Prime v. Prime

139 P.2d 550, 172 Or. 34, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 80
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 139 P.2d 550 (Prime v. Prime) 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
Prime v. Prime, 139 P.2d 550, 172 Or. 34, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 80 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

*40 BRAND, J.

Under the pleadings we must determine whether the so-called property'settlement above set forth, when approved by the order of the court in a divorce case, is an enforceable claim .against the estate of Glenn E. Prime, deceased. It is undisputed that all installments were paid until the death of Glenn E. Prime. The only question relates to the validity of the installments accrued and accruing subsequent to the date of his death.

In seeking a solution, we must attempt, with due regard for authority, to harmonize two conflicting-principles of law, both valid in their own proper setting. The obligation of contracts must be respected and their terms enforced. Courts do not ordinarily remake the agreements of private parties. On the other hand, the decree of a court of equity in a divorce suit respecting the obligation of the party at fault to contribute to the maintenance of the other is, by statute, subject to modification. Such a decree constitutes a final determination from which an appeal may be taken (as in Stout v. Stout, 99 Or. 133, 195 P. 153). Yet, it may *41 be modified as to the future upon suitable showing of changed circumstances. O. C. L. A. 9-915. The case at bar presents a combination of the two situations, a contract of the parties apparently binding, incorporated in a decree apparently subject to modification.

We will first consider the situation as it was prior to the death of the defendant. It is to be noted that we are dealing with executory provisions of the decree and contract. That a property settlement based on contract and approved by the court may be binding on the parties and beyond the power of the court to modify is beyond question. State ex rel. v. Kiessenbeck, 167 Or. 25, 114 P. (2d) 147. Such a case was Taylor v. Taylor, 154 Or. 442, 60 P. (2d) 942, wherein property held by and standing in the names of both parties was divided by an agreement -which the court found to be equitable and which this court enforced. (See also Geis v. Gallus, 130 Or. 619, 278 P. 969, an executed property settlement approved by the court.) There is, of course, no question as to the binding effect of a contract for maintenance when approved by decree of the divorce court, for the decree alone is binding, but the decree alone, though final and appealable and hence binding, is subject to modification upon a showing of changed conditions. The question is whether a decree for maintenance when based on. an agreement of the parties which has been approved by the court as equitable is also subject to modification upon a like showing.

Even in the case of contracts between husband- and wife in anticipation of divorce which merely provide for the present division of their property to the accumulation, of which both have contributed, it has. been held that; equity would refuse enforcement if the agreement was inequitable. In Hill v. Hill, 124 Or. 364, 264 P. 447, *42 this court refused to enforce such a contract and disposed of the identical real property which was the subject of the contract according to its own determination of the rights of the parties. It is apparent that contracts in anticipation of divorce are subject to peculiar rules not applicable to ordinary contracts for the disposition of property or the payment of money. It cannot always be said of such agreements that the mere presence of mutual assent and legal consideration obligates the promissor to pay and binds his estate upoii his decease. Nor do the courts as in ordinary contracts refuse to weigh the consideration received as against the value of the promise given. Hill v. Hill, supra. As to provisions of a decree requiring installment payments for future maintenance of the wife, the editors of A. L. R. have well said:

“* * * the general rule is that where a court has the general power to modify a decree for alimony or support, the exercise of that power is not affected by the fact that the decree is based on an agreement entered into by the parties to the action.” 109 A. L. R. 1068, and notes citing many cases.

We cannot, however, glibly announce a rule of thumb that all property settlements when approved by the court can be modified upon changed conditions. We have already noted the distinction as to fully executed transactions, and there may be instances in which even an executory agreement for future • periodical payments, when approved and incorporated in a decree, should be held invulnerable to modification, even in the event of changed conditions. For example, if husband and wife are each the owners of real property, and if they agree that in lieu of a division of • their property between them the rights of the wife shall be *43 liquidated by means of payments in the nature of an annuity, and if the agreement shows and the court finds that such provision was adopted as and constitutes a fair method of liquidating the actual property rights of the wife and approves the agreement in the decree, we suppose that such payments in the nature of an annuity would not be subject to later modification in the event of changed conditions. Parker v. Parker, 193 Cal. 478, 225 P. 447. The difficulty is in drawing the line between approved agreements in the nature of alimony which are subject to modification and approved agreements in the nature of an annuity employed as a means of adjusting the wife’s property rights. In any event, it is clear that the mere fact that there is an agreement supported by technical consideration such as waiver of court costs, attorney’s fees and the like does not deprive the court of power to modify a divorce decree for periodic payments of maintenance in the event of changed conditions. See note 58 A. L. R. 639 and 109 A. L. R. 1068.

In Warrington v. Warrington, 160 Or. 77, 83 P. (2d) 479, it was said that no property rights were involved, but it is reasonable to assume that technical consideration for the agreement concerning alimony existed. The court said:

“The right to alimony is, therefore, based upon the statute and not upon any contractual obligations. The law is designed for the protection of the parties and to promote the welfare of society. How, then, can parties, by any private agreement, oust the court of jurisdiction to regulate the payment of alimony when the status of the parties justifies a modification? Any agreement of the parties in reference to the payment of alimony was made in view of the statute authorizing the court to modify *44 the same. The mere fact that the court incorporated in the decree the stipulation concerning alimony is immaterial. It is entirely possible that, while the court undoubtedly considered the stipulation of the parties fair and equitable at the time the decree was rendered, it might, upon a showing of subsequent changed conditions, deem it unjust. To hold otherwise would defeat the very purpose and spirit of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 P.2d 550, 172 Or. 34, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prime-v-prime-or-1943.