Court Opinion

ID: 6939923
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 00:59:47.720664+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:07:39.671333
License: Public Domain

RIGGS, J.,
concurring in part; dissenting in part.
The majority affirms all issues except for recomputation of child support. I agree that child support must be recomputed. However, I do not agree that we should affirm the award of spousal support.
We review de novo, but that does not mean that we should decide the cases willy-nilly. It is true that many, if not most, dissolution cases are fact-specific. Attempts at close factual comparisons are usually of little use, given the almost *226endless variations in the factual matrix and the relative changing priority given to each fact from case to case. Nevertheless, some consistency is possible and is called for, especially when there are recent opinions of this court dealing with almost identical facts. Presumably, when we write on these cases, our purpose is to provide the trial bench and bar with guidance. If we are unwilling to follow our own recent precedents when it is possible to do so, then I wonder how we can expect anything from the trial courts other than ad hoc decision making.
The brief majority per curiam opinion omits a discussion of the facts of this case and avoids any real attempt to distinguish it from several cases decided by this court within the past year and which were briefed and argued by the parties here. Without a discussion of the facts of this case, it is impossible to see how closely they resemble the facts in other cases. The relevant facts follow.
Husband and wife were married for 19 years. He is 42 and she is 41. They have four children and wife has uncontested custody of them. During the marriage, husband attended college and medical school and currently practices as a physician. Wife worked on and off during the marriage and had been a full-time homemaker for 12 years before the dissolution. At the time of the marriage, husband and wife had college degrees, and wife had a Colorado teaching certificate. During the first four years of marriage, husband did three military tours of duty in Vietnam, and wife taught at schools in Hawaii and Washington. After leaving military service, husband continued his medical education and spent approximately nine years achieving his current position in a medical sub-specialty. During husband’s medical training, wife performed assistant teaching and secretarial work on a part-time basis. She has not worked in the teaching profession during the past 12 years and will need up to one year of additional training before she would be eligible to teach in elementary school, although she might be able to reactivate her teaching certificate for secondary education in a shorter time. At the time of trial she was earning $720 a month as a half-time preschool teacher.
The trial court found, as I would on de novo review, that husband earned approximately $118,800 in the year *227preceding the trial and that that fairly represents his current income level. The evidence also supports the conclusion that wife can be expected, within a year’s time, to have an annual salary of approximately $21,000, if she successfully completes her teachers’ recertification.1
The trial court awarded wife spousal support of $1,500 a month for 12 months, $2,500 per month for 36 months and $2,000 per month indefinitely.2 Husband argues that those amounts are excessive and that this is an inappropriate case for indefinite spousal support.3 Husband directs our attention to cases such as Stuart and Stuart, 107 Or App 549,813 P2d49 (1991), and Bailey and Bailey, 108 Or App 678,816 P2d 1195 (1991), as examples of spousal support amounts that would be reasonable here. In fact, this case bears a striking resemblance to the facts in Stuart, and only a little less so to the facts in Bailey.4 Except for minor differences in the projected income of the two husbands (both doctors) and a modest imbalance of property in favor of the wife in Stuart, the circumstances of the parties in both cases are remarkably similar. The marriage in Stuart lasted 16 years. The parties in both cases had ages within five years of each other. Each wife had been a homemaker or part-time *228outside worker, and each was projected to be able to earn in the middle-to-low $20,000 range annually after a short period of retraining. There were two minor children in Stuart and four in this case. Husband in both cases was required to pay child support. In Stuart, we modified spousal support to provide $1,500 per month as indefinite support, and we affirmed the trial court’s additional award of $10,000 lump sum spousal support to enable the wife to complete a master’s degree in nursing. In this case, on these facts, we should modify the spousal support award to the sum of $1,500 per month indefinitely. That amount would be appropriate, considering the length of the marriage, the disproportionate ability of wife to achieve a standard of living that the income of the husband now is able to provide and the additional criteria we discussed in Stuart. 107 Or App at 553; ORS 107.105(l)(d).5
I agree with the majority that the parties’ assignments of error and arguments on all issues other than child and spousal support do not merit discussion and I, too, would affirm on those issues.
For these reasons, I dissent from that portion of the majority opinion that does not modify spousal support.

 The majority opinion is silent as to which facts it found persuasive and which justified the trial court’s award of spousal support.

 The trial court used the term “permanent” support in its judgment. Most appellate opinions in recent years also have used the term “permanent” to define spousal support that is intended to last for an indefinite term, notwithstanding the fact that relevant statutory provisions do not use the word “permanent.” See ORS 107.105; ORS 107.135. It may be self-evident that there really is no such thing as “permanent” support, because there are a variety of statutory ways in which either the amount or duration of “permanent” support can be changed. I believe that “indefinite” is a more accurate term that should be substituted for “permanent” in spousal support judgments and appellate opinions.

 Among other things, husband argues that, because he was a medical student during the earlier years of the marriage, a frugal life style was necessarily maintained throughout most of the marriage. Therefore, he argues, wife should be entitled only to a standard of living not overly disproportionate to that which she enjoyed during the years of struggle toward husband’s medical degree and in the several practice-building years thereafter. I would reject husband’s argument. A “standard of living not overly disproportionate to the standard enjoyed by the parties before the dissolution” anticipates the standard of living that, but for the dissolution, would now be available to the parties.

 The Stuart opinion was a product of this department and was written by Edmonds, J. I dissented in Stuart and said that I would have reduced the indefinite support in that case to $750.

 The majority attempts to excuse its failure to follow precedent by suggesting that, in Stuart, the “parties argued and our analysis focused on the duration of spousal support, not the amount.” Indeed, I concede that that may have been what was in the author’s mind when he wrote Stuart; however, review of the appellate briefs in Stuart makes clear that both the duration and the amount were at issue on appeal. Further, contrary to the majority here, Stuart does not support its assertion that the wife in that case was seeking only an increased in the duration of spousal support. In Stuart, as in this case, we reviewed de novo and presumably addressed all the arguments of the parties relating to spousal support.