221 S.W. 1066 | Mo. | 1920
On the 19th day of January, 1903, appellant secured in the Circuit Court for Jackson County a decree of divorce from respondent, wherein she was awarded alimony from year to year, payable in monthly installments of thirty-five dollars, beginning on the 20th day of January next ensuing. On the 23rd day of August, 1904, she was remarried to one Wallace, from whom she later obtained a divorce and the restoration of her former name of Nelson. Respondent never paid a single installment of the alimony and the record does not disclose that the appellant ever took any steps to enforce her judgment therefor. However, on the 9th day of January, 1913, she began proceedings to revive the judgment by scire facias.. Respondent appeared and filed an answer in which he alleged in substance that he had paid all sums due from him to appellant. A hearing was had in October, 1914, and a judgment of revival was rendered. February 29th, 1916, respondent filed a motion alleging the remarriage of appellant and asking the court on that ground to so modify the judgment that he would be relieved of *416 the payment of all installments of alimony accruing after the date of the remarriage. No pleading of any kind was filed in opposition. The hearing on the motion to modify was had at the March term, 1916. The evidence heard consisted of the record of the proceedings hereinbefore referred to and the admission by appellant of her remarriage and subsequent divorce. The court took the matter under advisement until the May term, 1916, and on the 20th day of May, during said term, the motion was sustained, and judgment entered setting aside the original judgment as revived, in so far as it provides for the payment of alimony from and after August 23, 1904, the date of appellant's remarriage. Appellant was allowed an appeal to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where a decision was rendered, but that court deeming its decision contrary to a previous decision of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, certified the cause to this court for determination.
This appeal presents but two questions for consideration. First, whether respondent, inasmuch as he did not plead appellant's remarriage in his answer to the scire facias in the revivor proceeding, is not now concluded in that respect; and, second, whether the court had the power under the statute to so modify the judgment for alimony as to vacate and annul the same as to the installments that had accrued prior to the entry of the order of such modification. We agree with the conclusions of the Kansas City Court of Appeals and generally with its reasoning in support thereof, but inasmuch as the St. Louis Court of Appeals has reached a different conclusion on the proposition involved in the second question above, it is deemed proper to state somewhat more at length the grounds of the decision than appears in the opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals.
I. Appellant's first contention invokes the familiar rule, that a valid judgment for the plaintiff definitely and finally negatives every defense that might and *417
should have been raised against the action. If respondent could have pleaded appellant's remarriage in response to theIssues scire facias as a showing of sufficient cause why theSettled. judgment against him should not be revived, such plea is unavailing to him in this proceeding. It is well settled that as far as the merits are concerned there are in a general way but two defenses available to theRemarriage. defendant in an action to revive a judgment by scire facias. One is that there is no such judgment, and the other, that some fact has come into existence since its rendition that operates to discharge it, payment, release, or some other. So that the only question in this connection is whether appellant's remarriage operated ipso facto to dissolve respondent's obligation to pay alimony and thereby discharged the judgment therefor. The decree adjudging the alimony does not so provide, neither does the statute. Absent such a provision in either the one or the other, the general law must be looked to. The question of the effect of remarriage by a divorced wife on the judgment awarding her alimony seems never to have been passed on by the appellate courts of this State. There is, however, an abundance of authority elsewhere from which the general rule may be deduced that such remarriage has no direct effect upon the judgment for alimony. It merely affords a basis upon which the court, upon the application of the former husband, may modify or annul it. [11 Ann. Cas. 523.] The doctrine of the cases supporting this rule seems to be that where a wife obtains a divorce and afterwards remarries, and the husband of such second marriage is not able to support her in the position of life to which she is accustomed, the court will consider such circumstances, and while it will not order such payments of alimony shall cease, may reduce the amount. In such cases the burden is on the wife to show that her second husband is not able to support her, and where she introduces no evidence on this point it will be presumed that he is *418
abundantly able to fulfill his marriage obligations. [Southworth v. Treadwell,
II. The second question for decision is whether the trial court was authorized to so modify the judgment as to entirely wipe out the installments that had accrued after the second marriage and prior to the entry of the order of such modification. This involves a more definite construction, or ratherAnnullment interpretation, of Section 2375, Revised Statutesof Judgment. 1909, which among other things, provides that "the court on application of either party may make such alteration from time to time as to the allowance of alimony . . . as may be proper." Because of the unique character of the action for divorce and alimony such interpretation is not without difficulty. "The action, the defenses thereto, and the proceedings therein, are, as far as suited to our day and situation, controlled by the law of the English Ecclesiastical Courts (common law with us) as modified, changed, or, in some matters, supplanted by our statutes." [Chapman v. Chapman,
