Summary
In Unander v. Unander, 265 Or 102, 506 P2d 719 (1973), the Supreme Court addressed the validity of a provision in a prenuptial agreement waiving spousal support.
Summary of this case from McInnis and McInnisOpinion
Argued November 2, 1972,
Reversed February 23, 1973 Petition for rehearing denied March 30, 1973
On review from the Court of Appeals.
REVERSED.
Dwight L. Schwab, Portland, argued the cause for petitioner. With him on the briefs were Hutchinson, Schwab, Burdick Hilton, Portland.
Edward I. Engel, Portland, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the briefs were Goldsmith, Siegel Engel, Portland.
Before O'CONNELL, Chief Justice, and McALLISTER, DENECKE, TONGUE, HOWELL and BRYSON, Justices.
In Reiling v. Reiling, 256 Or. 448, 474 P.2d 327 (1970), we held invalid an antenuptial agreement which provided that the wife would be paid no alimony. We now are called upon to decide whether to adhere to that decision and whether that decision also requires us to hold invalid an antenuptial agreement providing that the wife is to receive $500 per month alimony.
The trial court distinguished Reiling v. Reiling, supra ( 256 Or. 448), and held the agreement valid. The Court of Appeals did not believe Reiling could be distinguished and held the agreement invalid. Unander v. Unander, 10 Or. App. 100, 498 P.2d 807 (1971). We granted review.
We have concluded that we were incorrect in our decision in Reiling v. Reiling, supra ( 256 Or. 448).
The facts in the present case are not dispositive of the issue but are influential as being typical of the facts underlying many antenuptial agreements.
The parties can be classified as middle-aged. Both had been married before. The husband had children by his previous marriage and was making substantial alimony and support payments. He was a man of property. There were no children of the present marriage. The wife had a well-paying position which she relinquished shortly after marriage.
The husband suggested before marriage that they enter an agreement. There was some negotiation between the parties' attorneys over the terms. As executed, it provided that in the event of divorce, the husband was to pay the wife $500 per month alimony, provide a $25,000 life insurance policy, and pay wife's medical expense. The property they each had upon entering marriage was to remain their separate property.
The husband filed for divorce about nine months after the marriage and the wife counterclaimed for divorce. The court found both parties were at fault, but the wife was least at fault and was awarded the divorce. The trial court awarded alimony per the agreement and observed that except for the agreement, alimony would not be appropriate because of the short existence of the marriage.
Our decision in Reiling was based upon two premises: (1) agreements providing no alimony is to be paid encourage divorce because the husband is apt to treat his wife without the consideration he may have if he had foreseen that he may have been required to pay her alimony in the event of a divorce; and (2) the state has a "paramount interest in the adequate support of its citizens, and, therefore, the husband's duty of support, either before or after divorce, should not be left to private control." 256 Or at 450.
Upon further reflection we are now of the opinion that the first premise, that such agreements encourage divorce, is of extremely doubtful validity.
A recurring picture painted in many of the decisions holding such agreements void is of a wrongdoing husband attempting to escape liability for alimony to an innocent wife. At the time we decided Reiling divorce in Oregon, ostensibly, could only be awarded against one guilty of fault or greater fault. In practice this was not true and the legislature recognized the situation and provided for "no fault" divorce. Oregon Laws 1971, ch 280, p 387. Now evidence of "fault" will ordinarily not be admissible and cannot be the basis of dividing property or awarding alimony. ORS 107.036.
The adoption of the "no fault" concept of divorce is indicative of the state's policy, as exhibited by legislation, that marriage between spouses who "can't get along" is not worth preserving. We believe a marriage preserved only because good behavior by the husband is enforced by the threat of having to pay alimony is also not worth preserving, particularly between spouses who typically are middle-aged and have no children in the home.
If such marriages are regarded as worth preserving, as pointed out in Reiling, the provision for no alimony may work to preserve a marriage as much as to destroy it. The wife may "bear with her husband's foibles because she knows she will receive no support in the event of divorce." 256 Or at 449.
As we observed in Reiling, the legislature has expressly approved antenuptial agreements concerning the spouses' respective personal property. ORS 108.140. We also observed that ante-nuptial agreements concerning the disposition of real property had been upheld. Moore v. Schermerhorn, 210 Or. 23, 307 P.2d 483, 308 P.2d 180, 65 ALR2d 715 (1957). We decided they were not analogous to agreements foregoing alimony because they did not interfere with the interest of the state in the wife's welfare and with the right of the wife to receive adequate support from a former husband. Leaving aside that contention for the moment, such agreements can be a cause of divorce as much as an agreement on alimony. In Posner v. Posner, 233 So.2d 381 (Fla 1970), a wife was attacking an antenuptial agreement whereby she would receive $500 per month alimony and surrender any claim to other property. The court held the provision valid. Pointing out the inconsistencies of the traditional view, the court observed that antenuptial agreements dividing property can be an incentive to divorce though such agreements have been favored in law. A spouse could wisely decide that she could better herself monetarily by obtaining a divorce with a lucrative alimony provision rather than waiting for her spouse to die and receive an impecunious testamentary disposition.
The Posner case and the solution we have followed in this case are discussed in 4 Creighton L Rev 180 (1971).
The second ground for our decision in Reiling was the more important; that is, that the state has an interest in the support of its citizens and one spouse's duty to support the other cannot be nullified by private agreement. We continue to regard this as a valid premise. Such a principle, however, does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that all antenuptial agreements concerning alimony are invalid.
We have now come to the conclusion that antenuptial agreements concerning alimony should be enforced unless enforcement deprives a spouse of support that he or she cannot otherwise secure. A provision providing that no alimony shall be paid will be enforced unless the spouse has no other reasonable source of support.
The antenuptial agreement, of course, must be valid in other respects, particularly it must have been fairly entered into by spouses who have a fiduciary duty to each other which includes a duty of full disclosure of assets. Newton v. Pickell, 201 Or. 225, 230, 269 P.2d 508 (1954).
If the circumstances of the parties change, the court can modify the decree just as it can modify a decree based upon an agreement made in contemplation of divorce which has a provision regarding payment of support. Warrington v. Warrington, 160 Or. 77, 83 P.2d 479 (1938); Prime v. Prime, 172 Or. 34, 41-50, 139 P.2d 550 (1943); Ross v. Ross, 240 Or. 561, 564-566, 403 P.2d 19 (1965).
"* * * We have already noted the distinction as to fully executed transactions, and there 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. * * *." Prime v. Prime, 172 Or. 34, 42-43, 139 P.2d 550 (1943).
This solution has the merit of according the parties to the antenuptial bargain 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.
The Court of Appeals in Reiling noted that alimony was not necessary for the support of the wife; if it had been the court indicated the contract "would have to give way to that extent." 1 Or. App. 571, 574.
We were accurate in stating in Reiling that the great weight of authority held alimony provisions in antenuptial agreements were invalid. However, the very recent judicial trend is to the contrary. Posner v. Posner, supra ( 238 So.2d 381); Volid v. Volid, 6 Ill. App.3d 386, 286 N.E.2d 42 (1972).
We believe it necessary to depart from the principle of stare decisis primarily because we have become convinced that it is important to a large number of citizens, as typified by the parties to this case, that they be able to freely enter into antenuptial agreements in the knowledge that their bargain is as inviolate as any other except when it must be voided to provide support.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the trial court's decree reinstated.