The question involved: Has the Superior Court power, by motion in the original cause in a suit instituted for alimony without divorce, to determine the amount owed by the defendant to the plaintiff under the former judgments of the court and to enter its decree judicially determining the amount so due and in arrears? We think so.
Where the pleadings for alimony without divorce (under sec. 1567, ch. 31 of Revisal, Laws of 1871-2, ch. 193, sec. 39) raises an issue of fact, it is for the jury to determine.
Crews v. Crews,
Under the old law, as it was in the Crews case, supra, there was no provision whereby the wife could obtain alimony during the determination of the issues involved in her suit. In 1919 an amendment was added whereby the wife might apply for an allowance for her subsistence during the pendency of her main action. Laws of 1919, ch. 24. It may be noted that two distinct remedies are therein provided: first, the action for alimony without divorce; second, the application for an allowance for subsistence pendente lite. Chapter 52, Laws of 1923, amended this section by allowing the husband to plead the adultery of the wife in bar of her right to such alimony. The jury passed on the issues of fact in this action before the amendments above set forth were added.
In
Walton v. Walton,
Speaking to the subject in
Anderson v. Anderson,
A judgment awarding alimony is a judgment directing the payment of money by a defendant to plaintiff and, by such judgment, the defendant thereupon becomes indebted to the plaintiff for such alimony as it becomes due, and when the defendant is in arrears in the payment of alimony the court may, on application of plaintiff, judicially determine the amount then due and enter its decree accordingly. The defendant, being a party to the action and having been given due notice of the motion, is bound by such decree, and the plaintiff is entitled to all the remedies provided by law for the enforcement thereof.
Vaughan v. Vaughan,
This Court has held that the allowance of alimony is higher than the “strait contractual obligation.” It is a claim that the Homestead Exemption cannot be called on to defeat; the failure to pay is the breach of an implied contract and attachment will lie; the court may declare it a lien on the husband’s property; the property, both real and personal, can be held and appropriated to pay it. The motion in the cause can be dealt with only as a petition for the ascertainment of the alimony due the plaintiff under former orders of the court, looking toward enforcement against the defendant by appropriate proceeding. It is not a final judgment in the action, since both the plaintiff and the defendant may apply for other orders and for modifications of orders already made, which the court will allow as the ends of justice require, according to the changed conditions of the parties. The orders made from time to time *428 are, of course, res judicata between the parties, subject to this power of the court to modify them. The consolidation of the amounts due, when ascertained in one order or decree, does not invest any of these orders with any other character than that which they originally had. If the defendant is in court only by reason of the original service of summons, he is in court only for such orders as, upon motion, are appropriate and customary in the proceeding thus instituted. There is no reason why a judgment should not be rendered on an allowance for alimony, which is a debt — and more than an ordinary one. The court below, in its sound discretion, which is not ordinarily reviewable by this Court, under the motion of plaintiff in this cause can hear the facts, change of conditions of the parties, the present needs of support of any of the children and, in its sound discretion, render judgment for what defendant owes under the former judgment and failed to pay and see to it that such judgment is given to protect plaintiff, and “give diligence to make her (your) calling and election sure.”
For the reasons given, we see no error in the judgment of the court below overruling the demurrer. The judgment is
Affirmed.
