DocketNumber: No. 80-5-185, CA A20034
Judges: Buttler, Joseph, Warren
Filed Date: 10/26/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Wife appeals the property distribution portion of the dissolution decree. She contends that the trial court’s refusal to award her one of two houses owned in the parties’ names was an inequitable distribution of the marital assets.
The parties were first married on July 28, 1973. In May, 1975, a house was purchased in both parties’ names, and the couple set up residence there.
At the time of the hearing, husband was 40 years old and had been employed as a design engineer at a paper mill for approximately five and one-half years. In addition to his net pay of approximately $1,256 per month, he earns a yearly gross income ranging from $8,000 to $15,000 from a one-man drafting business. Wife was 33 years old at the time of the trial and has completed three years of business courses. She was employed as an assembler clerk for an insurance company at a net salary of about $500 per month. During the marriage, she was unemployed for a period of three months. There are no children of this marriage.
It is clear from the record that the trial court treated the marriage and the remarriage as two marriages.
"* * * ppjhg general approach in dividing property after a short-term marriage is to place the parties as nearly as possible in the financial position they would have held if no marriage had taken place.”
The fundamental rule is that the property division shall "be just and proper in all the circumstances.” ORS 107.105(l)(e); Flowers and Flowers, 34 Or App 211, 577 P2d 1369 (1978). While the length of a marriage is an important factor, it alone is never determinative of what is an equitable distribution of assets.
Although the parties did not contribute equally to the marital community,
Husband claims that the acquisition of property was due to his "herculean efforts * * * for [sic] procuring additional income” rather than his greater earning power. Nevertheless, the properties were purchased in both parties’ names. Presumably both parties shared the risk of profit and loss. Most of the appreciation in the value of the houses occurred while the parties were married. As in Flowers, 34 Or App at 214,
"[T]he fact that there was a brief hiatus in their marital relationship did not substantially change their position as to these properties.”
The decree is modified to award wife the house purchased during the first marriage in lieu of the $18,000 judgment. That being so, the support provision of the decree is also modified to provide for spousal support in the amount of $150 per month for one year from the date of the decree.
Affirmed as modified. Costs to appellant.
Husband contends he acquired the house in anticipation of their divorce.
In his proposed distribution of assets in the trial court, husband claimed
"[sjeveral months after their first divorce, Wife and Wife’s mother pressured the Husband into remarrying. The ceremony was completed after Husband’s best man caught him attempting to escape through a bathroom window. To this date, his co-workers believe that he is single.”
Wife valued the assets awarded to husband at $62,750, while she claims to have received $24,000, including the judgment. Husband, on the other hand, claims he received $47,400 and wife a total of $25,700. Under wife’s calculations, the equity in the first house is $26,500 and $26,000 in the second. Husband claims the equity is $19,500 in the first house and $24,000 in the second.
Wife claims that this in itself was error. In light of the fact that the trial court awarded wife her share of the equity in the first house, we disagree.
See, e.g., Watrous and Watrous, 23 Or App 241, 243, 541 P2d 1082 (19751.
The parties maintained separate checking accounts. Husband made all of the loan, utility, insurance and tax payments, while wife purchased all of the groceries and paid for gifts and her personal bills.