We decide whether an attorney representing a party in a divorce action may in his own right pursue attorney fees against the opposing party after a divorce decree is issued in which attorney fees are reserved for a later hearing, but prior to the hearing *820 the attorney's client dies. We hold both that the trial court has jurisdiction to hear the issue of attorney fees and the attorney has standing to pursue the matter under the facts of this case.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Appellant, M. Joe Crosthwait, Jr., (attorney) represented Cynthia P. Swick (wife) in a divorce action against appellee, Edward Eugene Swick (husband). The wife’s petition for divorce requested her attorney fees be paid by husband. The trial court’s temporary order required husband to pay temporary attorney fees, but this order was later modified, reserving the award of attorney fees for hearing on the merits. The trial court issued a divorce decree on June 30, 1989 granting a divorce, which also included among other things, a division of property, assets, liabilities, as well as an award of alimony to wife, and an express statement reserving attorney fees for a later hearing. The wife died later that evening or the next day. Attorney thereafter filed a motion for attorney fees and costs to be assessed against husband pursuant to 12 O.S.1981, § 1276. 1 According to the response brief of husband to the motion for attorney fees filed in the trial court, a probate action involving the will of wife had been commenced and husband was the executor of the will.
The trial court ruled the administrator of wife’s estate was the correct party to bring the motion for attorney fees and that while an attorney, in his own right, may move to collect fees already awarded him, he may operate only as a representative of his client to ask for a fee. The Court of Appeals affirmed concluding attorney lacked standing to press the matter in the trial court. We previously granted certiorari.
LOWER COURT AUTHORITY ANALYZED
The trial court relied on
Potter v. Wilson,
The Court of Appeals, rather than relying on
Potter,
relied partially on
Kelly v. Maupin,
THE TRIAL COURT STILL HAD JURISDICTION AFTER THE DEATH OF WIFE AND ATTORNEY HAD STANDING TO PURSUE ATTORNEY FEES
In Oklahoma the death of a spouse terminates a divorce action if the death occurs before the entry of the final divorce decree.
Pellow v. Pellow,
We also made clear in
Chastain v. Posey,
We have also held outside the confines of a death of one of the parties to a divorce action that a trial court has jurisdiction to direct one spouse to pay the other spouse’s attorney fees after the divorce decree has been entered in the trial court and while an appeal from the judgment is pending in the appellate court, regardless of whether the issue of attorney fees was omitted from the terms of the journal entry and regardless of whether the issue was reserved for later hearing, provided only that the issue
*822
was then a viable one and not theretofore resolved by the trial court.
Harmon v. Harmon,
In our view, the inevitable conclusion of Pellow, Chastain and Harmon is that had the instant motion been made by the personal representative of wife’s estate the trial court would have had jurisdiction to consider it. Thus, the issue of attorney fees did not abate on the death of wife. Our only remaining task is to determine whether, instead of the personal representative of wife’s estate moving for fees, the attorney in his own right had standing to move for the fees. We believe he did.
In
Statser v. Statser,
[Wjhere a wife in good faith employs an attorney to represent her in a divorce action and the attorney in good faith performs services in preparation of the case for trial ... a reconciliation between the wife and her husband, while the action is still pending, will not deprive the court of authority or jurisdiction to hear and allow an application by the wife’s attorney for a reasonable attorney fee to be paid by the husband.
Id. at 766. We also recognized in Statser until final disposition of the action the court had subject matter jurisdiction of the matter, which included authority to rule on the attorney’s application for fees. Id.
We followed
Statser
with
Owens v. Owens,
[Attorneys for the wife in a divorce case have a personal interest in the allowance of attorney fees to the extent that the attorneys may in their own name enforce the payment of [attorney fees] to themselves and for their own private benefit, though the wife does not participate in such proceedings with the attorneys, and though the wife may be antagonistic to such enforcement by the attorneys.
Id. at 342. The above statement found in Owens was made in the context of our holding there that an order in a divorce proceeding directing the husband to pay attorney fees is not void whether it directs such payment to the wife, the clerk of court, for the use and benefit of the attorneys of record for the wife or to the attorneys of record themselves.
Further, § 1276, the statute that grants authority to award attorney fees in divorce cases, is broad and itself provides that a trial court has discretion to modify both interlocutory and final orders in divorce cases not only for the benefit of the parties, but for the benefit of the parties’ respective attorneys. It provides in pertinent part as follows:
After a petition has been filed in an action for divorce ... the court ... may ... make such order relative to the expenses of the suit as will insure an efficient preparation of the case; and, on granting a divorce in favor of the wife or the husband or both, the court may require the husband or wife to pay such reasonable expenses of the other in the prosecution or defense of the action as may be just and proper considering the respective parties and the means and property of each; provided further, that the court may in its discretion make additional orders relative to the expenses of any such subsequent actions, brought by the parties or their attorneys, for the enforcement or modification of any interlocutory or final orders in the divorce action made for the benefit of either party or their respective attorneys. (emphasis added)
The language of § 1276 appears to be an explicit recognition by the Legislature that an award of expenses, i.e. attorneys fees, in favor of one spouse and against the *823 other not only benefits the spouse awarded fees, but that spouses’ attorney. Like the Legislature, we see no reason to ignore the fundamental simple reality of the situation that attorney fees, when awarded, ultimately inure to the benefit of the attorney who receives them and it is quite clear that as long as the divorce matter is still pending (i.e. the trial court still has jurisdiction over the case) at the time the attorney seeks in his own right fees to which he may be entitled, the attorney has a personal interest in those fees sufficient to give him standing to pursue recovery of them in his own right.
Thus, although it is correct that the personal representative of wife’s estate would be a proper party to move for the attorney fees in this situation, we believe it is incorrect to say the personal representative would be the only proper party. 3 Such a rule would ignore Statser and Owens which have recognized while the case pends the attorney may seek fees for work done even where his client is antagonistic to the granting of fees against the other spouse. It would also ignore the language of § 1276 which expressly recognizes orders concerning suit expenses inure to the benefit not only of the client, but to the client’s attorney.
In the instant case wife sought attorney fees from husband in her initial petition. She alleged her poor health, that she lacked ability to support herself and that she was without sufficient means to pay her own attorney fees. The decree of divorce decided all issues in the case, but expressly reserved the issue as to attorney fees. In that the wife’s death did. not oust the trial court of jurisdiction over the divorce action and the attorney has a real, personal interest in the attorney fee issue for the services he rendered up to the time of the wife’s death, we hold the trial court has jurisdiction to entertain the motion of attorney for fees and attorney has standing to litigate the issue in his own right. 4
The decision of the Court of Appeals is VACATED and the judgment of the trial court is REVERSED AND REMANDED to be decided consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Section 1276 was renumbered as 43 O.S.Supp. 1989, § 110 in 1989. Section 110 was amended in 1991 and 1992 and the current version of the provision can be found at 43 O.S.Supp. 1992, § no.
. We note the parties have supported their respective positions with cases from other jurisdictions.
See e.g. Williams v. Williams,
. We note in an action of this kind it would probably be appropriate to give notice to the estate of a deceased spouse.
. We express no view as to whether the trial court should or should not actually award fees in favor of attorney and against husband. As we made clear in
Harmon v. Harmon,
