Downing v. Downing

24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241

This text of 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241 (Downing v. Downing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downing v. Downing, 24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

The foregoing cases have been submitted on the motion and demurrer docket. In all three cases a divorce was granted the wife, in each ease by reason of the aggression of the husband. An allowance of alimony was made in each case to the wife in a stated sum of money. In the Downing case the petition did not contain a prayer for alimony; the petition sought divorce only, the prayer being for such other relief as may be proper in equity.

Divorce and alimony is exclusively statutory, the court having no power in equity or chancery as these terms are known and understood in common law and equity system.

[243]*243In the first Pryor case a motion is filed for a modification of the judgment for alimony. On March 10, 1920, Pryor’s wife obtained a divorce for the aggression of her husband. There was one child torn July 17, 1914. The prayer was for divorce, for temporary and permanent alimony and custody of the child. Judgment of divorce to plaintiff was entered March 12, 1920; custody of the child was awarded to the mother. Judgment was rendered for $40 per month for alimony to the plaintiff and for the support of the child.

Two or more motions have been filed to modify the judgment for alimony, which were overruled. A motion is now again submitted for an order of modification.of the judgment. A reduction was made to $8. on May 21, 1922. Proceedings in contempt'have been prosecuted in this case for non-payment.

Pryor was married a second time, and divorced a second time, having two children by his second wife. It was adjudged that he pay to his second wife the sum of $40 for alimony and for the support of the two children.

It is shown by affidavit that his present salary is $135, whereas it formerly was $173. The affidavit shows his fixed monthly expenses to be $156.95, leaving him a balance of $17.95 for himself each month. In none of the three cases does it appear that the husband for whose infractions divorce was granted had any property. All that the three ex-husbands had was what they earned.

It is strange that our courts have so long operated under the statutes of divorce and alimony, and the question of power of the court to make an award of permanent alimony in the form of judgment for a lump sum payable in installments, when the divorced husband has no property — real or personal — and such award must necessarily be payable out of future earnings, until it appeared in the reviewing court in the ease of Lape v. Lape, 28 O. C. A., 108, affirmed in Lape v. Lape, 99 O. S., 143, but upon wholly different grounds.

Justification for an opinion by a trial court after the court of last resort has expressed an opinion may be found-in a de[244]*244sire to advance some views of a contrary nature — on the theory that no question may ever be considered to have been decided, until it is decided right, and further because the Supreme Court having affirmed the Court of Appeals, the opinion contained in the official reports is just an opinion, but not precisely on the judgment. Especially may there be warrant for action by a judge of the old common law shop of justice, if it can be made to appear that the statute is the law — when not read out of existence or materially changed by judicial legislation under the guise of judicial construction; for it is the duty of the trial court to follow the statute.

I would prefer taking my statutes “straight,” just as they came from the Legislature, rather than to have them mixed with a tincture of judicial construction which removes the obvious legislative meaning and purpose, and substitutes a new judicial remedy in lieu of the one prescribed by the Legislature. I desire not to show special consideration for the errant husbands, especially not more than was manifested by the chief justice for the injured wives, but I think his decision to which reference will- directly be made, rather displayed the kind of zeal for the women which would have come more approximately from the Legislature.

After years of litigation under the divorce and alimony statutes there came into the Supreme Court the ease of Lape v. Lape, 99 O. S., 143, on error from Hamilton County Court of Appeals, from whence many good things sometimes come. I think much more of the decision of the Court of Appeals than that of the learned chief justice. In the Lape case reported 28 O. C. A., 108, the court of appeals left .the divorce and alimony statutes just as they came from the Legislature, leaving them unaffected by judicial legislation. That court evidently thought they meant what the language indicated, that their meaning was obvious and simple, that “By no stretch of the imagination, nor by any strained construction of the term ‘property,’ coul-d it be claimed that future personal earnings or future wages come within the meaning of the term ‘property’ as used in the statute.” (Section 11900.)

[245]*245So this court held that divorced wives -could have no alimony when their derelict husbands had no property; but the statutes require that they must have property in order to justify an award of an allowance of alimony in property or in money; that future earnings of the divorced husband do not constitute property possessed by the derelict husbands, which the plain language of the statutes requires, when the court awards alimony.

The divorced wife, Virginia Lape, went to the Supreme Court on error, and one of the finest judges who ever graced that Bench — the first real chief justice — delivered the opinion. He was much wrought up over the great injustice done by the construction placed upon the statute by Brother Hamilton of the appellate court; he dilated to remarkable extent upon the “startling” character thereof, adverting to the alleged “thousands” of erroneous judgments which had been heretofore rendered and enforced — that have worried trial judges who have wrongfully imprisoned some of the husbands.

Time and space will not permit the recital of all the direful things enumerated in the opinion of the chief justice.

When the supreme court took the Lape case in hand, believing that the appellate court interpretation did great injustice to the divorced women and mothers — if the statute really meant what it stated, that alimony can only be allowed out of property real or personal owned at the time of the divorce — the court of last resort — opened the “Book of Judicial Remedies” and found a familiar rule of judicial construction by virtue of which statutory provisions may be correctly diagnosed as either directory or mandatory, and applied the rule of construction applicable to laws classed as directory, and thereby read out the intent of the Legislature, and read into the statute something which under no possible grammatical construction could have been deduced from its plain simple words.

Such plain and simple statutes as Section 11990 appeared to be, a statute in which the legislative intent is expressed In such ordinary, plain, simple language, that one possessing ordinary [246]*246good sense and judgment, and with some legal knowledge and experience ought readily understand and comprehend its meaning. It seems unfortunate that the judicial view was not centered on the judicial conception adopted some years ago by Judge Spear and his associates — reference to which is made later.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downing-v-downing-ohctcomplfrankl-1922.