4 Wash. 174 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought suit against her husband, Harley H. Prouty, to obtain a divorce. She asked that the custody of their minor child be awarded to her, and that she be allowed $10,000 alimony and costs of suit, including an attorney’s fee of $1,000. The plaintiff and said Harley H. Prouty were married in Canada June 14, 1888. After their marriage they went to Newport, Vermont, where they lived untill the fall of 1889, when they removed to'this state and purchased certain real estate in the city of Seattle. The appellant John A. Prouty is the father of said Harley H. Prouty. The appellants J ohn F. Lord and Ella Lord are husband and wife. When Harley H. Prouty located in Seattle he associated himself in business with said John F. Lord, and they continued their business relations up to about the time this suit was brought. The real estate purchased by said Harley H. Prouty in the city of Seattle had been conveyed by him — he at the time having power of attorney from his wife — to John A. Prouty, and by him to said John F. Lord. The plaintiff in her said action made said John A. Prouty, John F. Lord and Ella Lord parties defendant, charging them with conspiring with her husband Harley H. Prouty to place said real estate beyond her reach, and to prevent and defraud her from obtaining the same, or any alimony in her said suit. The respondent claims, and there was testimony to show, the following to be the facts: When her husband came to this
It appears that after the plaintiff and her husband had located in Seattle he treated her with great violence, threatening to kill her, and abused her until she was compelled to take their child, and leave their home. His abuse, threats and personal violence were such that she brought suit against him to compel him to give surety to keep the peace, and such proceedings werehad that he was required to give a bond for $5,000, for that purpose. He refused to give thebond and wentto jail. His doings attracted the attention of the newspapers, and a Seattle paper containing an account of his arrest was sent to his father at Newport, Vermont. The respondent claims that said John A. Prouty at once conceived the idea that divorce proceedings would be instituted, and he immediately wrote to his son to convey to him the real estate he had purchased in Seattle. The claim
It appears that the plaintiff acted in good faith, and with ler assistance her husband was released from confinement. •She also gave him the power of attorney, whereupon he ■ conveyed to his father all of said real estate for a purported consideration of $11,000. He then informed his wife that he had made said conveyance, and demanded that she pro- • cure a divorce and settle with him or he would place the property in such a position that neither she nor the child would ever get a dollar. At that time she had not been a .resident of the state for one year, and in order to prevent him from disposing of the property before she could commence an action for a divorce she brought an injunction, .suit against him to prevent him from so doing. John A. Prouty, who had then arrived at Seattle, was made a party do such action. A lis pendens notice was filed, and the appellant John F. Lord was also in fact aware of these pro- • ceedings. The court decided said action against her, and • on the same day John F. Lord took a conveyance of said real estate, agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $9,000. He executed a mortgage on the property to secure a note for $7,000 of it, and gave his note for the remaining $2,000 without any security. As soon as the conveyance was made to the appellant John F. Lord, said Harley H. Prouty . and his father took all their effects and left the State of Washington, said John A. Prouty going back to his home ■in Vermont, and Harley H. Prouty concealing himself so that process could not be served upon him. When the year of residence had expired, and plaintiff was entitled to bring an action for divorce, she filed her complaint and made all of the parties mentioned defendants. Said Lord did not pay any part of said purchase money to said Prouty, and at the time of the trial he had not paid anything thereon, and said John A. Prouty was in possession
Some of the points made by appellants are that the court had no jurisdiction to render any judgment because the plaintiff had not resided in the state one year before the commencement of the action, and that it appearing Harley H. Prouty was possessed of some $12,000 in property aside from the land in question, that there was no ground for attacking the conveyances made to the appellants. It is conceded that although the plaintiff did not come to this state until some months after her husband had come, that her residence would date from the time his commenced, and we are satisfied from the proofs that he became a resident here a year or more before the suit was begun, and that he continued to be a resident down to the time of its commencement. The land aforesaid was the only property Harley H. Prouty had within the jurisdiction of the court, the remainder either being in money, which was removed by him, or in notes, which were in a bank at Newport, Vermont, and the land being the only available property, the court was warranted in adjudging it to the plaintiff if he found the charge of conspiracy established and the conveyances to be fraudulent.
The appellant’s main contention is, that the land was deeded to John A. Prouty to pay him the balance of the $8,000 note, then amounting to over $10,000, owed him by Harley H. Prouty, and that the conveyance to Lord and wife was a bona fide sale for value. The note for $2,000, given by John F. Lord, which was unsecured, it is claimed was given to temporarily represent a cash payment which he was to make upon the land at the time of the purchase, but, upon the commencement of this suit, on the advice of his attorneys, he refused to make it. We are not . disposed to disturb the findings of the superior court upon these questions of fact. The plaintiff claimed that her husband had paid his father in full before leaving Vermont, and that she had seen a receipt which was given by John A. Prouty to her husband for the last payment. There were other circumstances to corroborate the claim that said debt had been paid. When Harley H. Prouty sold his interest in the mill property to his brother, for which his father gave his notes, or the notes of the firm of Prouty & Miller, it seems no mention was made of any sum owing by Harley H. Prouty to his father, and it is reasonable to suppose that if he was owing him anything some provision would have been made for its payment, or the same would have been deducted from the notes so executed
It is contended that too much was allowed the plaintiff in the way of alim ony. It appears that she had in Canada some property in her own right which she owned at the time of her marriage. The court found it to be of the value of $3,000. If the defendant, Harley H. Prouty, really was indebted to his father in the sum claimed, the allowance to her was unusually large, but with all the testimony before us we are not inclined to alter the conclusions reached by the lower court in this respect.
A further point is raised that the court erred in taxing an attorney’s fee against all of the defendants. In actions for a divorce the statute, Code 1881, § 2006, authorizes the court to impose upon the husband the payment of all reasonable expenses incurred by the wife. It is claimed that the appellants having entered into a conspiracy with Harley H. Prouty to prevent the plaintiff from obtaining any alimony, and by their very action having largely increased the expenses incurred by the plaintiff, should also be held liable for a reasonable attorney’s fee. But the right to recover an attorney’s fee must rest upon the statute, and the statute only authorizes it as against the husband.
The cause is remanded with instructions to modify the decree to the extent of striking out the $750 attorney’s fee as against the appellants. Neither party will recover costs of this appeal.
Stiles, Hoyt and Dunbar, JJ., concur.
Anders, C. J., dissents.