DocketNumber: No. 2127
Citation Numbers: 35 App. D.C. 288, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5894
Judges: Orsdel
Filed Date: 5/10/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court:
At the outset we encounter a fatal defect in the record. The pleadings and evidence in the original divorce proceeding, in which all of the above orders were made, is not before us. It cannot be held that the order appealed from was made solely upon the showing made by the affidavits filed in support of the motion. The order was not made in an independent proceeding, but in the original case. The court had before it the entire divorce proceeding, and, we must assume, considered it in denying this motion. The fact that the original order awarding the wife the custody of the two infant daughters and allowing her $12 per month, and the subsequent order increasing the allowance to $40 per month, were based solely upon the evidence
This matter is fully disposed of by the court in the case of Lesh v. Lesh, 21 App. D. C. 475, where an order granting alimony pendente lite was made after the testimony in the divorce proceeding had been filed. The appeal was from the order, and the record, as in this case, contained affidavits in support of the motion,- but did not contain a transcript of the evidence. Affirming the order, the court said: “The application here was made after the testimony in the cause had been taken and filed, and after a previous similar application had been refused. Presumably the present application was based, to a greater or less extent, upon the testimony. In fact, both parties, in their affidavits filed, in connection with the application, refer to this testimony and to the effect of it, in sustaining or disproving the charges and countercharges of the- parties. We may well presume that, if the court below looked into the affidavits, as it purports to have done, and as it necessarily did, it looked also into the testimony, which was virtually made a part of the affidavits, for the purposes of this application, hy the references thereto in the affidavits themselves. In fact, the refusal of the court to grant the alimony when it was first applied for, and its allowance of it after the testimony was taken, would tend to show very conclusively that the allowance was based upon the testimony. Now, we have not that testimony before us. It is not made part of this record on the present appeal. It is very plain, therefore, that it would be manifestly improper for us on this appeal to disturb the order of the court below in awarding an allowance of alimony pendente lite.”
There is nothing in the meager record before us to authorize a disturbance of the action of the court below. The order is affirmed, with costs, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.
A motion by the appellant for a rehearing was overruled May 24. 1910.