Crews v. Mooney

74 Mo. 26
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 Mo. 26 (Crews v. Mooney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crews v. Mooney, 74 Mo. 26 (Mo. 1881).

Opinion

Sherwood, C. J.

Mary B. Mooney, now Crews, brought replevin against defendant, her former husband, for certain articles of personal property: a piano, sewing machine, pony, etc., which were decreed to her by the Audrain circuit court, as alimony in gross, in a suit for divorce brought by the wife against her then husband, in which suit a final [28]*28decree was rendered, both, parties being present in person and by attorney. Such final decree also gave to the wife the care and custody of her infant child, and ordered that the defendant pay to the plaintiff $120 annually, for the support and maintenance of such child. Plaintiff', in her own behalf, testified that she was the owner of the property sued for by virtue of the decree aforesaid; that it had been rendered on a compromise or agreement between the respective attorneys of defendant and plaintiff; that prior to the commencement of this action demand had been made of defendant for the property. At the time of the entry of the decree and of the demand made, the property was in Barry county, Missouri. The defendant also testified that he consented to the decree as rendered.

Our statute respecting divorce provides that u where a divorce shall be adjudged, the court shall make such order touching the alimony and maintenance of the wife, and the care, custody and maintenance of the children, or any of them, as, from the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case, shall be reasonable.” 1 R. S. 1879, § 2179. And the next succeeding section provides that <( upon a decree of divorce in favor of the wife, the court may, in its discretion, decree alimony in gross or from year to year,” and this section further declares that “ when alimony is decreed in gross, such decree shall be a general lien on the realty of the party against whom the decree may be rendered, as in the case of other judgments.”

I.

The jurisdiction of the Audrain circuit court to render a decree in the premises, divorcing the parties, is unquestioned. The only portion of the decree questioned is that which gives plaintiff alimony in gross in and of the personal property aforesaid. And the question arising upon this record is: Did the Audrain circuit court by that decree vest in the plaintiff the title of such personal [29]*29property? If it did, she can maintain this action — otherwise not.

Alimony is said to be: An allowance made to a wife out of her husband’s estate or income for her support, upon her divorce or separation from him, or during a suit for the same. 2 Bishop Mar. and Div., § 427. The usual signification of the term alimony, in the English books, is a sum or portion allotted to the wife for her maintenance, from year to year, either during a matrimonial suit or upon a divorce. 1 Black. Com., 441. “ It is not, under the unwritten law, a gross sum, or a specific part of the husband’s estate, transferred to the wife in specie; but it is a continuous allotment of sums payable at regular periods for her support from year to year.” 2 Bishop Mar. and Div., § 427» And it has been held that: “The court cannot decree to the wife as alimony a gross sum, an absolute title in specific property, or a sale of a part of the husband’s estate for her use.” Ib.

But however correct the above definitions and remark* may be when applied to divorces at common law, so many changes have been wrought by statutes of the different states, that we must look to the statute law of each state in order to determine the exact status and rights of parties litigant in matrimonial suits. By reason of statutory enactment alimony has come to possess a broader signification than it once had. In Illinois, the 6th section of whose divorce law is substantially like section 2179, supra, it was held that as the statute authorized the court to “make such an order for the alimony and maintenance of the wife, the care, custody and support of the children, or any of them, as from the circumstances of the parties, and the nature of the case, shall be fit, reasonable and justthat by virtue of the statutory power thus bestowed, a gross sum amounting to one-fourth of the husband’s estate having been allowed and allotted to the wife, as her sole and separate property, as her alimony, and in lieu of other uayments, such allowance was in full discharge and satis[30]*30faction of all claims for future support of the wife. Plaster v. Plaster, 47 Ill. 290.

In Iowa, however, where no statute was relied on as to the power of the court touching alimony, it was held that in a divorce suit, where the husband desired that the wife be allowed a definite part of his property, in preference to a periodical claim on him, while she could not have a portion of his realty allotted to her in fee, yet that such portion might be decreed to her during her natural life, as well as one-half of the household and kitchen furniture absolutely, and a decree was entered accordingly. Russell v. Russell, 4 G. Greene (Iowa) 26 And this ruling was made upon the ground that alimony was “ only a support of the wife for life.” But it will be observed that the desire of the husband and his consent that a definite portion of his property be assigned to the wife, instead of having alimony decreed as a periodical claim, was so far respected as to grant a life estate in a part of his land, and one-half of certain personal property absolutely.

In the present instance it will have been observed that the personal property claimed by the plaintiff’ was decreed to her in consequence of the express agreement of the parties. Agreements of this nature, if fair and equitable, will be upheld by the courts. 2 Bishop Mar. and Div., § 235. Thus, in N ew J ersey, whose statute is nearly identical with that of Illinois, supra, a husband, being possessed of a roving fancy, abandoned his wife and assumed questionable relations with another woman. He then proposed by letter to the wife, a separation, proffering to give certain property in Newark, where she lived, and $2,000 in money. She finally accepted the offer, but he refused to comply with it, and she brought her bill seeking a divorce on account of the facts already narrated, and asking that the property before mentioned be decreed to her as a provision for her future support, and in lieu of all future claims. A decree was entered accordingly for the conveyance to the wife of the Newark property, and the payment of the $2,000 [31]*31in full discharge of all future demands for alimony and maintenance. Calame v. Calame, 9 C. E. Green 440.

The decree of the vice-chancellor in that case was based on the provisions of the statute of that state, (§ 9, p. 224, Nixon’s Big.,) which does not differ materially from our own statute above quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Mo. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crews-v-mooney-mo-1881.