Oliver v. Oliver
Oliver v. Oliver
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff (wife) and defendant (husband) were divorced in 1975. The decree of divorce incorporated an agreement of the parties. In 1981 husband sought termination of the requirements of the decree as to periodic alimony under §
The wife answered, claiming past-due alimony accrued under the divorce decree and claiming a vesting of alimony in gross. She also contends that §
The pertinent provisions of the divorce decree are as follows:
"ALIMONY: As alimony, Defendant shall pay over to Petitioner the monthly sum of $850.00 commencing with the *Page 1273 month of January, 1975, and in addition thereto Defendant shall pay over to Petitioner 25% of all future net pay raises. "In the event of the remarriage of Petitioner the foregoing award of alimony shall be reduced by 50% at the time of such remarriage and completely terminate one (1) year subsequent to the remarriage of Petitioner.
"LIFE INSURANCE: Petitioner shall be and remain as sole beneficiary on all "straight" life insurance policies provided by or through any company by whom Defendant might now or hereafter be employed. Expressly excluded from this provision is any policy or policies of accidental life insurance.
"RETIREMENT INCOME: For the life time of Petitioner, she shall receive from Defendant one-third (1/3) of Defendant's net retirement pay afforded to him through any past, present or future employment. The foregoing shall not include Social Security benefits during the lifetime of Defendant."
The court heard evidence ore tenus and made findings that the paragraph as to alimony was reduced by mutual agreement of the parties, and the wife waived any objection to the reduction as of July 1978. Thereby payments were reduced to $700.00 per month. The paragraph relating to life insurance constituted an award of alimony in gross but applied only to what the evidence termed a base policy in the approximate amount of $47,000.00 and did not apply to a supplemental policy purchased by the husband. It further found that the paragraph titled "RETIREMENT INCOME," provided for periodic income and was therefore terminated by the remarriage of the wife as provided in §
The appeal first contended that the court erred in finding that the provisions for periodic alimony were modified by agreement of the parties in July 1978. There was evidence that the husband fully complied with the "alimony" provisions of the decree until about July 1978. There were increases because of his increased salary until he was paying up to $900.00 per month. In July 1978 he became eligible for retirement with his company. In view of the large payment he was then making to the wife, he called her and told her he could now retire and was considering doing so unless she agreed to accept a reduction of alimony down to $700.00 per month. Husband stated wife agreed to the reduction. He thereafter paid her $700.00 from July 1978 until he learned of her remarriage in September 1981. The wife accepted his checks without complaint until husband brought this action.
The wife acknowledges all of these events except that of the claim of her agreement to a reduction. She said she neither agreed nor disagreed, only accepted. Thus a factual conflict was presented by the evidence as to whether there was an agreement to waive her known rights. There was evidence before the court that the wife thought that husband was going to retire. Though the amount of his retirement income was unknown, it was evident that it would be greatly less than he was earning in salary. There was apparently little if any animosity between the parties subsequent to the divorce. Each had visited the other and with their children. The wife openly enjoyed intimate relationships with at least two men (one of whom she has now married) in the presence of her children and her former husband. The husband had remarried. There appeared to be no issue made of the reduced alimony subsequent to the alleged agreement.
With this and other evidence before it, the court concluded a mutual agreement was reached by the parties to reduce the alimony payments. *Page 1274
The use by the trial court of terminology that the parties by agreement "modified" the original decree of alimony by reducing alimony to $700.00 per month is perhaps confusing and unfortunate. At first impression it may be thought that that finding is contrary to the decision of the Alabama Supreme Court in the case of Holland v. Holland,
The second issue is whether there was error in holding that the life insurance provision of the decree applied only to one policy.1
In responding to the contention of the wife on this issue, we note that the judge whose interpretation of the life insurance provision is now before us, was the judge who accepted the parties' agreement and placed it in the divorce decree. Because of that fact, though it is not conclusive, and because of some ambiguity in the phrase "provided by and through," when considered in the light of the evidence presented, we are again constrained to accept the trial court's judgment. The evidence was that the husband, at the time of the divorce, had in effect on his life two straight life insurance policies. The "base policy" was provided by his employer. The employer paid the premiums. There was a "supplemental" policy for the same benefit amount, presumably with the same insurer, for which the employer did not pay the premiums. The evidence did not disclose how the second policy was obtained. It might have been concluded that it was available or offered to the husband because of his employment. However, it could be said that it was not "provided by or through" his employer when he paid the premiums. Evidence of the true intent of ambiguous words in a contract is admissible. Mitchell v. Mitchell,
The third issue is whether the provision in the divorce decree giving to the wife one-third of the husband's net retirement pay was an award of periodic alimony, an award of alimony in gross or a property settlement.
The trial court held the award to be periodic alimony, terminable by remarriage under §
In all cases of construction of a divorce decree for the purpose of determining whether an award is periodic alimony or alimony in gross, and it is not specifically stated, the court will look to the source of payment and the purpose. Borton v.Borton,
"`Alimony in gross' is the present value of the wife's inchoate marital rights — dower, homestead, quarantine, and distributive share. It is payable out of the husband's present estate as it exists at the time of divorce. . . . On the other hand, `periodic alimony' is an allowance for the future support of the wife payable from the current earnings of the husband. . . ."2
As the purpose of the award from the retirement pay of the husband was not designated in the decree, it was proper to consider testimony of the parties as to the events of the time and the intent of the parties in arriving at the agreement. It is undisputed that a right to some retirement benefits was vested in the husband at the time of the divorce. It is also undisputed that the amount of the benefits was not known. It is evident that after retirement the husband would not be able to pay $850.00 in periodic alimony. It was therefore reasonable for the court to conclude that the designated interest in the monthly retirement income of the husband was intended to provide for the support of the wife from his then current earnings. The conclusion of the court was in accord with our holding in Kabaci v. Kabaci,
Section
The wife has presented contentions that §
It has long been held in this state that if the parties to a divorce proceeding have entered into an agreement in anticipation thereof and request that its provisions in full or in part be included in the decree of the court, such agreement, if incorporated, loses its contractual nature insofar as the right to modify it is concerned. Hutton v. Hutton,
By adoption of amendment 390 to the constitution and enactment of §
It is not the purpose of this decision to speak in any manner to contracts between husband and wife regarding any matters pertaining to their marital interests so long as they are not included in a decree of divorce. It must be recognized however that all matters related to a marriage may come within the authority of the court sitting in equity when the parties submit themselves to its jurisdiction by the filing of a suit for divorce. Owens v. Owens,
It is therefore the judgment of the court that the decree of the circuit court should be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
HOLMES, J., concurs specially.
BRADLEY, J., not sitting.
Concurring Opinion
I do not agree with the Presiding Judge's opinion that the wife "waived" her right to alimony. However, I do find the trial court's action to be supported by the evidence.
At the outset I note the husband's answer raised "accord and satisfaction" as a defense.
The past due alimony claimed by the wife is a fixed-money judgment, as to past due installments, which can be discharged as any other such judgment. O'Neal v. O'Neal,
For payment of a lesser amount to operate as a satisfaction of a debt or judgment, there must be a bona fide dispute as to the amount due, or an independent consideration, or written agreement, or a surrender of the evidence of the debt. O'Nealv. O'Neal, supra.
In the instant case, the trial court found a mutual agreement to reduce alimony. Such a finding is easily interpreted to support a finding that there was independent consideration which in turn supports a finding of accord and satisfaction. Every presumption must be indulged to uphold judgment entered in cases heard ore tenus. McGaha v. Steadman,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Dorothy L. Oliver v. James C. Oliver.
- Cited By
- 33 cases
- Status
- Published