DocketNumber: 4-8015
Citation Numbers: 197 S.W.2d 938, 210 Ark. 826, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 441
Judges: Smith
Filed Date: 12/2/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellee, a dentist, sued for divorce, alleging indignities *Page 827 of an intolerable nature. His wife cross-complained with the averment that the Doctor's fractious attitude had become publicly insulting to such an extent that the mutual relationship of husband and wife had ended. The abstract does not show that the cross-defendant denied these charges. On the contrary, there is a ready inference that Dr. McCue welcomed the opportunity to make his wife a burden-bearer in matters of testimony and the production of witnesses. Within three weeks McCue married a widow who had a young daughter. Appellant (the former Mrs. McCue) testified in the proceeding from which this appeal comes that her understanding of arrangements pertaining to the divorce decree was that Dr. McCue sought matrimonial emancipation because he wanted to marry the widow.
Whatever the prevailing motives may have been, appellant who — is referred to as having assisted her husband in his profession for more than fifteen years — seemingly came to the conclusion that her interests would be best served by cross-complaining and permitting the Doctor to prevail in fact if not of record.
The decree was rendered on Mrs. McCue's testimony and, presumptively, on the testimony of a witness she called. An expression in the decree is: ". . .it appearing to the Court by agreement upon the part of the plaintiff and the defendant that a property settlement has been made, . . . it is ordered that $25 per week be made to Lida B. McCue as permanent alimony . . . This decree is based upon property settlement and is a consent decree."
Other items as to which there was adjudication included $350 to be paid by Dr. McCue in February for use of the former wife in moving "her" furniture and household goods from Arkansas to Texas. In a subsequent provision it was decreed that all household furniture and furnishings "now in possession of the defendant" should go to the cross-complainant "as her personal property." She was also awarded "the 1942 Nash Tudor sedan." *Page 828
In June, 1946, Dr. McCue petitioned for modification of the decree, alleging that because of "a lack of business" he had been forced to abandon his profession in Little Rock, and had moved to Green Forest; [a city or town of 750 in Carroll County, Ark.] that he is a stranger there and will not be able to earn compensation in excess of necessary living expenses for a long period of time. It was further alleged that the petitioner "had information to the effect" that the former Mrs. McCue, then 54 years of age, ". . . is, or at least will in the near future, be employed in a remunerative position, [and that] she is able to work. His prayer was that provision in the decree of 1944 for alimony ". . . be cancelled, set aside, and held for naught."
The Chancellor thought otherwise and only partially modified. McCue was relieved entirely during June and July, 1946. The direction was that, beginning August 1, $25 should be paid "every two weeks until further orders."
Two questions are presented. (a) Did the Court have jurisdiction to modify the decree; (b) if there were power to relieve, was it appropriately exercised?
Dr. McCue testified he had adopted his second wife's daughter, a child thirteen years of age in 1946. He bought a piano for her use at a cost of about $800, and had paid $1,475 for an automobile. Appellee is 49 years of age, and with the exception of a slight leg impairment, is in good health "and happy." His present wife is 44.
Appellee purchased a home in Little Rock in October, 1944, with arrangements for deferred payments. The present Mrs. McCue used $1,227 of her personal funds in buying the property. It cost $4,500 and was sold for $8,250. Dr. McCue insisted that improvements he made, when added to the original consideration, represented an investment of $6,100. When the home was sold, $3,100 was given the second wife.
Gross income in 1944 was $13,000, in 1945, $11,252. Appellant's counsel argue that according to Dr. McCue's *Page 829 testimony, his net income for 1945 was $6,668.25, while appellee contends other deductions to which he was entitled, and concerning which he testified, reduced the net to $4,627.32.
During the first five months of 1946, appellee's professional receipts were: January, $672; February, $1,088; March, $1,017; April, $810, and May, $672 — a total of $4,259, or an average of $851.80 per month; whereas the 1944 average was, roughly, $1,083, a decrease of $231 per month from the highest income year mentioned.
Dr. McCue, after moving to Green Forest, purchased a six-room residence thirty years old, and says he agreed to pay $9,000 for it, $1,500 being the required "down" payment, with $1,500 to follow, the balance in monthly installments. Appellant (Lida B. McCue) has no income and has lived with a nephew and his wife. The relative has not finished school.
It was recognized in Shirey v. Hill,
A leading case dealing with alimony contracts is Pryor v. Pryor,
At page 309 of the Arkansas Reports, where the Pryor case appears, it is said: "The agreement was, in effect, contemporaneous with the decree granting the divorce."
