111 So. 382 | Fla. | 1926
This is a suit in which a husband sued his wife for divorce, charging desertion. The defendant wife is appellant here. The complainant husband is appellee. The parties stipulated as to the sums to be paid appellant as temporary alimony and solicitor's fees, and an interlocutory order was entered requiring the payment of the sums so agreed upon "during the pendency of this suit or until the further order of this (the Circuit) Court." A demurrer to the bill of complaint was overruled and defendant answered. The cause was referred to a Master to take the testimony of the parties, and his report was filed on July 21, 1922. Complainant below, the husband, having set down the cause for final hearing, the defendant wife moved for and obtained an order staying the further progress of the cause because the complainant was then in arrears in the payment of alimony pendente lite. It was further ordered that defendant below should have forty days after payment of the past due temporary alimony in which to complete the taking of her testimony.
In this status of the case, and on June 12, 1923, complainant below served notice upon the defendant that on June 18, 1923, complainant would file with the chancellor a motion requesting that he "enter an order dismissing the above entitled cause of record at the expense of complainant, and without prejudice to him." On the date named in the notice, June 18, 1923, defendant filed written objections to the granting of the motion to dismiss upon the grounds that the further progress of the cause had been previously stayed on account of the non-payment by the complainant of accrued alimony pendente lite, which alimony, *1084 as well as that accruing subsequent to the stated order, still remained unpaid, and that no order of dismissal could be entered so long as complainant remained so in default. Complainant objected to the granting of said motion upon the further ground that a temporary fee only had been allowed her solicitor and that since the payment thereof further services had been rendered by her solicitor and additional fees had accrued, evidence of which would be proper to be presented when defendant's testimony was taken, the time for taking which had not expired under the former order of the Court because complainant had not paid the past due alimony pendente lite.
The complainant's motion to dismiss appears not to have been filed until June 23, 1923, on which day the chancellor, pursuant to said motion, entered a decree in which it is found that complainant's failure to pay the past due temporary alimony was not wilful but was due to his inability to pay, which finding is apparently based upon the recitations of the motion which was sworn to by the complainant. The chancellor thereupon vacated his former order, entered upon the stipulation of the parties, requiring the payment by complainant of temporary alimony, as well as his previous order staying the further progress of the cause; relieved the complainant from the payment of any and all sums then due and unpaid as accrued temporary alimony, suit money or attorney's fees under the previous order requiring a payment thereof; and dismissed the cause "at the cost of complainant and without prejudice to his interests in the premises." This decree recites "that notice of this motion (to dismiss) had been duly served on the solicitor of record for the Defendant."
On appeal from that decree appellant in effect urges as error the same matters presented by her as objections to the entry of the decree, and further contends that the court was *1085 without authority to relieve appellee of the payment of accrued temporary alimony because appellant had acquired a vested right thereto by reason of its accrual pursuant to the former order; and that the Court was further without authority to relieve appellee of the payment of future temporary alimony because the order requiring the payment thereof was made pursuant to an agreement of the parties which constituted a contract, and could therefore be modified or vacated only by consent of the parties. Defendant also contends that complainant's motion to dismiss the bill of complaint and the decree thereon entered, transcended in scope the notice of hearing served upon defendant, and therefore that the decree was erroneously entered without notice in so far as it relieved of the payment of accrued alimony; and further, that it was error to dismiss the suit "without prejudice" to complainant, because, in the then status of the suit, defendant was entitled to an adjudication of the merits.
It should be borne in mind that temporary alimony only is now under consideration. No question relating to alimony of a permanent nature is involved in this case. The allowance of temporary alimony is not a matter of absolute right to the wife, but rests within the sound judicial discretion of the Court, which discretion is to be exercised in accordance with established rules of law and procedure. Floyd v. Floyd,
An order allowing temporary alimony is not in the nature of a final judgment of record, but is merely a temporary or adinterim provision for the support of the wife and children until a final determination of the suit. Surut v. Surut,
The original entry of the order staying the further progress of the cause so long as the husband remained in default in the payment of temporary alimony was also a discretionary order. Such an order is sometimes resorted to as a means of coercion upon the defendant husband to secure the payment of past due temporary alimony instead of applying for a rule to show cause why the delinquent husband should not be held in contempt. Being a discretionary order, its vacation is also a matter within the judicial discretion of the chancellor, and there is no sufficient showing of fact in this cause to lead us to the conclusion that the chancellor was clearly in error in making the latter order.
We now consider the sufficiency of complainant's notice of the motion to dismiss. The only point made against the notice is that it was not broad enough to embrace the subject matter of the motion and the decree entered thereon. In order to determine the sufficiency of the notice in the respect named, it is necessary to consider the effect of a final decree of dismissal upon a previous interlocutory order for the payment of temporary alimony in a suit for divorce. The general rule of procedure is that all provisional or interlocutory proceedings in a cause are merged in and disposed of by the final decree therein. Longfellow v. Longfellow, Clark Ch. 344; Henry v. Henry, 82 S.E. Rep. 522; L.R.A. 1916-B 1024. Interlocutory or temporary injunctions cease upon a decree dismissing the cause. A receivership created by interlocutory order would terminate under the same conditions. We see no distinguishing characteristic in an interlocutory order for the payment of temporary alimony to except it from the general rule. The dismissal of the cause clearly terminates the operation of such an *1091
order so far as future payments are concerned. Wood v. Wood, 7 Lans. (N.Y.) 204; Swallow v. Swallow, 82 Atl. Rep. 872; Caldwell v. Caldwell, 128 S.E. Rep. 329; Harvey v. Harvey,
Other assignments presented, including the assignment questioning the correctness of the dismissal of the cause without prejudice, have been examined but no reversible error found. See: Sontag Inv. Co. v. Nautilus Realty Co.,
*1093The decree appealed from is affirmed.
The final decree of dismissal below was entered on the 23rd day of June, 1923. This appeal was taken on the 12th day of December, 1923, and was heard upon oral argument in this court on October 6, 1926. On October 22, 1926, nearly three years after the appeal was taken, and after the cause had been finally submitted to and was under consideration by this Court, the defendant below, the appellant here, filed in this court a petition for the allowance of further temporary alimony during the pendency of this appeal and for solicitor's fees for prosecuting the same. Temporary alimony may ordinarily be allowed the wife pending an appeal, as well as solicitor's fees for prosecuting the same, where it is shown that such allowance is necessary for the wife, that the husband is able to pay it, and that the appeal is taken in good faith, but application therefor should be seasonably made, or a failure to do so fully explained. In proper cases, and upon an adequate showing of necessity and ability to pay, temporary alimony and solicitor's fees may be decreed, the operation of the former to relate back to some prior time, and the latter for services already rendered, the matter resting within the discretion of the court. In the absence, however, of strong extenuating circumstances, which do not appear from the petition now before us, an application therefor should at least come no later than the final submission of the cause on its merits on appeal, especially when the cause has stood upon appeal for nearly three years, during which time no such application was made. The petition for temporary alimony and solicitor's fees pending the appeal is therefore denied.
Decree affirmed.
*1094Petition denied.
ELLIS, C. J., AND BROWN, J., concur.
WHITFIELD, P. J., AND TERRELL AND BUFORD, J. J., concur in the opinion.