193 Mo. App. 46 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Suit by wife against the husband, brought under the provisions of section 8295, Revised Statutes 1909, the petition praying that defendant be ordered to pay plaintiff a reasonable sum each month for her support and maintenance during the pendency of the suit and a reasonable sum for attorney’s fees and suit money, to enable her to carry on this action, and that at the final hearing she may be decreed a reasonable sum for her support and maintenance, together with the costs and expenses of the action, and for such other and further relief as may seem meet and equitable. Defendant filed a general denial. Pending final hearing on this, plaintiff moved for the allowance of alimony for her support and suit money and attorney’s fees for the prosecution of her suit, pending the suit. • This motion was sustained, the court allowing $100 a month during the pendency of the suit and $350 as suit money.
The cause coming on for final hearing, testimony was introduced on part of plaintiff, respondent here. Without setting out this in detail, it is sufficient to say that it satisfies us that there was evidence tending to show that the husband had deserted his wife and abandoned their home, and so far as-the evidence shows, without any justifiable cause for so doing; that, the wife was without fault, a woman of good character, who had conducted herself as a loving and affectionate wife during the time of the marriage. It also appeared that after abandoning his home, the defendant, appellant here, had voluntarily paid his wife $100 a month and appears to have been paying her that amount, ■down to the time of the institution of this suit. The •evidence as to the means and financial standing of the husband consisted in part of the testimony of the wife
The principal testimony as to the financial condition of the husband, however, was read from a deposition of the husband taken in a suit for divorce which he had brought against his wife, but which had been dismissed by the husband before it came to trial, and before the trial of this case. Prior to offering this testimony from the deposition, the court asked counsel for defendant, if he desired to place defendant, who was present in court, on the stand. His counsel answered that they did not, whereupon counsel for plaintiff stated that he wished to prove by this deposition the admission of defendant that he was worth $150,000. To this the court said that that counsel was within their right and that he thought that, in fairness to the court, and in order that the court might be fully apprised, counsel should let defendant take the stand and
As before stated the appellant here, while present, did not take the stand at the hearing of this present action and introduced no testimony. At its conclusion-the court found for plaintiff, finding that as a matter of fact she had at all times treated her husband properly, kindly and affectionately; that the husband had left the home without reasonable ground, and, as far as the testimony shows, without any ground worthy of mention; that taking into consideration the large income of which defendant is the recipient, and that plaintiff had no means of support other than that which she earned by her own labors, the court found that plaintiff was entitled to a reasonable allowance as a separate maintenance for her support, fixing that amount at $225 a month, commencing on July 1, 1915, and $250 for services in the circuit court, in this final order reducing the allowance for suit money from $350 before then awarded to $250. Judgment went accordingly. From this defendant, saving his exception, and filing a motion for a new trial as well as one in arrest, prayed an appeal to our court. The appeal being allowed, plaintiff, at the same term, filed a.motion for an order for maintenance and suit money pending the appeal. The court, at that term, the testimony which had been introduced on a former motion being considered as again before the court, sustained this motion and awarded $225 a month pending the appeal and also ah
As said by Judge Nixon, speaking for the Springfield Court of Appeals in Wyrick v. Wyrick, 162 Mo. App. 723, l. c. 732, 145 S. W. 144, “A suit for maintenance by a wife against her husband is in the nature of an equitable action.” We have accordingly treated this — a statutory action — as one in equity. Reading all the testimony in the case, we have concluded that the result arrived at by the learned trial judge is fully sustained by that testimony.
The point is made that suit money or attorneys’ fees cannot be allowed pendente lite in an action of this kind.
