The plaintiff, Irma Wood, instituted this action in the chancery court of Jefferson County against her husband, W. L. Wood, Jr., to secure a decree for divorce and alimony. The complaint contains a prayer for allowance of attorney’s fees, suit money and temporary alimony. The defendant responded to the petition for temporary allowance, and on the hearing the court allowed the plaintiff $400 for attorney’s fees, $100 suit money, and $200 per month temporary alimony for support of herself and her child. An appeal has been prosecuted by the defendant from that allowance.
It appears from the allegations of the complaint and the testimony adduced that the parties lived together in the city of Texarkana until the month of May, 1918, when plaintiff left defendant’s home and returned to Pine Bluff, which was formerly her home, where her parents resided up to the time of their deaths-. The ground for divorce set forth in the complaint is that the defendant has been guilty of such cruel treatment of plaintiff as to render her condition intolerable, and the complaint sets forth that the cruel treatment consisted of frequent instances of abusive and contemptuous language, studied neglect and indifference and malignant ridicule “and every other plain manifestation of settled hate, alienation and estrangement, both of word and action. ’ ’
It is claimed also that sums paid monthly to the ’ building and loan association as dues should be deducted from defendant’s income in considering the amount of allowance to be made, but that, too, is an investment in the way of removing an encumbrance from the home. Of course, this matter is determined at present merely as a temporary allowance and might be viewed in a different light if made permanent on a final hearing of the case. We confine ourselves now merely to a decision that under the proof adduced, the allowance is not excessive as a temporary one during the pendency of the suit for divorce. It is not contended that the allowance of $100 as suit money is excessive.
Decree affirmed.