Honaker v. Honaker

101 S.W.2d 679, 267 Ky. 129, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 101 S.W.2d 679 (Honaker v. Honaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honaker v. Honaker, 101 S.W.2d 679, 267 Ky. 129, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 290 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

*131 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

In this action for divorce, upon submission plaintiff (here appellee) was on January 18, 1935, awarded an absolute divorce, custody of their eleven year old son, Earl Lee Honaker, and alimony in the sum of $15,000, to be paid in installments of $100 on the first day of each month, and recovery of a reasonable attorney’s fee and costs.

Appellant having paid to plaintiff but $50 of the September, 1936, installment, and having failed altogether to pay the installments of alimony for the months of October, November, December, and January, appellee filed separate affidavits and motions for rules in each instance against appellant for these several months, wherein rules were granted and warrants issued against appellant for each of these defaults.

The defendant filed his verified joint response to these five rules issued against him.

In this response, the appellant undertakes to set out the trouble occurring between him and his wife; that the written agreement filed in the record for the payment to her of alimony, and admitting the allegations of the petition and awarding her the custody of their child, was obtained from him through duress; his later inability to comply with this agreement, and various other claims and excuses hereinafter referred to; and asked that the response be treated as an answer to appellee’s petition and that the original judgment be modified; also, that the care and custody of the child be granted to him and that the alimony adjudged be reduced to a sum which he could pay, and the rules discharged.

To this response, plaintiff demurred, which the court upon hearing sustained, when, appellant refusing to plead or respond further, the court rendered judgment, making absolute each of the five rules, and ordered appellant committed to the Floyd county jail.

To reverse this judgment, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The one question thus presented for our review and ■decision is the sufficiency of appellant’s response to these five rules issued against him, charging him with *132 contempt of court in faiing to obey or comply with its judgment against him.

The facts as disclosed by the record (and in good part by the response), portraying the background of these parties ’’ married life, which apparently was shadowed and wrecked by the repeated misconduct and lack of loyalty on the part of the appellant for his wife, appear to be as follows:

The parties were married in the state of Missouri in January, 1922. After their marriage, they lived together eleven years and became the parents of the boy whose care and custody is here involved and who is now about twelve years of age.

Some time after their marriage, the parties left their home in Missouri and moved to Kentucky, to live with appellant’s mother on her large farm in Floyd county.

Upon the wife’s health breaking down while there, she went back with her little son to her father’s home in Missouri in order to regain her health. During her absence, it appears appellant became much enamoured with another woman, after which he seldom wrote to his wife or child, nor did he send her, as promised, any money for their maintenance or their return to Kentucky.

Later, however, despite the appellant’s neglect, the wife managed to get back to Kentucky, when she instituted a suit for divorce and alimony against appellant and attached his property. Thereupon appellant promised reformation and the resumption of their married life, whereby he persuaded her to discharge her attachment against his property and dismiss the suit. This she did and returned to Missouri, he again agreeing to follow her and bring her and the boy back to their home in Kentucky.

An order was thereupon entered, dismissing that suit without prejudice.

It appears that appellant failed to keep his promises given, of reformation and to bring back his wife and child to Kentucky, but at once transferred all of his property, which had been released by appellee from attachment, to his mother and again took up his rela *133 tions with this same woman of whom he had become enamoured, and it is alleged they went to the state of Ohio and entered into a bigamous marriage.

Appellee, being again left without support for herself and child in Missouri, again, unassisted by appellant, made her way back to Kentucky and in September, 1934, filed this suit for divorce and alimony.

She therein alleged the fact of their marriage, the birth of their child, the defendant’s abandonment of her without cause, that he was living in adultery with another woman, that he had treated her cruelly and inhumanly, that he had ample means to support her and his child, that she had no property or income, that she was a fit person, and that the defendant was an unfit person to have the custody of their child and sought alimony in the sum of $15,000.

Further it appears that about the middle of October, 1934, following, appellant went back with appellee to her child and father’s home in Missouri, when they were about to again compromise their differences and resume their married life, when this same woman appeared to interrupt their reconciliation, when he again left with her, abandoning his wife and child.

Upon reaching this decision, when thus animated, to desert his family, it appears that he entered into a written agreement with appellee, by way of a settlement and compromise of their differences and property rights, in which he admitted as true and correct all the above-recited allegations made in her petition for divorce and alimony, and therein further agreed to pay appellee $15,000 at the rate of $100 a month, to give her the custody and control of their child, and to pay her attorney’s fee and costs.

This agreement was filed of record in the suit, and upon later submission of the cause thereon for judgment, it was adjudged by the court that:

“This cause # * * having been heard and considered upon all the evidence herein including the written agreement entered into by plaintiff and defendant on October 20, 1934, and heretofore filed and entered of record herein, the court is of the opinion and now adjudges that plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for herein and agreed upon in said writing.
*134 “It is, therefore, adjudged by the court that • plaintiff, Hazel M. Honaker, be and she is now divorced from the bonds of matrimony with the defendant, Earl L. Honaker, that she be restored to all the rights of an unmarried woman, and that she' be adjudged the custody, care and control of Earl Lee Honaker, the infant child of plaintiff and defendant.
“It is further adjudged that plaintiff * * * now recover of the defendant judgment for alimony in the sum of $15,000, to be paid in installments of' $100 each on the first day of each month until the same is paid in full * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W.2d 679, 267 Ky. 129, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honaker-v-honaker-kyctapphigh-1937.