Walker v. Walker

577 A.2d 1218, 133 N.H. 413, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 18, 1990
DocketNo. 89-335
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 577 A.2d 1218 (Walker v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Walker, 577 A.2d 1218, 133 N.H. 413, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 76 (N.H. 1990).

Opinion

Per curiam.

The plaintiff, Patricia C. Walker, appeals from an order of the Superior Court {Murphy, J.) claiming several points of error; specifically, she argues that the trial court erred when it reduced her alimony to $575 per month, limited the time period to twenty-four months, denied her request for adequate security from the defendant and found her in contempt for failing to execute a will pursuant to an earlier court order. The defendant, Jerome K. Walker, argues on cross-appeal that the trial court erred when it did not apply the 1983 version of RSA 458:19 and failed to grant his motion to terminate alimony. We reverse in part, affirm in part and remand.

The plaintiff, Patricia C. Walker, and the defendant, Jerome K. Walker, were divorced in 1980, at which time they had two minor children, Kenneth, born on November 29,1963, and Jeremy, born on October 2, 1967. The court ordered the defendant to pay $1,100 per month in alimony and $450 per month in child support to be increased annually by a percentage determined in accordance with the Consumer Price Index and capped at 7.5%.

In the property settlement, plaintiff received a 1977 Subaru, a home and furnishings located at 93 Allied Street in Manchester, seven thousand dollars to be used for home repairs and a note in the amount of twenty thousand dollars secured by property in Bedford awarded to the defendant. Payments on the note were to commence [415]*415at the occurrence of one of the following events: when their youngest child completed his post-secondary education, when the property was sold, or when alimony payments ceased for any reason other than plaintiff’s death or remarriage. The defendant received a 1973 Dodge truck, a home and furnishings located at 47 New Boston Road in Bedford, subject to an existing encumbrance, his Keough and Amoskeag Pension Plans, his interest in the Jerome K. Walker Professional Association and the Algonquin and Sun Oil Company stocks.

In April of 1984, after the defendant filed a motion seeking a reduction in his alimony payments, the parties entered into a court-approved stipulation increasing his alimony and child support payments to $1,265 and $517 per month, respectively. The stipulation also eliminated the provision regarding the cost of living increase and required plaintiff to cover the payments for her own health insurance. Additionally, she agreed to enter into a contract to draft a will under which her assets would be available first for any uncompleted education of her children.

On October 2, 1985, the Walkers’ youngest son, Jeremy, turned eighteen. Three years later, on October 5,1988, the defendant ceased making alimony payments, allegedly in reliance on RSA 458:19 (1983). He did, however, commence payment on the $20,000 note pursuant to paragraph eleven of the 1980 divorce decree. On October 3, 1988, plaintiff filed a motion to bring forward and modify the alimony order and requested the court to rule on whether the three-year limitation in RSA 458:19 (1983) was applicable to this divorce. In response, defendant filed an objection to her motion and moved that plaintiff be found in contempt for failing to execute the will pursuant to the 1984 stipulation.

On April 14,1989, counsel for both parties argued about the applicability of RSA 458:19 (1983). The Master’s (Peter J. Bourque, Esq.) recommendation, which the Superior Court (Dalianis, J.) subsequently approved, was that the three-year provision in RSA 458:19 was inapplicable, reasoning that Henry v. Henry, 129 N.H. 159, 525 A.2d 267 (1987) (holding new statute applicable only prospectively) was distinguishable on its facts.

On May 10, 1989, defendant filed a motion to terminate alimony alleging that he had become disabled and was unable to continue practicing medicine. Plaintiff objected to this motion and simultaneously filed a motion requesting security for the alimony pay[416]*416ments in arrears. The court consolidated the motions and scheduled a hearing for May 17, 1989.

The Master (Peter J. Bourque, Esq.), whose report was approved by the Court (Murphy, J.), denied defendant’s motion to terminate alimony and, instead, reduced the amount to $575 per month to continue for a period of twenty-four months. The master also found that the defendant was in arrears in excess of $10,000 for failing to pay the $1,265 monthly payment from October 19, 1988. The master ordered him to pay fifty percent of the arrearage on or before September 15,1989, a,nd the balance on or before February 15,1990, with an 8% rate of interest per annum to be applied from the date the payments were due. Both plaintiff’s motion to bring forward and modify and her request for security were denied. The master also found her in contempt for failing to execute the will ordered by the court’s acceptance of the parties’ 1984 stipulation. Subsequent to this order, defendant and plaintiff filed their respective appeals.

The first matter we must address is which version of New Hampshire’s alimony statute, RSA 458:19, applies to the present case. RSA 458:19 was amended in 1981, in 1985 and again in 1987. The legislature provided that the 1981 amendment, which currently appears in the 1983 replacement edition of the Revised Statutes Annotated, would apply to all support orders preceding its enactment, but only after the expiration of one year, see Laws 1981, 275:2, whereas neither of the later versions was extended to cover earlier orders, see Laws 1987, 278:6; Laws 1985,175:5. The defendant, relying on Henry v. Henry supra, maintains that because the parties were divorced in 1980, their alimony order is governed exclusively by RSA 458:19 (1983). The plaintiff, with whom the master sided on this issue, argues that the Henry decision is distinguishable on its facts. According to the plaintiff and the master, we applied the 1983 version of RSA 458:19 in Henry only because there were no minor children involved; and, in their view, this factual distinction renders Henry wholly inapposite to the present case. We disagree with this analysis and conclude that the defendant’s position is correct on this issue.

In Henry v. Henry, 129 N.H. 159, 525 A.2d 267, we were confronted with the issue of whether the 1985 amendment to RSA 458:19, effective January 1, 1986, applied to a divorce decree dated August 8, 1978. In answering that issue, we expressly stated that “[o]rders based upon divorce decrees entered before January 1,1986, will be governed by the ‘old’ provision (RSA 458:19 (1983))” and that the then “new” provision, RSA 458:19 (Supp. 1986), “is applicable [417]*417only to orders based upon divorce decrees entered on or after that date.” Id. at 161, 525 A.2d at 268 (emphasis in original). This holding was based, not on the absence of minor children as the plaintiff suggests, but on two facts: first, the 1985 amendment carried an effective date of January 1, 1986, and second, the General Court specifically provided that the 1981 amendment would apply to all alimony orders in existence beginning one year after its effective date of August 15, 1981, see Laws 1981, 275:2, 275:3, while the 1985 amendment included no such provision, see Laws 1985, 175:5. Thus Henry,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 A.2d 1218, 133 N.H. 413, 1990 N.H. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-walker-nh-1990.