22 Wash. 261 | Wash. | 1900
Tbe opinion of tbe court was delivered by
Appellant commenced suit to dissolve tbe marriage existing between herself and tbe defendant on tbe ground of tbe non-age of plaintiff at tbe time of entering tbe marriage relation. Tbe allegation was tbat appellant and respondent intermarried in Kitsap county on the 26th day of August, 1897, and tbat thereafter they were, and now are, husband and wife; that at tbe time of tbe marriage appellant was residing with her parents in Jefferson county, and was under tbe age of eighteen years, to-wit, sixteen years; tbat tbe marriage was contracted and consummated without tbe consent and against tbe will of her parents; tbat she has not since tbe first day of July, 1898, lived with tbe defendant; and that she has not ratified said marriage since she became of age. Tbe complaint also alleged tbat tbe sum of $150 attorney’s fees was reasonable, and $50 in addition thereto was required
Upon hearing the court overruled the demurrer on the first and third grounds, but sustained it upon the second, i. e., that a cause for suit money and alimony could not be maintained. Judgment was entered decreeing the annulment and dissolution of the marriage, but it is stated in the judgment that the court “makes no finding” upon the allegations relative to suit money and alimony, “for the reason that a demurrer to the claim for alimony and suit money has been heretofore sustained.” Erom the order sustaining the demurrer to the cause stated in the complaint for suit money and alimony, and the judgment denying it, plaintiff appeals.
Error is assigned upon the. order sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint as to suit money and alimony, and also in awarding no part of the $500 cash in defendant’s possession to plaintiff, and failure to make any disposition of that money.
Objection is made by counsel for respondent to the consideration of the cause here upon its merits, because the appellant did not propose findings of fact and conclusions of law, and has brought here no exceptions to the findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the superior court. But appellant is not complaining of the findings of fact made by the court upon the issues on the dissolution of the
The reasons stated for the dissolution of the marriage are within § 4477, Bal. Code, as follows:
“ When either party to a marriage shall be incapable of consenting thereto, for want of legal age or a sufficient understanding, or when the consent of either party shall be obtained by force or fraud, such marriage is voidable, but only at the suit of the party laboring under the disability, or upon whom the force or fraud is imposed.”
Section 4467, Bal. Gode, declares the age of marriage for females eighteen years.
It is maintained by counsel for respondent that, the suit being one for the annulment of marriage, the provisions for suit money and alimony, under § 5722, Bal. Code (Divorce Act), are not applicable, and that the court had no inherent power to adjudge suit money and alimony. In 2 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), p. 100, it-is stated:
“ It was the universal practice of the ecclesiastical courts in England, and is now generally the practice in the United States, upon an application by the wife to the court, in a divorce suit, to make an allowance for her support during the pendency of the suit, and for costs and expenses to enable her to properly carry it on, if she is without separate means and the husband is able to support her, whether she be libelant or respondent, without a consideration of the merits of the case.”
And also, at page 104, idem.:
“ So in suits for divorce rendering the marriage null and void from the beginning, as where divorce is sought on the ground of another marriage, alimony pendente lite may be allowed upon proof of a marriage in fact.”
“ All that the law requires is the proof or admission of a de facto marriage. . . . The right to alimony pendente lite grows out of the changed pecuniary relations of the parties, by which the property of the wife is practically placed under the control of the husband; and this whether the marriage is valid or de facto only.”
See, also, Methvin v. Methvin, 15 Ga. 97 (60 Am. Dec. 664).
While there is some apparent conflict in the courts as to whether, when the invalidity of the marriage is alleged in the complaint, alimony or suit money can be adjudged, yet it will be generally found in those cases where it has been denied that there was in fact no marriage, and the marriage stated was void ab initio. 2 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. .104, quotes from Shelford on Marriage and Divorce, 17 Law Lib. (N. S.), 347 (587):
“ After proof of a marriage in fact, alimony pending the suit will be allowed, whether it be commenced by or against the husband, not only in' cases of impotency, but in all cases of nullity of the marriage, and in suits of restitution of conjugal rights, or for divorce by reason of adultery or cruelty.”
In the case of Willey v. Willey, decided January 27, 1900 (ante, p. 115), in this court, it was said that if, upon the face of the record presented, the validity of the marriage is shown, suit money should be allowed. In Kimble v. Kimble, 17 Wash. 75 (49 Pac. 216), it was held that the wife, who without cause has been abandoned by her husband, may maintain an action for maintenance
“Hor do we think there is any force in the contention that the statute has excluded the idea of a suit for separate maintenance, because it has provided for temporary and permanent alimony in connection with divorce proceedings. The statute which simply seeks to control alimony in divorce proceedings does not, in our judgment, imply that maintenance cannot be decreed in any other case.”
But in the case presented here there was a dc facto marriage, and such marriage is only voidable at the suit of the wife. While the principle upon which the annulment of marriage, technically speaking, is granted, is founded upon very different causes from those stated in the divorce act, — the former relating solely to some inc'ompetency to enter the marriage status or consummate the marriage contract, and the latter to breaches of the marriage relation,— yet in the procedure for relief by a dissolution of the marriage itself, the differences have not been exactly defined or preserved. Hence the terms “annulment of marriage” and “divorce” appear not infrequently to have been used interchangeably in suits to dissolve marriage either by annulment or divorce.
The superior court, having indicated by its ruling upon the demurrer that suit money and alimony cannot be adjudged in the action here to annul the marriage, erred in its conclusion; and, while the mere discretion of the court in allowing suit money and alimony will not be disturbed, an error of law of that court in the determination of the question is reviewable^
The complaint is not sufficiently definite in its allegations with reference to property acquired by appellant and respondent after the marriage was solemnized to determine its nature, or the other important question arising, as to what character is impressed upon property acquired by a
The cause is reversed, with direction to the superior court to allow such suit money and attorney’s fees as it shall determino to he .just, under the facts stated in the complaint. In all other respects the decision of the superior court is affirmed.
Gordon, O. J.,, and Anders, Dunbar and Eullerton, JJ., concur.