233 N.W. 208 | Mich. | 1930
This is mandamus to review an order pendente lite in a divorce suit.
In his bill of complaint, Wolf B. Lakritz, plaintiff in the divorce action, charged that his wife, plaintiff herein, owned several pieces of real estate, that as to one the money to purchase it had been contributed by him, that she had deposited in banks, in the name of herself or children, money belonging to him, and, aside from divorce, prayed for injunction to restrain disposal of the property and money, that the court decree him the whole or part of the real estate, and that a receiver be appointed to manage the property pending suit. Later he filed a petition asking a reasonable sum out of the proceeds of the property for his support. Mrs. Lakritz answered, filed cross-bill for divorce, denied that Lakritz had contributed anything to her property or that she had appropriated any of his money, but averred that all her real estate came from her own earnings and investment.
The order provided, during pendency of suit or until further order of the court, that
1. Mrs. Lakritz furnish her husband room and board;
*1502. She pay $100 to provide him a set of false teeth;
3. She pay $3 per week "out of the income from the real estate" for his use and benefit;
4. If she fail to carry out the order, a receiver be appointed and he distribute the net income equally between the parties.
Counsel for Mr. Lakritz concede that, as divorce proceedings are purely statutory (Hintz v. Wayne Circuit Judge,
Counsel contend, however, that the order for payment out of or division of income from the real estate is proper because their bill of complaint states a case of accounting for trust property as well as for divorce. Assuming the bill so states, although the objections by opposing counsel to such theory have much force, the right to the property and its income cannot be known until final hearing and proofs, nor declared except in formal decree. The order undertakes to give Lakritz money without adjudication that it is his, which, upon hearing, may be found to be his wife's. Even upon a sufficient bill on the trust theory, the most the court could do, pending determination on the merits, would be to preserve the property and income for the true owner.
Writ of mandamus will issue to set aside the order.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, and NORTH, JJ., concurred. *151