In this dissolution-of-marriage case, appellant-wife contends the trial court erred in failing to award her permanent support. The trial court’s decree limited respondent-husband’s support obligations to three years.
When an Oregon court dissolves a marriage, it must also determine a number of interrelated subsidiary questions, such as property division, child custody and support, etc. Three especially interrelated questions are: (1) whether to order one party to contribute to the support of the other; (2) if so, in what amount; and (3) for what duration.
*650 There is limited authority on the question of duration of support, as distinguished from amount of support. A legal encyclopedia primarily discusses duration of support payments as being limited only by the death of either the husband or wife, or the remarriage of the wifе. 24 Am Jur2d 760-69, Divorce and Separation, 641-650. However, it also notes:
“In several jurisdictions it is rather common to limit the duration of an award of permanent alimony to a definite period, such as a period of one year or a period of 2 yеars, the award being designed to support the wife while she is seeking employment. Especially is this the practice where a marriage has lasted only a short time and the wife worked before her marriage; the trial court should award alimony only for the limited time that will enable her to regain her former position of self-support. * * * In determining the duration of alimony the court may properly consider such circumstances as the brevity of the period of cohabitation, the fact that the parties had no children, that the wife had worked before her marriage, and that this was her third marriage.” 24 Am Jur2d, supra at 761.
Our statutes contemplate the possibility of support for either a limited or indefinite period. ORS 107.105 (1) (c) provides that a dissolution dеcree can require “the support of a party * * * for such period of time as may be just and equitable for the other party to contribute.” ORS 107.036 (3) states:
“* * * [I] n fixing the amount and duration of the contribution one party is to make to the support of thе other, the court shall not consider the fault, if any, of either of the parties in causing grounds for the * * * dissolution of the marriage * *
Statutory standards to be applied in arriving at both *651 amount and duration of support are set forth in ORS 107.105 (1) (c):
“(e) # * In making * * * [a] support order, the court shall consider the following matters:
“(A) The duration of the marriage;
“(B) The ages of the parties;
“(C) Their health and conditions;
“(D) Their work experience and earning capacities ;
“(E) Their financial conditions, resources and property rights;
“(F) The provisions of the decree relating to custody of the minor children of the parties;
“(G) The ages, health and dependency conditions of the children of the parties, оr either of them; and
“(H) Such other matters as the court shall deem relevant.”
Our decisions illustrate application of these statutory standards.
CASES LIMITING THE DURATION OF SUPPORT
In
Scheer and Scheer,
*652
In
Garrett v. Garrett,
In
Lathrop v. Lathrop,
In
Wright and Wright,
In
Stianson v. Stianson,
In
Bullock v. Bullock,
In
Craigmile v. Craigmile,
In
Bohanan v. Bohanan,
CASES EXTENDING THE DURATION OF SUPPORT OR PROVIDING SUPPORT FOR AN INDEFINITE PERIOD
In
Jacobson and Jacobson,
App at 155.
In
Morgan v. Morgan,
In
Tann and Tann,
In
Elliker v. Elliker,
CONCLUSION
While each case must be decided on its own facts and no formula can be stated, certain principles emerge from an examination of the above cases. The most significant factor usually is whether the wife is employable at an income not overly disproportionate from the standard of living she enjoyed during the marriage. The wife’s employability includes considerаtion of her education, training, experience, age, health, capacity, whether she has custody of small children, etc. Length of the marriage is germane because the longer the marriage, the more likely it is that the wife has foregоne employment experiences, the absence of which will make it more difficult for her to achieve employment and self-sufficiency. If the wife is employable at an income not overly disproportionate from the standard оf living she enjoyed during marriage, then, generally speaking, if support is appropriate it should be for a limited period of, for *656 example, one to three years. In such a situation, it is not the policy of the law to give the wife an annuity for life оr, stated differently, a perpetual lien against her former husband’s future income. Conversely, if the wife is not employable or only employable at a low income compared to her standard of living during marriage then, generally speaking, permanent support is appropriate.
Applying the above standards to the facts of the case at bar, we conclude that this is a case in which permanent support should be allowed. The parties had been married for 28 yеars at the time the decree was entered. The wife was 47 years old and the husband was 46 years old at the time the decree was entered. The parties had four children, three of whom are emancipated. The fourth, a daughter aged 12, is in thе custody of the wife. In 1972 the husband’s taxable income was about $21,500. Both the husband and wife have recently experienced health problems, although the evidence does not establish that they are especially serious in nature.
The wife has а high school education. She worked at various jobs just prior to and during the early part of the marriage. She has not worked since then, although she now plans to seek employment.
The trial court’s decree awarded the parties’ residence, furniture, automobile and a small savings account to the wife. The residence was valued at between $37,000 and $39,000, and encumbered by a mortgage of about $12,500. The decree awarded beach property and miscellaneous pеrsonal property to the husband. The beach property consists of a three-quarters vendee’s interest in real property assessed *657 as worth $18,300 in 1972, subject to an encumbrance of about $4,900. The decree requires the husband to pay child support of $200 per month. The support provision here in question requires the husband to pay $400 per month for one year, $300 per month for the second year, and $200 per month for the third year.
Throughout 28 years of marriage the wife devoted herself to rearing the parties’ children and maintaining the parties’ home. She is now in her late 40’s and has neither job, training nor skills. She plans to seek employment, but we are convinced that her earning capacity will be slight, especially compаred to the standard of living she enjoyed during marriage with the husband earning an average of over $20,000 per year. Under these circumstances, elimination of support after three years is unwarranted.
The requirement of the decree that the husbаnd pay $400 per month as support for one year is affirmed. The balance of the support provision of the decree is modified as follows: support payments shall be $325 per month during the second year, and $250 per month thereafter until the wife’s death or remarriage.
Affirmed as modified.
