Where husband and wife are living separately, and no action for divorce is pending, and the wife has instituted against the husband a suit for permanent alimony, it is not illegal for the judge on her application, after the required notice to the husband, to grant temporary alimony. Properly construed, the petition in the instant case was not an independent suit for temporary alimony, but in substance a proceeding of the character indicated above.
On May 27, 1938, one of the judges of Fulton superior court, on hearing the petition, passed an order awarding to the plaintiff $2.50 per week "until further order of the court," for her maintenance and support, and that the defendant pay to the plaintiff's attorney a fee of $25 at the rate of $3 per month.
No answer, demurrer, or plea appears to have been filed by the defendant until September, 1941, more than three years after the judgment referred to above, when he filed a plea asserting that said judgment was a mere interlocutory order for the payment of temporary alimony, and not one for the payment of permanent alimony; that he did not acquiesce in said order; that upon applications of the plaintiff two executions against him had been issued, based on said award of alimony, these aggregating several hundred dollars; that plaintiff is threatening to have levies, garnishments, attachments, etc., issued against him, and unless she be enjoined he will suffer irreparable loss. He prayed that the judgment and executions be set aside and canceled. On September 15, 1941, he filed his general demurrer to the petition for alimony. On September 29, 1941, the court overruled the motion to set aside the judgment and executions, and overruled the demurrer; and the defendant excepted.
No suit for divorce was pending; and the exceptions to the rulings complained of are well taken unless the petition, as against a general demurrer, is to be construed as a proceeding for permanent alimony, since temporary alimony can not be granted unless there be pending either a suit for divorce or a proceeding for permanent alimony. Stallings v. Stallings,
That the alimony here awarded was temporary alimony adds no strength to the argument that the alimony referred to in the suit meant temporary alimony only. Both the temporary award by the judge pending the action and the amount fixed by the jury on the final trial are alimony. Each is an allowance out of the husband's estate, made for the support of the wife when living separate from him. Code, § 30-201. This procedure was the appropriate one if the suit was one for permanent alimony, since the statute expressly provides that upon three days notice to the husband the judge may grant such order as he might grant were it based on a pending petition for divorce. A petition need not possess all of the excellencies of good pleading in order to withstand attack by general demurrer. If in substance it meets the requirements, that is sufficient. It may be that the pleader could have stated her purpose with more clearness, but she alleged all the facts necessary in a suit for permanent alimony; and a reasonable construction of the allegations and prayers leads to the conclusion that such was the intention of the pleader. It follows that the general demurrer was properly overruled, and that it was not erroneous to overrule the motion to vacate and set aside the judgment awarding temporary alimony and attorney's fees.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Duckworth,J., who dissents.