In Dorrance v. Dorrance, 257 Mo. 317, 165 S. W. 783, our Supreme Court has said (l. c. 329), referring to this section 8295, Revised Statutes 1899, that it does not specifically authorize an allowance of attorney’s fees for prosecuting a suit for maintenance, but that “our Courts of Appeals have uniformly approved such allowances,” citing Behrle v. Behrle, 120 Mo. App. 677, l. c. 682, 97 S. W. 1005; Hedrick v. Hedrick, 157 Mo. App. 633, l. c. 636, 138 S. W. 678, and Wyrick v. Wyrick, supra. It is further said in Dorrance 'V. Dorrance and at the same page that it is an ancient rule of the common law that the husband was liable to a third party for necessaries furnished to his wife when such husband has neglected to supply her with reason
Following this it is said by Judge Brown, who wrote the opinion in Dorrance v. Dorrance: “By what is here said we do not wish to be understood as referring to an allowance for suit money pendente lite in an action by the wife for maintenance. In the action at bar the wife’s right to maintenance has been determined upon full trial.” The learned counsel for appellant, calling attention to this latter statement, argues that the Supreme Court in this Dorrance case “just as clearly, and in language that cannot be misunderstood, disapproves of an allowance for suit money pendente lite in such character of cases.” We do not understand Dorrance v. Dorrance to take or even intimate any such proposition. All that is meant, as we understand it, by this saving sentence is, that that question not being then before the court, it will not pass upon it. In the light of what our Supreme Court has said in
So the Kansas City Court of Appeals held in Hedrick v. Hedrick, supra, l. c. 636, one of the cases distinctly affirmed by the Supreme Court in Dorrance v. Dorrance. In Hedrick v. Hedrick, §upra, Judge Broaddus, speaking for the Kansas City Court of Appeals, says:
“The section applies to such support and maintenance as the court may adjudge upon the final hearing of the ease. Independently, however, at common law, the wife, in this proceeding, would be entitled to an allowance, pendente lite, if she had not sufficient means for her support, and also a reasonable allowance to pay attorney’s fees.”
That was the only allowance that was made for suit money in the case at bar until the appeal was applied for. The court thereupon allowed an additional sum of $250 for suit money and allowed $225 a month for maintenance, pending the appeal, providing that this $225 maintenance money be credited on the former allowance of $250 for maintenance.
Referring to the assignment of error by learned counsel for appellant that improper testimony of the wife as to conversations between herself and her husband, privileged communications, were improperly admitted, a very careful reading of the record fails to show that this was the fact. In the first place the wife put no definite estimate on the value of any of her husband’s property. Again, the reading of that testimony fails to show that her knowledge of the property owned by the husband, of which she does not appear to have had a very full or accurate idea, was derived by her in a conversation between her and her
The objection to reading from the deposition testimony given by appellant in the divorce suit is not .tenable.
In Southern Bank of Fulton v. Nichols, 202 Mo. 309, 100 S. W. 613, it is distinctly ruled that a deposition given by a party to the suit where the suit is between the same parties, may be introduced and read in evidence as admissions made in another suit between the same parties.
But it is said by the learned counsel for appellant that this deposition of defendant related to his financial condition at a time prior to that at which this present case was heard. It is a well known rule that a .condition once shown to exist is presumed to continue until the contrary is shown. That is too trite a rule to require citation of authority, but see First National Bank of Kansas City v. Guardian Trust Co., 187 Mo. 494, l. c. 525, 86 S. W. 109.
Moreover, defendant here was present in court, heard his deposition, taken in a former case, read; had ample opportunity, if conditions had changed, to take the stand and so testify. He did not see fit to do so and the presumption is that he did not do so because he could not successfully' show a change in his financial condition, for the worse, at least. [Baldwin v. Whitcomb et al., 71 Mo. 651, l. c. 658; Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Smith, 117 Mo. 261, l. c. 294; 22 S. W. 623.]
Finally, it is urged that there is no evidence as to the value of the professional services of the attorney and that the court had nothing on which to base its
Our conclusion upon the whole case is that there is no error to the prejudice of appellant and the judgment of the circuit court in the allowance of maintenance and of suit money pendente lite and of both again pending the appeal, is correct. That judgment is affirmed.