190 Ky. 49 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In this action for divorce, the petition of the husband was dismissed and the wife upon her counterclaim was granted a divorce and alimony and her attorneys were allowed $500.00 for their services. The husband appeals.
The ground upon which a divorce was asked by each was one year’s abandonment by the other, and while we have no power to reverse the judgment of divorce refused the husband and granted the wife, the wife’s right to alimony depends upon and can be sustained only if her husband abandoned her and she was entitled to the divorce. Hence it will be necessary to review the evidence upon that question.
The parties were married on December 14, 1914. It was the second venture for each. At the time Mrs. Walter, with her single daughter, was living in Ashland, Kentucky, in a residence that had been devised to her by her first husband and which was worth about $25,000.00. She also owned a cottage in the same city worth about $2,500 and $8,000.00 worth of stock in a
After the expiration of a year he instituted this action for divorce and contends that she abandoned him because she refused to go with him to Winchester where he desired and elected to establish their residence. That it is both the right and the duty of the husband to provide for his wife a home cannot be doubted, and it is equally clear that in so doing the place where it is to be established must be left to his choice, when reasonably exercised, since otherwise the power to provide a home would be interfered with unreasonably and often destroyed; but he cannot exercise the right of choice and avoid the duty of furnishing a suitable home at the place of his choice, at his own expense when as here he is amply able to do so.
While the evidence is conclusive that plaintiff desired and quite reasonably decided that their home should be in Winchester rather than in Ashland, it is just as conclusively established that he did not provide a suitable home for his wife in Winchester or even offer to do so with his own means, but insisted that his wife should sell the home that had been left her by her first husband in Ashland and with the proceeds of same purchase a home for them in Winchester.
This evidence, however, falls far short of showing even a willingness on the part of the husband to provide with his own means, as it was his duty and he was amply able to do, a suitable home for his wife in Winchester. On the other hand it is shown by the testimony for the wife that she was willing to live in Winchester if the husband would provide the home but that she was not willing to sell the home in Ashland which had been left her by her former husband and which it was her desire should eventually go to his children, and with the proceeds of same purchase a home for herself and her husband in Winchester.
We are therefore quite sure that the chancellor did not err in holding that it was the husband who was guilty of the abandonment and not the wife and in awarding the divorce to her; and it is equally clear, in view of the wife’s customary mode of living and the husband’s ability to pay, that the allowance of $100.00 a month alimony to the wife was not excessive.
Nor do we think the allowance to her attorneys too large in view of the amount involved and the work performed by them at Ashland" and Winchester in the preparation and trial of the case; and since by statute the husband is required to pay attorney’s fees for his wife in a divorce proceeding unless she is both at fault and amply able to pay for same, and the wife was not at fault here, it results that the allowance to her attorneys was properly charged against the husband.
'Counsel for the wife in their brief complain that both of these allowances are too small, but a cross appeal has not been prosecuted and we could not therefore in
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.