delivered the opinion of the court:
Respondent, Paula N. Derning, appeals from an order of the circuit court of Lake County which dissolved her marriage of 23 years to petitioner, John P. Derning, apportioned the marital and nonmarital property of the parties, granted respondent unallocated child support and maintenance, and awarded each parent custody of one of the parties’ two minor children. On appeal, respondent raises three assignments of error before this court: (1) the trial court’s award of unallocated maintenance and child support was insufficient considering her limited employment income and lack of income from the marital assets she was awarded; (2) the court below failed to place a value on the business known as Mother’s Blues, thereby committing reversible error; and (3) the trial court, in allocating the marital property, failed to value and apportion petitioner’s pension benefits. Petitioner has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal, and this court has ordered that the motion and respondent’s response to it be considered with this case.
We first address petitioner’s contention that we are without jurisdiction to hear this appeal. To facilitate our discussion of the jurisdictional question presented, we recite chronologically certain procedural events in this case. On April 16, 1981, the trial court granted the motion of respondent’s counsel, Lois B. Ryan, to withdraw and entered an order valuing her services at $1,863.90 and reducing this amount to judgment, but reserved for a later date the apportioning of the attorney fees liability between the parties. Respondent’s second attorney, Stephen Katz, was granted leave to withdraw on August 28, 1981. On September 14, 1981, the court continued Ryan’s hearing on attorney fees until the property matters between the parties were resolved. On motion of Katz the court on January 19, 1982, entered judgment for his attorney fees against respondent in the amount of $5,130. At a hearing on April 28, 1982, the court vacated its January 19, 1982, order in which respondent had been assessed the $5,130 for Katz’ attorney fees, but confirmed its entry of judgment on the amount of those fees and ordered that on June 10, 1982, it would apportion liability for that judgment between the parties. In that same April 28, 1982, order the court directed that attorney fees in the amount of $2,087.87 be awarded to Ryan, reduced that amount to judgment and ordered that liability for those fees also be apportioned on June 10, 1982.
Thereafter, on May 7, 1982, the court entered an order dissolving the marriage, apportioning the parties’ property, granting respondent unallocated child support and maintenance, and awarding each parent custody of one of the children. Respondent filed her notice of appeal from this order on June 3, 1982. On June 10, 1982, the court ordered that petitioner pay $1,565.77 and respondent pay $522 of Ryan’s attorney fees. Petitioner filed a notice of cross-appeal on June 25, 1982, from that portion of the court’s order assessing Ryan’s fees against him. The court on June 23, 1982, apportioned $3,675 of the judgment for Katz’ attorney fees to petitioner and $1,225 to respondent. Petitioner filed a supplemental notice of appeal on July 6, 1982, from that portion of the court’s order assessing Katz’ fees against him. In his brief to this court, petitioner has abandoned his cross-appeal and supplemental appeal and thus, we dismiss them.
In his motion to dismiss and brief to this court, petitioner argues that the May 7, 1982, order was not final because no judgment had then been entered on the fee petitions, the court did not make a written finding of appealability required by Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (73 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)), respondent did not file a notice of appeal after judgment was entered on the petitions, and therefore, this court is without jurisdiction to hear this appeal. Petitioner challenges the reasoning of the cases relied upon by respondent and argues that attorney fees are an integral part of the dissolution proceeding and therefore must be apportioned before the court’s order can be final and appealable. In response, respondent asserts that the May 7, 1982, divorce decree determining the rights of the parties to this lawsuit was a final and appealable order, and the apportioning of fees between the parties was collateral and incidental to the final divorce decree.
Central to respondent’s argument that attorney fees are incidental is Pettit v. Pettit (1978),
“A divorce decree reserving the question of attorney’s fees, although final in other respects, is not final as to incidental questions expressly reserved. (Hokin v. Hokin (1968),102 Ill. App. 2d 205 , 215-16,243 N.E.2d 579 .) The test of finality lies in the substance, not the form of the order, and a divorce decree which terminates the litigation on the merits is final so long as all that remains is the execution of the order. (Myers v. Myers (1977),51 Ill. App. 3d 830 , 837,366 N.E.2d 1114 , 1121.) The trial court reserves jurisdiction to later rule on the question of attorney’s fees, that ruling may be made in a ‘supplemental decree’ subsequent to entry of a final, appealable decree. Bremer v. Bremer (1954),4 Ill. 2d 190 , 191-92,122 N.E.2d 794 .” Pettit v. Pettit (1978),60 Ill. App. 3d 375 , 378,376 N.E.2d 782 , 785.
