Marks v. Marks

100 P.2d 207, 98 Utah 400, 1940 Utah LEXIS 16
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketNo. 6150.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 100 P.2d 207 (Marks v. Marks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. Marks, 100 P.2d 207, 98 Utah 400, 1940 Utah LEXIS 16 (Utah 1940).

Opinions

WADE, District Judge.

In this case, on March 2, 1984, Plaintiff, Lois Canham Marks, the Respondent here, was granted a divorce from *402 the Defendant, Louis Lathair Marks, the Appellant here, and was awarded the custody of their son, Robert Maries, together with the home and an allowance for the support of herself and the child. Defendant was ordered to pay certain obligations and to reimburse Plaintiff for certain interest and taxes. Thereafter Plaintiff moved to Los Angeles, where she remarried; whereupon the amount of the allowance was reduced. Defendant has also remarried.

On August 28, 1937, Defendant petitioned the court to modify the decree by giving him part-time custody of the child. To this the Plaintiff answered, and counter-petitioned the court for judgment for $822.04, alleged to have accrued to her under the original decree, and for expenses and attorney’s fees and an increase in the allowance for support of the child.

After hearing, on December 12, 1938, the court refused to change the custody of the child, increased the allowance for the child’s support, and gave Plaintiff judgment for $490.70, which it found had accrued under the original decree and remained unpaid, and awarded her $80.30 for expenses and $200 attorney’s fees.

Defendant appealed, contending that the findings to the effect that $490.70 accruing to Plaintiff under the original decree was unpaid, are contrary to the preponderance of the evidence. He also contends that the court erred in allowing Plaintiff to amend her petition and in awarding the Plaintiff attorney’s fees and expenses and in allowing Plaintiff $110 for the months of November and December, 1935.

Plaintiff filed cross assignments of error, contending that the findings to the effect that certain items accruing to her under the original decree had been paid are contrary to the preponderance of the evidence. She also contends that the court erred in holding that she has the burden of proving non-payment of such items, and in this court she asks for an allowance of expenses and counsel fees on this appeal.

At the end of the trial the court allowed Plaintiff to amend her petition to claim certain expenses incurred by her in *403 traveling from Los Angeles and back twice and one trip for the boy. The court did not err in this regard, the matter being within its discretion.

Did the court err in allowing the Plaintiff these expenses of $80.30 and attorney’s fees of $200 ? The evidence is ample to justify the court’s finding that these expenses and fees were reasonable, that they were incurred in a bona fide defense of her rights and prosecution of her claims, and that she was without funds of her own. But Defendant contends that after the relationship of husband and wife was terminated by the divorce she had no further claim upon him for expenses and attorney’s fees than she would have in a suit against a stranger. And it must be conceded that there are authorities to that effect; but this court has repeatedly held to the contrary. See Hendricks v . Hendricks, 91 Utah 553, rehearing at page 564, 63 P. 2d 277, rehearing 65 P. 2d 642; Christensen v. Christensen, 65 Utah 597, 239 P. 501; Tribe v. Tribe, 59 Utah 112, 202 P. 213.

In the case of Hendricks v. Hendricks, supra, the Defendant petitioned the court to modify the amount allowed for support money, alleging changed conditions, and Plaintiff cited him in for contempt for not paying the amount accruing to her under the original decree. This court held in favor of the Defendant on both issues, but on rehearing, under Section 40-8-3, Revised Statutes for 1933, awarded her expenses and attorney’s fees of $100. And in Tribe v. Tribe, supra [59 Utah 112, 202 P. 216], the court said:

“Where, as here, a decree of divorce is obtained by the mother * * * and the father * * * is required to pay a certain sum periodically * * * and he, without sufficient cause, refuses to comply with the requirements of the decree, and the mother is compelled to bring1 proceedings against him in court, * * * we can see no good reason why the court, within reasonable hounds, should not require the father to pay counsel fees. * * * If it were held otherwise, the father could compel the mother to fritter away in costs and counsel fees practically the whole of the allowance made for the children by bringing repeated actions to enforce payment of such allowance.”

*404 The expenses and attorney’s fees are in the same class, and we find no error in the court’s decision.

Plaintiff remarried on November 9, 1935, and on the 18th Defendant filed a petition asking the court to reduce the allowance for support from $55 to $15 per month. On December 9, 1935, the parties entered into a stipulation “that the Defendant shall be forever discharged, from the date of said marriage of Plaintiff, from paying alimony to her for her support and maintenance. That the sum payable to the Plaintiff for the use and benefit of the minor child * * * shall be $15.00 per month * * *. Subject to the confirmation of * * * the court.” On December 20, 1935, the court ordered, “That the defendant * * * pay to the plaintiff * * * for the support of the minor child * * * $15 per month, commencing on the 1st day of January, 1936 * * The court allowed the Plaintiff $110 for the months of November and December, 1935. Defendant contends that under this petition, stipulation and order there accrued only $42 for these two months, — $30 for support of the child, $12 for Plaintiff for the nine days of November, — and that the $68 was excessive; that a mistake crept into the order as drawn by the Defendant’s attorney and signed by the court, and therefore that part of the order should be disregarded and the stipulation followed.

In Myers v. Myers, 62 Utah 90, 218 P. 123, 30 A. L. R. 74, we held that the court does not have the power to revoke or modify an installment of alimony which has accrued prior to the making of the application to modify the decree. The installments for November accrued on the 1st and 16th thereof, prior to the filing of the application to modify the decree; so regardless of the stipulation, the court did not have power to revoke or modify these installments. As to the installments for December the order modifying the decree is not ambiguous as to the date when the modification was to take effect; it is not inconsistent with the stipulation, which expressly provides that the change was subject to the confirmation of the court; and *405 no appeal from that order was taken, and it is now, therefore, binding upon the trial court and this court, and no error was committed in following it.

Both parties contend that, this being a suit in equity and there being a conflict in the evidence as to whether the items in dispute have been paid, it becomes the duty of this court to review questions of both law and fact.

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Bluebook (online)
100 P.2d 207, 98 Utah 400, 1940 Utah LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-marks-utah-1940.