Willits v. Willits

658 P.2d 508, 61 Or. App. 374, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 19, 1983
DocketNo. A7908-03825, CA A21250
StatusPublished

This text of 658 P.2d 508 (Willits v. Willits) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willits v. Willits, 658 P.2d 508, 61 Or. App. 374, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2143 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

Plaintiff (wife) brought this suit in equity for a “Declaratory Judgment for Declaratory Relief, Accounting and Damages” arising out of a dispute with defendant (husband) over the terms of the property settlement agreement (PSA) incorporated in their 1970 dissolution decree. The dispute centered on the following PSA provisions dealing with six pieces of real property and a promissory note.

“3. Ownership of Properties
“All real estate owned by the parties, including ownership of real estate, rights to purchase on real estate contracts and all interests as vendors in installment sales of real estate, shall continue to be owned by the parties in joint ownership with rights of survivorship, and not as tenants in common.
“4. Management and Control of Real Estate
“Husband is hereby authorized and directed to manage all real estate and interests in real estate as buyer or seller which are owned by the parties or in which wife has an interest, except the property at 12525 S. E. Main Street, Portland, Oregon. Wife does hereby appoint her husband as her agent and attorney in fact on behalf of her interests in said property to carry on or authorize maintenance expenses; receive payments of rent, note payments and contract payments, and deposit same; pay all bills against said property; and do all other acts and things appropriate for the management of said real property. Payment of all of the obligations, as mortgagor and contract vendee, of the parties shall be made by the husband, * * *. During husband’s lifetime or during the continuation of this agreement, whichever shall be the lesser, wife makes no claim to any income from the following property in which the parties have an interest, all of which properties are located in Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon:
“3322 S. E. 122nd Avenue;
“6128 S. E. 88th Avenue;
“2612 S. E. 141st Avenue;
“3400 S. E. 122nd Avenue;
“11848 S. E. Powell Boulevard; and
“5025 N. E. Sixth Avenue,[1]
[377]*377“as well as the promissory note made by Collector’s Book Store and payable to the parties. Husband shall report all income from such properties and shall pay in full any income tax attributable to said properties.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The PSA also provided that husband pay spousal support but that, if the Collector’s Book Store failed to make monthly payments on its promissory note, spousal support would be reduced by one-half of the amount it failed to pay.

When the PSA was signed in 1970, the parties were receiving payments of principal and interest on the land sale contracts for 3322, 6128 and 2612 and on the promissory note and rents for 3400, 11848 and 5025. In 1974, the parties sold 5025 on a land sale contract. In 1977, the parties sold 3400 on a land sale contract and split the $10,000 down payment between them. After this suit was filed in 1979, the land sale contract for 3322 was paid off in a lump sum of $11,633.47, which is being held in trust pending the outcome of this suit.

From the time of the dissolution until the suit was filed husband received and retained all of the payments and rents except the $5,000 for 3400 paid to wife and the payment for 3322 held in trust. Husband managed the properties, paying maintenance expenses, the underlying obligations and the property taxes for the appropriate properties. He also paid all the income taxes arising out of the rents and payments he received.

The issue in this suit is the meaning of the term “income” in the PSA. The parties agree that the rents and the interest portion of the land sale contract and promissory note payments were “income” and, therefore, husband’s property under the terms of the PSA. The dispute centers on those portions of the promissory note and land sale contract payments that were return of principal or capital gain. At trial, husband argued that the parties intended “income” to mean all of the note and contract payments; consequently, he was entitled to retain them. Wife argued that the parties intended income to mean only the interest portion of the note and contract payments. She contended that the non-income portions constituted “an inter vivos transfer of assets owned jointly with rights of [378]*378survivorship” that should have been “divided between the parties on the basis of their life expectancies” — 61.6 percent to wife and 38.4 percent to husband.

Wife requested three types of relief: (1) a declaration of the parties’ rights to the non-interest portions of the note and contract payments; (2) an accounting by husband of all monies received by him on the contracts and note, including an allocation of amounts for rents, interest and principal; and (3) a judgment against husband for any monies he retained that should have been paid to wife.2

In its findings of fact, the trial court addressed the parties’ intent as to the distribution of the non-interest portion of the payments: “Any return of capital from the sale of any of the properties was to be evenly divided between the parties.” The court also found that one of wife’s attorneys had prepared an accounting of funds received by husband since the dissolution.

The court entered the following conclusions of law:

“1. The term ‘income’ in the agreement of February 5, 1970, and as used therein, excludes net return of capital on the sale of any real property belonging to the parties. The term ‘expenses’ in the agreement of February 5, 1970 includes maintenance, property taxes, payments of principal and interest on mortgages and income taxes upon gains realized upon sale.
“2. Defendant owes Plaintiff one-half of all net return of capital, after taxes, on the following properties:
“6128 SE 88th Avenue,
“3400 SE 122nd Avenue,
“5025 NE 6th Avenue; and “2612 SE 141st Avenue,
“less the sum of $5,000 heretofore paid on 3400 SE 122nd Avenue.
“3. From the sale of 3322 SE 122nd Avenue, and the funds currently being held therefore [sic] by Defendant’s counsel, Defendant may be reimbursed for the property taxes paid on that property, and the balance received should be split equally between the parties. Any interest accrued on funds since they were placed in trust should be [379]*379divided according to the ratio of the total payments made to the parties of the pre-interest amount.
“4. Each party should pay his or her own attorney’s fees. Each party should pay one-half of the fee for the accounting to Ferris Boothe * * *.”

In a letter to the parties, the court defined the term “net return of capital.”

“Net return of capital means the total amount received for sale of a property after deducting all expenses incident to its operation, including interest and taxes. [Husband] is entitled to deduct all such expenses, including all capital gain taxes paid by him before division of the net capital received.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Adamson v. Adamson
541 P.2d 460 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
Main v. Howard
629 P.2d 870 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1981)
Kelley Et Ux. v. Mallory Et Ux.
277 P.2d 767 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1954)
Garnett v. Garnett
526 P.2d 549 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1974)
Cole v. FOGEL
310 P.2d 315 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
658 P.2d 508, 61 Or. App. 374, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willits-v-willits-orctapp-1983.