Docotovich v. Docotovich

229 P.2d 971, 125 Mont. 56, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 83
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1951
Docket9042
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 229 P.2d 971 (Docotovich v. Docotovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Docotovich v. Docotovich, 229 P.2d 971, 125 Mont. 56, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 83 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAIR:

August 14, 1945, Louis Doctovich, age 69, and Pearl D. Doctovich, age 45, intermarried at Billings. The groom had not been previously married. The bride was a widow with grown sons and daughters by her former marriage. The groom owned several small houses and other property in Billings including a modest three-room dwelling at 815 North 18th street where he resided and made his home. The bride’s property consisted of about $50 in cash, a couple of bonds, value not stated, and nine acres of dry farm land located about five miles northeast of Billings.

At the time of the marriage the groom told Ms bride that *58 when he sold any of his property he was going to give her one half of the proceeds of such sales. A few days after the marriage the groom sold a house and received a down payment of $400 and thereupon gave one half of that amount to his bride. Later he sold a couple of city lots and gave her $1,065 of the proceeds of such sale.

Upon their marriage the bride moved into the groom’s home on 18th street. The honeymoon was of short duration.

After living with her newly acquired husband but five days the bride left. She said she “couldn’t stand his attitude” nor his political views. Subsequently the bride returned to Billings and went to live with her mother without informing her husband of her whereabouts. When the groom learned that his wife was at her mother’s place he went to see her and asked her to come home with him which she did, but after three or four days she again became dissatisfied. Thereafter she left her husband on various occasions and for varying periods of time. She made two trips to Michigan where she visited a daughter. On one of the Michigan trips she stayed two months and the length of time she remained away on the other is not stated. At another time she spent three months in the state of Georgia visiting a son. She spent about a month with a daughter at Chico Hot Springs, Montana. She also made two trips to Wyoming, staying there for about two or three weeks on each occasion.

In December 1947, one of her sons came to live at the family home on 18th street where he resided for about three months.

About the time her son came to live with the couple Louis gave Pearl the $1,065, at which time the son commenced building a small house on defendant’s nine-acre tract. By the first week in April this house was suitable for occupancy and on April 5, 1948, Pearl and her son left the family home on 18th Street and moved into the newly constructed house on Pearl’s land where they took up their abode.

Seventeen months later, to wit, on September 8, 1949, Louis commenced this suit for divorce changing wilful desertion from and after April 5, 1948.

*59 Prior to pleading to the action Pearl applied to the court for an order to show cause why Louis should not pay counsel fees to enable her to defend the suit. The order to show cause issued and thereafter on November 15, 1949, the Honorable Guy C. Derry, a judge of the thirteenth judicial district; made an order requiring Louis to pay $100 within five days for fees for Pearl’s counsel.

On December 1, 1949, Pearl, by her counsel, filed an answer and cross complaint, denying the wilful desertion, — charging Louis with extreme cruelty and praying for a decree of separate maintenance.

On December 7, 1949, Louis filed an answer denying the alleged cruelty as well as the other affirmative matters pleaded by Pearl. Issue being joined the case was set for trial for a day certain. Two days prior to the date set for the trial, Pearl petitioned the court for the allowance of an additional counsel fee of $200, to which petition plaintiff interposed objections whereupon, and without hearing or determining Pearl’s petition for additional counsel fees, the court ordered the trial of the cause continued to January 27, 1950, on which date the suit came regularly on for trial on the merits before the Honorable W. R Flachsenhar, a district judge of the sixteenth judicial district, presiding instead of the Honorable Guy G. Derry who deemed himself disqualified.

At the trial, testimony was introduced by the respective parties and at the conclusion of the evidence time was allowed respective counsel for the filing of briefs.

On March 22, 1950, being almost two months after the trial of the suit, Judge Flachsenhar made an order stating that “the defendant is without funds or income” with which to pay her attorney’s fees, and awarded Pearl an additional attorneys’ fee of $200 and the further sum of $73.60 as costs.

Thereafter on May 18, 1950, the same judge made written findings of fact and conclusions of law which he incorporated in a decree wherein he denied Louis a divorce, — denied Pearl separate maintenance and dismissed the action.

*60 From the order of March 22, 1950, and the decree of May 18, 1950, Louis has taken this appeal.

The testimony introduced before Judge Derry prior to the making of his order of November 15, 1949, requiring Louis to pay $100 as counsel fees for Pearl’s attorney is not incorporated in the transcript on appeal filed in this court nor is it otherwise before us.

At the outset of the trial before Judge Flachsenhar, the wife’s counsel called to the judge’s attention the fact that Judge Derry’s order of November 15, 1949, is in the file as is the wife’s petition requesting $200 additional for attorneys’ fees, at which time defendant’s counsel concluded his remarks to the court by saying: “I don’t know whether the Court would care to make an order on that or not.” Thereupon the court inquired: “What is the position of counsel in this matter? What position do you take?” Thereupon, counsel for the husband further objected to the allowance of additional attorneys’ fees and specifically stated the grounds of such objections. Thereupon the following occurred:

“The Court: I wonder gentlemen if you are going to bind me by testimony given at a previous hearing.
“Mr. Wooster [defendant’s eounsel] : No, it occurred to me you might like to pass it for the present.
“The Court: I think so.”

The transcript on appeal shows no further proceeding during the trial on the petition for attorneys ’ fees and contains no evidence showing that Pearl could not proceed with her defense and with the trial without being awarded an additional counsel fee nor does it contain any evidence showing the necessity for such additional allowance.

Proceedings for divorce are purely statutory and the power which the court exercises is only that conferred upon it by statute.

The only statutory authority for allowing suit money or attorneys’ fees is that contained in R. C. M. 1947, sec. 21-137, which, as far as is here pertinent, provides: “While an action *61 for divorce is pending the court or judge may, in its or his discretion, require the husband to pay as alimony any money necessary to enable the wife to support herself * * * or to prosecute or defend the action.”

The right of the wife to counsel fees is not an absolute right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 P.2d 971, 125 Mont. 56, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/docotovich-v-docotovich-mont-1951.