67 Wash. 2d 198 | Wash. | 1965
Lead Opinion
— When Jessie and John Edinger married, September 15, 1937, his father’s ownership and management of the Centralia Daily Chronicle did not entirely assuage the doubts or remove the uncertainty from their financial future. At the age of 23, following graduation from the University of Washington School of Journalism and one year of graduate study at Harvard School of Business, John
Twenty-five years later, when they came before the divorce court, John Edinger could not avoid the aura of success, generated in a large degree by his capabilities as a business executive and his professional competence as a journalist. Although acquiring the paper largely through inheritance, there is little doubt that his skill, training and experience contributed in good measure during their marriage to the newspaper’s enhanced value, both in its physical properties its income and intangibles.
The divorce decree made adequate provision for the support and education of the four children, but the wife, Jessie Edinger, seeks a reversal of the judgment in its entirety, urging that her husband failed to show grounds for divorce and that the court erred in failing to provide alimony and in making an inequitable division of the property.
First, as to the assignment of error concerning want of grounds, our study of the record shows that it contains sufficient evidence to support the court’s findings and conclusions on that issue and the decree granting a divorce will be affirmed. Altman v. Sigurdson, 63 Wn.2d 347, 387 P.2d 375 (1963); Kaufman v. Kaufman, 60 Wn.2d 1, 371 P.2d 535 (1962).
The division of property, however, does not yield to so brief an analysis when we consider the duration of the marriage, the comparative earning capabilities of the parties and the financial condition in which they will be left by the decree. As to future earnings, the prospects of the parties seem markedly unequal. The husband, as owner and publisher of a daily newspaper and having now the assets of 25 years as a successful journalist, publisher and business executive, will draw a salary of $20,000 a year and derive other income from the newspaper to bring his earning capabilities up to around $40,000 or $50,000 per year.
Accepting the plaintiff husband’s valuation of the Daily Chronicle stock at a total of $158,000, the trial court awarded to the husband property valued at $198,562.45, and awarded to the wife property worth $43,740, in which was included the family residence at $20,000. The court also allowed the defendant wife .$40,000 as a part of the property division, payable $10,000. in cash and the remaining $30,000 at $400 per month with interest on the' unpaid balance at 5 per cent annually, thus bringing the wife’s share of the property division to $83,740.
. This appeal was first heard dep.artmentally and then reheard en banc. At the en banc hearing, plaintiff was virtually forced to concede that the Daily Chronicle stock had a value of $190,000 instead of the $158,000 figure adopted by the trial court, but argued that this difference should not affect the division of property because the court had before it for .disposition all of the property of the parties, and made the division advisedly with all of the facts before it.
There exists no conflict in the evidence as to the husband’s capabilities nor the wife’s limitations concerning their future earnings; nor in the property award and the division thereof ; nor in the financial condition in which the parties may be left by the decree. We are, accordingly, of the view that this court may correct the decree in these
The decree will be modified, therefore, by awarding to the defendant wife an additional $32,000 to be paid her by the plaintiff, John B. Edinger, at the rate of $300 per month, commencing with the first month next following payment In full of the $40,000 already awarded. Interest will accrue on the entire $72,000 in the manner now fixed by the decree. The defendant is likewise awarded an additional attorney’s fee of $1,000 above the amount allowed in the decree, and the cause is remanded for such modification.
Rosellini, C. J., Donworth, Finley, Weaver, Ott, Hunter, and Hamilton, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — I dissent. In my opinion, the evidence does not substantiate the trial court’s finding that the wife treated the plaintiff husband cruelly, or that she caused him to suffer personal indignities rendering his life burdensome. The matters complained of occurred over a period of many years, and were incidents or attitudes that should have been forgiven and forgotten in the usual give and take of married life. See Bang v. Bang, 57 Wn.2d 602, 358 P.2d 960 (1961); Wiggins v. Wiggins, 55 Wn.2d 390, 347 P.2d 1073 (1960); Best v. Best, 48 Wn.2d 252, 292 P.2d 1061 (1956); Neff v. Neff, 30 Wn.2d 593, 192 P.2d 344 (1948). Consequently, I would reverse the trial court and direct a dismissal of the divorce action.
Assuming that there were grounds for a divorce, I would not be in accord with the action of the majority in increasing the amount to be paid to the wife by $32,000.
The majority finds that the Centraba Chronicle stock (for the most part the separate property of the husband) had been valued at $158,000, whereas it was actually worth $190,000, and so awards the difference of $32,000 to the wife.