157 Ga. 589 | Ga. | 1924
Mrs. Odah Perkerson filed a petition against 0. C. Perkerson, her husband, for permanent and temporary alimony. Upon the hearing of the application for temporary alimony and attorney’s fees, after the introduction of evidence by petitioner and respondent, the court passed an order adjudging that the respondent pay as temporary alimony $40 per month, and the sum of $40 as attorney’s fees. The evidence shows that petitioner lives in
Under the evidence contained in this record, we are of the opinion that the court should have refused to allow the wife alimony; for we are of the opinion that the testimony, in this case is not sufficient to authorize a judgment for temporary alimony. The wife is making $100 per month. The evidence does not show .that the husband deserted or abandoned her. He did go to Austell, but the evidence discloses that he,went there bona fide for the purpose of accepting a position in a bank. During most of the time from the first of 1931 to a short time before the filing of this suit, he remitted to his wife considerable sums of money. The wife still owes- a balance on the home which she has purchased in Atlanta. It is inferable that a part of the money which she has paid upon it was sent to her by her husband. In fact the entire record indicates that the husband has been liberal towards the wife in the matter of
“For about the first two years of our married life we were very happy, but then the defendant began to grumble. The defendant is a man of very high temper, would at times get mad, and would at times go to bed as if he were sick, and at one time went to the home of his mother and stayed in bed a week or ten days claiming that he was sick. Since we have been married I have worked as a stenographer; have also done the housework, and have at times done the washing for the family. We have had no servant. I am now working as a stenographer. When we were married I was a widow, and had three children by my first husband; and the defendant promised to help educate my oldest daughter, Catherine, who is now nineteen years of age. When we were married the defendant was working and boarding in Atlanta, and after our marriage I went to Atlanta and boarded with him until the school which my .daughter was attending was out, and then we rented a house. We later moved to Austell, where we lived about a year, the defendant in the meantime going back and forth to Atlanta to his work. He first worked for Oglesby Grocery Co., which position he quit without consulting me, and then obtained a posi
As to the amounts which her husband had sent her, the wife testified as follows: “These checks which you present to me were sent to me by the defendant between the dates of February 14, 1921, and May of this year, aggregating $1679.83, and with the exception of the two which are made payable to Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose Co., to pay on my account there, I received the cash on them. That amount of $1679.83 has been paid to me between those dates of February 14, 1921, and May of this year. I refused to accept the check for $25, payable to me and signed by the defendant, dated May 1st, 1923, which you present to me, for the reason that it was not large enough.” This suit was brought July 7, 1923, and as late as May 17, 1923, the husband was writing the wife and entreating her to come and live with him. The agreement, marked “Exhibit A” and attached to the petition, stipulated that the husband should pay certain amounts monthly, and this agreement appears to have been substantially complied with by the husband.
The judgment of the court allowing temporary alimony and attorney’s fees must be set aside because not authorized by the evidence. The conclusion which we have reached in this case is based upon the evidence in this record and well-considered decisions in our own reports, laying down the law applicable to facts like those here shown. We feel that it is unnecessary to cite decisions. Nevertheless it is not inappropriate to quote in this connection what has been said in some of the cases decided by this court. In the case of Pace v. Pace, 154 Ga. 712 (115 S. E. 65), it was held: “In this State the husband is the head of the family, and as such has
In Brisendine v. Brisendine (supra), it was said: “Alimony will not be allowed to a wife who abandons her husband without just cause,” citing Fuller v. Fuller, supra. Also: “This is a proceeding under the Civil Code (1910), § 2986, for the allowance of alimony and counsel fees, where the husband and wife are living in a bona fide state of separation. On the hearing the testimony of the wife clearly showed that she voluntarily, abandoned her husband without just cause. It was therefore an abuse of discretion to allow her alimony and counsel fees.”
In Davis v. Davis (supra), it was said: irWhere no divorce suit is pending and alimony is applied for because the husband and wife are living in a bona fide state of separation, on a hearing for temporary alimony it is an abuse of discretion to allow alimony to the wife, where it is admitted that the husband provided everything he could for his wife, and a fair analysis of the evidence discloses no cruel treatment of the wife by the husband, and shows that the wife refused to live with the husband because of mutual antipathy between him and the wife’s mother, and that the husband had prepared a furnished home and asked the wife to come to it, who refused to do so, assigning as her reason that she no longer loved him and did not wish to go with him.” See also, in the same connection, Ward v. Ward, 144 Ga. 312 (87 S. E. 17); Vinson v. Vinson, 94 Ga. 492 (19 S. E. 898); Ring v. Ring, 118 Ga. 183 (44 S. E. 861, 62 L. R. A. 878); Stoner v. Stoner, 134 Ga. 368 (67 S. E. 1030). Judgment reversed.