221 P. 239 | Nev. | 1924
By the Court,
Respondent obtained a decree of divorce from the appellant in the district court of Washoe County and an appeal has been taken to this court. The matter is now before this court on a motion filed and presented by respondent, the wife, for an allowance of $250 as counsel fee for her attorneys for her defense on this appeal.
The right of this court to make an order directing the payment of attorney fees upon an appeal is well established (Lake v. Lake, 17 Nev. 238, 30 Pac. 878; Buehler v. Buehler, 38 Nev. 500, 151 Pac. 44), and is not questioned by counsel for appellant; but they insist that the facts do not present a proper case for such allowance. In support of her motion, respondent filed in this court an affidavit in which it is averred that she has no means of support whatsoever, but is dependant for support upon her father, who is a man of limited means, and that she is without the means or money with which to defend this case in this court on appeal, or to pay the fees of her attorneys; that Ayres & Gardiner, a firm of attorneys who represented her in the district court, have been employed to further represent her upon this appeal, and have informed her that the sum of $250 will be their charge for representing her on appeal, and that the same is a reasonable charge; that unless this court makes an order for the defendant to pay such counsel fee she will be without the means of compensating said attorneys and will be left without counsel; that said counsel are familiar with the ease, and it would be prejudicial to her interest should she be deprived of their services; that the appellant earns a substantial salary of about $3,000 a year and is able to pay such attorney fee.
On the other hand, it appears that respondent, ever since her separation from appellant in 1917, has been living at the home of her .father in Washington D. C., and has been self-supporting; that since the death of the latter’s wife she has been receiving the sum of $100 per month from her father.as his housekeeper. His ability and willingness to help her financially in her divorce action has been demonstrated. With her father’s assistance she was able to come from Washington, D. C., with her two children to Reno, and remain for six months prior to the divorce proceedings, and during the pendency thereof, and to return with her children to her father’s home in Washington, after obtaining the decree; to employ counsel to prosecute her suit and pay all expenses incident thereto. No
Mr. Nelson, in his work on Divorce and Separation (vol. 11, p. 803), states the following rule:
“Temporary alimony should be refused if it appear that the wife has sufficient income to support herself during the trial, to employ counsel, and to advance the necessary costs and expenses. It is immaterial how she derives this maintenance, if she is able to prosecute the suit, or to make a defense. The courts sometimes refuse to assist her where friends or relatives are doing so. If the parties have been living apart for years, and the wife has supported herself, no alimony should be allotted.”
The rule requiring the husband to pay the wife sufficient to enable her to maintain herself and meet the expenses of her suit or defense is based on necessity to prevent a failure of justice, and will-not be required unless it appears that the wife is destitute of the means to be employed for such purposes.
“The fact that she has been able to pay her expenses,” says Mr. Nelson, “or to obtain money on her own credit,
This statement is quite pertinent to the facts of this case. The respondent has been able to prosecute her suit successfully to this point without assistance from appellant, and it does not appear to us from the showing made that she will be unable to present her case on appeal without assistance from him.
The motion should be denied.
It is so ordered.