Hattie Farm v. Farm Cornn

31 Haw. 574, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 18
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1930
DocketNo. 1954.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 Haw. 574 (Hattie Farm v. Farm Cornn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hattie Farm v. Farm Cornn, 31 Haw. 574, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 18 (haw 1930).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

By decree of a circuit judge, dated May 22, 1926, a divorce a vinculo was granted to the present libellant. The *575 decree provided that the libellee should pay for the support, maintenance, clothing and education of the minor children during their minority and that he should also pay to the libellant as alimony for her support and maintenance the sum of $100 per month, to be paid to her monthly during her lifetime or until she should remarry. In February, 1930, the libellee presented a motion to modify the decree by reducing the amount of alimony payable thereunder, the motion being based upon the ground that his financial ability had been materially altered and reduced. The libellant opposed the motion upon the ground, among others, that the court had no poAver to modify an aAvard of alimony folloAving a divorce a vinculo so as to reduce the amount of alimony payable thereunder even Avhen a sufficient sliOAving is made as to the changed financial condition of the movant, — Avhen that poAver has not been specifically reserved in the decree. The libellant has not remarried.

The trial judge before Avhom the motion Avas presented reserved to this court for its determination the folloAving question: Has the circuit judge “the poAver Avhen not specifically reserved in the decree upon a proper showing as to the changed financial condition of a husband to modify a decree of divorce a vinculo granting a monthly allowance to a Avife as alimony so as to reduce the amount of such alimony payable under the terms of the decree?”

Our statutes relating to divorce contain the folloAving provisions: “Upon granting a divorce for the adultery or other offense amounting thereto, of the husband, the judge may make such further decree or order against the defendant, compelling him to provide for the maintenance of the children of the marriage, and to provide such suitable allowance for the wife, for her support, as the judge shall deem just and reasonable, having regard to the ability of the husband, the character and situation of the parties, *576 and all other circumstances of the case.” R. L. 1925, Sec. 2979.

“Upon annulling a marriage, or decreeing a divorce, the judge may make such further decree as he shall deem expedient, concerning the care, custody, education and maintenance of the minor children of the parties, and determine with which of the parents the children or any of them shall remain; and the judge may from time to time afterwards, on the petition of either of the parties, revise and alter the decree concerning the children, and make a new decree concerning the same, as the circumstances of the parents and the benefit of the children may require.” Ib., Sec. 2980.

“Whenever the judge shall make an order or decree requiring a husband to provide for the care, maintenance and education of his children, or for an allowance to his wife, the judge may require him to give reasonable security for such maintenance and allowance; and upon neglect or refusal to give the security, or upon default of him and his surety to provide the maintenance and allowance, the judge may sequester his personal estate, and the rents and profits of his real estate, and may appoint a receiver thereof, and cause his personal estate and the rents and profits of his real estate to be applied towards such maintenance and allowance, as to the judge shall from time to time seem just and reasonable.” Ib., Sec. 2981.

“Upon decreeing a separation, the judge may make such further decree for the support and maintenance of the wife and her children, by the husband, or out of his property, as may appear just and proper.” Ib., Sec. 2989.

In Alexander v. Alexander, 13 App. Cs. D. C. 334, the precise question now before us came before the court for determination. The substantial question of law involved in the issue between the parties was, as stated by that court, “whether, when a decree has been rendered for a *577 divorce from the bond of matrimony, and in the decree alimony has been allowed at a certain fixed sum per month to the complainant wife as against the defendant husband, with reservation to the former to apply at any time for an increase, but without any reservation to the latter to apply at any time or under any circumstances for a reduction or suspension of the alimony, for any cause supervening thereafter, the court which rendered the decree has any lawful authority to entertain an application on the part of the husband for a reduction of the amount, and to render a decree for such reduction.” Ib., 341. The court said that the question “involves an inquiry into the jurisdiction of our courts with reference to the laws governing divorce and alimony,” and proceeded: “Proceedings for divorce in this District are entirely the creation of statute law. As is well understood, divorce, whether from the bond of matrimony, or from bed and board, was unknown to the common law, both in England and in our own country. But the ecclesiastical courts have long claimed and exercised the authority to grant limited divorces, that is, from bed and board, or judicial separations, as they have sometimes, perhaps more appropriately, been called. The Parliament of England, we believe, sometimes, although very rarely, assumed the authority to grant absolute divorces from the bond of matrimony; and in our colonial days, in Maryland as in other colonies, the colonial legislatures occasionally granted divorces of both kinds, there never having been any ecclesiastical courts in the American colonies. In one at least of the States of our Union that authority is yet claimed and exercised by the state legislature. Now, however, both in England and in most of the States of our Union, and in the District of Columbia under legislation by the Congress of the United States, the authority to grant divorces is vested in the courts of general jurisdiction, generally in the courts of equity, to the ordi *578 nary proceedings of which proceedings for divorce are usually assimilated.” 15., 341, 342. The court then quoted from its statutes which in essentials are not at all dissimilar from ours.

The court continued: “These, we believe, are all the provisions of the statute which apply, directly or indirectly, to the subject of alimony; and from them it is apparent that we are remitted to preexisting law for a definition of alimony, its purposes and' incidents. These were all well known in the ecclesiastical law of England so far as that law was administered by the ecclesiastical courts of that country; and they were recognized and were well known in the courts of the state of Maryland, and to some extent in the judicial procedure of the District of Columbia as derived to'us from that state.

“Alimony has been defined to be The allowance which a husband by order of court pays to his wife, living separate from him, for her maintenance.’ Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, Sec. 549; Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Title Alimony.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Riethbrock v. Lange.
282 P.3d 543 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2012)
Richards v. Richards
355 P.2d 188 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1960)
Tanguay v. Tanguay
41 Haw. 345 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1956)
Harrington v. Harrington
41 Haw. 89 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1955)
Smith v. Smith
39 Haw. 245 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1952)
Sims v. Sims
34 Haw. 237 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1937)
Miller v. Cooke Trust Co.
33 Haw. 690 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Haw. 574, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hattie-farm-v-farm-cornn-haw-1930.