161 S.E. 27 | W. Va. | 1931
Flora Koen Blackshere instituted divorce proceedings against her husband, Harry F. Blackshere, who complains here of the orders of the circuit court of Marion County, *214 awarding to the wife $400.00 a month as pendente lite alimony for maintenance and support of herself and infant child, and enjoining defendant from encumbering or disposing of his real property, or his personal property, except to meet payment of the awards for alimony, counsel fees, and court costs, and reasonable expenses for the husband's defense in the divorce proceedings. An appeal was awarded to the amount of alimony allotted in excess of $150.00.
Plaintiff challenges the jurisdiction of this Court to consider the order awarding temporary alimony, suit costs, and counsel fees because said decree is an interlocutory order and not appealable until after entry of final decree, and because no motion to modify or abrogate said decree was made in the court below.
Chapter 135, section 1, Barnes' Code 1923 (
An examination of subsection 7 discloses that the language employed is stated in the disjunctive, so that the words of each phrase are separate and distinct and each portion is not to be read in conjunction with any other. In other words, if the decree be one "requiring money to be paid", it is not essential to its being appealable that all the principles of the cause be adjudicated. The two may, in instances, appear simultaneously; but this coincidence is not requisite to rendering an order, enumerated in subsection 7, appealable. The decree complained of clearly comes within the purview of a decree "requiring money to be paid". It expresses a finding of fact and is of such legal consequence that failure to comply with it renders the party whom it affects guilty of contempt. While it is true that a decree awarding pendente lite alimony may be interlocutory, it affects substantial rights quite as completely as does a decree for permanent alimony. If there be no right to appeal, an arbitrary award might effect a complete dissipation of a husband's estate before review. In McKennon v.McKennon,
"Under our law, the title to real or personal property, and the right to exercise dominion and control over it, as well as the right to life and liberty, are subjects too sacred to be made to depend upon the arbitrary exercise of discretion by any one man, however just or learned he may be. It is repugnant to our sense of justice, that rights and privileges as important as these, involving liberty or property, should be taken from any man, without giving him a hearing before the highest tribunal of the law. It is apparent that this order involves not only the right *216 of property, but the question of personal liberty, and makes both depend upon the wise exercise of a sound discretion of the trial judge. While we believe the question of allowing alimony pendente lite is one addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, we think it is the exercise, not of an arbitrary, but of a legal, discretion, which justice, logic, and sound reason would dictate should be subject to review on appeal."
Counsel for Mrs. Blackshere cite Beatty v. Beatty,
We are aware that other jurisdiction, as well as text writers, propound the rule that an order made on application for temporary alimony is non-appealable, but, on a proper interpretation of our statute, as well as on principle, we prefer and approve the majority rule that an interlocutory decree awarding pendente lite alimony is final in character and may be reviewed on appeal. See 1 Rawle C. L. 893; 21 Ann. Cases 600, note. Objection to allowance of an appeal from an interlocutory *217
order awarding pendente lite alimony on the ground that delay would be occasioned, subjecting the wife to starvation or to acceptance of charity (Call v. Call,
Persuasive of plaintiff's contention that the order awarding temporary alimony is not appealable because no motion was made in the court below to modify or abrogate it, State ex rel.Scott v. Waugh,
There is likewise no merit in plaintiff's contention that failure to pass upon the motion to dissolve the injunction awarded and continuing the same until the defendant filed his answer is not appealable. The court's order specifically states that defendant moved the modification of said injunction as to the personal property of defendant, and the order shows that the court acted thereon; and it is from that modification that defendant appeals. What other motions were made and continued until answer filed does not appear.
This brings us to a discussion of the errors assigned by defendant, who complains (1) that the allowance of alimonypendente lite is excessive, and (2) that the injunctive order as modified should not have included all of defendant's property, both real and personal. The orders were made upon consideration of the bill of complaint and affidavits filed by plaintiff and defendant.
Chapter 64, section 9, Barnes' Code 1923 (48-2-13, Code 1931), authorizes an award of pendente lite alimony "necessary for the maintenance of the woman". The amount of the award is always addressed to the sound discretion of the court; and the exercise of this discretion, a very broad one, will be reviewed only when it appears that it has been greatly abused. Wass v.Wass,
We likewise believe there was an abuse of judicial discretion in the modified injunction order, so far as it restrains defendant from enjoying a complete use of his personalty. Plaintiff's bill states there is $100,000 of realty, in addition to the personal property, and there is no showing that the realty is encumbered in any way. Hence, it would appear that enjoining defendant from disposing of or in any way encumbering his realty is a sufficient safeguard to assure to plaintiff whatever legal rights may be adjudicated in her favor upon final hearing of the divorce proceeding.
We reverse the lower court and remand the proceeding for entry of orders consonant with the tenor of this opinion.
Reversed; remanded.