Van Haltern v. Van Haltern

88 N.W.2d 485, 351 Mich. 286
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1958
DocketDocket 47, Calendar 47,391
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 88 N.W.2d 485 (Van Haltern v. Van Haltern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Haltern v. Van Haltern, 88 N.W.2d 485, 351 Mich. 286 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Black, J.

Two former wives of the late Dr. Harold L. Van Haltern — one is the widow — vie for the bulk of his estate. Each succeeded, in part, below. Neither is satisfied Avith the chancellor’s effort to provide, out of the estate, for the asserted needs and demands of each. Appeal by one (through the decedent’s fiduciary) and cross appeal by the other bring the case Here for new judicial effort, an effort *288 foreordained to be dissatisfactory — as it was in circuit — no matter wbat our decree may provide.

Dr. Yan Haltern’s first marriage, to cross appellant Katharyn C. Yan Haltern, ended in a decree of divorce, entered 9 years ago by the present chancellor, Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland of the 6th circuit, following an apparently bitter contest on bill and cross bill. The decree made certain provisions for the 2 minor daughters of such marriage and, of concern here, provided:

“Alimony
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant and cross plaintiff shall pay to the friend of the court for the county of Oakland, for the use and benefit of the plaintiff and cross defendant, the sum of $2,000 forthwith, and an additional sum of $2,000 on January 10, 1949.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendant and cross plaintiff shall pay to the friend of the court for the county of Oakland, for the use and benefit of the plaintiff and cross defendant the sum of $250 per month, until said plaintiff and cross defendant shall remarry, or until the further order of the court.”

The doctor duly complied with the quoted requirements until death intervened June 23, 1956. In the meantime, and a little over a year following entry of the divorce decree, Dr. Van Haltern married the now widow, Martha Van Haltern. Two children were born of this marriage. At the time of hearing of the instant petition the respective ages of such children were 3-1/2 years and 9 months.

When the divorce decree was entered the doctor had no estate beyond his professional tools and equipment. Thereafter, and prior to death, he and the named widow amassed a “joint estate” aggregating about $65,000 in value. During the same time his own estate grew so that, quoting the chancellor:

*289 “Hence, there should be a net estate of approximately $35,332.28. There must be paid out of said net amount, cost of administration, attorney fees and widow’s allowances.”

Following Dr. Van Haltern’s death his fiduciary appeared in the original cause and filed the instant petition for modification of the mentioned “alimony” provision. The prayer thereof is that the first wife’s apparent claim on the doctor’s estate, existing by virtue of the provision for her support, be terminated as of his death. The petition came to due issue and testimonial hearing, followed by opinion and decree relevantly providing: ;

“3. Katharyn Van Haltern, divorced wife of deceased, shall be paid by the administrator of deceased’s estate, the sum of $250 per month for a period of 3-1/2 months from the date of deceased’s-death until his youngest daughter, Elinor Van Haltern, arrived at the age of 18 years, or $875, and shall be paid the further lump sum of $20,000 by the administrator of deceased’s estate in lieu of all further alimony due under the terms of the decree after September 19, 1956.”

First: The chancellor’s guide, and ours in turn, appears in Braffett v. Braffett, 308 Mich 506, 511, as follows:

“In Pingree v. Pingree, 170 Mich 36, we held that by virtue of CL 1897, §§ 8638, 8640, 8641, an equity court has jurisdiction to modify a decree of divorce awarding alimony payable in instalments, after the death of the defendant husband, so as to grant a gross sum out of the estate of the deceased in lieu thereof.”

Each of the contending parties finally gets around to wry concession that a situation like this calls for *290 exercise of judicial discretion, guided by principles of equity and permissive purpose of the statutes considered in Braffett. Each nevertheless insists with vehemence and some heat that the chancellor abused such discretion by his decree for lump sum retirement of the first wife’s claim upon Dr. Van Haltera.’s estate for the sum of $20,000. On the one hand support need of the first — and older — wife is stressed. On the other, it is pointed out that the younger wife has 2 small children to rear and educate. The first wife points to the greater value of the joint estate and, comparing it with the decedent’s net estate, insists that her claim should as a matter of fairness aggregate at least the net amount of the decedent’s estate. The second wife, countering, points to undisputed proof that the sum of the joint estate, and of the estate in probate, was amassed since the second marriage and that she should have it all.

We have gone over this appendix of facts with more than passing interest, wondering as we turn pages how and by what means an appellate court might, by deciding each of these disputed issues of fact, improve on the job done below. We find no answer. Instead, looking at the 1948-through-1956 record of this litigation, and bearing in mind that a skilled and experienced circuit judge heard and decided, not only the issues before us but those which, years ago, were vigorously contested between the first wife and Dr. Van Haltera, we conclude that no reason has been shown here for reversal or modification of the present decree or for holding that the chancellor arrived at his conclusion in violation of the duties of judicial discretion. As in Crooks v. Crooks, 345 Mich 713, 718, 719, those who litigate domestic relations are advised that:

“We must in all cases cognizable by equity, and this is peculiarly true in divorce and child custody *291 cases, rely to great extent and as a matter of necessary judicial faith on our trial judges for righteous ascertainment of facts and humane application of equity’s conscience. An especially heavy responsibility rests on them. In such domestic relations cases, and because of the chancellor’s comparatively better position of on-the-scene judgment, the record brought here should affirmatively and clearly disclose that a different adjustment of property rights, or a variant determination of presented issues that affect personal welfare, is in order before we undertake a new decree.” ;

It is said that the fiduciary has not sustained the burden of proving right to modification of the original decree (see Welsh v. Welsh, 346 Mich 292). We need not discuss the point at length since the combination of the doctor’s death and attainment of age 18 by his youngest child (by the first marriage) furnished good reason for judicial review and overhauling of the original decretal provision for support of the first wife.

Second: One question remains.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.W.2d 485, 351 Mich. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-haltern-v-van-haltern-mich-1958.