The Superior Court held that James Williams' agreement to pay maintenance to his former wife, Sandra, terminated upon her remarriage. This decision was reversed by the Court of Appeals in
In re Marriage of Williams,
I
Sandra Rae Williams and James Eldon Williams were married in 1960. In January 1985, they separated, and Sandra filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage.
The parties, with the guidance of Northwest Mediation Service and the assistance of counsel, entered into a settlement agreement. Clerk's Papers, at 1-16. The agreement required the husband to pay maintenance to the wife for 4 years or until she finished her bachelor's degree, whichever came first. Clerk's Papers, at 7. It also stated that its maintenance provisions were not modifiable by a court. Clerk's *204 Papers, at 12. See RCW 26.09.070(7). It did not, however, explicitly address the effect of remarriage.
The trial court dissolved the marriage on August 2, 1988, and incorporated the agreement in its decree. Indeed, the decree recites verbatim the rather detailed provisions for spousal maintenance contained in the settlement. Clerk's Papers, at 33-36.
A few days after the dissolution decree was entered, Sandra remarried. James filed a motion to terminate his obligation to pay maintenance. A family court commissionеr denied James' motion to terminate maintenance and denied Sandra's motion for attorney fees.
Both parties moved to revise the commissioner's ruling in Superior Court before Judge Norman Quinn. He held that the husband's obligation terminated by operation of law.
See RCW
26.09.170(2). He relied uрon two Court of Appeals decisions which required that the decree or the settlement agreement must contain a provision expressly mentioning remarriage in order to overcome the statutory presumption that the receiving spouse's remarriage terminаtes alimony.
See In re Marriage of Thach,
Sandra appealed to Division One of the Court of Appeals, which reversed the trial court, ruling that the maintenance obligation did not terminate by operation of law.
In re Marriage of Williams,
Unless otherwise agreed in writing or expressly provided in the decree the obligation to pay future maintenance is terminated upon the death of either party or the remarriage of the party receiving maintenance.
Laws of 1973, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 157, § 17, p. 1224 (codified as amended at RCW 26.09.170(2)). The court reasoned that *205 the agreement reached by the parties satisfied the "otherwise agreed in writing" requirement, even though it contained no specific provision addressing the effect of remarriage. Williams, at 142-44.
This decision created a conflict with at least two cases of Division Three,
see In re Marriage of Thach, supra; In re Marriage of Rufener,
II
Our decisions prior to the dissolution act of 1973 require specific decretal provisions in order to overcome presumptive termination of alimony by operation of law. The 1973 dissolution act made remarriage an event which presumptively terminates alimony, but did not change the specific decretal language requirement in the case law.
Prior to 1973, remarriage did not presumptively terminate alimony.
Hanson v. Hanson,
We have consistently held that the dissolution decree must contain specific language in order to overcome the presumption that alimony terminates upon the death of either party.
Murphy v. Shelton,
*206 We have also held that this requirement applies even when the decree incorporates a property settlement between the parties. In DeRiemer, we rejected a claim that alimony payments survive the death of the payor, relying upon the rule that alimony payments do not survive the death of the payor absent express provision in the decree. DeRiemer, at 690. The payee in that case argued that the settlement agreement indicated that the monthly payments were not alimony, but part of a prоperty settlement. DeRiemer, at 688. Hence, the obligation would not cease upon the death of the payor. We rejected this argument emphatically. Our opinion stated, "the contract becomes a nullity when the court's decree has been entered". DeRiemer, at 689.
Until
Williams,
the Court of Aрpeals had read the 1973 act as extending the common law presumption that death terminated alimony to the event of remarriage.
Rufener; Mason; Thach. See also
Rieke,
The Dissolution Act of 1973: From Status to Contract?,
49 Wash. L. Rev. 375, 406 (1974). Accordingly, the specific decretal language requirement applied to claims that the remarriage did not terminate an obligation after 1973, just as it had applied to claims that death did not terminate an obligation prior to 1973.
Rufener
(an award of alimony until death of the wife terminates upon her remarriage);
Mason
(permanent alimony terminates upon remarriage absent specific decretal provision to the contrary);
Thach
(alimony awarded for 30 months to assist wife in obtaining college education terminates upon remarriage).
See also Vincent v. Vincent,
The Court of Appeals rejected prior precedent because, in its opinion, the language of the statute governing the *207 presumption that remarriage or death terminates an alimony obligation compelled this result. Williams, at 142. That statute states:
Unless otherwise agreed in writing or expressly provided in the decree the obligation to pay future maintenance is terminatеd upon the death of either party or the remarriage of the party receiving maintenance.
