In Re the Marriage of Richard C. Mauer and Carol K. Mauer, Upon the Petition of Richard C. Mauer , 874 N.W.2d 103 ( 2016 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 14–0317
    Filed January 29, 2016
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF RICHARD C. MAUER
    AND CAROL K. MAUER,
    Upon the Petition of
    RICHARD C. MAUER,
    Appellee,
    And Concerning
    CAROL K. MAUER,
    Appellant.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Jon
    Fister, Judge.
    Both parties seek further review of the financial provisions in their
    dissolution decree. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED IN
    PART AND VACATED IN PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
    Jacob R. Koller of Simmons Perrine Moyer Bergman, PLC, Cedar
    Rapids, for appellant.
    Allison M. Heffern and Diane Kutzko of Shuttleworth & Ingersoll,
    PLC, Cedar Rapids, and Max E. Kirk of Ball, Kirk & Holm, P.C., Waterloo,
    for appellee.
    2
    WIGGINS, Justice.
    Both parties seek further review of the financial provisions in their
    dissolution decree. Pursuant to our discretion to consider issues raised
    on further review, we let the court of appeals decision stand with respect
    to the property distribution, child support, life insurance, and appellate
    attorney fees. We do find, however, that the spousal support award by
    the district court was too low and the spousal support award as modified
    by the court of appeals was too high. Accordingly, we modify the spousal
    support award in the dissolution decree as set forth in this opinion.
    I. Prior Proceedings.
    Richard Mauer filed a petition to dissolve his marriage to Carol
    Mauer. Following a trial, the district court weighed conflicting evidence
    submitted by the parties as to the value of various business assets and
    real property.    It then distributed the Mauers’ substantial assets,
    ordering Richard to make an equalization payment to Carol in
    installments and pay her half the net proceeds from the sale of three
    commercial lots they owned. The court ordered Richard to pay $18,000
    per month in spousal support, decreasing to $10,000 per month when
    Carol reaches retirement age and $5000 per month when Richard
    reaches retirement age or actually retires, whichever occurs later.
    The court also awarded joint legal custody of the Mauers’ two
    minor children to Richard and Carol, with Carol responsible for their
    primary physical care.   Accordingly, the court ordered Richard to pay
    $3624 per month in child support initially, decreasing to $2598 per
    month upon the high school graduation of the older minor child.         In
    addition, the court ordered Richard to designate Carol as beneficiary on
    one of his existing life insurance policies until the entire equalization
    payment was paid.
    3
    Both parties filed posttrial motions to amend or enlarge the
    findings or rulings of the district court.   The district court issued an
    order amending the decree and a stipulated nunc pro tunc order. In its
    order amending the decree, the court adjusted the equalization payment
    to $243,458 to correct errors in its original calculation. The court also
    concluded the spousal support award was set too high and amended the
    decree to order Richard to pay $9100 per month in spousal support
    initially, decreasing to $7000 per month when Carol reaches retirement
    age and $5000 per month when Richard reaches retirement age or
    actually retires, whichever occurs later.    The court declined to order
    Richard to maintain life insurance to secure these support obligations.
    Both parties appealed, and we transferred the case to the court of
    appeals.     The court of appeals affirmed the property valuations and
    distribution in the decree, finding both to be equitable. In addition, the
    court affirmed the child support determination in the decree as being
    within the sound discretion of the district court.    However, the court
    concluded the spousal support award by the district court was
    inequitable and modified the decree in this respect, ordering Richard to
    pay $25,000 per month in spousal support until Carol’s remarriage or
    the death of either party. In doing so, the court found its determination
    to be consistent with the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers
    (AAML) guidelines. The court also affirmed the district court’s refusal to
    require Richard to secure his spousal support obligations with life
    insurance.
    Both parties sought further review, which we granted.        In his
    application for further review, Richard alleges the court of appeals
    improperly awarded Carol lifetime spousal support in the amount of
    $25,000 per month. In her application for further review, Carol alleges
    4
    the district court and the court of appeals erred in failing to order
    Richard to secure his spousal support obligations with life insurance.
    II. Background Facts.
    Richard and Carol married in July 1985. At the time of the trial,
    they had been married for twenty-eight years. Carol was fifty-six years
    old, and Richard was fifty-five years old.     During the course of the
    marriage, the couple had four children. Two of the children were still
    minors upon dissolution of the marriage, including a daughter who was a
    senior in high school and a son who was a freshman.
