East v. East

148 Ark. 143 | Ark. | 1921

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellant R. A. East and ap-pellee Sula East were formerly husband and wife, but were divorced by decree of the chancery court of Lawrence County, rendered in January, 1920, in an action instituted by appellee against appellant on the ground of cruel treatment. There were four living children of these parties, the oldest one being eighteen years of age and the youngest four years of age, and in the decree the custody of each of the children was awarded to appellee, and the court also decreed to appellee the pajunent of the sum of $1,150 by appellant as alimony out of funds which he then had in bank. Certain other items of personal property were also decreed to appellee.

The decree for alimony was pursuant to a written stipulation of the parties. Instead of paying over the money to appellee in accordance with the decree of the court, appellant drew the money out of the bank and, taking his youngest child with him, he left Lawrence . County. He went to Heber Springs, and stayed there awhile, and then to Hot Springs, Arkansas, and afterward went to Springfield, Missouri.

In April, 1920, appellee filed in the chancery court of Lawrence County her petition in the nature of a prayer for a writ of ne exeat to cause appellant’s arrest and compel him to comply with the decree of the court. Appellant was arrested under the writ, and, failing to give bond as directed by the court, he was incarcerated in jail and remained there for eight weeks up until the trial of the present proceedings below. Appellant filed a petition for modification of the order committing him to jail, and alleged in the petition that he was unable to comply with the order of the court and asked to he discharged. This petition was heard by the chancery court, and a decree was entered denying the relief prayed for, and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.

On the trial of the issues below appellant was introduced as a witness in his own behalf and undertook to give an account of the loss of the money he had on hand at the time the decree against him was rendered. He claimed that the money had been partly lost and partly spent, and was all gone at the time he was arrested, except the sum of $300 one-half of which lie had since spent in expenses of this litigation, and the remaining $150 he tendered to appellee’s counsel in open court, and that sum was accepted by counsel. He testified that in November or December, 1919, he had between $2,500 and $3,000 in the Bank of Black Bock at Black Bock, Arkansas, and that he drew it out of the bank, and that he left Walnut Bidge and took the youngest boy with him and went to Heber Springs. He stated about being sick there and the amount of money he spent on himself and on the child, and went from there to Hot Springs for treatment, and he stated the amount of the expenses of that trip. He testified then that he went from there to Springfield, Missouri, and that the sum of $1,500 was stolen from his pocket while he was in a large gathering of people at a show or entertainment of some kind. He testified also that he gave three of the older children $750, and placed it in the bank at Black Bock and that he gave another of the children $300, but he got that back from the child, and this was the sum out- of which he paid appellee’s counsel the sum of $150.

Appellant’s account of the loss of $1,500 is not convincing, and we can not say that the testimony does not support the chancellor’s conclusion that appellant had not lost the money, but still had it in his possession. Appellant admitted that he had the money in his possession at the time of the decree, and it devolved upon him to account for it, and the chancellor was not bound to accept as true his unsupported statement that it had been stolen from him. That being true, the chancellor was justified in refusing to discharge him from custody without producing the money and paying it over in accordance with the previous orders of the court.

Under our statutes the common law practice of issuing writs of ne exeat is abolished, but the statutes provide adequate remedy for the enforcement of decrees for alimony and maintenance in divorce' cases. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, sections 3506, 3509. Those statutes authorize imprisonment, both as punishment for refusal to obey the orders of the court and to compel, obedience of such orders. But imprisonment is, as was said by Judge Riddick, speaking for the court in Ex parte Caple, 81 Ark. 504, “only justified on the ground of wilful disobedience to the orders of the court, and, so soon as it is made to appear that the defendant is unable to comply with the orders of the court, he should be discharged. ” The imprisonment can not be made perpetual for recalcitrancy; and when it becomes manifest that further punishment will not compel obedience, then it is the duty of the court to refrain from further punishment, otherwise it would convert the exercise of the court’s power into an instrument of imprisonment for debt or would constitute the imposition of unusual and cruel punishment. The court found, however, upon what appears to be sufficient evidence that appellant had not spent the money, that it was still in his possession and unacounted for, and the court was justified in assuming that appellant could:be compelled by further punishment to produce the money. We cannot say, therefore, that the conclusion of the court was unsupported by the evidence or that there was an abuse of the court’s power.

The decree is therefore affirmed.

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