REVERSED IN PART, MODIFIED IN PART AND REMANDED. Costs to neither party. Plaintiff-wife was divorced from defendant-husband in a decree dated January 29, 1969 which, among other things, approved their property settlement agreement which had been received in evidence and it was made a part of the decree. In pronouncing its decree the court stated that the property settlement agreement was "given the force and effects of the decree."
Wife appeals in this motion proceeding by the husband for modification of the decree and property settlement agreement. Part of the motion was granted on September 12, 1973. Wife contends that the trial court erred in its order by modifying the property settlement agreement and decree in two respects: (1) by changing the requirements that husband pay for certain of wife's household expenses, and (2) by relieving him of the cost of automobile and its expenses, both subsequent to her remarriage.
Husband's motion requested elimination of "all future obligation" (I) "to the support * * *"; (II) "to pay * * * towards the purchase of [wife's] home * * *"; and (III) "to pay * * * household expenses [and] * * * automobile expenses * * *."
The trial court's formal order simply eliminated the household expenses of "Paragraph I" of the agreement and the automobile expenses of "Paragraph IV" *Page 309 of the agreement and stated that "all other terms and conditions of said Decree shall continue * * *." Thus, it appears that no action was taken on Requests (I) and (II) above unless it could be termed denial thereof. Husband did not cross-appeal.
Evidence was that the property settlement agreement was negotiated over a period starting before October 1968 and lasting until January 1969, which was a period in which husband was seeking freedom from his long-time marriage so that he could remarry. The parties had one grown, married child. Wife was represented by counsel but husband, who was an optometrist and a high school mathematics teacher, was unrepresented, a matter of his own choice. At least two drafts of the settlement agreement were prepared and executed, the second replacing the first. No allegations of fraud or duress in the making of the contract have been asserted. We find that the parties were dealing at arms' length and knew what they were doing when the final agreement was entered into. The agreement provided for the division of several parcels of real property, a private school, personal property, etc. After sales of property were completed after the decree was entered, the values of all the property divided under the terms of the agreement proved to be relatively equal, although the parties are not now in agreement that this was so. The controversy in this motion revolves around four provisions of the property settlement agreement:
"I
"Husband will execute a deed conveying to wife his interest in the premises located at 2210 S.W. Dewitt Street, Portland, Oregon. Husband will pay off and discharge the balance due on the purchase *Page 310 price of this property and it will become the sole property of the wife, free and clear. In the event that the wife wishes to continue residing at said premises, husband will continue to pay the insurance, taxes and all household utilities such as heat, light, water, garbage collection and telephone, and maintain said premises in a livable condition so long as the wife occupies same. [This was for a $20,000 residence the wife received.]
"* * * * *
"IV
"Husband agrees to provide the wife with the use of an automobile for such period and at such times as the wife may require its use and husband further agrees to pay for the insurance, licensing, maintenance and upkeep on said automobile.
"* * * * *
"VII
"It is the present intention of the wife to continue to be gainfully employed. However, in the event that she should be forced to discontinue her employment either temporarily or permanent[ly] due to illness or injury, husband agrees to pay to the wife each month by way of alimony such an amount as would make up the difference between whatever disability compensation she might receive from her employer during the period of disability and the total amount of $350 per month.
"* * * * *
"XI
"It is specifically agreed between the parties hereto that the remarriage of the wife shall not in any way effect [sic] or relieve husband of any of the obligations agreed to herein.
"* * * * *."
At the time the agreement was executed wife had *Page 311 been diagnosed as having diabetes, and the evidence fairly indicates that both parties expected that she would have health difficulties which might have impaired her future earning capacity. For many years she had been employed in a bank, and had made substantial contributions to the family finances. She continued to work through her bad health period. Sometime after the divorce wife's health difficulties cleared up and it was learned that she did not have diabetes. Husband contends that the challenged provisions of the agreement and decree were in the nature of alimony and are thus subject to change upon proof of changed circumstances, regardless of inclusion in the property settlement agreement. As a general proposition, this is correct if the provisions are alimony. Feves v. Feves,198 Or. 151, 254 P.2d 694 (1953); Prime v. Prime, 172 Or. 34,139 P.2d 550 (1943). Wife contends that the only provision of the agreement which contemplated support dependent upon her physical condition was Paragraph VII of the contract, quoted above, and that the provisions concerning household expenses and the automobile were in the nature of a division of the property which was executory over a long period of time.
