This appeal, following a jury trial and final divorce decree in Chatham Superior Court, presents the issue of whether a part of the jury’s verdict amounted to an award of alimony to the husband or merely required an equitable *632 division of monies belonging to both parties.
The pertinent provision of the verdict is as follows: "That all monies in safe deposit box valued at approximately $7,000, plus all monies in savings account valued at approximately $9,000, be divided equally between plaintiff and defendant.”
The wife was the defendant and cross complainant in the case and she contends the evidence shows these funds were her separate property and the jury awarded half of them to the husband, which is tantamount to an award of alimony to the husband and is illegal.
We have reviewed the transcript and find there was a sufficient conflict in the evidence dealing with the ownership of these funds to authorize the jury’s verdict dividing the funds between the parties. The evidence authorized the jury to find that at least one-half of the funds belonged to the husband. As we view the evidence, the jury could have resolved this issue in favor of either party but the evidence does not demand a finding that these funds were the separate property of the wife. The evidence authorized the jury to believe that it was the practice and custom of the parties to consider their joint salaries without division and as one "lump salary.” The evidence also authorized the finding that it was the purpose and intent of the parties to regard the monies on deposit in the savings account in the wife’s name and in the safety deposit box in both names as monies owned and held for the joint use and benefit of the parties.
In
Barnes v. Barnes,
" 'Proceedings for a divorce and for alimony have always, under the practice in this State, been regarded as
equitable.’ Rogers v. Rogers,
Judgment affirmed.
