Rice v. Rice

549 P.2d 555, 219 Kan. 569, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1976
Docket47,859
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 549 P.2d 555 (Rice v. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Rice, 549 P.2d 555, 219 Kan. 569, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 400 (kan 1976).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.:

Plaintiff appeals from an order of the trial court denying plaintiff’s motion to terminate alimony payments. This divorce proceeding was before this court in 1974, when plaintiff appealed from an order of the trial court denying his motion to terminate certain child support. Rice v. Rice, 213 Kan. 800, 518 P. 2d 477. The sole question presented here is whether the trial court erred in concluding that the decree of divorce embodied a separation agreement between the parties which fixed the amount of alimony.

E. Rice, also known as Ernest J. Rice, filed a petition for divorce in the district court of Wabaunsee County on October 7, 1970. Defendant, Ellen L. Rice, entered her voluntary appearance. The trial court declared an emergency and advanced the case for hearing on November 25, 1970. Plaintiff appeared in person and by counsel. At the time the matter was heard a lengthy decree of divorce, containing provisions for custody, support, education, medical expenses and insurance for the children; dividing the property of the parties; providing for alimony payable in various monthly installments, such payments to cease “upon defendant’s death or remarriage, or upon plaintiff’s death”; providing for the taking of credit for the children as dependents for income tax purposes; and providing for the payment of accrued income taxes, was submitted to the court. This order had been prepared in ad *570 vanee. It was finalized at a meeting of plaintiff, his attorney, and defendant’s attorney on the morning of the hearing, and was approved by counsel for both parties. Upon trial it was approved and adopted by the court.

The trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law upon the hearing of the plaintiff’s earlier motion to terminate child support. Those findings included the following statements which are pertinent here:

“ ‘At the court hearing, plaintiff appeared in person and by his attorney. Defendant did not appear at the court hearing either personally or by attorney. The Court heard evidence of the plaintiff, both as to grounds for divorce and as to property and child support. The evidence disclosed an agreement between the parties as to child support, disposition of property, and alimony. Following production of evidence, the court was presented with a journal entry of judgment which was approved by plaintiff’s attorney and was approved by defendant’s attorney. It was an agreed journal entry. The court found proper cause for granting a divorce, and decreed the divorce, and thereafter approved the agreement of property disposition, alimony, and child support, and the court signed the journal entry and entered judgment accordingly.
“ ‘Insofar as disposition of property, alimony and child support was concerned, the matter was submitted to the court as a result of an agreement between the parties. The journal entry was agreed to in advance of the court hearing.’ ” Rice v. Rice, supra, p. 801.

Upon the hearing of the motion which is the subject of this appeal, the trial court again made findings of fact and conclusions of law. These, in pertinent part, read as follows:

“Plaintiff, on this motion now pending, termination of alimony, takes the position there was no ‘separation agreement’, but even if there was one, it was not in writing, and again, even if there was one, this court did not find the same to be just, valid, and equitable, as required by the statute, nor was it incorporated in the decree of divorce.
“Evidence produced on the hearing of this motion discloses that there were negotiations leading up to the approved journal entry; that all negotiations were between the attorneys for the respective parties and that the parties themselves did not negotiate directly with each other. The morning before the court hearing, plaintiff and his attorney, met with defendant’s attorney, at which meeting the journal entry was finalized, and signed by the respective attorneys. This was on November 25, 1970. The plaintiff appeared at the court hearing on the divorce in person and by his attorney. Defendant made no personal appearance, nor by attorney being present on her behalf. The journal entry recites 19 separate findings, numbered, 3 of which deal with jurisdictional matters. The 16 other findings deal with custody of children, child support, medical insurance for the children, extraordinary medical and dental expense, provision for making the children irrevocable beneficiaries of life insurance having face values of over $100,000.00, provision for keeping *571 the insurance in force, transfer of title to the home to the wife, provision for payment of the mortgage on the home, division of automobiles, division of household furnishings, alimony at an increased rate for a time, then reduction to its present amount, and as to alimony, the journal entry recites the payments will continue to be payable on the first day of each month until defendant’s death or remarriage’ and will terminate in event of plaintiff’s death. The journal entry does not provide for modification of alimony. The journal entry deals with contractual obligations of the parties other than the home mortgage, deals with plaintiff’s property in his library, office equipment, and accounts receivable, deals with stocks, an airplane, use of boat, tax deductions for the children for income tax puiposes, contingently owing income tax, attorney fees, etc. The journal entry is skillfully, artfully, and carefully drawn. Evidence of plaintiff at the trial was very brief. Evidence adduced at the trial itself would not permit the court to have made appropriate findings relating to these matters had they not been worked out in detail in advance, between the parties, acting through their attorneys. After a brief hearing, the journal entry, approved by the respective attorneys was presented to the court. The judge signed the journal entry. Each party was represented by a competent attorney known to the court. Surely, the act of the judge in signing the journal entry constituted a finding that the agreement was just, valid, and equitable.
“Plaintiff’s attorney, during the course of the divorce hearing, alluded to the fact that there was not a ‘formal agreement,’ and thereafter studiously avoided use of the word ‘agreement,’ referring to ‘proposed findings of the court,’ etc. Plaintiff used the word ‘agree,’ or any form thereof, only once, and that is in relation with what he did agree to for carrying medical insurance.
“Can it seriously be contended that the provisions of the journal entry did not constitute an agreement? An attorney may agree on behalf of his client in regard to property matters and in. regard to alimony matters. The divorce case was not contested in court to any degree or in any respect. Can it seriously be contended that had either party, in the absence of the other in court, urged the court to materially change the terms of the journal entry, that the absent party would not have claimed breach of agreement, even breach of ethics?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
549 P.2d 555, 219 Kan. 569, 1976 Kan. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-rice-kan-1976.