The trial court in its written order modifying the decree found only that there had been a change of circumstances warranting modification of the decree. There is nothing from the court in the record otherwise to show the basis of the trial court's finding. However, a copy of a letter opinion from the judge is included without challenge in the abstract submitted with wife's brief. It discusses Paragraphs I, IV and XI, supra, of the agreement, ignores Paragraph VII thereof and apparently also Request (I) of the motion, supra, without explanation therefor. *Page 312
The evidence indicates that possibly the $20,000 home (Paragraph I, agreement) was completely paid for through the husband's transferring to wife his interest in some other property. In any event, the court's letter opinion (but not the formal order which appears to have been drawn pursuant thereto) states the decree should be amended by "deleting * * * household expenses other than discharging the mortgageincumbrance * * *." (Emphasis supplied.)
With reference to Paragraph VII of the agreement, we see nothing except one statement in wife's testimony (to the effect she is no longer interested in it) to explain why the court and the parties seemed to leave its provisions in effect, or unsettled. That formed the basis for much of the evidence and husband's concern. Perhaps this was attributable to an oversight in drawing up the formal order.
The letter opinion also states:
"It is my opinion that the payments, no matter how they are labeled, are and should be considered alimony and not a division of assets. It is significant that at the time of the property settlement, the husband was not represented by counsel. He was anxious to be free of his former wife so that he could remarry * * *.
"* * * * *
"The provision of the decree specifying that remarriage of the wife shall not affect the husband's obligation is an unreasonable provision. To require an ex-husband to support an ex-wife who has remarried is unconscionable."
These findings must be considered the basis for the modification order, in addition to a finding that there had been a change of circumstances.
It does not appear that the exact question presented *Page 313 here has previously been decided in Oregon. In Prime v. Prime, supra, 172 Or at 42-3, the court said:
"* * * [T]here may be instances in which even an executory agreement for future periodical payments, when approved and incorporated in a decree, should be held invulnerable to modification, even in the event of changed conditions. For example, if husband and wife are each the owners of real property, and if they agree that in lieu of a division of their property between them the rights of the wife shall be liquidated by means of payments in the nature of an annuity, and if the agreement shows and the court finds that such provision was adopted as and constitutes a fair method of liquidating the actual property rights of the wife and approves the agreement in the decree, we suppose that such payments in the nature of an annuity would not be subject to later modification in the event of changed conditions. Parker v. Parker, 193 Cal. 478, 225 P. 447. The difficulty is in drawing the line between approved agreements in the nature of alimony which are subject to modification and approved agreements in the nature of an annuity employed as a means of adjusting the wife's property rights * * *."
In Prime the Supreme Court was not considering a contract where the parties, dealing at arm's length, expressly provided that payments to the wife should survive a remarriage. That is the situation we have here, although the situation we have here is otherwise much like that described in the Prime quote, above. The writer in an annotation on the law applicable to situations like that at bar1 in Annotation, 48 ALR2d 318, 327-28 (1956), said:
"Ordinarily, no questions of construction arise *Page 314 where a separation agreement, by its terms, unequivocally provides that a money obligation imposed by the agreement upon the husband shall, or shall not, terminate upon the wife's remarriage * * *." (Footnotes omitted.)
At Annotation, 48 ALR2d 270, 310 (1956), in an allied annotation, it was said:
"A specific agreement * * * to pay * * * stipulated sums during her [wife's] life has been held * * * when incorporated in a divorce decree, as to be unaffected by the wife's remarriage * * *."
The cases cited by the annotator support the rule that a clear statement such as that which we have in Paragraph XI of the instant settlement agreement must be given effect, e.g.,see Sullivan v. Sullivan, 215 Ala. 627, 111 So. 911 (1927); Spearv. Spear, 158 Md. 672, 149 A 468 (1930); and Krick v. Krick, infra.
In Warrington v. Warrington, 160 Or. 77, 82, 83 P.2d 479 (1938), the court said:
"* * * It should not be the policy of the court to require two or more men to support * * * the same woman."
However, the court there was dealing with straight alimony, and no agreement like Paragraph XI of the agreement at bar.
In Nelson v. Nelson, 181 Or. 494, 500, 182 P.2d 416 (1947), the court said:
"* * * It would not be good public policy to compel a divorced husband to support his former wife after she had remarried, except under extraordinary conditions * * *."*Page 315
But the court went on to hold that periodic payments until they totaled $700, which was called for in a property settlement agreement, were not alimony but in nature of property settlement, and were enforceable by the wife after remarriage.
In Bennett v. Bennett, 208 Or. 524, 302 P.2d 1019 (1956), the court held that $2,000 "lump sum alimony" decreed was not alimony, but a property settlement that was enforceable after remarriage, and repeated language from Nelson:
"`Alimony, however, is used in some instances to designate the amount allowed the divorced wife in settlement of property rights and when so used is not affected by her remarriage * * *."`* * * * *.'" (Emphasis theirs.) 208 Or at 531.
