Richheimer v. Richheimer

208 N.E.2d 346, 59 Ill. App. 2d 354, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 852
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 13, 1965
DocketGen. 49,460
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 208 N.E.2d 346 (Richheimer v. Richheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richheimer v. Richheimer, 208 N.E.2d 346, 59 Ill. App. 2d 354, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 852 (Ill. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE SCHWAETZ

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree entered in an uncontested suit for separate maintenance. Defendant charges that the alimony and attorneys’ fees awarded were excessive. Plaintiff has cross-appealed, charging that the alimony and child support were inadequate. Two of her attorneys have filed cross-appeals, claiming that their fees were inadequate. Defendant filed a' motion to dismiss the attorneys’ cross-appeals, which motion was taken with the case. The principal issues on appeal are the amount of the defendant’s income and what would be a fair portion thereof as alimony; the standing of the attorneys to file cross-appeals; and the proper amount to be awarded for attorneys’ fees.

The Eichheimers were married in 1933 and lived together until August 1960. They have three children — an adult son, Eobert, and two minor daughters Laurie and Kathie, who were seventeen and thirteen in December 1963 at the time of the decree. Kathie is afflicted with cerebral palsy and requires special care and attention. Defendant is the president and one of the three directors of Eichheimer Goffee Company (Eichheimer), a wholesale coffee business. The preferred stock and half of the common stock of the company is held by a testamentary trust established by defendant’s father for the benefit of his mother during her lifetime. Defendant and his brother each own one-quarter of the common stock and are the residual beneficiaries of the testamentary trust. Dividends were paid on the common stock in 1957, 1958, 1960 and 1961, hut not in 1962. No common stock dividends were paid before 1957. Defendant and his brother also each own fifty percent of the stock of the Thayse Coffee Company (Thayse) which is engaged in the wholesale coffee business as a selling agent. Thayse has the same address as Richheimer and buys coffee from the latter. Defendant testified that Richheimer sold coffee to Thayse at a profit. He testified that his original investment in Thayse was $500 and that its net assets at the end of March 1962 were $64,466.24.

Defendant received approximately $43,500 in salary from Richheimer and $2,500 from Thayse in 1962, the year prior to the entry of the decree. In 1962, defendant’s total taxable income was $54,885.30, including a taxable, nonrecurring capital gain of about $4,500 and a bonus of about $5,000, based on ten percent of the profits of Richheimer, provided such sum does not exceed $5,000.

In December 1963, at the time of the entry of the decree for separate maintenance, defendant had an interest in the Richheimer employees’ pension fund computed to be $74,028, which cannot be withdrawn until 1975 when he reaches the age of sixty-five. He also had $5,000 in bonds plus approximately $20,000 in cash. His only other asset was the home in Glencoe worth approximately $50,000, where the plaintiff and their two daughters live. He formerly owned a 34-foot sail boat or yacht costing $25,000 and belonged to a yacht club, but sold the yacht in 1962. The family usually took a month’s cruise during the summer and also took other trips and vacations and generally lived in the manner of a well-to-do family.

Plaintiff is a sculptress and in 1962 she earned $1,800 on a single commission. There is no evidence to indicate that she had earnings of any regularity from such source.

The complaint for separate maintenance and other relief was filed on October 11, 1960. The cause was referred to a master, who found among other things that temporary alimony and child support of $1,700 a month was fair and reasonable. It was conditioned on the defendant’s payment of Kathie’s medical expenses, Robert’s college expenses, the payment of insurance premiums, and the payment of real estate taxes on the house. During the period prior to the entry of the decree, extended and intensive negotiations were conducted regarding a divorce and property settlement, the cause being continued from time to time. In about September 1962 plaintiff refused an offer of settlement. In June 1963 a stipulation was entered into and pursuant thereto, a hearing on plaintiff’s complaint for separate maintenance was had before the chancellor. There was no contest on the merits, and the testimony was limited to the amount of the defendant’s income and the amount to be awarded for the support of plaintiff and their children.

The decree ordered the defendant to provide the following:

1. Alimony of $15,500 annually;
2. Child support of $6,000 annually ($2,400 for Laurie and $3,600 for Kathie) tax free;
3. Rent-free use of the Glencoe home, the reasonable rental value of which was $6,000 a year;
4. Real estate taxes on the home, which now exceed $1,000 annually; and
5. To carry life insurance and pay the premiums thereon of $2,500 a year for the benefit of the three children.

The total benefits in cash and kind amounted to over $31,000 annually. In addition, defendant was to put the home in good repair and was to provide plaintiff with a new 1964 automobile suitable for carrying the daughter, Kathie, and a wheelchair.

The custody, control and education of the children was awarded the plaintiff, with reasonable visitation rights for the defendant.

It is well settled that in determining the amount of alimony to be allowed, the court shall take into consideration the condition in life of the parties, the place of residence of the wife or husband, and the circumstances of the respective parties. Ill Rev Stats c 68, § 22 (1963). The wife is entitled to' be maintained and supported in a manner consistent with her station in life and the husband’s ability, if the money required therefor be not more than a just and equitable proportion of the joint income of herself and her husband. Harding v. Harding, 144 Ill 588, 32 NE 206.

Plaintiff in her cross-appeal contends that the award is not adequate; that the defendant’s income is potentially much greater than the $55,000 a year found by the chancellor; that the defendant and his brother control Richheimer and the amount of its distributable dividends and its pension fund, and that it is reasonable to suppose that if the defendant ever rids himself of his wife, additional income would be forthcoming to him in the form of dividends and withholdings from the pension fund. The plaintiff suggested one of the three following methods for determining defendant’s income: (1) to an estimated salary of $48,000 from Richheimer and $2,500 from Thayse, there be added $10,000 from defendant’s profit-sharing contributions and earnings on interest and $3,000 in usual dividends, for a total salary of $63,500; or (2) to the income of $63,500 shown in method (1) there be added $16,500, defendant’s pro rata share of $79,931, the corporate earnings of Richheimer after giving effect to preferred and common dividends, and $8,800, the pro rata share of the $17,600 corporate earnings of Thayse, for total earnings of $88,800; or (3) that Richheimer and Thayse he considered partnerships instead of corporations, and that defendant’s share of the income he computed on the basis of their total earnings.

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Bluebook (online)
208 N.E.2d 346, 59 Ill. App. 2d 354, 1965 Ill. App. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richheimer-v-richheimer-illappct-1965.