Vetter v. Vetter

1954 OK 68, 267 P.2d 606, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1954
DocketNo. 35761
StatusPublished

This text of 1954 OK 68 (Vetter v. Vetter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vetter v. Vetter, 1954 OK 68, 267 P.2d 606, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 451 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, instituted an action for, and obtained, an uncontested divorce against her husband, the defendant in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, in the District Court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma, in the latter part of the year 1949. Previously, a property settlement, by written contract, had been entered into, and, in the divorce decree, the Court, without incorporating any of the settlement’s provisions in said decree, merely found that the settlement had been “fully and fairly considered by both parties,” that it was ‘/fair and just”, that it .was an enforcible agreement, tha.t “it was not necessary to make it a part of the decree”, and stated: “ * * it is by the Court approved and confirmed.”

The settlement contract, among other things, provided in paragraph 3 thereof, that' defendant was to pay plaintiff for her maintenance ahd support .after,the divorce “while she' remained single and unmarried *'' * during a period of ten (10) years and two (2) months following the date of the. decree * * * the sum of Three Húndred ($300.00) Dollars, in cash on the ISth day of each succeeding month; * * ”

After the transfers of property contemplated in the contract had been made, the contract in all other respects fully executed, and defendant had been making the support money payments, above referred to, faithfully and promptly for a period of more than a year, the present action was com[607]*607menced in.March, 1951, by,the filing, in-the original divorce case, of plaintiff’s petition to vacate the decree, ■ •

• In 'said petition,' plaintiff went into the history of her marital difficulties 'with defendant and the events leading up to their divorce, alleging, among other things in substance,' that they were separated in August,- 1949, that shortly thereafter she informed defendant she was going to sue 'him for divorce', alimony, custody of the children,'and a division of property; that he thereupon advised her' to employ an attorney who wás friendly'to'him and would not charge'“much of-a'fee”-; that thereafter she did -consult such attorney and he prepared the property settlement agreement 'which she accepted upon his advice without knowing the full extent of her husband’s financial worth; that at the time she réad and sighed the agreement she paid no attention to paragraph 3 thereof (supra) extending the maintenance and support money payments over a period of 10 years and 2 months, and she did not learn until January, 1951, that the effect of such term of payment (being more than 10 years) was to .malee her, instead, of defendant, liable for the income tax on said -maintenance payments, the payment of which tax will subject her to a possible loss of-$9,000 on such income. Other allegations in her petition to vacate were that defendant, a certified public accountant, being versed in tax matters, was fully aware of the significance of such term of payment. Other allegations described other respects in which the settlement contract “was unfair and unconscionable” such as the provision that if defendant died within the payment term specified, the payments should cease. Said petition to vacate also contained allegations to the effect that the trial judge was never informed before the divorce decree was entered of the contract provisions complained 'of, and, if he had been, would not have sighed the decree; and, because of the facts alleged, fraud was not only practiced upon her, but also upon the Court, in its determination of the action.

Plaintiff further alleged that by the divorce decree’s references to the settlement contract, said cbntract was merged into and became a part of -said decree, and, by reason of the facts alleged, she was entitled to re-open the case and present evidence for the Court’s determination -of the parties’ respective property rights.- She further plead in the alternative, that if the court should find that the contract was not-a part of the decree and for that reason the division of property gnd alimony payments agreed to therein, could not be modified, that then, and in that event, she is entitled to have said contract reformed in the following respects : “First-, that the alimony .payment of .$300 be provided to cover a period of ten years instead of- ten years and two months; Second, that.the contract be modified by striking therefrom the provisions that said alimony payments shall cease upon the death of the defendant, and Third,” that said -contract -contain an oral agreement that the parties had entered into concerning purchase of stock in the Southwest Sporting Goods Company.

In his answer to plaintiff’s petition to vacate, defendant, among other things, denied plaintiff’s allegations that in the parties’ negotiations leading up .to the execution of the settlement contract, he had concealed any of the facts concerning his financial status and assets, or that any fraud had, been worked upon either the plaintiff or, the Court in entering the divorce decree, and he affirmatively alleged in substance that plaintiff had full knowledge of all facts pertinent to the settlement agreement and that, having.accepted all of the benefits of said contract, which he had fully, performed, she was estopped from denying its obligations and binding force and could not now obtain the aid of the court in setting it aside.

Upon the cause’s trial, at which plaintiff’s attorney seems to have never known, to have forgotten, or to have disavowed the charges of fraud upon -the court contained in her petition- (which apparently was drawn by another-attorney), and whereat, plaintiff testified that the only reason she had become “unhappy” with the settlement agreement was the income tax liability that its term of support money payments subjected her to, the Court specifically found that “no fraud was practiced upon the [608]*608plaintiff in obtaining her agreement to the settlement of her property and alimony rights”, and thereafter entered judgment in favor of defendant, denying plaintiff the relief she had prayed for. From said judgment, plaintiff appeals herein.

In attempting to show that the trial court’s judgment was contrary to law and to the evidence, plaintiff urges two propositions, as follows:

(1) “Fraud, in transactions between husband and wife, need be only a failure to comply with the highest degree of good faith and fair dealing as imposed by the statutes relating to trusts in such transactions.”
(2) “The.burden was upon the husband to overcome the strong presumption of fraud, which he did not do.”

In her argument under the first of these propositions, plaintiff refers to Title 32 O.S.1951 § 5, authorizing a husband and wife to enter into “any engagement or transaction” with each other respecting property which either might, if unmarried, enter into, subject to “the general rules which control the actions of persons occupying confidential relations with each other as defined by the title on trusts.” (Emphasis added.) She then argues for application of the principles referred to and applied in Holt v. Holt, 23 Okl. 639, 102 P. 187; Howell v. Howell, 42 Okl. 286, 141 P. 412; Wooden v. Wooden, 113 Okl. 81, 239 P. 231; Mann v. Mann, 135 Okl. 211, 275 P. 348; Brasier v. Brasier, 200 Okl. 689, 200 P.2d 427, and others. Plaintiff does not cite any rule of law laid down in the syllabus of Holt v.

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Related

Revis v. State
1929 OK CR 80 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1929)
Mann v. Mann
1929 OK 102 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1929)
Wooden v. Wooden
1925 OK 594 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Holt v. Holt
1909 OK 102 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)
Howell v. Howell
1914 OK 258 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1914)
Brasier v. Brasier
1948 OK 251 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 68, 267 P.2d 606, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vetter-v-vetter-okla-1954.