Nuhn v. Nuhn

37 P.2d 571, 97 Mont. 596, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 104
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1934
DocketNo. 7,250.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 P.2d 571 (Nuhn v. Nuhn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nuhn v. Nuhn, 37 P.2d 571, 97 Mont. 596, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 104 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to secure a divorce and a judgment for permanent alimony, costs and attorneys’ fees. The complaint contains two causes of action, one alleging desertion *598 and the other extreme cruelty. The defendant answered, denying generally the allegations of the complaint, with the exception of the allegation as to the marriage. He also, by cross-complaint, sought divorce on the ground of desertion.

The cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury. Plaintiff produced testimony in support of the allegations of both causes of action. The defendant did not appear in person on the trial, and produced no evidence in support of the allegations of his cross-complaint. He was represented by counsel on the trial. The only evidence offered in his behalf was with reference to his property and the amount of indebtedness owing by him.

The court made findings in favor of the plaintiff to the effect that both causes of action were sustained by the evidence, and that the value of defendant’s property was $35,000. Judgment was entered awarding plaintiff a divorce, and a judgment against the defendant for '$20,000 permanent alimony, $500 attorneys’ fees and costs. The appeal is from the judgment.

The only error urged on this appeal is that the allowance to the plaintiff in the sum of $20,000. as alimony was excessive and should be reduced.

Plaintiff and defendant intermarried in the year 1911. They have only one child, a boy, the issue of 'this marriage, who at the time of the trial was twenty-one years of age. It appeared that following their marriage they resided in Montana, and, after a few years, removed to the state of Missouri, suffered financial reverses, and in 1921 returned to Montana, where at that time defendant embarked in the business of raising sheep. His father at that time sold him approximately 3,000 sheep at $10 per head. Defendant was without funds with which to pay the purchase price of the sheep. He continued in this business until the commencement of this action.

At the time of the trial defendant owned, approximately 5,000 ewes, 1,500 lambs, 14 head of cattle, farming machinery, and approximately 5,000 acres of land in the southeastern *599 portion of Carter county. Evidence was received on the trial as to the value of this property. It was conceded by witnesses on behalf of the plaintiff that there was no ready market for the land at that time; an opinion, however, was expressed by them as to its value, based upon knowledge and experience. There is no complaint here made as to the finding of the court with reference to the value of this property. Plaintiff had resided with defendant from the time of their marriage until the month of October, 1931.

The father of the defendant testified that the defendant was then indebted to him in the sum of $38,000; that after the return of his son from the state of Missouri in 1921, he sold sheep to him for the sum of $30,000, and that from time to time his son had borrowed money from him, so that the state of the indebtedness at the time of the trial was as testified by him. This indebtedness was then secured by a chattel mortgage dated December 26, 1931, filed on August 12, 1932. This mortgage described all the cattle, horses, sheep, hay and feed, the property of the defendant. The mortgage was executed about one week after the defendant deserted plaintiff.

The father testified that the original indebtedness was also secured by mortgage. A satisfaction of an earlier mortgage between these parties was received in evidence, but the mortgage thus satisfied was not produced in evidence. The first mortgage in point of time which was offered and received at the trial, and executed by the defendant in favor of his father, bears date of January 7, 1924, being filed in the office of the county clerk of Carter county on January 25, 1924. A like mortgage was executed by the defendant to his father on January 8, 1930, and filed on the twenty-ninth day of January of that year in the office of the county clerk.

On October 14, 1930, the father of the defendant, the mortgagee in the last-named mortgage, executed and acknowledged a satisfaction of that mortgage, wherein it was recited, after describing the mortgage, that “the said mortgage together with the debt secured thereby, is hereby fully paid, satisfied and discharged.” This satisfaction was filed in the office of the *600 county clerk on October 18, 1930. The mortgage thereby discharged described all the sheep and increase, the property of the defendant.

Plaintiff testified that in the fall of 1929 she had a conversation with her husband, wherein she inquired of him — because of a remark made by his father to her — as to the payments made by her husband on the sheep, and that her husband told her he had paid his father everything he owed, and that he did not owe him “a dime.”

If the testimony of the father as to the existence of this indebtedness is to be believed, and if we consider the valuation of the unencumbered property to be as testified by plaintiff’s witnesses, the value of this property was $13,610. The value of the property enumerated in the mortgage to Nuhn, Sr., as testified by plaintiff’s witnesses, was $21,390.

Counsel for the defendant argue that in determining the amount of alimony to be awarded, the obligations or debts of the husband should be considered and deductions made from his income or property therefor, so that the rights of creditors may be protected. (19 C. J. 256.) Counsel for the plaintiff concede the correctness of the rule for which defendant contends.

The trial court made no express finding with reference to the indebtedness owing by the defendant to his father. The evidence on the subject of indebtedness offered by both sides was received by the trial court without objection.

Plaintiff contends that since no special finding was made on the subject of indebtedness, of necessity the trial court must have found that none existed, as otherwise the amount of the award would exceed the value of the unencumbered property of the defendant, the encumbered property described in the chattel mortgage being worth far less than the amount of indebtedness secured thereby. Defendant urges that there were no allegations in plaintiff’s complaint with reference to the last chattel mortgage being fraudulent, that no issue was raised on the question by the pleadings in the case, and that therefore no finding could be implied on this question.

*601 Neither party made any request that the court make any findings on the question of the validity of the indebtedness between Nuhn, Sr., and the defendant. In the absence of express findings, or request therefor, every finding necessary to support the judgment of the court will be implied. (Sawyer v. Somers Lumber Co., 86 Mont. 169, 282 Pac. 852; Blackwelder v. Fergus Motor Co., 80 Mont. 374, 260 Pac. 734; Polich v. Severson, 68 Mont. 225, 216 Pac. 785; Edwards v. Muri, 73 Mont. 339, 237 Pac. 209.)

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Bluebook (online)
37 P.2d 571, 97 Mont. 596, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nuhn-v-nuhn-mont-1934.