    Richard and Carol met in 1984.         At the time, Richard was in
    medical school at the University of Iowa, where he had previously
    completed his undergraduate degree in science in 1977.         Carol had
    recently received a master’s degree in business administration from the
    University of Iowa, having previously graduated from Cornell College with
    a double major in German and biology. Upon Richard’s graduation from
    medical school, he completed an internship in internal medicine in
    Des Moines. During his internship, he decided he was passionate about
    ophthalmology.   He was accepted into a residency program in Detroit,
    Michigan. While awaiting the start of his residency, he worked for one
    year as an emergency-room doctor in Ottumwa and Des Moines. During
    that year, Richard and Carol were married.
    While Richard was completing his three-year residency, Carol
    worked in computer sales.     She was the primary breadwinner for the
    couple during that period, and Richard received only a small stipend as a
    resident.   Richard completed his residency in 1989.     That same year,
    Carol stopped working just before their first child was born. The couple
    moved to Waterloo the following month, where Richard began working as
    an ophthalmologist.
    5
    Once the couple arrived in Waterloo, Richard rapidly developed a
    successful ophthalmology practice that continued to grow over time.
    Over the years, he also launched numerous business endeavors, some of
    which were more successful than others. At the time of the trial, Richard
    was the sole owner of three closely held corporations: Cedar Valley
    Ophthalmology, P.C.; Mauer Vision Center, P.C.; and D’Vine Medical
    Spa, L.L.C.   Cedar Valley Ophthalmology does business as Mauer Eye
    Center in Waterloo, Iowa, and has forty-five to fifty employees. Mauer
    Vision Center is located in Waverly, Iowa, and has several employees. In
    addition, Richard and Carol each owned an interest in Mauer Land,
    L.L.C., a limited liability company that owns the building housing both
    Mauer Eye Center and D’Vine Medical Spa. The couple also owned three
    commercial lots at Pinnacle Prairie in Cedar Falls and a commercial
    property leased by Veridian Credit Union.
    Following the birth of the couple’s first child, Carol devoted herself
    to being a mother and homemaker. Although she offered to return to
    work several times, Richard preferred she stay home with the children.
    In addition to caring for the children and the family home, Carol devoted
    herself to various community activities. In 2007, she became a licensed
    massage therapist and began practicing Reiki, massage, and shamanism
    at D’Vine Medical Spa.       For the next several years, she worked
    approximately twenty-five to thirty hours per week. Unbeknownst to her,
    Richard paid her through contributions to a 401k retirement account.
    From 2009 to 2012, Carol also taught classes at a massage school, for
    which she was paid approximately $3000 per year. However, she has not
    had a regular income from employment since 1989.
    Richard petitioned for divorce in August 2012 and moved out of
    the family home a few days later in September 2012. Carol remained in
    6
    the home with the two minor children who were still in high school.
    While they awaited trial, Richard continued to pay between $11,000 and
    $12,000 per month for the benefit of Carol and the two minor children,
    which was consistent with his obligations under a temporary support
    order.
    III. Scope of Review.
    When considering an application for further review, we have
    discretion to review all the issues raised on appeal or in the application
    for further review or only a portion thereof.            In re Marriage of
    Schenkelberg, 
    824 N.W.2d 481
    , 483 (Iowa 2012).             In this case, we
    exercise that discretion to review only the spousal support award. Thus,
    the court of appeals decision affirming the dissolution decree as modified
    will stand as the final decision of this court in all other respects.
    Marriage dissolution proceedings are equitable proceedings. 
    Iowa Code § 598.3
     (2011); Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d at 483.              Thus, the
    standard of review is de novo.      Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d at 483; see
    Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. Although we give weight to the factual findings of
    the district court, we are not bound by them. Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d
    at 483; see Iowa R. App. P. 6.14(6)(g). But we will disturb a district court
    determination only when there has been a failure to do equity.          In re
    Marriage of Anliker, 
    694 N.W.2d 535
    , 540 (Iowa 2005).
    IV. Spousal Support.
    Before we begin our analysis concerning the spousal support
    award in this case, we think it is important to discuss the general
    principles governing such awards.
    A.   General Principles.   We considered the subject of spousal
    support in In re Marriage of Gust, 
    858 N.W.2d 402
    , 407–14 (Iowa 2015).
