Schanck v. Schanck

717 P.2d 1
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1986
DocketS-837
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 717 P.2d 1 (Schanck v. Schanck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schanck v. Schanck, 717 P.2d 1 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

*2 OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

This appeal concerns a divorce decree in which the superior court awarded 74 percent of the marital assets to Norma Schanck and 26 percent to James Schanck. The husband advances three principal specifications of error in this appeal. First James disputes several of the items the superior court included in the category of marital assets on the ground that he earned them after his wife filed for divorce. Second, he claims that the superior court’s property division gave Norma a larger share of the marital assets than was warranted under the relevant facts and governing law. Finally, he claims that the award of rehabilitative alimony was improper in that Norma had already reentered the job market at the time of trial. FACTS.

Neither party had significant assets when they were married in 1960. James had been recently discharged from the Army, and Norma worked as a registered nurse. In the course of their marriage, the Schancks adopted two children, and a third child was born of the marriage. Norma assumed the tasks of running the household and raising the children. James was highly successful in his work in oil pipeline operations, which brought the family to Alaska in 1974.

The marriage entered a difficult phase in 1979. A marriage counselor ultimately advised a divorce, and the couple embarked on a trial separation in April, 1983. Norma filed for divorce on June 6, 1983. Between the time of the separation and the divorce trial in October, 1984 the couple shared custody of their children, and James accounted for the principal support of both households. During this same period, Norma earned her recertification as a nurse, and found a full-time position as such. At the time of trial, James was earning approximately $84,000 a year and Norma was making about $17,000. The value of the parties’ marital assets at the time of trial totaled approximately $275,000.

Noting the large discrepancy in their post-separation incomes, and the unlikelihood of Norma’s significantly improving her annual income, the superior court concluded that she should receive the larger share of the marital assets. The superior court determined that Norma should receive approximately 74% of the marital assets, with a value totaling $206,744, including the equity in the family home, and some income-producing stock. James received 26% of the marital assets, totaling $70,403. He also was required to pay Norma $700 a month in rehabilitative alimony for a period of eighteen months, for a total of $12,600.

POST-SEPARATION EARNINGS.

The division of property in a divorce action is controlled by AS 25.24.160(4), 1 which states in relevant part that the trial court may divide the parties’ property, “whether joint or separate, acquired only during cov-erture, in the manner as may be just,” under a balancing of the equities approach. The words “acquired only during cover-ture” were added by amendment in 1968, indicating that, in general, it is only property created by the enterprise of marriage that should be subject to division. 2

The rule that has evolved in Alaska for dividing assets acquired after a separation resulting in a divorce is based on the source of the payment with which those assets are acquired. In a case where the parties were separated for four years prior to their divorce, we affirmed the superior court’s inclusion of assets accumulated during that period as property subject to division. Bussell v. Bussell, 623 P.2d 1221, *3 1223 (Alaska 1981). 3 We held that even if we were to apply the doctrine of “equitable divorce,” there was sufficient evidence to uphold the superior court’s finding that the parties did not consider the marriage ended when they separated. Id. at 1223. We also stated that since a significant portion of the expense involved in accumulating the post-separation property was paid for out of pre-separation assets, it was not unjust that the property be divided between the spouses. Id. at 1223 n. 3.

We elaborated on this rule in Hunt v. Hunt, 698 P.2d 1168 (Alaska 1985), 4 where there was a seven-month period between the separation and the divorce. Rather than laying down a rule to determine precisely when coverture had come to an end, we held that property accumulated during the period between separation and divorce should be divided into two categories: 1) property acquired with assets which, had they not been used in such acquisition, would have been subject to division, and 2) property acquired with assets, such as post-separation income, which, had they not been used in such acquisition, would not have been subject to division. Id. at 1171. Property in the first category would be subject to division, while property in the second category would not. Under this approach, we held it was not an abuse of discretion for the superior court to exclude the value of real estate the husband purchased with loans from a close corporation that was marital property. Since the loans were made after the parties separated, and therefore the wife would not be liable for them, the buildings for which they provided the down payment were properly excluded as being acquired with assets which would not be the subject of property division. Id. at 1172.

In Hunt, we also found that the superior court did not abuse its discretion in excluding from marital property personalty in the husband’s new residence, despite a lack of evidence as to the precise source of funds for these purchases, “absent any evidence that [the husband] invaded property which should have been divided.” Id. at 1172. 5 Finally, we concluded that valuing the husband’s retirement benefits at the time of separation rather than at the time of divorce was not an abuse of discretion. Id. at 1172.

These cases provide a general framework for the division of post-separation assets. As a general rule, we hold that property accumulated with income earned after a final separation that is intended to, and does in fact, lead to a divorce is excluded from the category of marital property, as long as it is obtained without the invasion of any pre-separation marital asset. 6 We decline to specify, as a matter of law, that the effective date when such earnings become severable from marital property is at separation or at filing for divorce. Each case must be judged on its facts to determine when the marriage has terminated as a joint enterprise. In the instant case, we accept James’ use of the date on which Norma filed for divorce as a reasonable cut-off point for this purpose. 7

*4

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Bluebook (online)
717 P.2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schanck-v-schanck-alaska-1986.