6 N.Y.S. 447 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The allowance granted herein by way of counsel fees to the plaintiff does not seem to us to be at all excessive, provided the court had the power to make provision for any compensation to her counsel. It is claimed that under the rule laid down in the case of Beadleston v. Beadleston, 103 N. N. 402, 8 N. E. Rep. 735, no allowance whatever can be made in this case. The rule laid down is certainly a very strict one, and calculated to work great injustice to a wife who has been successful in an action of divorce, because, if the construction to be put upon the decision which is claimed by the appellant is the true one, where a wife has been denied counsel fee because of the showing made against her by affidavits, upon an application for counsel fee, although she may succeed upon the trial, where witnesses are examined in