Stroecker v. Stroecker

428 P.2d 384, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 139
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1967
Docket682
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 428 P.2d 384 (Stroecker v. Stroecker) 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
Stroecker v. Stroecker, 428 P.2d 384, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 139 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

SANDERS, Superior Court Judge.

This is an appeal from the judgment rendered against appellant in a divorce proceeding brought by appellee.

The parties were married in 1942, and are the parents of three children. At the time of the trial the son was 20 years of age, and the two daughters were 12 and 17 years of age. Appellee’s amended complaint made the usual allegations of domicile and marriage and asked for a divorce on the grounds of personal indignities rendering her life burdensome, incompatibility of temperament, adultery, habitual gross drunkenness, and cruel and inhuman treatment calculated to impair health and endanger life. In his answer, appellant denied the allegations and alleged forgiveness and condonation. Appellant counterclaimed for a divorce on the grounds of incompatibility of temperament and further alleged that appellee had treated him with extreme cruelty and had wrongfully inflicted grievous mental suffering upon him.

During the eleven-day trial the evidence disclosed that the marriage had been a stormy and turbulent one. Both parties, over the years, had problems arising from drinking alcoholic beverages to excess. Appellant’s problems were more extensive in that he was a heavy and continuous drinker and sought treatment for alcoholism. The conduct of both parties left much to be desired. Appellee was not free from fault. 1

The trial court found that there was an incompatibility of temperament existing between the parties; that appellant had subjected appellee to cruel and inhuman treatment calculated to impair her health and endanger her life; that appellant had committed adultery and granted appellee a divorce.

The court awarded the custody of the youngest child of the parties to appellee and ordered appellant to pay $100 a month for her support. Appellant was ordered to pay the guardian of the parties’ other daughter $150 a month for her support. Appellant was also ordered to pay $400 a month as alimony to appellee.

Appellant contends, first, that the property division is clearly unjust and, second-, that the property division is manifestly unsuitable to both the nature of the properties and the circumstances of the parties.

Alaska law provides that the court in a divorce proceeding may divide the parties’ joint or separate property “in [a] manner as may be just, and without regard as to which of the parties is the owner of the property.” 2

This court has held that all property of the parties, both separate and joint, is before the court for disposition in a *386 divorce action. 3 The division of property-under AS 09.55.210(6) is left to the broad discretion of the court, and will not be reversed in the absence of a showing that it is clearly unjust. 4 This discretion is not an arbitrary one, but is a sound judicial discretion and is subject to review by this court. The factors to be considered by the trial court in determining property division and alimony issues were set forth in Groff v. Groff 5 and Merrill v. Merrill 6 as follows:

[T]he respective ages of the parties; their earning ability; the duration and conduct of each during their marriage; their station in life; the circumstances and necessities of each; their health and physical condition; their financial cir cumstances, including the time and mariner of acquisition of the property in question, its value at the time and its income producing capacity if any. (Emphasis added.)

We have examined the record in some detail in connection with the property division and the points raised by appellant.

The family home, located in Weeks Subdivision, was awarded to appellant by the court on condition that he pay to appellee the sum of $15,000 in ten equal yearly installments. This property had an approximate value of $50,000 at the time of trial. It was encumbered by an FHA mortgage in the sum of $12,000. In addition, an encumbrance of $20,000 had been placed against it in August of 1963 which had been reduced in an unknown amount by the time of trial. The approximate unencumbered value of this property at the time of trial was $18-20,000. The approximate value of this award to appellant was $6,850. The approximate present value of this award to appellee was $12,150.

The one-third interest in certain Stroecker Partnership properties owned by appellant in partnership with his brother and sister were divided equally between the parties as follows:

(a) A one-third interest in the Old Stroecker Homeplace which was inherited by appellant in 1954 had a value of $8,666.-67 at the time of trial. This value was awarded equally between the parties, $4,-333.33 going to each.

(b) A one-third interest in the Marion Building which had a value of $25,000 at the time of trial was divided equally between the parties, $12,500 going to each.

(c) A one-third interest in the Stroecker Building which had a value of $25,000 at the time of trial was divided equally between the parties, $12,500 going to each.

(d) A one-third interest in the Wendell Avenue Lots which had a value of $5,000 at the time of trial was divided equally between the parties, $2,500 being awarded to each.

(e) A one-third interest in the Farmer’s Loop Acreage which had a value of $5,-333.33 at the time of trial was divided equally between the parties, $2,666.66 going to each.

The one-half interest the parties owned in the Harding Lake Lot which had a value of $4,500 at the time of trial was awarded to appellant.

706½ shares of stock of the First National Bank of Fairbanks having a market value of $197,710.80 were divided between the parties. Appellant received 439.11 shares having a market value of $122,950.80. Appellee received 267 shares having a market value of $74,760. Appellant was awarded the voting rights in the stock awarded to appellee. The stock awarded to appellant appears to have a reasonable as *387 surance of returning to appellant an income of approximately $3,950.99 per an-num based on past payments of dividends at the rate of $9 per share. The bank stock awarded to appellee on the same basis would return an annual income of $2,403 to ap-pellee.

Appellant contends in his brief that this stock was inherited by appellant from his mother in 1954 and should not have been distributed in the manner in which it was in view of the fact that it was inherited property and, in addition, was a necessary vehicle for appellant to maintain his position on the board of directors of the bank which position was the source of most of his income. The record does not substantiate appellant’s claim. The record does indicate that appellant owned approximately 150 shares of bank stock before his mother’s death in 1954. By reason of subsequent successive 100 percent and 66.67 percent stock dividends appellant’s pre-1954 holdings were increased to 504 shares.

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Bluebook (online)
428 P.2d 384, 1967 Alas. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroecker-v-stroecker-alaska-1967.