Folk v. Folk

347 S.W.2d 405, 1 A.L.R. 3d 273, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 596
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1961
DocketNo. 30696
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 405 (Folk v. Folk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Folk v. Folk, 347 S.W.2d 405, 1 A.L.R. 3d 273, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 596 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

DEW, Special Commissioner.

This was originally an action solely for divorce, instituted by the appellant. Respondent filed a general denial of the charges made and also a cross-petition for a decree for separate maintenance. Thereafter respondent also filed a motion for alimony pendente lite and for counsel fees pending the action. Upon a hearing of the motion the Court sustained it, allowing the respondent $400 per month temporary alimony and $1,000 attorneys’ fees pending the suit. Motion to modify and for a rehearing of that order and judgment having been overruled, the appellant has appealed therefrom.

For convenience the parties will hereinafter be referred to, respectively, as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the trial court. The plaintiff contends that the defendant was shown to possess sufficient means to support herself and to pay her own counsel fees without imposing that burden upon the plaintiff, and that, further, the allowances made were excessive.

The defendant insists that the proof shows she is without any income whatever or other property or means with which to support herself and to pay her counsel fees pending the suit, and that the allowances made were not excessive.

Defendant concedes in her brief that under the law she is not entitled, as a matter of absolute right, to temporary alimony or counsel fees pending the action, [406]*406if she is shown to possess adequate means to supply the same. That principle of law is well settled. Whitwell v. Whitwell, 318 Mo. 476, 300 S.W. 455; Stark v. Stark, 115 Mo.App. 436, 91 S.W. 413; Noll v. Noll, Mo.App., 286 S.W.2d 58, 61 and cases therein cited. But defendant strongly asserts that such principle does not apply to her because of her total lack of income or other adequate property.

According to the evidence the plaintiff had previously been married and divorced and had a daughter by the previous marriage. He is a sales agent for several shoe manufacturers and his work requires much travel. He married the defendant in 1954. The separation is alleged as of April 25, 1959. The defendant remained and still resides in the apartment occupied by them prior to the separation. Plaintiff’s gross income for the years 1954 to 1959, inclusive, was shown in his report as follows: 1954, $14,540; 1955, $16,924; 1956, $21,-816; 1957, $14,408; 1958, $13,249; 1959, $13,169. Very substantial reductions, personal and business, were made on each of the above reports, for many of which plaintiff had no records at the hearing. His gross income of $13,169 for 1959 was reduced by claimed business deductions totaling $6,912. That return was later adjusted after his deposition in this case.

Since plaintiff’s separation he has expended about $1,200.00 to set up an apartment for himself, for which he pays $115 per month, including garage. His current personal expenses, not including clothes, drugs, and barber bills, aggregate $308.50 per month, and his monthly business expenses total $269.80, or approximately $3,000 per year. His monthly outlay for his business, living costs, loan payments and budget installments total $971.60. He estimated that since his marriage he had bought $16,000 to $18,000 worth of furniture, to which he had made no objection. He said he had been in debt ever since his marriage to the defendant and that his total indebtness now is about $16,000.

Plaintiff enumerated numerous installment accounts at department stores and other establishments on which he is making monthly payments. One of these was a jewelry account for one of defendant’s lost pearls from her engagement ring and a watch for his daughter, for which he paid about $700. He also owes his father for substantial sums borrowed to pay living expenses. He has borrowed $800 from one of his employers. He sends the defendant $30 per month and pays her utility bills. He has paid $1,200 on a default judgment of $1,818.45 rendered against him and defendant for rent and possession of her apartment. He has not been able to pay her current rent for several months because of lack of funds. He listed six or more charge accounts maintained by him at fashionable liquor and dining establishments.

According to the defendant’s evidence she is 49 years of age and had not been married prior to her marriage to the plaintiff. Prior to her marriage she was employed as a designer for her mother and brother at large establishments in St. Louis and earned $10,000 per year. Later when her mother sold the business she and her mother purchased some corporate stock valued at about $20,000. Defendant, as stated, occupies her apartment at 4905 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis, which the parties occupied before their separation. The mother, Mrs. Ethel Hicks, then a single woman 69 years of age, purchased an apartment building at 6803 Kingsbury,. St. Louis, in part of which Mrs. Hicks and. her own mother (defendant’s grandmother) then 90 years of age, reside. The price of that apartment building was $52,500, and the joint stock of defendant and Mrs. Hicks was pledged to the bank as security for a loan of the necessary cash for the-down payment on the purchase price. The-stock is also held by the bank as security on a loan to the plaintiff. The dividends on. this stock are used to pay the interest on the Hicks’ loan. A deed of trust for $32,-500 was made to a loan company on the-[407]*407Hicks’ building to effect the purchase, on which encumbrance $7,000 has been paid. The deed to the Hicks’ apartment building gives Mrs. Hicks a life interest with right of sale, lease or otherwise to dispose of the property, with remainder at her death to the defendant. The total monthly payment of $561.65 by Mrs. Hicks on these loans, together with the maintenance, exceeds the monthly income from the building. It was stated that the stock was placed in the joint names of defendant and Mrs. Hicks because it would descend to defendant anyway. Mrs. Hicks had supplied $7,000 of its purchase price from insurance proceeds received at her son’s death. Defendant, it was testified, was required to sign the mortgage papers on the Hicks’ apartment because of Mrs. Hicks’ age. Defendant testified that she received no rents from the apartment nor any income from the stock.

The defendant is permitted to occupy her same apartment at 4905 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis, under a new lease made by her mother in her behalf. The landlord would not accept a lease by the defendant or plaintiff. Defendant said she borrowed $500 from her father and sold some of her clothes to pay three months’ rent. She outlined her living expenses at a total of $638 per month. Among the items were $205 rent for the eight-room apartment; regular maid, $135; entertainment, $25; drugs, medicines and cosmetics, $25; miscellaneous, $40. She said she could not move into her mother’s apartment because her grandmother already shared that apartment. She said the $27,000 valuation shown on her fire insurance policies covering household goods and other personal property was an arbitrary value representing the replacement values and not the original cost. Her furs, she said, valued at $4,800, were 14 years old, and her jewels were gifts.

On the matter of counsel fees defendant’s attorney testified that he and his firm had represented defendant in the action for about a year, during which various conferences were held, considerable research made and motions filed and hearings attended. He estimated that approximately 50 hours had been consumed in the matters mentioned, and that the case on its merits will require considerable further service.

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Related

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427 A.2d 361 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1981)
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475 S.W.2d 623 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1971)
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467 S.W.2d 303 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 405, 1 A.L.R. 3d 273, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folk-v-folk-moctapp-1961.