On August 27, 1969, this Court entered an order sustaining appellee’s motion to dismiss this appeal.
On September 15, appellant filed a petition for rehearing in which he calls this Court’s attention to the fact that we did not render an opinion in writing in disposing of this case. We do, therefore, render the following opinion in the granting of appellee’s motion to dismiss.
This was an appeal from a judgment from the Lake Superior Court, Room One, finding appellant in contempt of court for failing to comply with certain orders of the trial court made in connection with the decree of absolute divorce whereby appellant was granted a divorce from his wife, the appellee. The trial court found the appellant to be in contempt for failure to make support payments, mortgage payments and payments on a dental bill incurred by the appellee, said payments totaling $2,662.04.
On July 9, 1969, the appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appellant had accepted the benefits of the decree in that he had, among other things, remarried subsequent to the divorce. Appellee is sustained in her position by the case of Arnold v. Arnold (1933),
“. . . The adjudication of the property rights between a husband and wife in a divorce proceeding is such an integral part of the judgment as that, in the absence of fraud, it cannot be separated from the decree for divorce. The appellant is not to be heard to accept the benefits of the judgment without likewise accepting the burdens thereof. . . .”
This same proposition was stated by this Court in Davis v. Davis (1951),
“. . . The only defenses appellee would have to this cause of action are such defenses as arose subsequent to the judgment of divorce. The evidence further reveals that appellee, since the granting of the divorce, has remarried. Appellee, having accepted the benefits of the divorce judgment, would be estopped from attacking it. . . .”
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