Sipherd v. Sipherd

27 P.2d 801, 83 Utah 245, 1933 Utah LEXIS 21
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1933
DocketNo. 5288.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 801 (Sipherd v. Sipherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sipherd v. Sipherd, 27 P.2d 801, 83 Utah 245, 1933 Utah LEXIS 21 (Utah 1933).

Opinions

STRAUP, C. J.

The appellant, the plaintiff below, was granted a decree of divorce against the defendant, her husband on the ground of cruelty. They had one child ten months of age at the time of the trial. The custody of it was awarded the plaintiff. She appeals on the ground that the court failed to make an adequate allowance for the support of herself and of the child. The whole record including a bill of exceptions of the divorce proceedings is brought up.

The parties were married in 1929. At the time of the trial she was about 38, he about 53. According to the findings, of which no complaint is made, the cruel treatment was of an aggravated character causing the plaintiff bodily injury and great mental distress. The cause was tried in 1931 and findings made and a decree rendered in June of that year. The findings show that the defendant was able-bodied and at the time of the trial and for a number of years prior thereto was regularly employed at Salt Lake City, Utah, as district manager of a large manufacturer of soap and toilet articles and was receiving $400 a month, a bonus on commissions based on net profits, which bonus in the year 1929 paid him was $2,800, in 1930 $1,700 ; that his employment required him to be absent from Salt Lake City about oneT third of the time, but when so absent all of his expenses were paid by the company; that the rest of the time he was engaged in the office where he had charge of the business of the district and of sales agents; that he was the owner of an improved 80-acre farm in Nebraska, a 100-acre ranch in Wyoming, and a farm of about 150 acres in Millard county, Utah; 45 shares of preferred stock of the company of a market value in excess of $4,500; that he carried life insurance with several insurance companies in the aggregate of $15,000 or more, the beneficiary of all of which was the defendant’s son by a former marriage who was married and employed *247 with the same company as the defendant; that all of the property of the defendant was encumbered, but the amount of the incumbrances was not found, nor was there any finding made as to the value of any of the property, except the 45 shares of the preferred stock, but a finding was made that the value thereof was in excess of all the debts and obligations of the defendant, but to what extent, was not found.

The court further found that the plaintiff was in “very poor health,” that she was unable to support herself or the child, that she was in need of a surgical operation and medical treatment which approximately would cost $260; that during the marriage relation the parties lived in an apartment, during which time the defendant purchased furniture and furnishings therefor, without finding the amount or value thereof, but that “a considerable part of the furniture” was purchased by the defendant under title retaining notes upon which there remained a balance unpaid, but no finding was made as to the amount thereof, nor as to the value of the furniture; that pursuant to an interlocutory order, $75 was paid by the defendant as temporary counsel fees for the plaintiff and at the trial the court made an additional allowance of $100 for such purpose, but counsel for the plaintiff waived such additional fees on the condition that such amount, or whatever allowance the court otherwise might make, be added to the amount allowed the plaintiff as alimony and support of the minor child.

Upon such findings, conclusions were made and a decree rendered giving the plaintiff no right, title, or interest whatever in or to any of the property of the defendant, but awarded her $75 a month for the support of herself and of the minor child; and because of the waiver of the additional counsel fees, the court required the defendant to pay an additional amount of $10 a month for a period of ten months for the support of the plaintiff and of the minor child. The court further awarded the furniture to the plain *248 tiff requiring the defendant to pay the unpaid installments due and as they become due on the purchase price, required the defendant to pay “all family bills” incurred during the marriage and remaining unpaid and to pay the further sum of $260 for surgical operation and medical treatment of the plaintiff.

The appeal is on the ground that the allowance of $75 a month is inadequate and inequitable. While the court did not find the value of the real estate owned by the defendant, yet evidence was given to show that the assessed value of the Nebraska farm was about $9,600 on which the defendant claimed there was a mortgage of $6,000, but there was some question as to whether the amount of the mortgage was that amount or only $4,000; that the appraised value for purposes of taxation of the Wyoming ranch was $4,569, but the defendant testified there was a mortgage on that ranch amounting to $4,500, the plaintiff contending that the ranch was of the value of $9,000 and a mortgage thereon of a less amount; that the Utah farm consisting of 155 acres was of no substantial value and that there was a mortgage thereon of $1,200 but no interest or any part of the principal had been paid for more than seven years; and that the farm was, as testified to by the defendant, practically abandoned.

It further was shown that one of the insurance policies amounting to $5,000 was paid up and that the premiums of another policy, the amount of which was not stated, were regularly paid since 1914. The defendant testified that the regular annual premiums on his insurance policies amounted to about $520.50; that the annual taxes on the real estate and interest on the mortgages and interest upon notes held against him amounted to $1,206, or a total annual outlay of $1,726.50, premiums on his life insurance and taxes and interest; that the unpaid installments of the furniture amounted to about $574 and the unpaid family bills about $326. He further testified that his annual income from his salary was $4,800; that his yearly bonuses were *249 from $1,700 to $2,800, but estimated that his bonus for the year 1931, payable in February, 1932, would be only about $700; that he received an annual income from the preferred stock of about $276 and about $110 from the Nebraska farm, but no income from his other real estate, or (estimating his bonus to be only $700) a total income of $5,886. Against that he deducted all premiums to be paid on his life insurance policies and all taxes and interest amounting to $1,726.50 in addition thereto he deducted annual expenses of $l,000i for the use of an automobile in his business, $420 which he testified he paid annually for the support of a son 19 years of age by a former marriage and living with his former wife, $360 which he testified he was required to pay annually on the furniture, $140 a month, or $1,680 a year, for his own personal expenses for room, board, clothing, and laundry, or a total deduction from his income of $5,186.50, leaving a net annual income of only about $700. In other words, the defendant out of his income claimed $140 a month for his own living expenses, $35 a month for his 19 year old son (who, as shown by the record at least a part of the time earned his own living), or a total of $175 a month for himself and his 19 year old son, but was willing to allow the plaintiff who was in poor health and no income of her own only $75 a month for her support and of the ten month old child.

It was shown that the defendant used a Dodge coupe in connection with the business in which he was employed.

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Related

Knighton v. Manning
33 P.2d 401 (Utah Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 801, 83 Utah 245, 1933 Utah LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sipherd-v-sipherd-utah-1933.