Under the first count of her complaint as amended the plaintiff claims a divorce on the ground of intolerable cruelty, and under the second she asks
We summarize the material facts found by the court, which are not subject to correction. The parties were married July 3, 1925. Six of the eight children of the marriage are minors. Five of them, together with one adult daughter who is gainfully employed, live with the plaintiff in the defendant’s house in Manchester, where the family has lived for about eighteen years. It is an eleven-room single dwelling with three bathrooms and is considerably out of repair. The household furnishings and equipment are much the worse for wear, and, though needed, there have been no replacements in the past five years. The plaintiff has suffered for the past sixteen years from varicose veins and needs treatment. She has had no domestic help and has done all of the cooking, laundry and other work in keeping house for the family, ordinarily working from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. She is unable to continue to care for her home and family properly without domestic help. She is in need of dental work and surgery, which she has foregone because it was too humiliating to ask the defendant for money. Two of the minor sons are also in need of surgical or medical treatment.
The plaintiff has no money or assets of any kind and is wholly dependent upon the defendant for her living
At the hearing, the defendant, who had left the home, agreed that during the pendency of the action he would allow the plaintiff and the children to remain in the house rent free and that he would pay for electricity, telephone, gas and fuel. He has failed to support the plaintiff and the children in accordance with his ability. The sum of $500 per month is a reasonable allowance to the plaintiff for her support and for that of her minor dependent children during the pendency of the action, in addition to the provision for the use of the home with the necessary services. The court concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to alimony pendente lite on this basis and entered its order accordingly.
The court’s authority to award alimony pendente lite is expressly provided for in § 7335 of the General Statutes. Payments pursuant to such an award constitute “a fund for the current support of the wife.”
The defendant’s principal contention is that, regardless of his ability to pay, the court, instead of awarding support to the plaintiff and her minor children “in accordance with their needs,” could only order such payment by the defendant as would provide that “standard of living to which the plaintiff has been accustomed.” No authority is cited in support of this claim. If this were the law, in an action for divorce on the ground of intolerable cruelty consisting in part of a wilful total
The order for the payment of counsel fees, from which the defendant has appealed, required that he pay $1000 to the plaintiff’s counsel within two weeks, by way of a preliminary allowance, plus $600 for reasonable costs already incurred, and at or before trial an additional allowance of $1000. The defendant in his brief attacks the award of counsel fees on two grounds. The first is that there was no evidence that the plaintiff would be deprived of any legal rights if the court did not make an award of counsel fees pendente
The second ground upon which the defendant attacks the allowance of counsel fees is that the award was made in the absence of competent evidence as to the services and their value. A short and sufficient
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
