Gilbert v. Hayward

92 A. 625, 37 R.I. 303, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 92 A. 625 (Gilbert v. Hayward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Hayward, 92 A. 625, 37 R.I. 303, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 47 (R.I. 1914).

Opinion

Baker, J.

These two causes have been heard together. The first is an appeal from a decree of the municipal court of the City of Providence entered the fifth day of December, A. D. 1913, allowing the claim of Annie F. Hayward against the estate of her deceased husband, Benjamin F. Hayward, in the sum of $28,148. From this decree Mary E. Gilbert, the only child of said Benjamin and said Annie, claimed an appeal. The appeal was heard in the Superior Court by Mr. Justice Doran without a jury and his decision was in favor of said Annie in the sum of $14,101. To this decision both parties filed exceptions and the cause has been heard before this court on bills.of exception of both appellant and appellee.

The claim of Annie F. Hayward filed in the municipal court was for unpaid alimony awarded to her by a decree entered in the Supreme Court of this state, in Providence County, on the 6th day of June, 1874, granting her a divorce from the bed and board of her said husband and giving her the custody of their infant daughter, Mary Elizabeth Hayward, now the said Mary E. Gilbert.

The terms of the award of alimony were as follows: “And it-is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that said Benjamin F.' Hayward pay to the clerk of the Supreme Court, in the County of Providence, to and for the use of said Anna F. Hayward and for a support and maintenance to her and her said daughter the sum of eight dollars per week and at that rate per week payable on the first day of every month until further order of this court. ” The statute in referring to the allowance for the support of a wife in such cases uses the words “a separate maintenance” instead of the word “alimony,” but inasmuch as this last term may be defined thus “alimony is the allowance winch *306 a husband may be compelled to pay to his wife for her maintenance when she is living apart from him or has been divorced” (1 It. C. L. 864), for convenience the term alimony will be used in referring to the allowance granted by this decree.

The parties to the divorce were never reconciled. The decree was never modified. No payments were made under it by said Benjamin after the latter part of 1875. He died October 6, 1912, and thereafter said Annie was appointed administratrix on his' estate. The amended claim of the appellee as filed in the municipal court covers the period included between October 1, 1878 and October 1, 1912, with interest on the several installments from the time they respectively became due. The decision of, the Superior Court applies to the claim the statute of limitations relative to actions of debt on judgment and allows so much of the. claim as accrued in the twenty years next preceding the death of said Benjamin, with interest on the monthly installments to May 26, 1914, the day before the decision was filed.

In the appeal from the decree of the municipal court the appellant stated eleven reasons of appeal, the first, second and eleventh of which were general, and the other eight specific, statements of error. The reasons of appeal were not amended or added to in the Superior Court. The appellant’s bill of exceptions sets out in detail as the grounds of her exception to the decision of the Superior Court what are in substance the said reasons of appeal and all of them with one xiew ground or reason. This new ground of .exception, numbered eleventh in the bill of exceptions, is that the appellee “is equitably estopped by her conduct from claiming any arrears of alimony.” We think this ground of exception is, upon the evidence, without merit. But further than that we are of the opinion that the provisions of paragraph “second” of Section 1 of Chapter 311 of the Ceneral Laws restricting an appellant from a decree of a court of probate in the Superior Court to “his reasons *307 of appeal specifically stated” prevents the raising in this court for the first time of a question going to the merits of the appeal not included in the reasons of appeal. The first and second grounds of exception need no separate discussion as they are identical with the general statements of error in the reasons of appeal from the decree of the municipal court, and are covered by the other grounds of exception.

The third ground of exception raises the question of whether or not the decree in the divorce proceeding is such a judgment for debt that the wife could sue the husband thereon in law or equity, and- constitutes a maintainable claim against the estate of Benjamin F. Hayward, and also the question of whether the enforcement of such a claim is not exclusively in the court granting the divorce, either in the divorce case itself or in a suit in equity auxiliary thereto. The last question is the simpler and may be disposed of first.

(2) Section 3 of Chapter 314 of the General Laws provides that “All persons having claims, including pending suits, . . . •and claims of the executor or administrator, against the estate of a deceased person, shall file statements of their claims in the office of the clerk of the probate court.” The same section provides that claims not so filed within the time limited. theréfor shall be barred except in cases of “accident, mistake and unforeseen cause.” Section 10 of the same chapter provides that if “an executor or-administrator shall file a claim which he had against the testator or intestate in his lifetime, the probate court shall examine and determine such claim.” .This procedure was followed in the present case. From the operation of this statute no claims are specifically excepted, and taking into consideration the whole statutory scheme for the early settlement of estates of deceased persons- in courts of probate, the reasonable and only conclusion is that all claims against such estates are required to be filed in the office of the clerk of said court. This is the necessary *308 initial step in their enforcement. Lawton, Petr., 12 R. I. 210, is not precisely in point as an authority, as that case was under a different statute, but it is of value by way of analogy. We áre of opinion therefore that the method of procedure for the enforcement of her claim followed by the appellee was the only correct one.

(3) But irrespective of the mode of enforcement the important question is whether or not this decree in an action for divorce a mensa et thoro providing for future monthly payments of alimony until further order of the court creates or constitutes an enforceable debt. In the United States the weight of authority is that debt may be maintained on a decree either domestic or foreign for the payment of a specific sum of money unconnected with any condition. 5 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 1069 and cases cited; Wagner v. Wagner, 26 R. I. 27; 2 Black on Judgments, 2d Ed. Sec. 962; Freeman on Judgments, Sec. 434; Page v. Page, 189 Mass, at p. 87. There has been a diversity of decision as to whether an action would lie on a decree requiring payment of future installments of alimony. The question has usually arisen, when an action has been brought upon such a decree in a foreign jurisdiction, under Section 1 of Article IV of the Constitution of the United1 States, the "full faith and •credit” section so-called.

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 625, 37 R.I. 303, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-hayward-ri-1914.