    Although we acknowledged a few states determine spousal support
    7
    awards by employing alternative approaches that rely on arithmetic
    formulas, we cautioned Iowa courts “are compelled to follow the
    traditional multifactor statutory framework” set forth in Iowa Code
    section 598.21A.     
    Id.
     at 407–10.      Under the statutorily mandated
    approach, a court may grant spousal support
    for a limited or indefinite length of time after considering all
    of the following:
    a. The length of the marriage.
    b. The age and physical and emotional health of the
    parties.
    c. The distribution of property made pursuant to
    section 598.21.
    d. The educational level of each party at the time of
    marriage and at the time the action is commenced.
    e. The earning capacity of the party seeking
    maintenance, including educational background, training,
    employment skills, work experience, length of absence from
    the job market, responsibilities for children under either an
    award of custody or physical care, and the time and expense
    necessary to acquire sufficient education or training to
    enable the party to find appropriate employment.
    f. The feasibility of the party seeking maintenance
    becoming self-supporting at a standard of living reasonably
    comparable to that enjoyed during the marriage, and the
    length of time necessary to achieve this goal.
    g. The tax consequences to each party.
    h. Any mutual agreement made by the parties
    concerning financial or service contributions by one party
    with the expectation of future reciprocation or compensation
    by the other party.
    i. The provisions of an antenuptial agreement.
    j. Other factors the court may determine to be
    relevant in an individual case.
    
    Iowa Code § 598
    .21A(1). The legislature has not authorized Iowa courts
    to employ any fixed or mathematical formula in applying spousal
    support. Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 410–12. Rather, it has instructed courts
    to equitably award spousal support by considering each of the above
    criteria. 
    Iowa Code § 598
    .21A(1); see 
    id.
     § 598.3.
    8
    Our recognition in Gust that, over time, our cases have established
    general principles governing spousal support awards in no way
    diminishes the statutory mandate to consider each criterion set forth in
    section 598.21A(1). See 858 N.W.2d at 410. On the contrary, we merely
    observed our cases establish the comparative weight or importance of
    certain statutory criteria relative to others.    Id. at 410.    Thus, we
    recognized fair and equitable consideration of the section 598.21A(1)
    criteria ordinarily places some degree of emphasis on the duration of the
    marriage and the earning capacities of the spouses as demonstrated by
    the historical record. Id. at 410–12.
    In attempting to assist courts applying the spousal support
    analysis required by section 598.21A(1), we responded in part to
    advocates for reform who criticized the traditional approach to spousal
    support embraced by our legislature as lacking predictability and
    consistency. See id. at 408–09. However, we recognize some degree of
    inconsistency is inevitable in this context, because the financial
    decisions   spouses   make   are   highly   personal   and   responsive   to
    idiosyncratic facts and circumstances.
    Although some advocates for reform have argued that using
    guidelines to determine spousal support might alleviate predictability
    and consistency concerns, agreement is lacking as to what appropriate
    guidelines might look like. See id. The American Law Institute (ALI) and
    the AAML have each suggested substantively different guidelines-based
    approaches to spousal support determination. Compare Principles of the
    Law of Family Dissolution: Analysis and Recommendations ch. 5, at 874–
    1009 (Am. Law Inst. 2002), with Mary Kay Kisthardt, Re-thinking
    Alimony: The AAML’s Considerations for Calculating Alimony, Spousal
    Support or Maintenance, 21 J. Am. Acad. Matrim. Lawy. 61, 78–81
    9
    (2008). See also Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 408–10. In addition, numerous
    commentators have offered their own suggestions for reform, some of
    which begin with consideration of the ALI or AAML guidelines. See, e.g.,
    Cynthia Lee Starnes, The Marriage Buyout: The Troubled Trajectory of
    U.S. Alimony Law 161–68 (2014); Jill C. Engle, Promoting the General
    Welfare: Legal Reform to Lift Women and Children in the United States Out
    of Poverty, 
    16 J. Gender Race & Just. 1
    , 39–43 (2013); Lara Lenzotti
    Kapalla, Some Assembly Required: Why States Should Not Adopt the ALI’s
    System of Presumptive Alimony Awards in Its Current Form, 
    2004 Mich. St. L. Rev. 207
    , 232–36 (2004); Alicia B. Kelly, Sharing Inequality, 
    2013 Mich. St. L. Rev. 967
    , 973 (2013). Furthermore, a few state and local
    jurisdictions have adopted their own guidelines-based approaches to
    spousal support determinations.       See Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 408–09;
    Kisthardt, 21 J. Am. Acad. Matrim. Law. at 73–77.
