Sattler v. Sattler

7 Conn. Supp. 179 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1939

This action seeking a divorce was returnable on the first Tuesday of May. The defendant is a non-resident who has not appeared to defend. Service was made by registered mail in conformity with an order of notice issued by an assistant clerk of this court. The officer's return shows that, by virtue of the writ, he "made an attachment of all the right, title and interest of the defendant in and to a certain lot, tract or parcel of land lying in the Town of Meriden," a description of which then follows. Whether the defendant is the owner of the property so attached or of any interest in it is unascertainable from the record in court. The officer likewise "attached all goods, effects, money and debts due to or belonging to the defendant in the hands of the named garnishee" who "having been inquired of disclosed that he was indebted to the defendant."

The plaintiff now presents a motion that alimony be allowedpendente lite and that an order issue for the support of the minor children of the litigants. The problem confronting the court is, in the first instance, one which questions the right of this tribunal to entertain the motion at all.

An order for the payment of money as alimony or support is essentially one in personam. In those cases which quite commonly command the attention of the court where the defendant is a nonresident and no property of his is within its jurisdiction, it is legally impossible to enter an order for alimony or support.McSherry vs. McSherry, 113 Md. 395, 77 A. 653; Smith vs.Smith, 74 Vt. 20, 51 A. 1060. Constructive notice is never capable of laying the basis for an order in personam, even though it be conclusively demonstrated that the nonresident defendant has actual knowledge of the pendency of the action.Hood vs. Hood, 130 Ga. 610, 61 S.E. 471; Proctor vs. Proctor,215 Ill. 275, 74 N.E. 145.

But where property of the nonresident is located within the territorial limits of Connecticut, this court may acquire the power to pass an order for alimony or support, which, thoughin personam in form, is in fact directed against the property itself. Thus the order is one in rem or quasi in rem. The only essentials to the exercise of this right are the presence of the res within the State of Connecticut, its seizure at the commencement or during the course of the proceedings and before the order is passed, and the opportunity of the owner to be heard. Where the essentials exist an order for alimony or *181 support will be valid under the same circumstances and to the same extent as is found in judgments on a debt — that is, it will be valid not in personam, but as a charge to be satisfied out of the property seized. Pennington vs. Fourth NationalBank, 243 U.S. 269, 61 L. Ed. 713.

One of the above enumerated requisites is that there must be something in the action which makes it in effect a proceeding against the property. The writ, in the case under discussion, commanded the officer to make an attachment of the defendant's property; the petition alleges him to be the owner of real and personal estate; and the claim for relief asks alimony.

I am of the opinion that better practice requires greater certainty of objective as to the petitioner's intention to pursue the defendant's property — and this might well be done by the additional request in the ad damnum that the property be applied to honor all orders of alimony — nevertheless, I think it sufficiently evident from the record that the action is one capable of supporting an order for alimony pendente lite. It should be observed, however, that nowhere does it appear that the petitioner is seeking any support for her children, save in the motion now at hand. Hence such support cannot be considered.

Therefore, an order for $7 a week may enter as alimony

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