We believe that the result reached in Pettit is unsound. A careful analysis of the cases cited by the Pettit court reveals that they do not support the Pettit court’s conclusion that a reservation of attorney fees does not impair the finality and appealability of the court’s order. The Pettit court cited Bremer v. Bremer (1954),
Bremer v. Bremer (1954),
While relying principally on Bremer v. Bremer (1954),
The Pettit court’s reliance on Myers v. Myers (1977),
While the Myers court did conclude that the trial court’s initial order was not appealable, Myers principally was concerned with trial court and not appellate court jurisdiction. Myers does not support the result reached in Pettit v. Pettit (1978),
No case has been cited to us nor can we find one which follows the holding in Pettit v. Pettit (1978),
While the judgment appealed from in Wilson-Jump Co. v. McCarthy-Hundrieser & Associates (1980),
Thus, our statutory scheme requires the trial court to consider the property received by each party, their respective incomes and financial obligations before allocating responsibility for payment of attorney fees. Necessarily, attorney fees should be allocated before the reviewing court can properly assess the trial court’s division of property and decisions regarding maintenance and child support. Since the allocation of attorney fees judgment is dependent upon and integrally related to decisions regarding property, maintenance and child support, their allocation cannot fairly be characterized as collateral or incidental to the divorce decree.
Our conclusion is buttressed by the Illinois Supreme Court’s recent discussion of dissolution-of-marriage cases in In re Marriage of Cohn (1982),
Since attorney fees are not an incidental matter, this court has jurisdiction of this case only if the divorce decree is a final judgment or if the fees are a separate claim pursuant to Rule 304(a) (73 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)). Here, we believe based upon the authority of the supreme court’s recent decision in In re Marriage of Leopando (1983),
The policy considerations underlying Rule 304(a), the court continued, also support the conclusion that a custody order is not a final judgment. Quoting from its earlier discussion of Rule 304(a) in In re Marriage of Lentz (1980),
We believe that the reasoning of the supreme court in In re Marriage of Leopando (1983),
The policy considerations supporting the Leopando court’s conclusion that a custody order is not final similarly support our conclusion that an order which dissolves the marriage but which leaves for later resolution the apportioning of attorney fees judgments between the parties is also not final. Without such a rule, conceivably parties could appeal from a maintenance and distribution award, the reviewing court could render its decision, the trial court after the appeal could apportion .an attorney fees judgment between the parties, and another appeal could thereafter be taken challenging the trial court’s attorney fees ruling. Such piecemeal appeals are inconsistent with the policy expressed by the supreme court in In re Marriage of Cohn (1982),
Even if we are incorrect in concluding that a dissolution-of-marriage case involves only one claim and therefore attorney fee judgments must be allocated before a divorce decree an became final, the reasoning of our supreme court in In re Marriage of Lentz (1980),
The order here reserves the allocation of attorney fees and therefore disposed of fewer than all of the claims. If, as we believe, this case involves but one claim, the May 7, 1982, order is not a final judgment and is not appealable. If the order is a final judgment, then the unallocated attorney fees are a separate claim which could only be appealable in the manner prescribed by Rule 304(a). That rule provides that an appeal cannot be taken from an order which disposes of fewer than all of the claims in the absence of an express written finding that there is no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal of the order. (In re Marriage of Lentz (1980),
Accordingly, we grant petitioner’s motion to dismiss, dismiss respondent’s appeal from the circuit court of Lake County and dismiss petitioner’s cross-appeal and supplemental appeal.
Petitioner’s motion to dismiss granted, appeal dismissed, cross-appeal and supplemental appeal dismissed.
SEIDENFELD, P.J., and HOPE, J., concur.
