DocketNumber: No. 143
Judges: Beck
Filed Date: 12/13/1917
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Mrs. Gorham, upon application for temporary alimony, obtained a judgment against her husband, ordering tern-' porary alimony to be paid in monthly instalments. Subsequently she obtained a decree of total divorce, but prior to the decree several months had elapsed in which the husband failed to pay the instalments of temporary alimony which he had been ordered by the court to pay; ¿nd Mrs. Gorham brought a petition against him, requiring him to show cause why he should not be punished as for _ contempt because of the failure to pay temporary alimony prior
We are of the opinion that the court was vested with authority to enforce its order for temporary alimony, by punishing the defendant as for a contempt. In this State it is settled law that the payment of permanent alimony adjudged in a divorce decree may be enforced by attachment. Van Dyke v. Van Dyke, 125 Ga. 491 (54 S. E. 537). It was said in that case that “The power to enforce a decree for permanent alimony-by attachment for contempt for failing to comply therewith belongs inherently to a court having jurisdiction of divorce suits.” And in the case of Lewis v. Lewis, 80 Ga. 706 (6 S. E. 918, 12 Am. St. R. 281), it was said: “We are of the opinion that when a court directs the payment of alimony by a husband to his wife, it is a duty he owes, not only to his wife but to the public, to comply with the order; and if he fails to perform that duty, we see no reason why the court can not compel him to do so by an order of attachment, directing his imprisonment in the event of his failure to comply with the order.” There is nothing in the record to show that the judgment for temporary alimony was merged into the final judgment taken in the divorce suit. In fact it is said by the defendant, the- plaintiff in error here, that the judgment for temporary alimony should be enforced by execution-. When the husband failed to pay the instalments of alimony which it had been adjudged that he should pay, unless this failure arose from his inability to pay or from some other cause that amounted to an excuse under the law for a failure' to pay, he was guilty of a contempt of court; and the court could punish him as for a contempt, upon his continued neglect or refusal to pay according to the terms of the order previously granted. In the case of Raines v. Raines, 138 Ga. 790 (76 S. E.
Judgment affirmed.