    In Gust, we noted our resolution on the spousal support issue was
    consistent with the presumptive spousal support award that would have
    resulted from application of the AAML guidelines to the facts before us.
    Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 416 n.2.        However, we clearly acknowledged the
    AAML guidelines are not Iowa law and therefore clearly are not binding
    on Iowa courts.   Id.   Nonetheless, we suggested the AAML guidelines
    might “provide a useful reality check with respect to an award of
    traditional spousal support.” Id.
    However, even if spousal support guidelines may provide a useful
    reality check in some cases, because they are not Iowa law, they can
    serve neither as the starting point for a trial court nor as the decisive
    factor for a reviewing court on appeal. See id. When application of the
    factors contained in section 598.21A(1) results in a spousal support
    calculation that is inconsistent with a spousal support calculation under
    10
    any guidelines-based approach, the court’s application of the statutory
    factors must prevail over the guidelines-based determination.
    B. Application of Iowa Code Section 598.21A(1). In reviewing
    the spousal support determination by the district court, the court of
    appeals noted this case involves traditional spousal support. The court
    of appeals agreed with the district court that the monthly budget of
    approximately $23,000 Carol submitted at trial was excessive and she
    could eventually downsize her home without decreasing her quality of
    life.   However, the court of appeals disagreed with the district court’s
    finding that Carol’s healing arts practice was unlikely to amount to
    anything more than a hobby, concluding Carol could be expected to earn
    $25,000 per year working part-time as a massage therapist. Despite its
    conclusion that Carol would bring in more income than the district court
    accounted for, the court of appeals concluded the district court’s spousal
    support award was inequitable because Carol was accustomed to a
    standard of living well beyond the standard of living she could afford with
    $9100 per month in spousal support.
    Based on the evidence Richard provided of his annual income over
    the past several years, the court of appeals concluded his expected
    income was at least $1,000,000 per year.        The court of appeals then
    determined the $25,000 in monthly spousal support Carol requested
    would achieve equity between the parties. The entire analysis applying
    the section 598.21A(1) factors was contained in two sentences:
    Upon our de novo review, we believe the district court’s
    award of $9100 per month fails to do equity in this case. We
    conclude that awarding Carol her request for $25,000 per
    month in spousal support would achieve equity between the
    parties.
    11
    In a footnote citing Gust, the court of appeals acknowledged it consulted
    the AAML guidelines in reaching this conclusion:
    We observe our resolution on this issue is consistent
    with the recommendation of the American Academy of
    Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML). In this case, application of the
    AAML guideline formula would produce a presumptive
    unlimited support payment of $295,000 per year.
    (Citations omitted.)
    We disagree with the court of appeals’ analysis for a number of
    reasons. First and foremost, any court, including our appellate courts,
    must apply the section 598.21A(1) factors in making spousal support
    determinations.    As seen later in our analysis, the spousal support
    awarded by the court of appeals is inconsistent with this requirement.
    In Gust, we indicated in a footnote after applying the 598.21A(1)
    factors that our resolution of a spousal support issue was consistent
    with the presumptive result under the AAML guidelines. See Gust, 858
    N.W.2d at 416 n.2.     However, we did not use the AAML guidelines to
    determine whether the spousal support awarded was equitable—we used
    the section 598.21A(1) factors and principles suggesting the comparative
    weight of those factors derived from our relevant caselaw. Id. at 410–12,
    414–16.
    We also find the court of appeals was incorrect to conclude
    awarding Carol $25,000 per month was consistent with the AAML
    guidelines.   First, as previously noted, the court of appeals expressly
    found Richard’s gross income exceeds $1,000,000 per year. The AAML
    formula for determining presumptive spousal support “does not apply to
    cases in which the combined gross income of the parties exceeds
    $1,000,000 a year.” Kisthardt, 21 J. Am. Acad. Matrim. Law. at 80–81.
    Second, the guidelines name several circumstances that may justify an
    12
    adjustment to the presumptive amount or duration of spousal support,
    and some of those circumstances were present in this case.                    Namely,
    Carol was the primary caretaker of the dependent minors and gave up
    her career or otherwise supported Richard’s career. See id. In addition,
    the age and health of the parties and other circumstances may make
    application of the presumptive formulas inequitable in this case. See id.
