,1945, plaintiff was obligated to pay or account for the sum of $22.50 each month as belonging to the defendant. It is obvious that, in following the provisions in the decree of divorce with respect to the real property, plaintiff received $22.50 which otherwise would have inured to defendant. Adding 22% to 82%, the result is 105. Prom this elementary computation, it is apparent that under the terms of the decree of divorce herein plaintiff was really awarded, and defendant was required to supply, $105.00 per month for the nurture and education of the children of the parties.

*105 This being true, in the order appealed from, the court made no change in the amount of the contribution required of the defendant, by the decree of divorce, for the support and maintenance of the children of the parties plaintiff and defendant; but only in the manner in which plaintiff should receive such contribution.

This then presents the question whether defendant has made a sufficient showing to entitle him to an order reducing the amount he should be required to contribute toward the support and maintenance of said children.

Counsel for defendant state in defendant’s printed brief the rule governing the procedure in such cases as this one.

We quote from page 10 of defendant’s brief:
“A provision in a divorce decree for the support and maintenance of minor children will be modified only on a showing of a change in circumstances requiring and justifying such modification at the time the modification is made.” Citing authorities.

The showing made by defendant with reference to and as a basis for a modification of the order of May 17, 1945, consists of the following statements contained in an affidavit by defendant made on December 4, 1946, and verified in the state of Michigan, namely, — “That the true facts as to my financial standing are as follows:

* * * “That during the month of May, 1946, my health required me to leave Oregon and on the advice of a physician I did leave Oregon, and I went to Illinois to take a job there. That job, however, did not work out, and until about six weeks ago my only employment has been such odd jobs *106 as I have been able to obtain, and at no time during such period did I earn as much as $100.00 per month.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 67, 182 Or. 101, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-norris-or-1947.