Feek v. Feek

60 P.2d 686, 187 Wash. 573, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 719
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 26218. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 686 (Feek v. Feek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feek v. Feek, 60 P.2d 686, 187 Wash. 573, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 719 (Wash. 1936).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This is an appeal from an order requiring the payment of support money due and accruing under a prior decree of divorce, and also from an order denying a petition to modify such prior decree.

In an action for divorce brought by appellant against respondent, a decree was entered July 18, 1923, granting the divorce to the respondent wife and awarding to her the sole care, custody, and control of Richard James Feek, minor child of the parties. At the same time, appellant was ordered to pay to the respondent, for the care and support of the minor child, the sum of twenty dollars per month, to begin as of July 15, 1923, and to continue until the further order of the court.

From July 15, 1923, to October 15, 1935, inclusive, there accrued to respondent, under the decree, the sum of $2,960. Of this amount, appellant paid, in all, the sum of $1,244.92, or an average amount of about one hundred dollars per year, leaving a balance of $1,715.08 unpaid. Within this period, and from January 1, 1930, to October 15, 1935, inclusive, there accrued to respondent, under the decree, a total of fourteen hundred dollars, of which amount appellant paid $500.92, leaving a balance of $899.08 due and owing for the latter period. During the year 1934, appellant paid only $97.45, and during the year 1935 only $60. We are not concerned herein with the delinquencies accruing prior to January 1, 1930.

Richard James Feek, the minor child, attained the age of eighteen years on September 23, 1935, and at all times herein mentioned has been in the custody and under the care of the respondent. The boy has completed his high school education and has since *575 been eager to take a forestry course at the University of Washington. To that end, he has been endeavoring to earn money by working in a gasoline service station. The respondent has also been, and now is, desirous of having the boy enter the university, and in order to render him the necessary assistance, initiated this proceeding to compel appellant to make the payments accruing under the decree subsequent to January 1, 1930. This appears to be the first time that the respondent has taken any legal action to enforce payment of the support money.

Upon the petition, motion, and affidavit of respondent, filed in the original divorce action, an order was issued by the court, on October 21, 1935, directing the appellant to show cause why he should not forthwith pay to the respondent the unpaid delinquencies to the extent of $899.08 and also pay the future installments of twenty dollars per month, as provided in the decree, or, in the alternative, be punished for contempt for his failure in either respect.

Appellant demurred to respondent’s petition, motion, and affidavit, and at the same time sought by his own petition to have the prior decree of divorce modified to the extent of relieving him from further liability for the support of his minor son.

The entire matter was heard by the court upon controverting affidavits, supplemented by the oral testimony of the appellant.

The basis of appellant’s position in the controversy, as shown by his evidence, may be summarized as follows : Appellant remarried in 1930 and is now living with his second wife, by whom he has one child and, at the time of the hearing, had the expectancy of another. The birth of the second child would expectantly entail the expense of a physician, hospital, and nurse. *576 Appellant also has outstanding unpaid hills in the sum of five hundred dollars.

In 1931, he borrowed two thousand dollars from his father and, with another party, • organized a corporation for the conduct of a used car business. The father subsequently advanced a further sum for the purchase of the other party’s stock in the corporation, and at the present time the entire stock of the company is owned equally by the appellant and his father. The appellant still owes his father, on the amount borrowed, the sum of $1,050, for which the appellant’s stock in the corporation has been pledged as security. In the beginning, the business of the company was not very successful, but it has now arrived at a point where appellant is able to withdraw therefrom two hundred or two hundred fifty dollars a month. Out of these earnings received by appellant, he pays his father the sum of fifty dollars per month.

In his affidavit, appellant stated that, “within his means,” he was willing to contribute to his son’s intended education, and that, if the decree were modified as requested by him, he would bend every effort toward contributing twenty dollars per month regularly into a fund for that purpose.

At the conclusion of the hearing upon the evidence submitted, the court made an order, the material portions of which, so far as pertinent here, are contained in three paragraphs. The first of these paragraphs reads as follows:

“That by reason of the laches on the part of the defendant [respondent] in failing prior hereto to enforce her rights under said decree, the plaintiff [appellant] is not now in contempt of court for failure to make all of the payments accruing under said decree as they accrued. ’ ’

In the next paragraph, the court ordered appellant to pay to respondent’s attorneys, for use as a fund to *577 assist the minor son in attaining a university education, the sum of twenty-five dollars per month from October to. March, inclusive, of each year, until the further order of the court, and forty dollars per month for the remaining months of each year. The court further directed that, of these amounts, twenty dollars per month should be applied on account of current installments of support money and the remainder applied on the delinquency to the extent of $899.08.

In the third paragraph of the order, it was provided that, if appellant failed to make the monthly payments as directed, citation should issue directing appellant to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court for such failure.

The court also entered an order denying appellant’s petition to modify the decree of divorce.

From these two orders, this appeal was taken, and cost and supersedeas bonds were duly and regularly posted by appellant.

In his brief, appellant presents five assignments of error, grouped and discussed under two heads. Under the first group of assignments, appellant contends that the court erred (1) in refusing to dismiss the citation upon finding that, because of respondent’s laches, appellant was not in contempt of court; (2) in making and entering an affirmative order as to past and future installments accrued and accruing under the original decree; and (3) in refusing to find that all sums which had accrued under the decree, prior to the statutory period, were barred by the statute of limitations so far as contempt proceedings to enforce the same were concerned.

By reference to what has already been stated herein, it will be observed that this proceeding was initiated by petition, motion, and affidavit, pursuant *578

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 686, 187 Wash. 573, 1936 Wash. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feek-v-feek-wash-1936.