90 Mich. 276 | Mich. | 1892
Complainant filed his bill for divorce in the Kent circuit court, in chancery, where a decree was entered dissolving the marriage. Motion is now made in this Court for an order to enable the defendant to appeal.
It appears that the complainant is the owner of at least $25,000 of available property, and that the defendant has no means whatever; that there was a large amount of testimony taken in the court below, the record containing over 3,000 folios, and that the cost of procuring a copy from the stenographer, and printing the record and briefs, together with clerk’s fees, amounts to nearly $800, of which amount the defendant is unable to pay any part. She presents these facts by affidavits which are not very much in dispute. She also shows by the certificate of a member of the bar of this State, in good standing, that her claim of appeal is meritorious, and, in the opinion of the attorney, should be heard in this Court. On the hearing of the motion here the solicitor for the complainant offers, if the order is made requiring the complainant to furnish the means to perfect the appeal, to do the printing, and this is assented to by defendant’s solicitor. Defendant’s solicitor has already procured a. copy of the stenographer’s minutes, but it has not been paid for. It is a case of great importance to the defendant, as the charges against her in the bill are of a character which affect her reputation for chastity.
We therefore grant the motion, and order that the complainant pay to the defendant or her solicitor the sum of $242 (being the cost of stenographer’s minutes already procured by him, and costs of printing briefs,