Boulanger v. Boulanger

1927 OK 342, 260 P. 49, 127 Okla. 103, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 11, 1927
Docket17686
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1927 OK 342 (Boulanger v. Boulanger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boulanger v. Boulanger, 1927 OK 342, 260 P. 49, 127 Okla. 103, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 281 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

DiFFENDAFFER, C.

This is an action brought originally by appellant for a divorce and the care and custody of two minor children. Defendant filed an answer and cross-petition, wherein she prayed for a divorce, care and custody of the two minor children, and for the sum of $200 per month for her'separate support and. maintenance.

Plaintiff, before trial, withdrew his petition, and the ease was tried on the answer and cross-petition ,of defendant, and on September 3, 1924, the court granted a decree Of divorce to defendant, in which a finding was made that plaintiff had been guilty of extreme cruelty towards defendant. The decree in part provides:

“It is further ordered that the care, custody, control and education of the children of said parties be decreed as follows: That the plaintiff, W. J. Boulanger, shall have the care, custody and control of the oldest child, Joe Boulanger; and the defendant shall have the care, custody and control of the youngest child. Celeste Boulanger; that each of said parties shall have the privilege of visiting the child in the custody of the other, and of having said child visit each of the parties at all convenient times.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff pay to the defend *104 ant the sum of $200 per month for the reasonable support and maintenance of Eerself and of said child, Celeste Boulanger, during the minority of said child, as per agreement of parties.”

Plaintiff made the payments of $200 per month, as provided in the decree, until the 1st of March, 1026, when he failed to make the payment then due. .The defendant applied for and secured an order citing- plaintiff to appear and show cause why he should not be jranished as for contempt. When the citation was served on plaintiff, he tendered the $200 then due, and immediately filed a motion to modify the decree, upon 'the grounds that, in so far as the payments were to be made to the defendant for her support, the decree was invalid, and in so far as the -payments were for the benefit of said minor child, the sum of $200 per month was unreasonable and unwarranted ; that the condition of plaintiff’s estate financially, at that time, did not warrant the payment of so large a sum for the maintenance of a child of the age of Celeste Boulanger; that the judgment was inadvertently rendered by the. court, and that the court was not sufficiently advised of the existing facts and circumstances of the parties, and that the financial condition of plaintiff was not disclosed to the court at the time judgment was rendered. No allegations as to any change in the condition of the parties, since the decree, was contained in the motion.

No answer or reply was filed to this motion.

The court set the motion down for hearing, and the evidence introduced by plaintiff, nearly all of which was hearsay and of a rather unsatisfactory character, tended to show that at the time of the hearing the plaintiff was indebted in the amount of about $12,000 or more. It was not shownk however, that any substantial part of this indebtedness was not owing by plaintiff at the date of the decree. There was no evidence and' nothing to indicate that any of these facts were not before the court at the time of the trial, nor was there anything offered to show that at the time the decree was entered any person made any representation to the court that would, in any way tend to mislead the court.

At the close of the evidence, the court entered an order refusing to modify the decree, from which orct’er plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. ' i ' 5

The decree does not include any finding as to what the agreement of the parties was at the time the decree was entered, but plaintiff at this hearing was. a witness in his own behalf, and testified:

“By the Court: Mr. Boulanger, when this decree was -granted, I will ask you if you did not agree in open court that either for yourself or by your counsel that you should pay your wife the sum of $200 per month for the support of herself and this child? A. That was the agreement, yes, sir, it was. Q. That agreement was not reduced to writing? (No response.) Q. That agreement was not reduced to writing, was it; it was not reduced to writing and signed ■by you people, was it? A. No. Q. It was just— A. An agreement. Q. An agreement you made in open court on which the decree was granted? A. Tes. The Court: That is all; that was my recollection of this.”

The court in ruling upon the motion said in part:

“The facts are that when this case was tried, just as Mr. Boulanger testified, an agreement, a solemn agreement, was entered into between these parties, regardless of what the decree may say, that in lieu of all alimony and any further claims made upon this plaintiff, W. J. Boulanger, that he was to pay this woman $200 a month for the support of herself and this child, and I believe in people standing up to their agreements. * * * He has income in excess of $10,000 a year, which was not disclosed by this evidence, but which the court would probably be warranted in taking knowledge of. I know what the income of each Osage Indian has been for the last eight .or ten years, and this allowance made to his wife and child, is about one-fourth of his income; it is in fact not one-fourth, and I ihink it is a very reasonable allowance.”

The plaintiff in his petition in error sets up eight assignment of error, which he argues in his brief under three propositions. The first four assignments are presented in the first proposition. They are: Refusal to grant a new trial; refusal to modify the decree as contrary to law; as contrary to the evidence; and that the judgment of the court shows on its face that, in so far as the judgment being for alimony in favor of defendant, it is absolutely and totally void.

The principal argument is directed to the proposition that the decree is void, in so far as it attempts to fix alimony for defendant, for the reason that in awarding alimony the amount thereof must be definitely fixed, though it may be ordered paid In installments. It may be said that the rule has been definitely fixed in this state, as contended for by plaintiff; that in cases *105 wnere the decree provides for alimony r,o the wife at a certain sum per month, without fixing a definite amount ultimately ro be paid, the decree is void, as to the alimony. Plaintiff relies upon the case of Dutton v. Dutton, 97 Okla. 234, 223 Pac. 149, wherein the court held that a decree providing:

“* * * That she be and hereby is awarded the custody and possession of their minor child, Genevieve Dutton; and, that said plaintiff be awarded alimony in the sum of $100 per month until their child shall become 24 years of age, or until the death of said child, in ease it shall occur prior to said date, and after said child shall become 24 years of age, or shall have died prior thereto, that the plaintiff receive, as alimony, the sum cf $50 per month, until such time as she shall remarry”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 342, 260 P. 49, 127 Okla. 103, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulanger-v-boulanger-okla-1927.