Defendant husband filed a petition seeking relief from the alimony provisions of the divorce decree previously entered in favor of the plaintiff wife. His petition for relief was denied and the wife was awarded part of hеr attorney’s fees. Petitioner appeals. Respondent wife has cross-appealed for additional attorney’s fees for the trial and has filed a motion for attorney’s fees on appeal. For convenience, petitioner husband and respondent wife will be referred to, respectively, as husband or wife, as the case may be.
The parties were married in 1940. In September 1967 they were divorced following a hearing in a nonсontested suit brought by the wife. At that time the three children of the parties had attained their majority. During the marriage the wife worked as a part-time bookkeeper at a salary of $150 per month, and, following the divorce, cоntinued in that employment.
The divorce decree, concerning alimony, provides:
It is Further . . . Decreed that the defendant shall be required to pay the plaintiff the sum of $400.00 per month as alimony until plaintiff remarries or accepts employment, and if said employment does not net plаintiff $400.00 per month, defendant shall be required to pay the difference to make up the $400.00.
For approximately 2 years following the divorce, while the wife continued in her part-time employment, the hus *125 band paid alimony of $400 per month. The husband, under the erroneous impression that the wife was receiving a salary of $175 per month rather than $150 she actually received, concluded that he was entitled to credit on the alimony payment in the amount of $175 рer month. To protect this claimed credit but without court order, he reduced the monthly alimony payment by $175 and paid that sum into the registry of the court. At the same time, he petitioned the court either to construe the alimony paragraph of the decree to permit the offset claimed or, alternatively, to eliminate alimony altogether, based on change of financial circumstances subsequent to the decree. The changе claimed was the wife’s increased investment income and unwillingness to seek full-time employment of which she was capable. The wife prevailed below and this appeal and cross-appeal followed.
Petitioner claims the court below erred concerning the proper amount of alimony to be paid, or alternatively, the refusal to terminate alimony, and the allowance of the partial attorney’s fees to the wife. We must affirm the decree on the husband’s appeal, however, because the findings claimed to be erroneous are not set out in his appellant’s brief, thus precluding our reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence tо support the findings. CAROA 43. Petitioner has attempted to remedy this defect by setting out the objected-to findings in his reply brief. This attempt does not comply with the rule, does not accomplish the purposes of CAROA 43, and is insufficient.
Johnson v. Johnson,
The findings not being reviewable, we must treat them as verities. So treated they support the trial court’s conclusions and judgment.
The wife’s cross-appeal, based on certain findings claimed to be erroneous, attacks the adequacy оf the partial award of $500 for her attorney’s fees below. The award appears to be predicated on the basis of the wife’s financial need in
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order to enable her to efficiently prepare for and conduct the trial below, and thus not deprive her of her day in court.
See Malfait v. Malfait,
The plaintiff has approximately $6700 in savings and checking accounts. The income of the plaintiff respondent is approximately 25 % of the income of thе defendant petitioner; that on a comparative basis she is not able to pay her attorney’s fees in their totality . . .
The court explained the award in these words:
[T]hough she does have some income [about $7,800 per year], . . . the income ... is necessary for the maintenance of her normal way of life in the maintenance of her home, her usual and necessary expenses, which are primarily food, clothing, and shelter, and that on a comparative basis she is not able to pay her own attorney fees in a matter such as this, which is a petition for modification of a divorce decree with the attendant circumstances that funds to which she was entitled by this court’s present ruling were withheld from her, thus resulting in a rеduction of her income immediately prior to the hearing to the extent of $150.00 or $175.00 per month. Therefore, the court’s ruling is that she is entitled to attorney fees.
There is no longer any doubt that the financial need of the wife and thе husband’s ability to pay have long been primary factors in determining whether attorney’s fees should be allowed to the wife in divorce or modification proceedings. Hence, in the absence of a showing of need, attorney’s fees will be disallowed.
Koon v. Koon,
Need in this sense does not necessarily mean destitution or poverty but it does mean an absence of funds and a lack of ability to get them without extreme hardship.
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In exceptional cases, it is truе, factors other than need have been considered as justifying an award. Thus, attorney’s fee allowances have been authorized or upheld in divorce proceedings when the husband has engaged in improper trial tactics, needlessly increasing the expense of the proceedings.
Gamache v. Gamache,
In the instant case, had the court eliminatеd the comparative basis theory on which it relied, it may be doubted whether the court would have made the allowance it did and possibly any allowance at all. The evidence showed the wife had substantial capitаl assets. The court stated she had an annual income of about $7,800 per year. The court further found she had savings and checking accounts in the sum of “approximately $6700.” The evidence showed the precise amount was $7,069. Furthermore, the court made a finding that the wife “has made no effort to seek employment nor does she intend to do so as long as she receives alimony payments.” Finding 7. We cannot say on this record that the court’s exеrcise of discretion in making an allowance was “clearly untenable or manifestly unreasonable” when the court might properly have made either an allowance less than the one it did, or no allowance аt all.
Abel v. Abel, supra
at 819.
See Moore v. Moore,
We have examined the findings to which respondent wife takes exception, but, with one exception, find the findings supported by material and substantial evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom. However, lеst res judicata effect be given to finding 11 in an erroneous sense, we state that we have construed the finding that the wife receives “approximately $150.00 per month clear of expenses arising *129 out of the purchase by her and operation of an apartment house” as meaning merely that the wife receives no- more than the approximate amount stated. No doubt had insurance premiums, taxes of approximately $30 per month, and the cost of possible emergency repairs exceeding the reserve for repairs set up by the wife, been deducted, the amount remaining would have been less than the $150 stated in the finding. Nevertheless, even with the deduсtions stated, the evidence supports the statement in finding 11 that “the financial condition of the parties has' improved.”
The wife has moved this court for an allowance of attorney’s fees in successfully resisting this appeаl. No doubt, upon a proper showing, this court has authority to make such an allowance or to remand this case to the court below for that purpose.
See Rentel v. Rentel,
The judgment is affirmed, both on the appeal and cross-appeal, and the wife’s motion for attorney’s fees on appeal is denied. Each party will bear his or her own costs on appeal.
Utter and Williams, JJ., concur.
Petition for rehearing denied January 19, 1972.
Notes
Callan v. Callan, 2
Wn. App. 446,