    Carol was less than ten years from full retirement age, suffered from
    recurrent shoulder pain that prevents her from working full-time, and
    received a substantial property distribution in the decree. The court of
    appeals concluded “application of the AAML guideline formula would
    produce a presumptive unlimited support payment of $295,000 per year”
    without addressing whether any of these circumstances called for
    adjusting that presumptive determination.             Even if this case had been
    considered in a jurisdiction in which the AAML guidelines were binding,1
    reliance on the presumptive determination in setting the amount or
    duration of spousal support without addressing whether the above
    circumstances called for departure would have been erroneous. See id.
    More fundamentally, as previously noted, when application of the
    factors contained in section 598.21A(1) results in a spousal support
    calculation inconsistent with a calculation under any guidelines-based
    approach, the calculation determined by application of the statutory
    factors must prevail because the guidelines have not been adopted or
    sanctioned by our legislature.
    Upon its de novo review, the court of appeals determined a spousal
    support award exceeding the amount accounted for in Carol’s excessive
    budget was necessary to achieve equity between the parties even though
    1Our   research indicates no state legislature has enacted the AAML guidelines.
    13
    it acknowledged a lesser amount would allow her to maintain the
    standard of living she enjoyed during the marriage.         We find this
    determination was incompatible with the requirements of section
    598.21A(1).
    We begin our de novo review of the spousal support award by
    reviewing the district court determinations in this case.   Following its
    initial award of spousal support, the district court reviewed its decision
    after both parties filed motions to amend or enlarge findings of fact or
    conclusions of law. In the final decree, the court reduced the spousal
    support awarded in the original decree. In doing so, the court noted the
    temporary support Carol had been receiving for more than a year had
    satisfied her needs and the minor children’s needs well enough that she
    made no complaint during trial that she or the children were suffering
    any economic deprivation.
    At the time of the trial, the parties had been married for twenty-
    eight years. Both were in their fifties, and both were in relatively good
    health.   At the time of the marriage, both Richard and Carol had
    completed advanced degrees, and he was completing his residency while
    she provided primary support for the couple. After their first child was
    born, they jointly decided Carol should give up her employment and
    dedicate herself to raising their children. This decision allowed Richard
    to build his ophthalmology practice knowing his children were being
    cared for.    Later in the marriage, Carol became a massage therapist.
    Although Carol did not knowingly practice massage therapy for
    traditional monetary compensation during the course of the marriage, we
    agree with the court of appeals that her earning capacity at the time of
    the trial was approximately $25,000 per year. Without spousal support,
    14
    she will be unable to maintain the lifestyle she enjoyed prior to the
    dissolution of the marriage.
    The district court awarded Carol a property settlement valued at
    $1,762,118. This property settlement included approximately $693,000
    in liquid assets she could rely upon to generate pre-retirement income.2
    Carol was also to receive half the proceeds from the sale of the
    commercial      lots    in   Pinnicle   Park,      which   have   a   net   value    of
    approximately $244,000.            After paying commission and closing costs
    following the sale of these lots, Carol should net at least an additional
    $107,000.           Thus,    the   district    court   awarded    Carol     investable
    preretirement assets totaling approximately $800,000. Assuming a four
    percent return, which is the rate of return her own expert conceded she
    could realize, Carol is capable of generating approximately $32,000 in
    annual investment income from these assets.                 We therefore conclude
    Carol is capable of earning $57,000 per year in employment and
    investment income.
    To determine how much income Carol would require to support
    herself at a standard of living reasonably comparable to that she enjoyed
    during the marriage, we begin with the budget Carol provided to the
    district court.        Carol acknowledged the budget was essentially an
    estimate of historical expenditures for the entire family before the
    dissolution. Because it included past expenditures Carol was no longer
    obligated to pay at the time of the trial, the budget was an inaccurate
    basis for projecting her post-dissolution support needs. After adjusting
    2Following  the dissolution of her marriage to Richard, Carol retained retirement
    assets valued at $854,856, including $831,662 in 401k accounts she was awarded in
    the property distribution and $23,194 in a rollover IRA account she inherited. We do
    not consider these assets in determining Carol’s pre-retirement earning capacity.
    15
    the budget to eliminate every inaccuracy pointed out by the district
    court, to remove child-specific items that could be paid for using child
    support, and appropriately to reduce the cost of food, clothing, travel,
    and household supplies, we find Carol requires approximately $13,000
    per month, or approximately $156,000 per year, to enjoy a standard of
    living approaching that she enjoyed during her marriage to Richard.
