177 A.D. 827 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
This is an action for a separation. It was commenced on the 2d day of April, 1915, and a notice of motion for alimony and counsel fees was served with the summons. The motion was granted on the 30th of April, 1915, and a short form of order was entered describing the papers read on the motion, and stating that upon those papers the motion was granted and alimony at the rate of twenty dollars per week, commencing from the date of service of the motion papers, and two hundred dollars counsel fees, payable within ten days after the service of the order with notice of entry, were allowed. A copy of the order with notice of entry was duly served on the attorney for the defendant on the next day. The counsel fee was paid, and on the 5th of May, 1915, the defendant commenced paying the alimony in weekly installments, and by the thirteenth of July thereafter he had made ten payments, five of which were twenty dollars, one fifty dollars, one forty dollars, one eighteen dollars, and two ten dollars, leaving seventy-two dollars unpaid; and on that day a certified copy of the order and a written demand for the payment of the balance were duly served on the defendant personally. He thereupon resumed and continued paying at irregular intervals until the 1st day of April, 1916, having at that time paid on account of alimony nine hundred and eighty-three dollars and thirty-three cents. He has made no payments since. On May 26, July 18 and November 1, 1916, written demands for the balance of alimony due on those respective dates were made on the defendant personally, and a motion was made to punish him for contempt in failing to comply with the demand of November first. On November twenty-first that motion was denied, without costs, on the ground, as shown by the memorandum opinion, that a long form order should have been entered, specifying with more definiteness the duty of the defendant with respect to paying the alimony. So far as appears, the sufficiency of the order had not been questioned until that time. A motion was then made by plaintiff for the resettlement of the order, and by an order dated and entered on the 4th of December, 1916, it was resettled by the justice presiding when it was made, but as of the date of the original order. The
It is now contended in behalf of the defendant that the order denying the motion to punish him for contempt for failing to comply with the original order is a bar. There is no force in that contention, for it is manifest that the denial of the motion was not on the merits. I am of opinion that the order as resettled was not a new order, but merely constituted a more formal and definite statement of the defendant’s duty under the decision of the court, made on the original motion, and briefly prescribed in the original order. It is well settled that
It follows, therefore, that the court erred in denying the motion and that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, and the defendant fined the sum of seven hundred and seventy-six dollars and sixty-seven cents, the amount of the accrued alimony, together with the costs, and required to pay the same forthwith or be committed according to law.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Davis and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, as stated in opinion. Order to he settled on notice.