133 Minn. 86 | Minn. | 1916
While a decree of separation from bed and board was in force, plaintiff began this action for divorce charging desertion. Defendant answered, denied the desertion, and by cross-bill set up cruel and inhuman treatment as ground for an absolute divorce from plaintiff. The .court found that plaintiff had no cause of action, but that defendant was entitled to the relief she demanded and upon the ground she alleged. As alimony and as support for a minor child of the parties, whose custody and care were awarded to defendant, the decree granted her $500, and plaintiff was adjudged “to continue in force, by prompt payment of the premiums thereon, and until the expiration of the tontine period thereof, certain insurance on his life in the sum of $2,000 (describing the policy), and wherein the defendant herein is the beneficiary therein, and should be continued as such, the foregoing to be in full satisfaction of any amount at this time due the defendant under any former order of this court, and in full settlement and satisfaction of any and all claims of the defendant for the further support of either herself or of her said daughter.”
Appellant contends: (a) Section 7786, G. S. 1913, excepts decrees of divorce from the judgments which the court may modify or amend; (b) defendant’s laches precluded the relief granted; (c) the modification was based on an issue foreign to the application; and (d) there is no evidence to sustain the finding of fact upon which the modification is based.
The contention that the court was without authority to amend, modify or correct the decree in the respect here done cadnot be sustained. It is apparent that the exception referred to in section 7786, G. S. 1913, is confined to that part of the decree in a divorce action which deals with the marriage status and does not embrace the parts which relate to the custody of the children or to alimony. It is true enough that while, in respect to the last mentioned subjects, the power to modify or change exists, it is to be exercised cautiously, and, as a rule, only when conditions have changed from what they were at the time the decree was entered, and the change is such as to justify and require a modification. Haskell v. Haskell, 116 Minn. 10, 132 N. W. 1129, and cases there cited. We also agree with appellant that the order of the court cannot be sustained upon the ground that any change in the situation of the parties has occurred which called for a change in the decree. But we do affirm the action of the trial court, upon the ground that the so-called amendment of the decree was nothing more than a rewording thereof so as to make it speak with more accuracy and certainty the judgment which the court plainly intended to render and did render on August 12, 1912, and so that, not only as between the parties themselves, it should be definite, but also that as between them and the insurance company it
Entertaining this view of the meaning of the decree it is unimportant what basis the trial court found for rewording it to better and more clearly express the decision intended, for plaintiff has not been deprived of anything which he was not already in all justice and equity deprived of under the decree as first entered. Neither is it of any consequence that, as plaintiff asserts, there is no evidence to support the additional finding of fact inserted by the court to the effect that the parties agreed at the time of the trial that all the moneys to become due upon the policy should belong to defendant, for that is the meaning we give to the decree as originally rendered. Eor the same reason little need be said of the alleged laches. The correction of the decree did not change it in spirit
Plaintiff cannot rightfully complain of the order and it is affirmed.