Busch v. Busch

278 P. 456, 99 Cal. App. 198, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 548
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6708.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 278 P. 456 (Busch v. Busch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busch v. Busch, 278 P. 456, 99 Cal. App. 198, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 548 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

DOOLING, J., pro tem.

In an action for divorce, plaintiff and respondent procured an order on March 11, 1927, that defendant and appellant pay her $1,000 per month temporary alimony, $1,000 suit money, $7,500 attorneys’ fees and $3,600, the purpose of this $3,600 payment not being stated in the order. Notice of appeal from this order was filed March 17, 1927. Thereafter on April 21, 1927, respondent secured a further order that appellant pay her $1500 counsel fees and $200 suit money to ’ enable her to resist the appeal from the prior order. From this second order appellant also appeals. The two appeals have been presented together.

Appellant’s claim that these orders were erroneous because it appeared that respondent had sufficient means of her own to enable her to support herself and prosecute the action may be briefly disposed of. Respondent’s property consisted of the home in which she was living with its furnishings, an automobile, personal jewelry and a few shares of stock. The income from the stock was shown to be abont eight dollars per year and none of the other property was income producing. “Where the wife is the owner of non-income-producing property, the law does not require her to have recourse to her own resources first, or to impair the capital of her separate estate.” (Farrar v. Farrar, 45 Cal. App. 584, 586 [188 Pac. 289, 290].)

It is argued that the allowance of $1,000 per month was excessive, first, because it was not necessary to sustain the wife and child in the manner in which they had been accustomed to live and, secondly, because it was in excess of appellant’s reasonable ability to pay. It was shown that while the parties were living together appellant allowed respondent an aggregate of $850 per month for household expenses, clothes and the support of the minor child. • In *201 addition appellant paid many expenses of the household himself. We are satisfied that the evidence justified the trial court in its informal finding that these additional expenditures averaged from $450 to $600 per month. This showing was ample to support the implied finding that $1,000 per month would be necessary to support wife and child in their accustomed manner. While appellant testified that their living on this scale had been against his repeated protests there was no showing that during the several years they lived together their scale of living had been at any time reduced. On the second ground it was admitted by appellant that his separate property had a minimum value of $2-78,000 and respondent’s counsel offered to prove that its value was at least $700,000. This offer was objected to by counsel for appellant on the ground that it was in the interest of time to exclude such proof and the proof was not permitted to be made. Appellant produced evidence to show that his income for the particular year would be materially reduced from the income that» he had received in the previous year and that by reason thereof $400 per month would be the maximum amount that he could pay for the support of his wife and child. The court, however, was entitled to take into consideration the previous year’s income and was not bound by appellant’s estimate, necessarily speculative and possibly colored, of his future income; and appellant admitted receiving a salary of $1,000 per month in addition to his income from investments. It is also to be noted that the order was made on March 11th and the divorce suit was set for trial and tried on March 16th, five days later. Under these circumstances and upon the showing made the court was justified in allowing the wife temporary alimony to enable her to maintain her accustomed 'standard of living for the very short period which would intervene before the matter could be fully examined into and determined at the trial.

While the allowance of $7,500 for counsel fees is perhaps more than we would have allowed under the same circumstances, in view of the very wide discretion vested in the trial court, we are not prepared to disturb it. The complaint charged many acts of cruelty and a number of acts of adultery. The answer not only put in issue the voluminous complaint, but set up an affirmative defense of *202 conspiracy between respondent and her father to entrap appellant into actual or apparent adulteries. The amount to be allowed respondent as permanent alimony was seriously disputed, as were the value of appellant’s property and his ■ earning's and ability to pay. ‘ ‘ The amount to be allowed by the court is as much within its discretion as is the power to make the allowance, and in neither case will the appellate court set aside its action unless this discretion has been abused; and we do not think abuse of discretion has been shown in the present ease.” (Youree v. Youree, 1 Cal. App. 152, 156 [81 Pac. 1023, 1025].) The evidence was uncontradicted that .respondent had neither paid nor agreed to pay her attorneys nor received credit from them for their services to be rendered in the trial of the action.

Appellant complains of a hypothetical question asked two expert witnesses as to the value of the services thereafter to be performed by respondent’s attorneys on the ground that the question assumed facts not in evidence. In the main the facts assumed were correct and the error, if any, was in our opinion not prejudicial. “In taking the evidence for the purpose of finding the amount of the allowance the court is not trying an issue in the case, but is seeking for •information as the basis of its order, and is not bound by the technical rules of evidence applicable to controversies between contesting litigants.” (Youree v. Youree, supra; Rose v. Rose, 109 Cal. 544 [42 Pac. 452].) “And no testi■mony was necessary to determine what the amount of the fee should be. The court could determine from its own experience, and from the facts and circumstances of - the case, as they appeared to it from the pleadings and other •papers and proceedings, what was a reasonable fee." (Peyre v. Peyre, 79 Cal. 336, 339, 340 [21 Pac. 838, 839].)

The allowance of $3,600 was recited in the order ■prepared by respondent’s counsel to be “back alimony from and including the month of July, 1926, to and including the .month of February, 1927.” The words in quotation ¡marks were stricken out before the order was .signed, so that we are left to speculation to determine on what theory this sum was allowed. It is elementary that the purpose of an allowance to a wife pendente lite is to enable her to properly live and prosecute or defend the action from the time the order is made. As additional future alimony this lump ■ sum *203 allowance would be unreasonable and unjustified in view of the allowance of $1,000 per month for that purpose. It is sought to be justified as an allowance to permit the wife to repay advances made to her by her father. It is true that in Reed v. Reed, 40 Cal. App. 102, 106, 107, [180 Pac. 45], the court said: “If the application for alimony, is not made until some months after the commencement of the action, and if,, in the meantime, the wife has managed to exist only by borrowing money ... it is manifest that, to place her in such a situation that in the future she may be enabled to live upon the allowance provided to be paid for her future support . . .

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 456, 99 Cal. App. 198, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-v-busch-calctapp-1929.