60 P. 597 | Or. | 1900
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
We are now to determine whether the facts set up by the answer to the defendant’s petition constitute a defense to a modification of the decree in so far as it provides for the maintenance of the divorced wife. The facts relied upon are set forth by way of estoppel to the defendant insisting upon the modification, it being urged that a valid and binding agreement, based upon a sufficient consideration, was entered into by and between the parties, and that, the decree having been given and rendered in pursuance thereof, neither party can now be heard, without the consent of the other, to deny its validity or binding force and effect.
The maintenance provided for by statute is an enlargement upon the signification of the term “alimony” as used in the parlance of the common law. Alimony is an allowance which, by order of the court, the husband is compelled to pay the wife from the date he has been legally separated or divorced, for her support and maintenance. This is to be distinguished, in a general sense, from an allowance pendente lite, and proceeded from the recognition of the husband’s common-law liability to support the wife : 2 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 92. But the statute contemplates an allowance out of the wife’s estate in favor of the husband also, thereby extending the power to make an allowance in divorce proceedings ; and the authority to modify the decree subsequent to the time of its rendition in respect to maintenance exists as well in the one case as the other, — that is to say, whether the allowance is made from the husband’s estate for the maintenance of the wife, or vice versa. Although the right to have an allowance awarded for maintenance has been extended by the statute to the husband, the same reasons do not exist in support thereof which formerly induced the allowance of alimony proper. His right thereto is merely statutory, and, while her right is now sustained
In Buck v. Buck, 60 Ill. 241, a decree was granted the wife, reciting, among other things, that the husband was a man of large property; that, alimony having been settled between the parties upon the basis therein stated, it was accordingly decreed that the husband pay to the wife $12,000, and the'further sum of $1,000, the value of certain furniture and silverware, and that he should maintain and educate an adopted child. The case went to the supreme court, and as a ground of reversal it was urged that the alimony allowed by the court was excessive and oppressive. But it was held that the husband, having consented to the provisions of the decree, should have no relief against his own voluntary agreement, the court saying: “Whether the alimony is too high, or whether the court had any lawful authority to make provision for the maintenance of the adopted daughter without the consent of the plaintiff in error, it is not now necessary for us to express an opinion. It was competent for the plaintiff in error to consent to such a decree, and, having done so, it must remain forever binding on him.” So, in Storey v. Storey, 125 Ill. 608 (18 N. E. 329, 1 L. R. A. 320, 8 Am. St. Rep. 417), it was held that, “while it is true that husband and wife
Aeeirmed .
Decided 28 May, 1900.
On Motion to Modify Mandate.
4. This is a motion to modify the decree rendered in this court in the above-entitled cause, so that it may be entered against the surety on the undertaking for appeal, not only for the costs and damages, but as well for the sum of $1,800, the amount of alimony which has accrued against the defendant and appellant under the decree of the circuit court since the appeal was perfected.
The facts out of which the controversy arises are substantially as follows: The plaintiff recovered a decree of divorce against the defendant January 3, 1894, and, as a part of the same decree, the defendant was directed to pay her $150 per month alimony. Subsequently the defendant moved for a modification of this decree, so as to relieve him from the payment of $75 per month of such alimony, which resulted in an order or decree dismissing the motion, and adjudging that the defendant pay the costs attending the same, from which defendant prosecutes his appeal to this court. In perfecting his appeal defendant gave an undertaking, with Byron Z. Holmes as surety, to the effect that he would satisfy the decree appealed from so far as affirmed. Subsequent to the time when the appeal was perfected, there accrued against the defendant, and in favor of the plaintiff, the sum of $1,800 alimony under the original decree entered when the divorce was granted; and the purpose of the motion now made is to have the decree of this court en
It is claimed for the respondent that this stipulation, taken in connection with the undertaking’, shows that it was the purpose of the undertaking to cover the amount of alimony which should accrue under the decree of the circuit court after the date of the perfecting of the appeal to this court. But in this view we cannot concur. The appeal is from the decree of the circuit court dismissing
Motion Overruled.