If the courts of this State have the authority to modify judgments for permanent alimony to the extent of cancelling or annulling accrued unpaid installments thereof, it must be because our statute merely adopts the ancient chancery practice above referred to with the legal theories and their logical sequences which it effectuated. On the contrary, many of those theories by the spirit of our times and of our institutions, and by force of the statute itself, have become obsolete. Under the laws of this State marriage is not a sacrament but a contract. Divorce is not merely a legal separation but absolute dissolution of the marriage tie. Through the decree rendered in the action, the contract of marriage is fully discharged as to both parties thereto for the breach by one. The permanent alimony allowed by the statute as an incident thereto takes character accordingly. In other words, it is not a continuing of the support of the wife by the husband, but it is the allowance of such a sum of money in gross or in installments as will fairly and reasonably compensate her for the loss of her support by the annulment of the marriage contract. In this limited sense at least it may be deemed an assessment of damages in her favor for breach of the contract by her husband. Following the rule of statutory interpretation heretofore premised, the elements *422 that enter into and make up the measure of such damages are for all practical purposes, and on principle should be, determined by the same considerations that determined the amount of alimony under the unwritten law, the prior treatment of the spouses respectively of each other, the needs of the wife, the "faculties" of the husband, etc. But the essential nature of statutory alimony is not support furnished by an unwilling husband to his wife on the compulsion of a court of chancery, but compensation for the loss thereof adjudged her in an action at law. [Chapman v. Chapman, supra.] The fact that alimony may be decreed from year to year, as well as in gross, does not militate against the idea that it is essentially compensation. If the husband has no property, his future earning capacity must be utilized to meet his obligation. In such a case a judgment in gross might defeat the very purpose to be attained. Nor does the further fact that the court may make such alterations in the amount allowed, from time to time as may be proper, so militate. The provision merely affords the opportunity from time to time as new conditions arise to more exactly determine the extent of the loss suffered by the wife. If she minimizes and entirely recoups the same by remarriage, her compensation can, and should be accordingly reduced.
A judgment for alimony whether in gross or from year to year is a debt of record as much as any other judgment for money. The wife is a judgment creditor and as such is entitled to avail herself of all the remedies given to judgment creditors. [1 R.C.L. p. 951, sec. 97.] In this State such a judgment is a judgment in an action at law, secured by statutory liens, enforceable by execution, and becomes dormant after the lapse of the statutory period of ten years unless revived. In fact it is subject to the same incidents as judgments in other action at law. [Chapman v. Chapman, supra; Biffle v. Pullam,
As a judgment for alimony from year to year is subject to the same incidents as other judgments rendered in action at law, and as it is in its essence compensation awarded in redress of a legal injury, it must be held on principle that the wife has therein, as she would have in any other money judgment rendered in her favor, a property right which vests as the installments accrue. It follows that the court rendering such judgment has no power subsequently to impair or destroy a right so vested without the wife's consent. [Craig v. Craig,
"But it is equally certain that nothing in this language expressly gives power to revoke or modify an installment of alimony which had accrued prior to the making of an application to vary or modify, and every reasonable implication must be resorted to against the existence of such power, in the absence of clear language manifesting an intention to confer it. The implication, however, which arises from the failure to expressly *424
confer authority to retroactively modify an allowance of alimony is fortified by the provisions which are expressed. Thus, the methods of enforcing payment of the future alimony awarded, provided by the statute, all contemplate the collection and paying over as a matter of right of the installments as they accrue, as long as the judgment remains unmodified, or, at least, until application has been made or permission to make one in pursuance to the statute has been accorded. And the force of this suggestion is accentuated when it is considered that it was not unusual in New York to resort to executions as upon a judgment at law to enforce the collection of unpaid installments of alimony. [Wetmore v. Wetmore,
The reasoning of that case is wholly applicable in this.
To say that a judgment for alimony, in respect to past due and unpaid installments, is a judgment and fixed debt, unless and until altered, is to say that it is not fixed at all, and on such hypothesis the judgment in that respect would be interlocutory and not final as a matter of course. Solely for that reason, judgments for alimony, rendered in those forums that exercise the power to modify them retroactively, are not under the protection of the full faith and credit clause of the *425
Federal Constitution, and suit can not be maintained on past due installments thereof in the courts of sister states. [Sistare v. Sistare, supra.] For the same reason unpaid over-due installments under the judgments of such courts are not provable in courts of bankruptcy. [In re Nowell, supra.] If not otherwise impelled thereto, we would be constrained to hold for reasons of public policy alone that the courts of this State have no power to revoke or modify an installment of alimony which has accrued prior to the making of an application therefor. The case of Francis v. Francis,
The judgment of the trial court in this case, in so far as it annuls and cancels the payments of alimony after February 29, 1916, is affirmed; in other respects it is reversed. Walker,C.J., and Williams, Goode and Williamson, JJ., concur;Blair, Woodson and Graves, JJ., dissent.