Kizer v. Bellar

241 S.W.2d 561, 192 Tenn. 540, 28 Beeler 540, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 301
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 241 S.W.2d 561 (Kizer v. Bellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kizer v. Bellar, 241 S.W.2d 561, 192 Tenn. 540, 28 Beeler 540, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 301 (Tenn. 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mrs. Kizer, appellant here, obtained a decree of divorce from appellee, Bellar, by a decree or judgment of the *542 Circuit Court of Davidson County entered in 1948. That decree awarded her alimony and the custody of the children, and an order that he pay her $175.00 per month for the support of these children.

Because Bellar was in default as to the orders with reference to the payment of alimony and for the support of the children, Mrs. Kizer filed this bill in Chancery for the enforcement of the decree of the Circuit Court in those respects. Bellar filed a plea in abatement wherein it is asserted that the Circuit Court which granted the divorce decree and ordered the alimony and support payments above mentioned had exclusive jurisdiction in these matters. The Chancellor sustained that plea and dismissed the bill. This appeal was had.

The divorce decree ordered the cause retained in the Circuit Court for future orders with reference to the welfare and support of the children. Inasmuch as the bill in the instant case seeks relief not only as to that phase of the divorce decree, but also as to the alimony awarded complainant, it is insisted by one assignment of error that the Circuit Court did not have exclusive jurisdiction of all phases of the relief sought, because the divorce decree purported to retain the cause in Circuit Court only for the support and welfare of these children.

In every divorce decree wherein an order is made for the support and maintenance of the wife and children the cause remains in the control of the Court without regard to whether the decree of divorce so provides, Code, Section 8446, Perry v. Perry, 183 Tenn. 362, 364, 192 S. W. (2d) 830. Accordingly, the assignment of error above stated must be overruled.

The divorce decree awarded Mrs. Kizer (then Mrs. Bellar) alimony in the amount of $31,500.00 payable *543 $500.00 upon entry of the decree, the remainder to he liquidated at the rate of not less than $175.00 per month. That decree expressly declared a lien upon certain personal property to secure the payment of this alimony, but this lien is subject to a $50,000.00 lien thereon to a bank, and on which there was owed at the time of the filing of this bill some $34,000.00'. Mrs. Kizer was likewise awarded certain real estate on which there was an encumbrance of $2,500.00. Bellar was ordered to pay that lien indebtedness so that unencumbered title would be vested in Mrs. Kizer.

It is alleged in the bill that Bellar never has paid the $500.00 due on the alimony which the decree ordered him to pay upon the entry of that decree, and that he is in substantial default in his $175.00 per month payments on that alimony; further that he never paid the $2,500.00 lien indebtedness on the real estate awarded his wife with the result that she had to pay $3,000.00 or more to prevent a foreclosure of that property; further, that Bellar is in substantial default in the monthly payments of $175.00 for the support of the children. The bill alleges that Bellar intends not to make the payments ordered and “will use every possible means to defeat the collection of said judgment and will so manage and control his assets and property as to carry out this purpose”, and that he is now, and will continue, dissipating his assets, including the personal property upon which she was awarded a lien to secure the payment of the alimony awarded her.

The bill prays for a judgment for not less than the amount Bellar is in default in payments, and that Mrs. Kizer’s lien on the personal property “be specifically decreed to be on the items of personal property” de *544 scribed in the bill, and that the lien on the real estate and personal property be enforced by sale and her debt paid after satisfaction of the debt of the bank.

The bill prays for an injunction restraining Bellar from transferring or further encumbering his equity in the personal property mentioned and that a Receiver be appointed to take charge of said real and personal property and collect the rents and profits, and to operate the business, etc.

It is apparent from the foregoing review of the contents of the bill that Mrs. Kizer seeks by that bill to subject the equitable interest of Bellar in certain real estate and personal property to the lien which was decreed her in the divorce decree for the satisfaction of the judgment rendered in that divorce decree.

Code, Section 10352 provides that the Chancery Court has exclusive jurisdiction, in aid of a judgment creditor, to subject to the satisfaction of the judgment property of the debtor which cannot be reached by execution. Because of that code section it is insisted by Mrs. Kizer that the Circuit Court in which the divorce decree was granted doesn’t have judisdiction to grant the main part of the relief which she seeks.

Code, Section 8448 provides that the Court which grants the divorce decree and alimony may sequester the rents and profits of the real and personal estate and appoint a Receiver for the enforcement of the decree, and also may employ for the accomplishment of such enforcement ‘‘ such other lawful means as are usual and according to the course and practice of the court, as to the court shall seem meet and agreeable to equity and good conscience”. Bellar insists that by reason of this code section, among other reasons, the .Circuit Court which granted the divorce *545 decree does have jurisdiction in aid of collection of Mrs. Kizer’s judgment to subject to the satisfaction thereof his equity in property which cannot he reached by execution.

On the other hand, the brief submitted in behalf of Mrs. Kizer calls attention to that language of Code, Section 8448 which says that the Court may employ ‘ ‘ such other lawful means as are usual and according to the course and practice of the court”. She insists that the subjection of the equitable interest of a judgment debtor in property to the satisfaction of the judgment is not “according to the course and practice of” the Circuit Court.

In Broch v. Broch, 164 Tenn. 219, 222-223, 47 S. W. (2d) 84, 85, it was held (by reaffirming a previous holding) “that: Divorce cases, whether heard by a circuit judge or a chancellor, are in the nature of chancery suits, the procedure being (is) according to the courts of chancery”. It seems to necessarily follow that insofar as a divorce case is concerned the authority given by Code, Section 8448 to the Circuit Court to enforce its divorce decree by such means, “as are usual and according to the course and practice of the court”, necessarily means the authority to do anything that a chancery court can do for the enforcement of that divorce decree, because, insofar as that divorce suit is concerned, it is to all intents and purposes a chancery suit. The accuracy of this conclusion is further strongly confirmed by that closing expression in Section 8448 wherein it says that the means employed by whatever Court the divorce proceedings are in shall be such as “seem meet and agreeable to equity and good conscience”,

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W.2d 561, 192 Tenn. 540, 28 Beeler 540, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kizer-v-bellar-tenn-1951.