RCW 26.09.170(2).
The Court of Appeals apparently believed that a settlement agreement lacking the specificity required in a decree suffices to overcome the statutory presumption. It noted that the adverb "expressly" only applies to provisions in a decree, not to written agreements. Williams, at 142. It suggested that the phrase "otherwise agreed in writing" must mean something less than the phrase "expressly provided for." Applying that princiрle to this case directly contradicts the principle that a decree incorporating a settlement governs the rights of the parties, not the settlement agreement.
According to the Court of Appeals, interpreting the provision to require express prоvision in the settlement agreement incorporated in the decree would render the "otherwise agreed in writing" language superfluous.
Williams,
at 142-43 (citing
Snow's Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Morgan,
The survival of prior case law would not, however, make the otherwise agreed language in the statute superfluous; it would merely narrow its scope. The otherwise agreed in writing language would only apply to cases where no decree has been issued or where the decree declared that the agreement shall survive the decree.
See, e.g., Stone v. Bayley,
In faсt, principles of statutory construction compel us to overrule the Court of Appeals and reaffirm our precedent in this area. The Legislature is presumed to be aware of judicial construction of prior statutes.
In re Marriage of Little,
A number of states require specific decretal language to overcome presumptive termination of maintenance obligations by operation of law. The Minnesota Supreme Court recently concluded that court-ordered alimony, of 42 months' duration, terminated before the expiration of that periоd if one of the parties remarried.
In re Marriage of Gunderson,
In the wake of
Gunderson,
the Minnesota Court of Appeals rejected an argument based on an agreement
*209
almost exactly like the one before this court. The dissolution decree in that case, like the decree in this case, required the husband to pay his wife maintenance for 48 months or until she completed her bachelor's degree.
Peterson v. Lobeck,
We are aware of the fact that the Washington State Task Force on Gender and Justice in the Courts has recommended that the Legislature repeal the provision we are interpreting. Wаshington State Task Force, Gender and Justice in the Courts 145 (1989). We, however, may not repeal the statute through questionable judicial construction.
The policy of the statute is to create a presumption that remarriage terminates alimony, as the Court of Appeals recognized. Williams, at 144. The Legislature apparently intended, however, to allow trial courts the power to award maintenance beyond remarriage in appropriate cases and to allow parties to contract around the presumption.
Departure from the rule requiring "sрecific or manifestly clear and unmistakable decretal provision" to overcome a statutory presumption would only eviscerate the law. We have explained:
We consider this rule a salutory [sic] one, if for no other reason than that it encouragеs the considered judgment inherent in clarity and certainty. It tends to exclude misunderstanding and ambiguity in an area of human relations where the emotions of the moment often conflict with afterthoughts, changing circumstances, death, and the intervention of third party interests. Abandonment of the rule would accomplish no practical result. Watering it down by sophisticated construction of questionable decretal language, however magnanimous the spirit, would lead but to confusion.
Bird v. Henke,
Other state supreme courts have similarly recognized that the policy оf requiring clear language to overcome
*210
statutory presumptions is salutary. The Georgia Supreme Court recently adopted a clarity standard similar to the one we have had in Washington for some time.
Daopoulos v. Daopoulos,
Had the drafter of the agreement squarely faced the issue undоubtedly there would have been an expression clearly conveying to the reader whether remarriage would terminate the alimony obligation. . . .
Daopoulos, at 72.
This decree declares that maintenance will be paid until Sandra completes her bachelor's degree or until 4 years pass, whichever comes first. This speaks no more specifically to the parties' intentions as to the effect of remarriage than an agreement to pay permanent alimony or alimony for a fixed period not linked to the educational needs of a spouse. Accordingly, we hold that the dissolution decree lacked the specific language necessary to overcome the statutory presumption. In the hopes of discouraging dubious interpretation of questionable decretal language, we hold further that the decree must specifically mention remarriage in order to overcome the presumption. Specific decretal language means just that. James' obligation terminated on the day Sandra remarried. We reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court's decision. We grant James' request for attorney fees, 1 but remand to the trial court for a determination of the proper amount. RAP 18.1(e).
Callow, C.J., and Brachtenbach, Dolliver, Dore, Andersen, Durham, Smith, and Guy, JJ., concur.
Reconsideration denied December 4, 1990.
Notes
Both parties agree that the prevailing party is entitled to attorney fees under their agreement.
