115 Ga. 776 | Ga. | 1902
Suit for divorce was brought by Mrs. Wester against her husband. She applied for temporary alimony and counsel fees; and at the hearing of the application the court rendered
It is the settled law in this State that an order for a husband to pay temporary alimony and counsel fees is always within the discretion and control of the court. Civil Code, § 2459. It is not a final adjudication that binds the husband so as to prevent his showing his inability to pay. The court may at any time, upon proper application and proof, change, modify, or alter the order, or even annul it altogether. The answer of Wester was sworn to, and was not traversed, and for the purposes of this argument it will be assumed to be true. Assuming this, the order of the court granting the alimony and counsel fees must have been improvidently granted, or else some change has since occurred in the pecuniary affairs of Wester so as to render the amount awarded excessive. Pinckard v. Pinckard, 23 Ga. 286, is on its facts almost identical with this. There Pinckard had been ordered to pay alimony and counsel fees, A rule was issued against him to show cause why he should not be attached for contempt in failing to comply with the order. He answered by showing his inability, on account of poverty, to pay the sum awarded. The judge made the rule absolute, and this court held that he should have reduced the sum required of Pinckard in the order granting the alimony. This case controls the case under consideration,and it follows that the judge erred in refusing to hear evidence in support of the answer, and in striking the answer. See also 1 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 437, 438. The above is on the assumption that the answer is true. Of course Martin may traverse it
Judgment reversed.