Stolier v. Stolier

357 So. 2d 1334
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1978
Docket8708
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 357 So. 2d 1334 (Stolier v. Stolier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stolier v. Stolier, 357 So. 2d 1334 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

357 So.2d 1334 (1978)

Dorothy Simkin STOLIER
v.
Bert STOLIER.

No. 8708.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

April 11, 1978.
Rehearing Denied May 10, 1978.
Writ Refused June 9, 1978.

*1335 Zelden & Zelden, Max Zelden, New Orleans, for Dorothy Simkin Stolier, plaintiff-appellant.

Rudman & Howard, Lawrence D. Rudman, New Orleans, for Bert W. Stolier, defendant-appellant.

Before GULOTTA, BEER and BOWES, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Plaintiff, Dorothy Simkin Stolier, obtained a judicial separation from her husband, Bert Stolier, on the ground of abandonment. The judgment of separation granted custody of the minor child to the mother and condemned the father to pay one-third of each monthly pay check as child support and alimony pendente lite.

Later, on November 23, 1971, on the ground of no reconciliation, the husband obtained a divorce. In accordance with an agreement between the parties, that judgment declared the wife was without fault in the separation and awarded her permanent custody of the minor. By consent and agreement among the parties, that judgment also provided for permanent alimony and child support in an amount equal to one-third of the husband's monthly income, after taxes, until such time as the minor child reached the age of majority, at which time the alimony was to be reduced to a sum to equal 28% of the plaintiff's monthly income "from all sources, after taxes". Following the divorce, the husband remarried and the child is now no longer a minor.

Mr. Stolier, a commissioned salesman with earnings of $60,000 per year, made payments from 1971 to October, 1975, totaling approximately $82,000. He discontinued *1336 payments following an operation which left him apparently totally disabled.

After receiving no payments for several months, the wife filed a rule for contempt and the husband thereafter filed a rule to terminate or, alternatively, to reduce the alimony. The rules were consolidated for trial and judgment was rendered purging the husband of contempt, superceding all agreements between the parties relative to alimony, and ordering Mr. Stolier to pay his former wife $175 per month beginning July 1, 1976. Both parties have appealed.

In this court Mrs. Stolier contends: (1) consent to the payment of alimony is a judicial admission of the wife's necessitous circumstances and her right to receive alimony; (2) her former husband has failed to show a change of circumstances entitling him to modification of the alimony granted in the divorce decree; and (3) his second wife's income should be considered in determining the amount of the alimony award.

Mr. Stolier contends: (1) his former wife is not in necessitous circumstances, and thus not entitled to alimony, or, in that the alimony should be reduced to $175 per month, the amount finally awarded by the trial judge.

We agree that consent to the payment of alimony is a judicial admission of the wife's right to receive alimony and her necessitous circumstances.[1] The jurisprudence is also to the effect that judgments awarding alimony and support, including consent judgments such as the one here, are always subject to modification and may be adjusted at any time to meet the changing needs of the wife and the husband's ability to pay, or revoked entirely, if it becomes necessary, or if the wife remarries.[2]

It is obvious, therefore, that the wife's right to alimony is predicated on her not having income sufficient for her maintenance.[3]

The uncontradicted evidence shows that the former Mrs. Stolier is a part-time secretary to a doctor. She earns $406.77 per month or $94.42 per week. She was earning $70 per week at the time of the consent judgment of 28% of all the husband's income after taxes in November, 1971. She also has $1,800 per year interest from securities and savings (the equivalent of approximately $150 per month). These figures translate into an annual income of approximately $6,685 per year now as compared to $3,640 per year in 1971. In addition thereto, she has $29,000 in municipal bonds. It is not clear from the record whether the tax free income from these bonds is included in the $1,800 per year she receives. We assume it is since such income from bonds is normally called "interest", $4,125 on deposit in a homestead, and $255 in a checking account.

The husband receives the sum of $18,000 per year from his disability insurance which we hold constitutes "income" within the purview of the consent judgment of November 3, 1971, $502 interest on savings accounts, and one-half of $4,355 interest per year or approximately $2,177, from a corporation in which his present wife has an interest, according to their joint tax returns, all of which items we also hold constitute "income" to the husband. Imprimis, we hold that in determining the husband's property and earnings, income from all sources, including that of the second wife should be taken into consideration.[4] His present wife owns, or has an interest in, and derives income from a business known as Swenson's Ice Cream. Corporate 1975 federal tax returns indicate the firm operated at a loss in that year. However, $10,843 of that loss is represented by a bookkeeping entry for depreciation. If one-half *1337 of this is added back, the husband has an additional $5,000 in "income from all sources". Thus, it appears that the husband's present annual income amounts to a figure of either $20,679 or $25,679, depending upon the accounting point of view. The husband itemized his living expenses at $1,593.50 per month.

For the court to alter an alimony agreement established by a consent judgment, or otherwise, the party seeking modification must show a change in circumstances of either party from the time of the award to the time of trial of the alimony rule.[5]

The wife contends that the award of 28% granted in the divorce decree takes into consideration changing circumstances. (In passing, we note that C.C. Art. 160 permits the court to award an amount not to exceed one-third of the husband's income.) While it is true the 28% is flexible, and does take into consideration changing circumstances of the husband, it is still subject to modification by the court on the basis of fairness and equity and in accordance with the changing situations of the parties as seen by the court.

We are of the opinion that the husband has proven a change in circumstances. He has shown that his income from all sources has dropped from some $60,000 per year to $20,679 or $25,679 per year and his health from that of a healthy substantial wage earner to that of complete disablement, or practically so. He has also shown that his former wife's income has risen from $3,640 to $6,685 per year.

However, $1,800 of the wife's income is composed of interest from investments arising from her frugality in saving funds received from the community property settlement and the past alimony payments, which are rightfully hers by virtue of the marriage and the original consent judgment and by astutely investing these funds. In O'Brien v. O'Brien, 308 So.2d 333, 336, La.App., (1975), our brothers of the First Circuit Court of Appeal held, under relatively similar circumstances "[that] to punish her for this prudent handling of her affairs would be unjust."

We feel that the same rule should apply here and thus $1,800 of the increase in the wife's income should not be considered in judging the husband's rule to decrease.

We are aware that the record is bare with regard to the wife's expenses at this time.

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Bluebook (online)
357 So. 2d 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stolier-v-stolier-lactapp-1978.