281 N.W. 305 | Mich. | 1938
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *507 In 1931 plaintiff secured a decree of divorce from defendant. The home of the parties, held by the entireties, and the household goods and fixtures, were awarded to plaintiff and defendant was ordered to pay to her, in monthly instalments of $40, the sum of $465, which amount was one-half of the $930 mortgage outstanding against the property. Defendant was also ordered to pay to the clerk of the court for the support, maintenance and education of the daughter of the parties, the sum of $960 in monthly instalments of $40, the first of such instalments to be payable on the first of the month following the last monthly instalment of the $465 payable to plaintiff. The decree specified that the clerk of the court should pay the moneys to a guardian to be appointed for the daughter who was then a minor. Another paragraph of the decree stated that the provisions made for the plaintiff should be in lieu of dower and in satisfaction of all claims plaintiff might have in all property defendant then owned or thereafter acquired.
The testimony indicates that neither plaintiff nor defendant prospered financially after the divorce. Defendant made some payments under the decree *508 totaling $345, but maintains that his earning power became very small and his health very bad so that he could not make further payments. His remarriage, according to the testimony, did not cause him additional expense. Plaintiff secured a position as a school teacher and made a brave and hard struggle to support herself and her daughter and to give the latter a good education. In spite of plaintiff's efforts, it was necessary for her to refinance the mortgage on the home through the Home Owners Loan Corporation and she has contracted other debts. The daughter reached her majority before the present controversy arose. She is now teaching school and is self-supporting. No guardian was ever appointed for her.
Defendant paid only $345 under the decree, leaving $120 due plaintiff toward payment of one-half of the mortgage and the full amount of $960 due for the support of the daughter, the total amount past due being $1,080.
On May 10, 1937, plaintiff filed a petition in the same cause asking that defendant be found guilty of contempt in not making payments as ordered in the decree. Defendant thereupon filed a petition to amend and modify the decree on the ground that poor health and the depression had impoverished him. He asked that he be released from any further payments to plaintiff or for the support of the daughter. A hearing was held and on July 2, 1937, the court amended the decree, stating that the payment by defendant of the sum of $600 would constitute full satisfaction of the terms of the decree and all claims for dower or otherwise that plaintiff might have in any real or personal property, which defendant owned or might thereafter acquire. The court stated that the decree "is hereby amended and modified to reduce the amount to be paid to *509 plaintiff by the defendant to $600, which sum is hereby decreed to be due and payable to the plaintiff or to the clerk of the court for her." It further provided for the payment of this sum in instalments of $10 per month. The order also stated that plaintiff and her attorney consented to the modification.
On October 9, 1937, plaintiff filed another petition for an order to show cause and stated therein that she was informed and believed that on the 18th day of September, 1937, defendant was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States district court, and that he wrongfully scheduled the amount due plaintiff in accordance with the amended decree as a judgment in the sum of $580 (the amount then due), and that it is claimed by him that his discharge in bankruptcy was a full release of his obligation under the decree. There is no dispute over what is stated in the bankruptcy petition. Further testimony was taken and the court on November 24, 1937, in an amendment to the amended decree of July 2, 1937, stated that it was the intent of the amendment to make plain that the court had treated and considered the sum of $600, required by the first amendment to the decree, as alimony and not a money decree or a property settlement. Later the court entered an order adjudging defendant guilty of contempt in failing to make payments of alimony. Defendant appeals, contending that the court had no power to amend the amended decree and that he could not be adjudged guilty of contempt for failure to make payments under the amended decree.
A decree for payment of alimony or other allowance for the support of the wife or children is subject to revision or amendment, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12748 (Stat. Ann. § 25.106);Kutchai v. Kutchai,
At the time of the amendment to the decree, July 2, 1937, defendant owed plaintiff $120 to be applied on the mortgage. Defendant could not be adjudicated in contempt for failure to pay this amount, because it was obviously in the nature of a property settlement and was not alimony. The amendment of the decree could not change the nature of the obligation from a provision for property settlement to a provision for alimony or support of the child. Harner v. Harner,
The balance of the $600 award in the amended decree must have been in satisfaction of the original award of $960 for the support of the daughter. The original decree made no provision for the custody of the daughter other than stating that the money for her support was to be paid to a guardian to be appointed. As the question of the validity of such order is not raised, we pass it, calling attention, however, toSwiney v. Swiney,
The order of the court adjudging defendant in contempt should be set aside, but without costs to either party.
WIEST, C.J., and BUSHNELL, SHARPE, POTTER, CHANDLER, NORTH, and McALLISTER, JJ., concurred. *512