Spencer v. Spencer

166 P.2d 845, 24 Wash. 2d 574, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 320
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1946
DocketNo. 29664.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 P.2d 845 (Spencer v. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer v. Spencer, 166 P.2d 845, 24 Wash. 2d 574, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 320 (Wash. 1946).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

Plaintiff instituted an action in which, by an amended complaint, she sought a divorce from the defendant, on grounds amounting to cruelty, and further asked that she be awarded all of the property belonging to the parties, together with temporary alimony, attorney’s fees, *575 and costs. Defendant answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint and, by cross-complaint, sought a divorce, from the plaintiff on the ground of cruelty and, in turn, asked that all of the property of the parties be awarded to him. Upon a trial before the court, findings and conclusions were made and an interlocutory order was entered granting plaintiff a divorce from the defendant, making a property division between the parties, and awarding to the plaintiff an attorney’s fee and a fixed amount of alimony for a prescribed period of time. Plaintiff has appealed from that portion of the order relating to the division of property and the settlement of property rights.

The parties to this action were united in marriage in November, 1934, and lived together until February, 1944, at which time appellant, Dalia I. Spencer, was approximately thirty-four years of age, and respondent, Homer I. Spencer, was thirty-eight. They have no children. Since the matter of the divorce itself is not now contested by either party, we shall not further discuss that phase of the case, except to say that we are satisfied that the pleadings, evidence, and findings upon which the interlocutory order is based meet the requirements of Rem. Rev. Stat., §§ 982 and 996, and that the trial court correctly decided that particular issue. We shall therefore confine our attention to that part of the evidence which relates more nearly to the property rights and the circumstances to be considered in reference thereto.

Appellant has no special education and is not fitted for any special work. She has a curvature of the spine, resulting from falls sustained in early life. Although this physical defect is not ordinarily noticeable in her appearance, it gives her considerable pain at intervals and prevents her from being on her feet for more than two hours at a time without rest. Relief from her ailment might be obtained if medical or other professional attention were given her over a period of a year or more.

Respondent is an able-bodied man and, prior to 1940, was employed as a tinsmith and construction worker. In that year he entered upon the business of manufacturing and *576 distributing cheese, and has been engaged in that vocation ever since.

It appears that in, and for many years prior to, 1935, Mr. Wade H. Dean and Effie M. Dean, husband and wife, parents of the appellant, were the owners of a tract of land in Klicki-tat county containing about twenty-five acres, upon which was a large cave used for storing potatoes and, to some extent, for sight-seeing excursions. Mr. Dean and the respondent at that time entertained the view that the cave was particularly adapted "for use in aging and curing cheese of the Roquefort type.

After making some research and study of the matter, they entered into an agreement whereby the Deans leased the premises to the respondent for a period of thirty years, beginning July 1, 1936, with the option on the part of the respondent to renew the lease for an additional period of thirty years, provided he in the meantime performed all the terms and conditions contained in the written instrument.

The lease carried a provision permitting respondent to sublet the premises or assign the lease to a corporation to be formed by him for manufacturing and storing cheese on the property, on condition, however, that such assignment would be valid and binding only so long as respondent owned and controlled a majority of the voting stock of such corporation, and only so long as the cave was used for the purposes above stated. As consideration for the lease, the lessors were to receive quarterly an amount equal to one and one-half cents a pound for all cheese manufactured and sold by respondent.

Although respondent was named as the sole lessee, it is conceded that the lease became the community property of the respondent and his wife, the appellant herein. The evidence indicates that the terms of the lease were tempered, somewhat because it was contemplated that the enterprise was, and would continue to be, a sort of family affair. Mr. Dean testified that his motive in entering into the lease was “to establish my children [meaning appellant and respondent] in a business.”

Further investigation, research, experimentation, and correspondence fully established the fact that the cave is unique *577 in its adaptability for the aging and curing of cheese of the Roquefort type; indeed, it appears from the evidence that representatives of the United States department of agriculture, who had officially visited and examined the cave, declared that the department had been searching since 1925 for a locale having attributes of the caves in Roquefort, France, and that this cave was the first one of the desired kind that they had been able to find, and that this one, and no others in the United States, met the required qualifications. An interesting two-page article, with photographs, descriptive of the cave and the enterprise presently conducted in connection therewith, was presented in the Seattle Times under date of September 24, 1944, and appears as an exhibit in the case.

Pursuant to the lease and the extensive preparations made in connection therewith, respondent installed the necessary equipment and has ever since conducted on the premises the business of manufacturing a Roquefort type of cheese, under the trade name of “Guler Cheese.” The lease and the business conducted thereunder constitute the principal items of community property herein and will be referred to in more detail a little later.

The only property involved in this action stamped with any separate interest of the one party or the other consists of a twenty-five hundred dollar “paid-up life” insurance policy which respondent took out eight years prior to his marriage, and a diamond ring valued at one thousand dollars which formerly belonged to respondent’s grandmother and which, with her consent, he had given to appellant at the time of their marriage. The insurance policy was hypoth-ecated to secure an outstanding bank loan of nine hundred ninety dollars, and its present surrender value is slightly in excess of that amount, although, according to the evidence, its full face value will be realized in a few years. This policy was awarded to the respondent, and he was charged with the obligation of the indebtedness to the bank. The diamond ring was awarded to the appellant.

The community property consists of three life insurance policies, household furniture and furnishings, a house and *578 lot in the town of Trout Lake, Washington, the lease on the cave property above mentioned, and the cheese business conducted thereon. One of these policies is on the life of the appellant and has a surrender value of about fifty dollars; the other two policies are on the life of the respondent and have a combined surrender value of approximately the same amount.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P.2d 845, 24 Wash. 2d 574, 1946 Wash. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-spencer-wash-1946.