Bridges v. Bridges
This text of 330 So. 2d 260 (Bridges v. Bridges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
William Parham BRIDGES
v.
Mrs. Loris C. BRIDGES.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*261 W.E. Gore, Jr., John R. Countiss, III, Jackson, for appellant.
Young, Young & Scanlon, Jackson, for appellee.
Before GILLESPIE, ROBERTSON and LEE, JJ.
LEE, Justice, for the Court:
Appellee filed suit against appellant in the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, seeking separate maintenance, including construction of a new home, custody of and support for the minor child of the parties and reasonable attorney's fees. Appellant denied the material allegations of the bill and filed a cross-bill for divorce on the ground of desertion.
The chancellor entered a decree ordering appellant (1) to construct a new home costing not less than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000.00) nor more than one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000.00) on property of appellee in Eastover and permitted him to place a first mortgage not exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000.00) on the same, appellant to pay the installments on the mortgage; (2) to pay the last installment on appellee's Eastover property when due; (3) to sell the jointly-owned home of the parties on Reddoch Drive and apply the proceeds to the construction of the new home; (4) to pay all monthly installments on the Reddoch home, including insurance and taxes, as well as all insurance and taxes on the new home to be constructed; (5) to pay to appellee the sum of six thousand dollars ($6,000.00) with which to discharge her accumulated debts and to pay the amount of bills incurred by appellee for herself and their minor child between March 26, 1974 and August 5, 1974, not to exceed three thousand dollars ($3,000.00); (6) to make available to appellee for her use and at appellant's expense his yacht and personnel and facilities attendant thereto on a reasonable basis consistent with that she enjoyed prior to the separation; (7) to make available to appellee the facilities heretofore utilized by her at five social clubs, but not exceeding charges of one hundred dollars ($100.00) per month at each club; (8) to make available to appellee every third year a new automobile in the price range of a Thunderbird and with appellee haveing exclusive use of the 1974 Thunderbird now operated by her; (9) to pay the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000.00) per month additional support for appellee and the minor child and to pay school expenses and other expenses for said child; (10) to pay the balance of appellee's attorney's fees in the amount of two thousand nine hundred sixty-nine dollars and ninety-eight cents ($2,969.98).
Appellee was granted custody of the minor child with reasonable visitation rights to appellant. She was ordered to convey unto appellant an undivided one-half (1/2) interest in her Eastover property upon which the new home was ordered to be constructed. No relief was granted under the cross-bill.
Appellant assigned nine errors in the decree of the court, but waived four of them by failing to brief and argue same.
I.
The court erred in entering a decree of separate maintenance for appellant.
*262 Appellant contends that the court should not have decreed separate maintenance because he had not refused to support appellee and that, in fact, she was provided with more of the luxuries of life and had greater financial means and a higher standard of living than most women.
True, appellee had a comfortable home in which to live. Appellant had given her nine hundred dollars ($900.00) per month since their separation in October, 1971. She had charge accounts and enjoyed benefits of many social clubs, all paid for by appellant. She had a Thunderbird automobile provided by appellant. Without question, during the period of the separation from a financial standpoint, she has lived higher and better than most women.
However, the evidence reflects that prior to the suit, appellant had begun to restrict appellee in the things to which she had become accustomed. Part of her bills were sent back to her unpaid. Appellant wrote a letter to Mrs. Bridges' doctor telling him that he would no longer be responsible for her medical bills. He stopped paying her psychiatric bills. He required her to return her air travel card and stopped her charging privileges at the Broadwater Beach Hotel. Appellee testified that she was no longer able to live in the manner she had become accustomed and that she no longer had a right to anything; that appellant threatened to take away from her the things he had previously provided, and that he proceeded to do so. She instituted the suit because "I prefer the security of knowing what I can and can't do."
In Etheridge v. Webb, 210 Miss. 729, 50 So.2d 603 (1951), this Court said:
"... The power to grant separate maintenance to a wife was based on (a) separation without fault on the wife's part, and (b) willful abandonment of her by the husband with refusal to support her. These jurisdictional requirements for a separate maintenance decree have continued up to the present time." 210 Miss. at 743, 50 So.2d at 607.
During the trial, the following stipulation was filed by the parties: "It is stipulated by and between the parties hereto that from August, 1971, to the present time, the defendant has been guilty of adultery with several different women."
Thus, the appellee was justified in separating from appellant. That separation was without fault on her part and his admitted conduct constituted a willful abandonment of the marriage relationship. Then, to what support and maintenance is she entitled from her husband?
Appellant has a net worth of six million dollars ($6,000,000.00). His annual income is in the bracket of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000.00) to three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000.00) per year. He owned a private Aero Commander type airplane replaced by a Cessna 340. He had a yacht which he kept at the Broadwater Marina and at the Racket Club in Miami. He had a penthouse on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. He permitted his wife to travel without restriction and to shop at exclusive department stores in New York, Chicago, Dallas, New Orleans, Las Vegas, and other large cities. The parties had and enjoyed everything they desired that money could buy. Their standard of living and life style were affluent and luxurious, and, by most standards, extravagant.
Even though appellant gave his wife substantial sums from 1971 to the date of suit, unquestionably her standard of living was far below that standard and style she enjoyed before the separation. The separation having occurred at the fault of appellant, she is entitled to the same standard of living she enjoyed before the separation. Refusal of the appellant to so provide is tantamount to a refusal to support appellee as set forth in Etheridge v. Webb, supra.
The principle of law is stated in Bunkley and Morse's, Amis on Divorce and Separation in Mississippi § 7.04, at 205 (1957):
"Nor should the allowance be so large as to unduly deplete the husband's estate or *263 earning capacity and thus render it impossible for him to comply with the decree. The purpose should be to provide, as nearly as may be possible, the same sort of normal support and maintenance for the wife, all things considered, as she would have received in the home, if the parties had continued normal cohabitation, and the wife had helped in a reasonable way, in view of her health and physical condition.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
330 So. 2d 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-bridges-miss-1976.