The court in a Washington divorce case must make a just and equitable division of the marital estate, considering certain statutory factors. Those factors include the nature and extent of community property and separate property, the length of the marriage, and the economic circumstances of each party when the property division becomes effective. RCW 26.09.080. A former wife recently appealed the property division in her divorce.
According to the appeals court opinion, the parties married in 1978 and separated in 2014. The wife was a teacher, but became a stay-at-home parent after the parties’ children were born. She returned to work after 10 years. When the parties separated, she was working full-time as a school counselor, earning about $59,600 per year. By trial, she had voluntarily gone part-time.
The husband was also a teacher for most of the marriage, but had been a principal for the last four years. He earned $95,972 per year at the time of trial. He also earned money fishing in Alaska in the summers, averaging a net profit of $62,372.