Ando v. Ando

30 Haw. 80, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 21
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1927
Docket1758
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 80 (Ando v. Ando) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ando v. Ando, 30 Haw. 80, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 21 (haw 1927).

Opinion

*81 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

On November 4, 1925, Y. Ando filed a libel for divorce against Ms wife, Tomo Ando. On December 4, 1925, the wife filed a cross libel in which she prayed for a divorce, bnt later amended her prayer so as to request merely a separation from bed and board. On June 24, 1926, the circuit judge reserved to this court the question whether, under the circumstances of the case, a separation could be granted to the wife upon her cross libel. On December 3, 1926, it was decided by this court that a separation could be so granted. On August 5, 1926, in this court the wife moved that the fee of her attorneys for their services upon the reserved question be fixed at $250 and that the husband be required to pay it. (All the briefs upon the reserved question were filed before, and the oral argument was had after, the application for the fee.) A hearing was had upon the questions of the financial ability of the husband to pay and of the necessities of the wife. At the conclusion of the hearing, and with the consent of both parties, by order dated November 10, 1926, the amount of the fee was fixed at $250 and the husband was required to assign to the clerk of this court as trustee all of the outstanding accounts and bills re *82 ceivable then held by the husband, the trustee to collect as much- of the same as possible in trust to pay the amount of the fee then just decreed and any alimony due either upon the order of. the circuit court or upon the order of this court. With possible minor exceptions, the choses in action thus assigned to the trustee appeared to this court from the evidence to be all of the property which the husband then owned. The trustee subsequently collected $160 out of the property assigned to him and paid the same to the attorneys for the wife on account of the fee of $250; and found the remainder to be uncollectible.

On June 24, 1926, the circuit judge entered an order fixing temporary alimony at $125 per month and requiring the husband to pay to the wife $875 as temporary alimony for the period from December 4, 1925, to June 4, 1926, “and the further sum of $125 per month thereafter, payable on the 4th day of each and every month as! and for temporary alimony.”

On July 17, and upon the wife’s motion, the husband was cited to show cause why he should not be punished for: contempt of court for non-payment of temporary alimony. The defense offered by the husband was that he had paid bills incurred by the wife and that the only balance of alimony due and unpaid by him was $175.90 and for this latter amount he tendered a check in payment. After a hearing on the subject of whether the payments relied upon by the husband could all be credited in his favor as payments of alimony, Circuit Judge Massee, sitting in place of Judge Desha, who was absent at the time, held, by order dated July 29,1926, and filed July 31, 1926, that of the amount claimed as payments only $266.10 should be credited to him at that time as playments of alimony, ordered the husband’s check of $175.90 and another check of his in the sum of $125 to be paid to the wife and required the husband *83 to pay her in addition $453 in cash or to deposit in court “an irrevocable application for loan for the full value, that is, loan value, on that certain $2000.00 policy of life insurance” held by the husband “to await the return and decision of the Honorable John B. Desha in the premises.” In other words, Judge Massee left it to Judge Desha to decide ultimately whether other payments of bills incurred by the wife could be credited to the husband on account of alimony. The husband deposited the irrevocable application and otherwise complied with the order. These arrangements having been made, Judge Massee evidently was satisfied, and it clearly was the fact, that the husband had thereby paid all the alimony then due.

On October 27, 1926, upon motion of the wife, the husband was again cited for contempt of court because he had paid only $85 of the alimony of $125 due September 4, 1926, and because he had not paid the installment of $125 due November 4, 1926. On November 12, 1926, Judge Desha found Ando guilty of contempt, fined him $50, thereafter ordered him to pay to the wife $250 back alimony' before November 13, 1926, and denied his motion for the reduction of alimony. The fine was paid.

On December 10, 1926, Ando was by the federal court declared a bankrupt on his own petition. He reported and surrendered to that court all of his remaining assets, such as they were. On December 22, 1926, Judge Desha rendered an oral decision granting to the wife separation from bed and board, adding “this decree to take effect forthwith”. At that time he also said that “the matter of alimony and counsel fees will be determined some other time.” No written decree was entered. On February 7, 1927, Judge Desha, after a hearing on the subject, found that certain additional bills paid by the husband were properly to be •credited to. him as payments of alimony, and signed *84 an order 'to the effect that $220.25 was due to the wife by the hpsband for alimony, — evidently disallowing to that extent payments of bills as payments of alimony. On February 14, 1927, upon motion of the wife, the husband xas again cited for contempt of court for nonpayment of alimony in the sum of $845.25. On March 28, 1927, the circuit judge found the husband guilty of contempt, of court and sentenced him to 20 days imprisonment. At the same time by decree he declared that the1 “temporary alimony” ordered on June 24., 1926, extended to and included March 4, 1927, and that the total alimony due on March 28, 1927, was $970.25; ordered that the present loan value of the insurance policy, $4j31, be applied to Ando’s credit on that sum of $970.25, thus leaving $539.25 as the balance of alimony that had accrued and was due from the husband after application of the loan value of the insurance policy. The husband does not dispute that the sum of $539.25 Avas the balance due at the date of the decree last mentioned, except insofar as he claims that the temporary alimony of $125 a month ceased to accrue upon the making of the order of separation On December 22, 1926, and that from that date the order of permanent alimony at $75 per month applied.

On March 30, 1927, the circuit judge entered an order fixing permanent alimony at $75 per month from April 1, 1927, and required the husband to pay to the Avife an attorney’s fee of $250 for services theretofore rendered in the trial court. Under the same date of March 30, 1927, a final decree was entered in that court providing: (a) for the separation from bed and board, (b) the attorney’s fee of $250, and (c) permanent alimony of $75 per month. This decree recites in its last paragraph that it is effective as of December 22, 1926.

The. husband appeals to this court from the order of March 28, 1927, adjudging him guilty of contempt, from *85 the same order ixx so fax* as it continues the temporary alimoxxy in effect after December 22, 1926, from the allowance of $250 as an attorney’s fee for sexwices rendered in the circuit court, and froxn the allowance of $75 per xxionth as permanent alimony on the ground that this allowance is excessive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 80, 1927 Haw. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ando-v-ando-haw-1927.