Murtha v. Kramer
Murtha v. Kramer
Opinion of the Court
Roger Kramer appeals an order denying his motion for declaratory relief and discharge of a judgment lien and granting James Murtha’s motion for an order directing payment of the j udgment.
In the event the husband and wife fail to agree on the division of exemption, the exemption shall be divided between them by the court in which the first judgment was taken.
This portion of the statute has not previously been interpreted. It can, however, be interpreted by looking at the plain and ordinary meaning of its language. See State v. Tollefson, 85 Wis. 2d 162, 171, 270 N.W.2d 201, 205 (1978). It says the court must divide the exemption when the husband and wife fail to agree. When the court has no evidence that a husband and wife agree on the division of the exemption, it must treat that as a failure to agree and must protect each party’s right to the exemption by dividing it between them. Since the trial court had no evidence that Kramer’s wife agreed to his claiming the entire exemption,
By the Court. — Order modified so the lien encumbers only Roger Kramer’s one-half interest in the proceeds, and, as modified, affirmed.
Kramer owed $4,066.18 on the judgment.
The home was sold and, as required by the divorce decree, the proceeds were divided equally between Kramer and his ex-wife. The proceeds, however, were held in escrow pending the resolution of Murtha’s action.
Kramer submitted an affidavit from his wife on March 10, 1983, after the hearing was held on his motion. The trial court found that the affidavit was filed after the fact and did not consider it in ruling on the motion. Since we are limited to a review of only the evidence before the trial court, we also do not consider this untimely affidavit.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.