Younge v. Younge

2002 OK 12, 41 P.3d 966, 73 O.B.A.J. 565, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 13, 2002 WL 226717
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 2002
Docket93,288
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2002 OK 12 (Younge v. Younge) 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
Younge v. Younge, 2002 OK 12, 41 P.3d 966, 73 O.B.A.J. 565, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 13, 2002 WL 226717 (Okla. 2002).

Opinion

OPALA, J.

1 This certiorari presses for decision two questions: (1) Can a husband be required by the divorcee decree to maintain a term insurance policy on whose proceeds the wife is granted a lien to secure the payment of due and unpaid alimony? and (2) Did the trial court err in its award of support alimony to the wife? We answer the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

12 Hunter Fred Younge III [husband or appellant] and Barbara A. Younge [wife or appellee] were married on 8 August 1969. Two children were born of the union, both of whom have reached the age of majority. At the time of the marriage, the wife had attained a high school education and the husband a bachelor's degree. The latter earned two master's degrees during the marriage. The wife engaged in employment only periodically, choosing to be primarily a homemaker. During the final three years of the marriage, the husband's two recently established enterprises prospered-primarily his home health care business and, to a lesser extent, the hospice service. The couple's income rose considerably. 2 The home health care's profitability decreased during the last year of the marriage, largely because of changes in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. A decree of divorce, entered on 1 June 1999, allows for the division of their spousal as-sets 3 According to the decree, the husband is to pay support alimony of $1,000.00 for 120 months, a total of $120,000.00. The decree mandates that the husband maintain an existing term life insurance policy on his life (with the wife as beneficiary) "so long as alimony is due in this case." 4

The Court of Civil Appeals' Pronouncement

T3 The husband challenged (1) the decree provision that he maintain life insurance for so long as alimony is due as violative of the rule prohibiting open-ended support alimony awards and (2) the quantum of nisi prius support alimony award. The Court of Civil Appeals [COCA], Division II, sustained the trial court's award viewing it as not contrary to the weight of evidence. As for the provision requiring husband to maintain term life insurance that names the wife as beneficiary, COCA determined that the trial court did not "award a sum that could be made certain by calculation even in the future." 5 It regarded the trial court's inclusion of this provision as an effort to create security for due and unpaid alimony in an amount which could be ascertained at any time. COCA ordered the husband to continue the policy in force during the period support alimony was to be paid, directing that the wife have a lien on the policy proceeds in the amount of any due and unpaid alimony rather than be the policy's beneficiary. The husband was directed to instruct his insurance carrier to alter the *969 policy's terms to conform to the amended decree.

4 Husband's certiorari challenges the trial court's ruling (as modified by COCA) and contends that (a) alimony is not stated in a sum certain because the added cost of maintaining the insurance enhances the award by an indefinite amount (because the premiums for term policies will vary over time); (b) requiring him to maintain the life insurance policy to secure alimony payments impermis-sibly extends his alimony obligation beyond the time of his death; and (c) the trial court abused its discretion in awarding support alimony. 6

T5 On certiorari granted upon the husband's petition, the trial court's decree, as modified by the Court of Civil Appeals, is affirmed, and the cause stands remanded for further proceedings to be consistent with today's pronouncement.

II

THE INSURANCE PROVISION

A.

The Insurance Clause is Ancillary to the Monetary Alimony Award. - COCA's Decree Modification Meets the Sum Certain Requirement for the Insurance Obligation

96 The husband asserts first that the appellate court's modification of the decree's insurance mandate-which denominates the wife as a lien holder rather than the policy's beneficiary-does not cure the decree's defect. Although the modified decree remedies the indefinite aspect of the award should the policy come due, it continues to impose alimony that is void because it is not stated in a fixed sum. This is so, the husband contends, because premium payments-which inure solely to the wife's benefit-also constitute alimony. 7 The expenses of maintaining term life insurance will vary over the course of the ten-year period. According to the husband, the variation in premiums makes the husband's total alimony obligation uncertain. In short, because the decree does not set alimony in a sum certain, the husband asserts that the award is void. 8 Wife counters by stating that the record fails to show that policy premiums will vary.

17 This court recently reaffirmed the long-held doctrine that requires alimony to be in a sum certain. 9 Though the pertinent statute, 48 O.S. Supp.1998 § 121, 10 no longer contains its earlier language, the rule continues in effect. 11 In the absence of agreement to the contrary, the trial court cannot award support alimony in an indefinite sum, though it may provide for payment of the gross amount to be made in installments. 12 Where the divorce decree facially reveals that money awarded as alimony is not in a definite sum, the award is void and subject to attack. 13

*970 {8 The focus of our review here must be different from that in Clark, 14 the case on which the husband relies for reversal. We must first examine the amount of the alimony obligation that is to be secured by the insurance policy. If that amount is stated in a sum certain (or is ascertainable and does not represent an open-ended liability), the alimony award passes legal muster. The insurance device, fashioned by the appellate court, is but ancillary to the alimony obligation. If the alimony obligation is sustainable, so is the insurance provision-unless the premium obligation alone operates to render it open-ended. The obligation for premium payment is coextensive with the time period set for the discharge of the alimony obligation. When viewed in this context, the obligation to pay insurance premiums is as ascertainable as the duty to pay the alimony itself. The two obligations clearly run parallel.

19 The decree's clause that calls upon the husband to keep in force the policy meets the statutory requirement for certainty. The alimony award the policy is to secure does not offend the teachings of Clark.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 OK 12, 41 P.3d 966, 73 O.B.A.J. 565, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 13, 2002 WL 226717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/younge-v-younge-okla-2002.