Pryor v. Pryor was distinguished in McConnell v. McConnell,
It is worthy of note that Mr. Justice HART, who wrote the McConnell opinion, spoke for the Court in Erwin v. Erwin,
This brings us to a consideration of Holmes v. Holmes,
Although the Holmes transaction and the case at bar are strikingly similar, the essential holding in Holmes v. Holmes is that the decree recitals were not intended as a finding by the Court that the plaintiff and defendant had by a joint undertaking having contractual force substituted their own arrangements for the Court's authority. Wording of the decree was: ". . . the parties hereto have agreed upon a settlement of the property rights; [therefore] it is ordered that the defendant pay to the plaintiff by way of alimony the sum of $150 at this time and $150 on the first day of each and every month hereafter."
There is this expression in the opinion: "It will be seen . . . that the agreement of the parties was ``merely one as to the amount the Court by its decree should fix as alimony,' and was not intended as an independent agreement for the payment of alimony."
It might be argued with a full measure of sincerity and earnestness that there was an independent agreement in the Holmes case, but that point has already been decided. The question is, Does the Holmes holding supersede Pryor v. Pryor and other decisions where it is said that an independent contract incorporated in a decree is not subject to subsequent modification by the Court?
Judicial hairsplitting is not a pleasant pursuit, nor is it conducive to confidence in lawyer or Court. The appeal with which we are dealing might very well be *Page 832 disposed of by saying that a preponderance of the evidence does not show that appellee was unable to pay. But this would not harmonize the seeming conflicts to which reference has been made.
Dr. McCue testified his attorney told him he could agree to the obligation, have it incorporated in the decree, then later procure modification. But there is no suggestion that his idea was brought to Mrs. McCue's attention. On the contrary, her testimony is that the settlement was a covenant openly arrived at because it was the course thought best.
Certainly the Court is not bound by an agreement disputing husband and wife may enter into, in order to terminate a controversy; and this is true even in the absence of fraud or coercion. Where, however, as here, the wife is told that in substitution of her marital rights she will permanently be paid $25 per week, some rational meaning must be given the decree recital that "Said payments of $25 per week to be made by the plaintiff as permanent alimony for the defendant. This decree is based upon property settlement and is a consent decree."
To what could "consent" refer except that McCue and his wife had agreed upon what the husband would pay, how it should be paid, and over what period of time? The two could not have the divorce granted in consequence of mutuality, because of statutory inhibition and public policy.
We think the decree reflects this situation: The Chancellor required the minimum proof necessary under divorce laws, and in granting the decree exercised appropriate discretion. But in dealing with property rights it appears that the parties themselves, and their attorneys, reached an understanding. The Court had nothing to do with the method by which that result was arrived at. The suggested provisions could have been rejected; but that was not the Court's purpose or policy nor was it the desire of Dr. McCue. If he and his wife were satisfied, evidence affecting ability to pay was unnecessary; and their agreement became a part of the decree. As to that *Page 833 phase of the litigation the Court relied upon representations. To say that the commitment on Dr. McCue's part to pay permanent alimony of $25 per week was not his contract, but was due to the Court's exercise of judicial discretion, would be to warp words and conduct to suit an undisclosed plan — the plan of a husband who told his attorney to proceed with the hearing, procure immediate results, but to stand by for a relief call when the occasion seemed inviting.
That part of the decree modifying the former allowance is reversed, with directions that all delinquent payments be made. Appellant's attorney is allowed a fee of $100, to be paid within thirty days.
ELAINE G. LORILLARD, Appellant v. LOUIS L. LORILLARD , 358 F.2d 172 ( 1966 )
Crow v. Crow , 26 Ark. App. 37 ( 1988 )
Liebendorfer v. Gayle , 217 So. 2d 37 ( 1969 )
Reiter v. Reiter , 225 Ark. 157 ( 1955 )
Schichtel v. Schichtel , 3 Ark. App. 36 ( 1981 )
Fields v. Fields , 88 Ark. App. 277 ( 2004 )
Lively v. Lively , 1953 Ark. LEXIS 827 ( 1953 )
Seaton v. Seaton , 221 Ark. 778 ( 1953 )
Johnston v. Johnston , 241 Ark. 551 ( 1966 )
Granquist v. Randolph , 326 Ark. 809 ( 1996 )
Armstrong v. Armstrong , 248 Ark. 835 ( 1970 )
Strasner v. Strasner , 232 Ark. 478 ( 1960 )
Sheard v. Green , 219 La. 199 ( 1951 )
Collie v. Collie , 242 Ark. 297 ( 1967 )
Bachus v. Bachus , 216 Ark. 802 ( 1950 )
McDougal v. McDougal , 279 S.W.2d 731 ( 1955 )
Rutherford v. Rutherford , 81 Ark. App. 122 ( 2003 )