94 So. 2d 799 | Miss. | 1957
The parties hereto are man and wife. When the proceedings herein took place they were living apart. On October 17, 1956, the chancellor, upon bill, answer and proof, rendered a decree ordering Mr. Serio to pay to Mrs. Serio $130 per month, in two installments of $65.50 each, for the support and maintenance of herself and their four minor children, and to her attorney the sum of $75 as his fee for representing her. Serio appealed from that decree without supersedeas.
He first says the decree was erroneous in that it ordered him to pay the suit money to Mrs. Serio’s attorney and not to her. In that he is correct. Parker v. Parker, 71 Miss. 164, 16 So. 459; Rees v. Rees, 188 Miss. 256, 194 So. 750. However, this may he corrected and a proper decree rendered here if the action of the chancellor in making the allowance is approved. Parker v. Parker, supra. The action is approved and decree will be entered here directing payment to Mrs. Serio.
Mr. Serio next says the proof is insufficient to justify an award for any support and maintenance of
The chancellor did not set out his findings of fact, but the evidence was sufficient to establish the following facts, which, we may properly assume, the chancellor concluded were the facts applicable to the issues involved :
' The parties hereto were married in Clarksdale, Mississippi, June 24, 1951. They established their home in Greenwood. In March 1955, Mrs. Serio left the domicile and went to the home of a sister in Greenwood.. Two children, both boys, had been born to Mr. and Mrs. Serio. She carried the children with her. After a short time she and the children went to her father’s home at Clarksdale. On the question of justifying her action in leaving her husband, the proof on her behalf shows that Serio had a very vile temper. He often became very angry at his wife without cause, or, at least, without just cause. Once, he slapped her; another time he threw water upon her. He gambled almost nightly. He stayed at home very little of the time. He engaged in the sale, of whiskey and undertook to make her sell whiskey for him. He would not pay the household bills, not even the. medical and doctor bills for the children. He told her to leave the home. Mrs. Serio was a faithful wife. She did what she could to properly rear the family and assist in defraying expenses.
After her removal to Clarksdale there was a temporary reconciliation. Serio -went, to Clarksdale and the parties undertook to establish a home there. However,
“Listen you dirty Skunk, don’t you ever send me another bill that you have ever made, because I’m not going to pay any attention to them.
“The agreement I made with that fellow that calls himself a lawyer, well I kept my end of the agreement, but you didn’t keep yours which was alright.
“As soon as you can go some place and drop dead.” As a witness at the hearing Serio apologized for writing that, letter. On March 20, 1956, Mrs. Serio filed a petition in the chancery court for separate support and maintenance for herself and four minor children. On April 3, 1956, the chancellor granted the prayer of the petition.
Did these facts, as we may assume the chancellor found them, justify Mrs. Serio in leaving the home at Greenwood? The principles involved are discussed in Divorce and Separation, A Brief, by Judge A. B. Amis, Sr., par. 190, pages 252-3, in these words:
As to the separation in Clarksdale, the foregoing facts would have weighed heavily in favor of her right to abandon Serio had she abandoned him. However, the evidence predominates here that Mr. Serio left her— not that she left him.
But, Serio says that on September 27, 1956, he wrote Mrs. Serio a letter, inviting her to come and live with him at Greenwood, saying he still loved her and the children, and he wanted the family together; that he would make arrangements for a home at Greenwood and would maintain and support her and the children. Mrs. Serio did not accept that offer. Serio says that precludes her right to separate support and maintenance. In Ouzts, et al. v. Carroll, et al., 190 Miss. 217, 199 So. 76, this Court, dealing with the right of the husband to select the domicile and the duty of the wife to abide by the decision, said: ‘ ‘ The husband has the right to choose and establish the matrimonial domicile, and it is the duty of the wife to acquiesce in his selection and folloAV bim to the domicile of his choice unless the choice has been unreasonably and arbitrarily exercised, or where the comfort, health, and general well being of the wife would be jeopardized by such change of domicile.”
On August 11, 1956, Mrs. Serio had filed a petition in the chancery court in the foregoing cause to have Serio adjudged in contempt of court for failure to comply with the decree to support his children and Mrs. Serio. Notice of this contempt proceeding had been served upon Serio. Evidently this letter was written by him in the hope it might have bearing upon that proceeding. The letter was dictated by counsel for Serio, and written on a typewriter in the office of said attorney. Evidently the chancellor did not think that Serio intended in good
Serio complains of the amount the chancellor required him to pay for the support and maintenance of his wife and children. That amount was fixed at $130 per month, payable $65.50 the first and fifteenth of each month, and $75 for her solicitors in the representation of her in her effort to procure the support and maintenance. The twins were nine months old and the other two boys were two and three years old respectively. Mrs. Serio was making $25 per week for nine months of the year playing a piano at a dancing school conducted by her sister. . Of. this amount she had to pay $15 per week for a nurse for the children. Her father had been contributing to the support of Mrs. Serio and the children. Mr. Serio was operating a small grocery store in what is described as the “colored” section of Greenwood. He testified that Ms net income from the business was $25 to $30 per month. The stock of groceries is of
The decree of the chancellor will be affirmed except that the decree here will require Mr. Serio to pay to Mrs. Serio for counsel fees the sum of $75 within thirty days of the final decree in this Court.
Affirmed as modified.