Plk v. Rjk
This text of 682 S.W.2d 486 (Plk v. Rjk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
P.L.K., Respondent,
v.
R.J.K., Appellant.
Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District.
*487 John H. Lake, Jefferson City, for appellant.
William L. Orr, Columbia, for respondent.
Before PRITCHARD, P.J., and SHANGLER and BERREY, JJ.
BERREY, Judge.
R.J.K. appeals from the decree dissolving his marriage with P.L.K. assigning as error the award of maintenance for an indefinite period, the amount of the maintenance award, and the distribution of the marital property. Judgment affirmed.
After twenty years of marriage, P.L.K. filed a petition for dissolution in August, 1983, apparently because R.J.K. admitted that he was having a relationship with another woman. The parties have two children, a son J.K. age twenty at the time of the dissolution, and a son D.K. age eleven at the time of the dissolution. J.K. is a student at the University of Missouri.
R.J.K. is employed as editor-in-chief of a sports publication. His annual salary for 1984 is $68,000.00. The policy of the publication is to award annual bonuses to its employees on the basis of merit and the success of the publication. R.J.K.'s bonus for 1983 was $16,000.00. He estimated that his bonus for 1984 would be at least $15,000.00. His monthly income after taxes is approximately $3,500.00. R.J.K. has had a career spanning more than twenty years as a sports writer for several publications. He was employed for eleven years with a St. Louis publication. When he left that publication in 1979 to assume his *488 present employment his annual salary was $30,000.00.
P.L.K. is a licensed real estate agent. In 1983, her first year of practice as a parttime agent, she earned approximately $6,000.00. Now P.L.K. no longer wants to work as a real estate agent. During her marriage, she was employed in a variety of jobs. She was briefly employed with a radio station, a television station, as a county supervisor, and raising livestock on the family farm.
P.L.K. now wants to finish her undergraduate degree and to attend law school. She testified at the dissolution hearing that she is very intelligent, with an IQ of 147, and is highly motivated to prepare herself for a career that will be "meaningful" to her. She has made no attempt since her separation from R.J.K. to pursue her career as a real estate agent or to seek any other employment. She was thirty-nine years of age at the time of the dissolution and she testified at the hearing that she is healthy and has no disabilities.
At the dissolution hearing the appellant testified that he had a $100,000 life insurance policy on his life with L.M., his girlfriend, as beneficiary. He also testified that L.M. was living with him in the Pacific, Missouri, house, apparently before the house was set off to P.L.K., and that he took her to lunch at least weekly and to hotels and motels where they engaged in extramarital sex.
Appellant admitted to frequent drinking but denied a problem. He acknowledged he passed out occasionally. During their twenty-year marriage he stated he passed out about twenty times. Respondent testified that R.J.K. drank every night the past few years and passed out almost every night. Appellant admitted hitting respondent on two occasions. He accused her of having a "violent temper, especially when she drinks."
Following the revelation about his girlfriend, respondent testified she was "totally broken hearted" and a bitter fight ensued. Appellant abused the respondent and gave her two black eyes. He took her to her parents in Columbia, Missouri. Twice he administered beatings, the evening of the 19th of August and the next morning. She was examined at a local hospital where a counselor advised her she was a "battered woman." She was also advised by members of the staff and a doctor not to return to St. Louis, "that once a husband started beating a woman, that there was nothing that would stop him from doing it again and in all likelihood it would reoccur." She had "bruises all over" and lots of marks around her neck. The latter was inflicted the next morning. Respondent awoke in bed with appellant and was thoroughly repulsed. She got up and then he came and stood nude in front of her. She reached out toward his testicles and said, "How could you have touched her with those? That's where my children came from." Appellant then grabbed her around the neck and started beating her head against the floor. "He just banged my head and banged it against the floor and I said something about wanting to die. I felt like I was going to right then."
Respondent testified R.J.K. had blackened her eye during a previous altercation, and on one or two occasions when he had been drinking at home that "My nineteen year old son had to pull him off me because he was hitting at me because he wanted to go get in the truck and he was in no condition to drive."
Appellant complained respondent disparaged his job and was a constant complainer. Whereas respondent complained that in addition to the foregoing appellant would pick fights and would not eat what was prepared for him. That despite respondent's thyroid surgery and a hiatal hernia, "he was not very concerned ...." It was during this time that "he was involved with this girl."
He acknowledged that she had never been unfaithful to him, that she took good care of and raised their children, that she kept records for his Softball team and went to corporate functions. She stated that she was a homemaker, cooked, cleaned, cared *489 for the children, had a big garden and raised beef on occasion.
The circuit court entered a decree dissolving the marriage and awarding custody of the children and child support to P.L.K. It also awarded P.L.K. maintenance in the amount of $2,000.00 per month until the house in Pacific, Missouri, was sold, and $1,700.00 per month afterward. P.L.K. was awarded the Pacific real estate, an automobile, and various personal items. R.J.K. was awarded the farm in Alhambra, Illinois, a pickup truck, and some personal items.
On appeal, R.J.K. argues that the trial court erred by awarding maintenance for an indefinite period and by awarding an excessive amount of maintenance and marital property to P.L.K. This court must affirm the decree of the circuit court unless the decree has no substantial evidence to support it, is against the weight of the evidence, or erroneously declares or applies the law. Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976); Miller v. Miller, 635 S.W.2d 350, 352 (Mo.App.1982). The lower court is vested with considerable discretion in awarding maintenance and dividing marital property. Miller v. Miller, supra, at 352. This court may set aside its decree only if we firmly believe that it is wrong. Murphy v. Carron, supra, at 32; Miller v. Miller, supra, at 352.
Although P.L.K. says she is motivated to complete law school and begin a career as an attorney, any attempt by the lower court to set a time limit within which she must achieve these goals would have been merely speculative. Maintenance awards of limited duration should not be based on speculation about the future circumstances of the parties. Turner v. Turner, 650 S.W.2d 662, 664 (Mo.App. 1983).
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682 S.W.2d 486, 1984 Mo. App. LEXIS 4266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plk-v-rjk-moctapp-1984.