Ramsay v. Ramsay
Decision Date | 12 September 1975 |
Docket Number | No. 44700,44700 |
Citation | 233 N.W.2d 729,305 Minn. 321 |
Parties | Mary Lou RAMSAY, Appellant, v. James F. RAMSAY, Respondent. |
Court | Minnesota Supreme Court |
Bruess, Boyd, Andresen & Sullivan and David P. Sullivan, Duluth, for appellant.
Courtney, Gruesen & Peterson and David A. Petersen, Duluth, for respondent.
Heard before OTIS, PETERSON, and SCOTT, JJ., and considered and decided by the court en banc.
This is an appeal from an amendment to a divorce decree. The principal issue is whether the receipt of income by appellant, Mary Lou Ramsay, resulting from her employment, justified the termination of her alimony. We hold that it did not, and reverse.
The parties were divorced on July 30, 1968. They were represented by counsel who negotiated a stipulation for the division of property, payment of alimony and support money, and custody of their three children who remained with plaintiff wife. The terms of the stipulation incorporated in the decree required defendant husband to pay $170 a month in alimony and $80 a month support for each child.
On May 4, 1973, defendant moved the court for an amendment terminating his obligation to pay alimony. Thereupon, plaintiff sought an order awarding her additional child support, attorneys fees, and other relief. The court granted defendant's motion and denied plaintiff's stating its reasons in the following memorandum:
'In any event, the plaintiff's present income exceeds the amount of alimony that she was originally granted, while the defendant's income has not increased since 1967.
'The Court has taken into consideration the fact that this matter is now being appealed and therefore has, by this Order, reinstated temporarily the alimony payments pending this appeal.'
1. Minn.St. 518.64 allows the court to 'revise and alter * * * the amount of * * * alimony' granted in a divorce decree, but in so doing it must base its amendment on a showing there has been a substantial change of circumstances in one or both of the parties. Mark v. Mark, 248 Minn. 446, 80 N.W.2d 621 (1957). In every such case discretion must be exercised 'cautiously.' Bissell v. Bissell, 291 Minn. 348, 351, 191 N.W.2d 425, 427 (1971). Defendant showed that plaintiff was now employed in a part-time job and that she could work full time if she wished to do so since the children had reached the ages of 8, 11, and 12 years. Defendant had married a woman with three children and testified that he had to 'contribute substantially' to their support.
Our prior decisions which considered the termination of alimony because of the wife's ability to earn a living dealt with situations where there had been a diminution of the former husband's earning capacity. Smith v. Smith, 77 Minn. 67, 79 N.W. 648 (1899). In the Smith case, the husband was elderly, while his former wife was 'in the prime of life and is able to command a good salary.' 77 Minn. 69, 79 N.W. 648. More recently, in Schmidt v. Schmidt, 275 Minn. 268, 146 N.W.2d 185 (1966), alimony was terminated where the husband's health had badly deteriorated and the former wife was employed full time. Here, however, defendant makes no claim that his income has declined since the date of the divorce. Nor is the fact of defendant's remarriage, as he concedes in his brief, sufficient change of circumstance to support a termination of alimony. Quist v. Quist, 207 Minn. 257, 290 N.W. 561 (1940); Hagen v. Hagen, 212...
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