Espeland v. Espeland

109 P.2d 792, 111 Mont. 365, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 4
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1941
DocketNo. 8,098.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 P.2d 792 (Espeland v. Espeland) 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
Espeland v. Espeland, 109 P.2d 792, 111 Mont. 365, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 4 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was commenced by plaintiff, Dorothy Ann Espeland, against her husband, Henry Espeland, in the district court for Missoula county. The facts are that in August, 1913, the parties herein were married, and that in October, 1928, the defendant, Henry Espeland, filed an action for divorce against this plaintiff in the Superior Court of the State of Washington for the *367 County of King. Plaintiff in this action filed a cross-complaint in that action asking for separate maintenance. In April, 1929, the Washington court granted this plaintiff a decree of separate maintenance providing in part and so far as here material as follows: “It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that plaintiff [defendant here] do pay to the defendant [plaintiff here] monthly the sum of $95.00 as and for her support, paying the same $30.00 on the 15th day of each month and $65.00 on the 30th day of each month, all until the further order of the court or so long as the plaintiff [defendant here] wilfully continues to live separate and apart from the defendant [plaintiff here] and continues his wrongful abandonment of her and so Icing as he shall wrongfully refuse to live with the defendant [plaintiff here] as a husband should. That the court retains jurisdiction for the purpose of making such orders as may in the future be just and equitable.” Payments were regularly made under the decree for some time, then payments became delinquent and for some period the defendant paid $25 a month, and in May, 1939, he made a payment and then ceased to make any at all.

The complaint alleged the existence and validity of the Washington decree and that under that decree there was owing to the plaintiff in unpaid alimony the sum of $5,815; that the Washington decree had not been modified and that the defendant had continued wrongfully to refuse to live with the plaintiff. The purpose of the action, as stated by the complaint, was to recover a judgment for the unpaid and past due alimony under the Washington decree and to establish that decree as a decree of the Montana court. The answer, after admitting the existence and validity of the Washington decree and the amount of the payments alleged, admitted the amount unpaid as alleged by the complaint, but denied that it was owing. The answer denied that the defendant wrongfully refused to live with the plaintiff and set up by way of,affirmative defense: (1) The statute of limitations; (2) that the obligation created by the Washington decree had been extinguished by an executed oral agreement; *368 and (3) that the decree of the Washington court is not a final decree entitled to enforcement in Montana.

The lower court found after trial that the action was not barred by the statute of limitations, that the decree of the Washington court was not a final decree as contended by the plaintiff but that it was entitled to comity and that the obligation to pay had not been extinguished by an oral agreement. The court found that by acquiescence on the part of the plaintiff and agreement, the parties had reduced the amount of the alimony from $95 a month to $25 a month, and found that 'there were delinquencies in the payment of monthly payments at $25 a month and granted the judgment for that amount.

As to the allegation that the defendant continued to wrongfully refuse to live with the plaintiff, there is a difference of opinion between the parties as to the court’s finding on this question. The first finding of fact is that the parties have continued to live separate and apart since April, 1926, “this being the continued wish and desire of the defendant and against the desire and wishes of the plaintiff who at many times has offered reconciliation and shown her desire to resume marital relations with the defendant.”

Before we consider the specifications and cross-specifications of error, we must first dispose of the motion on the part of the defendant to dismiss the appeal. This motion was based on certain matters occurring subsequent to the decision in the district court, which was made on the 8th day of February, 1940. After that decision through other counsel this plaintiff caused to be issued in the Washington court in the original action writs of execution and garnishment and caused them to be served upon the defendant’s employer, the Northern Pacific Railway Company, and thereafter a stipulation was entered into between plaintiff’s Washington attorneys and defendant’s Washington attorneys, under which the defendant made certain payments to the plaintiff which he now contends amount to an abandonment of this appeal on the theory that by her action in Washington, plaintiff is indirectly enforcing the Montana judgment and taking its fruits, and that she cannot enforce the *369 judgment on the one hand and prosecute her appeal on the other.

The stipulation in question, after reciting the entry of the Washington judgment, refers to the present action, the decree and the present appeal. It then refers to the writs of execution and garnishment,-and after stating that the plaintiff (defendant here) contends that the Washington court had no jurisdiction to issue the writs, provides: “Now therefore the plaintiff agrees to pay defendant Dorothy Ann Espeland, or her said attorneys, the sum of $389.98 out of the funds held pursuant to said writs of garnishment. The plaintiff further agrees to pay to said defendant or her said attorneys the sum of $50 out of his pay check on or about November 15, 1940, and $50 out of his semi-monthly pay check thereafter until the amount due pursuant to said decree of the said district court of Montana in said Cause No. 14120 has been paid in full, thereafter to pay $25 per month pursuant to said decree until the same is modified or set aside.”

The quoted portion of the stipulation contains then the same provisions as to amounts to be paid by defendant as the decree from which this appeal is prosecuted. After this quoted portion, the stipulation contains a provision that the amount paid under the stipulation shall be credited upon any sums thereafter found due from plaintiff (defendant here) to the defendant (plaintiff here) by final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. And, further, the defendant in the stipulation agrees that no further writs issue so long as the plaintiff (defendant here) makes the payments promptly.

The final portion of the stipulation recites “that this stipulation is without prejudice to any legal rights of the parties hereto either in this cause or said cause now pending in the Supreme Court of the State of Montana, and both parties hereto reserve the right to object to the jurisdiction of the court in either of said causes and to assert all legal rights except as herein otherwise expressly provided. ’ ’

The last portion of the stipulation renders any further discussion of the motion unnecessary. The clear import of that *370 provision is that the payments by the husband and acceptance by the wife under the stipulation shall not constitute an abandonment of the appeal, and clearly it did not do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.2d 792, 111 Mont. 365, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/espeland-v-espeland-mont-1941.