Appellant, Carol Alayne Sparr, appeals from an order entered in her suit for divorce appointing a receiver to sell the home of herself and appellee, Richard A. Sparr; reducing the amount previously ordered to be paid by appellee for the temporary support of appellant and their two children; and for the court’s failure to enforce by contempt its previous order that appellee make the mortgage payments on the home during the pendency of the divorce suit.
The court at a prior hearing had ordered appellee to pay or make arrangements for the deferment of all debts, whether secured or unsecured; to pay the utilities at the home occupied by appellant and the two children; and to pay to appellant for her and the childrens’ support the sum of $1750.00 per month. Appellee failed to make payments on the home, and, in order to prevent a threatened foreclosure, appellant borrowed sufficient funds to make the required payments. Appellant then sought to have appellee held in contempt of court for his failure to make such payments. Ap-pellee in turn filed a motion for the appointment of a receiver to sell the home and for a reduction in the amount to be paid for the temporary support of his wife and children. Upon hearing these motions, the court took under advisement appellant’s motion for contempt, appointed a receiver to sell the home with the appellee to make payments thereon pending its sale, and reduced the amount to be paid by appellee for the temporary support of appellant and the children.
Appellant by her first eight points of error contends that the court exceeded its power and abused its discretion in appointing a receiver to make an immediate sale of the home.
Section 3.58 of the Texas Family Code Annotated and Article 2293 of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated contain the authority for the appointment of a receiver by a trial court. Neither the appellant here nor the court in
Parness v.
Parness,
Appellant further asserts that the court erred in reducing the amount of the previously ordered support payments and in failing to find the appellee in contempt of court because of his violation of the court’s initial temporary order. Each of these orders are clearly interlocutory and as such are not subject to be appealed. Except for injunctive orders and orders appointing a receiver, orders entered pursuant to Section 3.58 of the Tex.Family Code Ann. are not appealable.
Wells v. Wells,
The order of the trial court is sustained.
