62 Vt. 495 | Vt. | 1889
The opinion of the court was delivered by The county court is the tribunal appointed by statute to hear and determine libels for divorce. It is authorized to issue process of attachment and execution, and other proper process, necessary for the dispatch and final determination of such causes. After a libel for divorce is filed, the court may order the payment of temporary alimony. Upon a dissolution of marriage it may decree to the wife such part of the real and personal estate of the husband, or such sum of money to be paid *497 in lieu thereof by the husband, as it deems just. It is also empowered to require sufficient security to be given for the payment of alimony according to the terms of its decree. It may order the money into the hands of trustees, and direct the manner in which the income shall be applied to the support of the wife and children. After a decree in regard to alimony, the court may from time to time, upon the petition of either party, revise and alter such decree, either as to the amount or the manner of payment. R. L. 2368, 2377, 2381, 2383, 2385, 2386.
The petitioner, on obtaining a divorce from the petitionee, was decreed alimony in the sum of three hundred dollars, payable in annual instalments of fifty dollars each. The petitionee failed to pay the first instalment when due, and upon a subsequent demand refused to make such payment. This petition is brought to procure the enforcement of the order by the punishment of the petitionee for contempt. The petition is demurred to.
The question for consideration is, whether the court is authorized to enforce the payment of permanent alimony by proceedings for contempt. It is by no means certain but that express authority for this course may be found in R. L. 2368; but the argument has proceeded upon the ground of implied authority, and as we consider the position taken by counsel for petitioner fully sustained by reason and precedent, we dispose of the question upon the ground which has been argued, without passing upon the exact effect and application of the section referred to.
The position of the petitionee is that there is no provision in the statute which authorizes the enforcement of a decree for the payment of permanent alimony by means of this process, and that the court has no power beyond that expressly conferred by the statute. It is true that the jurisdiction of the county court in divorce proceedings is statutory, but this does not justify the conclusion that its power is limited by the letter of the statute. That the jurisdiction is not statutory in the strict sense contended for is apparent from the case ofLeBarron v. LeBarron,
The position taken by counsel for petitionee leaves them nothing to suggest except that the decree is a judgment upon which suit may be brought; and it is said that a collection may *499
thus be effected by the ordinary process of attachment and execution, and that if no property can then be found the judgment will still stand against the petitionee. If this means of redress is available, the inadequacy of the proceeding is too apparent to permit a belief that the Legislature intended to leave the suitor without other remedy. The libellee in a divorce suit may place his property beyond the reach of attachment. The property on account of which the alimony is decreed may be exempt from attachment. The jurisdictional limit may compel the libellant to sue in an inferior court, and after obtaining judgment she may be brought into the court where the decree was made, as an appellee. The suit, wherever brought, will be subject to such delays and contingencies as are possible in a proceeding of that character. Meanwhile the libellant must care for herself and children as best she may, while the libellee retains the money which the court has assigned for their support. But in view of the nature of the decree it may be questioned whether an action upon it can be maintained. Many of the reasons given in Nary v. Braley,
This method of enforcement is spoken of by counsel as unusual and extraordinary. There is, however, nothing unusual in the use of process of commitment for this purpose. In some States it is directly authorized by statute. In others it is held to be proper without statutory authorization. It is among the remedies available under the present English divorce act. And, if we look beyond the proceedings of the ecclesiastical court, we find it was the ultimate means of enforcement under the common law practice. The ecclesiastical court pronounced its sentence of excommunication against the disobedient party. The common law added to his spiritual disabilities an incapacity to be a witness or to bring a suit. But the matter did not necessarily rest upon this deprivation of his privileges as a Christian and a citizen. If he did not submit within a certain time, upon proper application a writ issued out of chancery, upon which he was committed to jail and there detained until he complied with the requirements of the ecclesiastical court. The process was different, but the results to the contumacious party were the same. 3 Bl. Com. 101.
The purpose of the statute and the interests depending upon it are such that we have no hesitation in sanctioning a resort to this means of coercion. A prompt compliance with the decree *502 of the court is of the utmost importance, both to the individuals for whose benefit the decree is made and to the public at large. The law, for a sufficient reason, divides the family. The children of tender age are ordinarily placed in the care of the mother. The property is usually in the hands of the husband. The support of the wife and children may depend entirely upon the allowance made by the court. It was unquestionably the intention of the Legislature to invest the court with such power as would enable it to make this provision certain, and easily and readily available.
This is the first time that the matter of enforcing the payment of permanent alimony has been before this court. We think compulsory process has seldom been found necessary. County courts have sometimes enforced these decrees by attachment for contempt, and have sometimes ordered that executions issue for their collection. In many cases the latter process may be adequate. But we are clearly of the opinion that the power of the court extends to the use of the process which is likely to be effectual in all cases, and that it is not necessary to exhaust other possible remedies in order to become entitled to this.
It is claimed that this petition is defective because it does not allege that the petitionee is able to make the payment. We see-no reason for requiring the petitioner to allege and prove that fact. It is to be presumed that the order is a proper one. It is enough for the petitioner to show that the petitionee has refused to obey it. If for any reason a compliance with it is impossible, that is for the petitionee to show. The statute gives the petitionee the right to apply for a modification of the decree at any term. He can upon the hearing on this petition show cause why he should not be committed. The proceeding is designed to give him notice and an opportunity to be heard, before an attachment for contempt is ordered.
A petition of this character should be brought as a proceeding in the suit in which the divorce was granted, and at the term to which it is returnable the original cause should be brought forward *503 ward upon the docket, if it has not been kept there. In this case, the main cause should now be brought forward and this petition be treated as an application in the same suit.
The citation in this case was signed by a justice of the peace. We know of no provision of the statute which authorizes this. But the petitionee having appeared, and having by his demurrer submitted a question involving the merits of the case, the defect is cured.Huntley v. Henry,
Judgment affirmed and cause remanded for further proceedings.
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