DocketNumber: No. 124,879, CA A23739
Citation Numbers: 59 Or. App. 256, 650 P.2d 1018, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3204
Judges: Gillette, Young
Filed Date: 9/15/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This is a dissolution of marriage case in which a wife of over 30 years appeals the trial court’s denial of spousal support. We modify the decree.
Husband originally sought dissolution in 1974, the case resulting in a “Decree of Permanent Separation” in January, 1975. The decree contained two apparently inconsistent provisions. The preamble provided, in pertinent part:
“* * * [T]he Court finds irreconcilable differences between the parties have caused the irremediable breakdown of the marriage, but that the continuation of their status as married persons will preserve a legal and financial interest of the [wife], * * *” (Emphasis supplied.)
Two paragraphs farther on, however, the decree provided:
“* * * []\[]either [party] shall be responsible for any further financial support or obligations to each other for any reason as of the date of this decree.”
The first question presented to us by the parties is whether we can, under the peculiar facts of this case, award spousal support. Husband argues that the last quoted section means that, inasmuch as the separation decree did not provide for spousal support, he cannot be required to pay it now. Wife argues that the original decree did provide for spousal support. She maintains that the emphasized portion of the preamble was a reference to the fact that, by virtue of the parties’ remaining married, she continued to be entitled to benefits — including health care, commissary privileges and the like — as the wife of a man retired from the Navy. The health benefits alone, she argues, were worth over $100 a month.
Assuming, for the purposes of this case and as the parties have presented to us, that the provisions of a decree of permanent separation limit a court of equity’s authority in a subsequent petition for dissolution, we find that wife’s construction of the separation decree is the more reasonable one. Because of husband’s status as a Navy retiree, he was in a position to confer benefits on wife, not out of his own pocket, simply by remaining married. His decision now to seek a divorce means that those benefits will be cut off. In substance, then, wife would lose some spousal support.
The decree of dissolution is modified to require that husband pay wife, as and for permanent spousal support, the amount of $150 per month and affirmed as modified. Cost to appellant.