McAllister v. McAllister

Decision Date01 April 1977
Docket NumberNo. 75--2018,75--2018
Citation345 So.2d 352
PartiesEvelyn M. McALLISTER, Appellant, v. John Gordon McALLISTER, Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Robert M. Curtis of Saunders, Curtis, Ginestra & Gore, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.

William E. Blyler of Patterson, Maloney & Shankweiler, Coral Springs, for appellee.

LETTS, Judge.

This appeal stems from a dissolution of marriage in which the wife of a successful doctor received a $500.00 per month award of permanent alimony.

This cause is reversed in part.

The McAllisters were married in 1951 while he was a medical student and she an employed pharmacist. The record reflects that the wife worked, to assist her husband finish school, 1 for over a year after the marriage, and almost immediately thereafter, bore the first of four children. Subsequently, until now, she pursued the outmoded profession of housewife and mother, only once working during a vacation period, in 24 years of marriage. Upon receiving his medical degree, the husband commenced to build a medical practice, equipping his office with the aid of a loan secured by the meager inherited stocks and bonds owned by the wife. His practice became successful and Doctor McAllister's 1973 corporate income tax return, for his single P.A., reflected a gross income of over $200,000. Moreover, his personal return for that same year, even after his accountants had done with their computations, reflected a payment to himself of a $75,000 salary. By contrast, the wife's income from dividends and interest totalled less than $2,200 in that same year.

The record reflects that Doctor McAllister is a good father, 49 years old and a man's man, who goes elk hunting in Wyoming, dove shooting in Mexico, Fishing, belongs to the yacht club and enjoys many skiing excursions. Vacations have included several trips to the Bahamas, Canada and to Europe. He breeds horses, co-owns cattle, and he himself claims that his monthly personal living expenses add up to over $2,600. There can be no doubt that he enjoys a style of living and social prestige which, by the rest of society's standards, must be termed both generous and glamorous, and which can continue completely unaffected by the permanent alimony award in the court below. The wife, on the other hand, aged 48, although also able bodied and capable of employment, will, in terms of permanent alimony awarded, be receiving only $500.00 per month, plus her private income of $175.00, for a grand total, before taxes, of $675.00 per month, plus whatever she can earn. She claims her knowledge of pharmacology is so outdated that she cannot resume her former profession, but regardless of the truth of this, there is no suggestion that she cannot procure work. (Pharmacologists are paid $6.00 per hour, according to the record). The wife, apparently, has latterly continued her education, parttime, and now holds a degree in anthropology from Florida Atlantic University, but neither she, nor any of her graduate classmates, have been able to secure a job in this field.

The final judgment, insofar as alimony is concerned, awarded the wife $500.00 a month rehabilitative alimony for five years, and $500.00 a month permanent alimony, until his death or her remarriage. In addition, she was given possession of the house for five years (she was already the owner of record of an undivided one-half thereof and her assets were used to collateralize a second mortgage when it was purchased) and the husband required to pay the mortgage and taxes during that period, which he can deduct. At the end of the five years, the house is to be sold and the proceeds equally divided.

The foregoing recitation of facts and circumstances in the case now before us, is laborious and detailed; however, we find it neither a waste of time nor paper, because we would hope by this opinion to help clarify the law regarding alimony where a breakup of a long term family marriage is involved, and we perceive a tendency by some trial courts, to undercompensate the wife. It would appear that, in some instances at the trial level, the result has very much hinged upon the luck of the draw depending upon which division in the courthouse gets the case; however, we see no such variation at the appellate level, where the recent case law on this kind of long term family marriage breakup has been reasonably uniform. Much of what we will say hereafter has already been covered in a shorter form by Chief Judge Mager in Gordon v. Gordon, 335 So.2d 321 (Fla.4th DCA 1976) but we shall repeat it, and expand upon it, for future reference at the trial level.

The history of the change in alimony concept, up through the new dissolution of marriage law and beyond, is best set forth by Judge Rawls in the case of Brown v. Brown, 300 So.2d 719 (Fla.1st DCA 1974), and we see no purpose to repeat it here. Suffice it to say that reasonable permanent alimony still lives, especially, in dissolutions involving the long time role of a mother and housewife.

Alimony is traditionally predicated on three criteria: (1) the ability of the husband to pay it, (2) the needs of the wife compared to reasonable expectations from her own income, and (3) the standard of living enjoyed by the wife during marriage. Caracristi v. Caracristi, 324 So.2d 634 (Fla.2nd DCA 1976). In turn, these three criteria have, in developing case law, been supplemented by six more: (4) the length of the marriage; (5) the number of children. (Included in this category should be the extent to which the wife has been required to do the actual housework and perform the chore of raising the children, vis a vis the amount of outside domestic assistance paid for by the husband;) (6) the relative health and physical condition of both the wife and the husband, and (7) the extent of the contribution by the wife to her husband's successful career. 2

An eighth factor considered by the courts concerns the conduct, or misconduct, of the parties during the marriage. Oliver v. Oliver, 285 So.2d 638 (Fla.4th DCA 1973). This particular category is cited with some reluctance, (although in the light of case law, it would be remiss to exclude it) for we recognize that, inevitably, a consideration of conduct involves a retrogression back to the fault concept and away from no fault; however, in Oliver the Court was careful to point out that the extent of such evidence should be limited, at the trial judge's discretion. Moreover, in Oliver, it would appear that the misconduct was gross, for the wife claiming alimony was all the time drunk, repeatedly threatened to kill her husband and made no effort whatever to keep house. The Oliver court permitted such testimony to be considered by the chancellor below on the basis of Florida Statute § 61.08(2) (1975), which says:

In determining a proper award of Alimony, the court may consider Any factor necessary to do equity and justice between the parties. (emphasis supplied).

By contrast, there is no suggestion in the record now before us of any misconduct by Dr. McAllister, but likewise, there is no indication that Mrs. McAllister was other than a good spouse. At all events, we would urge that evidence of misconduct be limited to gross situations such as existed in Oliver, with no mitigating circumstances, otherwise, as was conceded in that case, we will return to the very type of '. . . often sordid and provocative testimony of fault . . . that lead to the enactment of the so-called no-fault dissolution of marriage chapter.' Id. at 640.

Finally, there is a ninth catch all consideration set forth in Kennedy...

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