    In determining how much spousal support Carol requires to
    support herself at that standard of living, we must also consider the tax
    consequences.     Like employment income and investment income,
    spousal support is taxable. Assuming an effective tax rate of twenty-five
    percent, Carol requires approximately $208,000 in pretax income from
    her employment, her investments, and spousal support. Thus, because
    we find Carol can generate approximately $57,000 in pretax income per
    year through her employment and her investments, we conclude she
    requires approximately $151,000 in spousal support annually to
    maintain a standard of living reasonably comparable to that she enjoyed
    during the marriage. This equates to $12,583.33 per month. Richard’s
    substantial income from his ophthalmology practice is more than
    adequate to support this award. Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d at 485–87.
    Accordingly, we determine $12,600 per month constitutes an equitable
    spousal support award in this case.
    Termination of spousal support may be appropriate when “the
    record shows that a payee spouse has or will at some point reach a
    position where self-support at a standard of living comparable to that
    enjoyed in the marriage is attainable.” Gust, 858 N.W.2d at 412. But
    based upon her age, educational background, training, employment
    skills, work experience, and the length of her absence from the job
    market, there is no reason to believe Carol’s earnings will ever increase
    16
    such that she will become capable of earning enough to maintain a
    comparable standard of living to that she enjoyed during her marriage to
    Richard. See Schenkelberg, 824 N.W.2d at 484–87. Consequently, we
    find Carol is entitled to lifetime spousal support.             See id. at 487.
    Nonetheless, for the following reasons, we agree with the district court
    that equity requires the spousal support award to decrease when Carol
    reaches retirement age and when Richard reaches retirement age. 3
    When Carol reaches retirement age, in addition to drawing income
    from the liquid assets she was awarded in the property distribution, she
    can also draw income from the retirement assets we did not consider in
    setting her preretirement spousal support. At the time of the dissolution,
    the retirement and IRA accounts Carol was awarded in the property
    distribution were valued at $854,856.           Because these accounts will
    continue to grow tax-free until Carol begins to draw upon them, by the
    time Carol reaches retirement age, their value will have significantly
    increased. Moreover, upon reaching retirement age, Carol will be eligible
    to draw social security benefits based on her own prior employment.
    In contrast, when Richard retires from his ophthalmology practice,
    his income will decrease dramatically.           In addition, once he begins
    drawing his social security benefits, Carol will qualify to receive increased
    social security benefits based on his prior employment.
    Based on these facts and circumstances, we conclude section
    598.21A(1) requires us to account for the retirement of both parties in
    setting spousal support. When Carol reaches the age of sixty-six years
    and six months, Richard shall pay spousal support in the amount of
    3Neither    party disputes that the question of whether or how the parties’
    prospective retirements should impact the spousal support award was ripe. See Gust,
    858 N.W.2d at 416–18.
    17
    $6500 per month. When Richard reaches the age of sixty-six years and
    six months or actually retires as a practicing ophthalmologist, he shall
    pay spousal support in the amount of $5000 per month.          If Richard
    retires as a practicing ophthalmologist before Carol reaches the age of
    sixty-six years and six months, Richard shall pay $5000 per month in
    spousal support upon his retirement. Spousal support shall cease upon
    any one of the following contingencies: Carol’s remarriage, Carol’s death,
    or Richard’s death.
    V. Disposition.
    We affirm the court of appeals decision affirming the district court
    with respect to the property distribution, child support, life insurance,
    and appellate attorney fees.    We vacate the decision of the court of
    appeals as to the spousal support award and modify the judgment of the
    district court with respect to spousal support as follows. Richard shall
    pay Carol $12,600 per month in spousal support until Carol reaches the
    age of sixty-six years and six months. At that time, Richard shall pay
    spousal support in the amount of $6500 per month.          When Richard
    reaches the age of sixty-six years and six months or actually retires as a
    practicing ophthalmologist, he shall pay spousal support in the amount
    of $5000 per month. If Richard retires as a practicing ophthalmologist
    before Carol reaches the age of sixty-six years and six months, Richard
    shall pay $5000 per month in spousal support upon his retirement.
    Spousal support shall cease upon Carol’s remarriage, the death of Carol,
    or Richard’s death.
    We assess half the costs on appeal to each party.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED IN PART AND
    VACATED IN PART; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED AS
    MODIFIED.