In Ross v. Ross, 240 Or. 561, 403 P.2d 19 (1965), the court reviewed most of the cases discussed above and came to a conclusion consistent with them.
In none of these cases does it appear that the parties had included a provision in their agreement like Paragraph XI of the agreement at bar. It appears the trial court in the instant case concluded that if future payments would contribute to wife's support after she remarried, Paragraph XI would be against public policy in that respect and unenforceable. We doubt that such a conclusion is warranted. We find no cases directly in point in Oregon, but as mentioned above, the ALR annotator says there is no question of construction when there is an unequivocal provision like Paragraph XI.
An example of cases supporting the rule so stated isKrick v. Krick, 76 Nev. 52, 348 P.2d 752 (1960), *Page 316 where it was held that where the husband received property under the property settlement agreement and agreed to make monthly payments "for life" to the wife those payments must continue after her remarriage despite a Nevada statute which specifically provided that alimony payments cease with the remarriage of the wife unless the decree "otherwise provided." The trial court had originally decreed that the property settlement be complied with and the husband had moved to modify the decree. The Nevada court cited Hilton v. McNitt, 49 Cal.2d 79, 315 P.2d 1 (1957), which recognizes that under a similar California statute the parties can agree in a property settlement agreement that support payments will continue after remarriage, and the agreement will be enforced.
In Gush v. Gush, 14 Misc.2d 146, 178 NYS2d 429 (Sup Ct 1958),affirmed 9 App. Div. 2d 815, 192 NYS2d 678 (1959), a case with facts somewhat similar to those at bar was under consideration. When the property settlement agreement was entered into, the wife was ill. The agreement required weekly payments for the wife's support for life regardless of remarriage. The agreement was made a part of the decree. The wife recovered and remarried. In a separate motion proceeding, the support provision had been expunged from the decree, without prejudice to the wife's seeking enforcement of the contract in a separate action. Gush was the separate action. New York had a statute terminating support payments after remarriage. The court said:
"But public policy does not strike down contracts in which, as a part of the agreement, the husband has * * * [agreed] to make payments to the wife after her [re]marriage or during her natural life. *Page 317 [Citing nine New York cases.] * * *" (Emphasis supplied.) 178 NYS2d at 431.
In Unander v. Unander, 265 Or. 102, 107-08, n 3, 506 P.2d 719 (1973), the Oregon Supreme Court quoted the language which we have quoted above from Prime. It concluded that an antenuptial agreement concerning alimony in the event of divorce will be enforced
"* * * unless the spouse has no other reasonable source of support.
"* * * * *
"This * * * has the merit of according the parties * * * the same freedom of contract that other parties are accorded but preserving to the state the right to invalidate the contract when required to insure adequate support for one of its citizens." (Footnotes omitted.) 265 Or at 107-08.
That case involved an antenuptial agreement as distinguished from an agreement in contemplation of dissolution of the marriage, but we see no reason why the same principle should not apply. The court should not save a person from the bargain he makes under fair bargaining conditions, after he finds the consideration unattractive. If the husband was under pressure because of his desire to remarry, and this led him into making a bad bargain, it still is of his own making. In the case at bar, the evidence showed that the husband continues to have a "reasonable source of support," even though there may have been a change of circumstances, as the trial court found.
For the reasons set out above, the trial court order must be reversed as to its provisions relating to Paragraphs I and IV of the agreement and the *Page 318 matter returned for entry of a new order consistent with this opinion and responsive to the motion.
We have noted above that it appears the trial court indicated in its letter opinion that the requirement that the home covered by Paragraph I of the agreement must be paid for by husband is still effective, if it is still executory. With this we agree, and the new formal order should so state.
Paragraph VII of the agreement appears to us to have been entered into under the mutual misapprehension that wife's misdiagnosed diabetes might render her unable to work. Perhaps husband's best remedy in this regard was a separate suit for rescission of Paragraph VII based on mutual mistake of fact, but the remedy appears to be within the motion husband made.
We do not view the evidence supporting a mutual mistake as applying in the same way to Paragraphs I and IV (the household and automobile expenses) that it does to Paragraph VII. The expenses relate to one house which wife got in exchange for their family home, and "an automobile." From reading Paragraph IV as a whole, we do not think this can fairly be interpreted as meaning more than one automobile.
We hold that Request (I) of the motion shall be allowed as to Paragraph VII of the agreement, and the motion denied as to Requests (II) and (III).
Reversed in part, modified in part and remanded. Costs to neither party.
1 The note at Annotation, 48 ALR2d 318-19 (1956), says it deals with agreements not made a part of the divorce decree, but in the next sentence says: "* * * In some of the cases * * * the * * * agreement has been made part of the divorce decree, * * *" but the court has given no weight to that fact. "* * * Cases of this type are referred to by way of illustration."