Mayer v. Mayer

117 N.W. 890, 154 Mich. 386, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 729
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1908
DocketDocket No. 92
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 117 N.W. 890 (Mayer v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Mayer, 117 N.W. 890, 154 Mich. 386, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 729 (Mich. 1908).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

Complainant and defendant were formerly husband and wife. On the 20th of April, 1896, the district court of the first district of Oklahoma passed a decree dissolving the marriage between the parties, and awarding the custody of five minor children of the parties to the defendant upon the following terms and conditions :

“The said children are to be sent to the public schools during the school year, and said children are not to be sent out to work unless by permission of the court or judge. The plaintiff is to have the right to visit the said children at their home between the hours of 9 a. m. and 9 p. m. on Wednesdays and Saturdays of each week without interference or molestation from the defendant, the court reserving the right to modify the order in regard to the children at any time.”

The decree further adjudged that the complainant should pay to defendant as alimony for the support of herself the sum of $25 per month, payable monthly, such payments to cease on defendant’s death or in case defendant should marry again. The decree then proceeds as follows:

It is further ordered that the plaintiff pay to the defendant for the support and maintenance of the children the sum of ten dollars per month for each of said children, payable to the defendant monthly, said payments to continue until each of the said children shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one (21) years, or shall have married, or until the further order of the court. As a condition precedent to the payment of alimony by the plaintiff; the defendant is required to turn over to the plaintiff his books, literary, and professional, also the instruments of his profession now being in the possession of the defendant, also his private papers, pictures, and photographs, and the plaintiff may withhold the payment of said alimony until this order is complied with, the cost of packing and shipping to be paid by the plaintiff.”

[388]*388The complainant, who was the defendant in the divorce proceedings, afterwards removed to New York, and the defendant removed to the city of Detroit, in this State, and complainant later also removed to the city of Detroit and filed the bill in this case, which sets up, in substance, that she has substantially complied with all the terms of the decree on her part, but that the defendant has failed to make payments of the amount of alimony due to complainant of |25 per month, that he has failed to keep up the payments awarded to her for the care and support of the children, and that there is now due on each item a large sum of money. The circuit judge found that there was unpaid to complainant for her support at the date of the decree $1,700.50, and that there was unpaid to complainant of the sums which she was entitled to receive for the support of the children $3,172.34, and gave a decree for the total amount of $4,872.84, payable forthwith. The decree not having been complied with, upon proper proceedings had, the defendant was adjudged guilty of contempt for failure to comply with the decree, and an appeal has been taken to this court from the original decree, and also from the order adjudging the defendant guilty of contempt, and the questions involved in both orders are before the court for determination.

The case presents three questions:

First. Whether a decree for alimony made in a court of a sister State, where no reservation of a right to modify the decree appears in the decree itself, and where no such right is conferred upon the court by statute, is such a final determination of the rights of the parties as to create an obligation enforceable in our courts.
Second. Whether the award of money for the care and support of the children, as in this case where there is a reservation in the decree of a right to modify or change the order, either in the statute or in the decree itself, is such a final decree or order as is enforceable in the courts of this State.
Third. Whether, if such decree is either wholly or in part enforceable within this State, it may be enforced by proceedings as for contempt on the failure of the delinquent to comply with the order of the court in chancery.

[389]*389The case of Barber v. Barber, 21 How. (U. S.) 582, affirms the right of a wife under a judicial decree of separation from bed and board who has been awarded alimony by the courts of the State of New York, payable in installments, to maintain a suit in equity in a court of the United States in the State of Wisconsin by her next friend to enforce the payment of such alimony. It was said in the course of the opinion:

“Courts of equity will interfere to compel the payment of alimony which has been decreed to a wife by the ecclesiastical court in England. Such a jurisdiction is ancient there, and the principal reason for its exercise is equally applicable to the courts of equity in the United States. It is that when a court of competent jurisdiction over the subject-matter and the parties decrees a divorce, and alimony to the wife as its incident, and is unable of itself to enforce the decree summarily upon the husband, that courts of equity will interfere to prevent the decree from being defeated by fraud. The interference, however, is limited to cases in which alimony has been decreed. Then only to the extent of what is due, and always to cases in which no appeal is pending from the decree for the divorce or for alimony. * * *
“ The parties to a cause for a divorce and for alimony are as much bound by a decree for both, which has been given by one of our State courts having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and over the parties, as the same parties would be if the decree had been given in the ecclesiastical court of England. The decree in both is a judgment of record, and will be received as such by other courts. And such a judgment or decree, rendered in any State of the United States, the court having jurisdiction, will be carried into judgment in any other State, to have there the same binding force that it has in the State in which it was originally given. For such a purpose, both the equity courts of the United States and the same courts of the States have jurisdiction.”

This case was cited as an authority in Dow v. Blake, 148 Ill. 76, and in Wagner v. Wagner, 26 R. I. 27 (65 L. R. A. 816), and, if the holding be limited to a case in which a final award of alimony has been made in a sister State, with no power reserved in the court, in the decree [390]*390itself or inherent in the court under the law, either the common law or the statute law, to modify or amend the decree as to the amount, its authority should be said to remain unshaken. It will be noticed that, as to the award of alimony to the wife in this case, the decree contains no reservation of authority to subsequently modify the decree. The statute of Oklahoma was introduced in evidence by the defendant, and the only provision which bears upon the power of the court in such cases is as follows:

“When á divorce is granted, the court shall make provision for guardianship, custody, support and education of the minor children of the marriage, and may modify or change any order in this respect whenever circumstances render such change proper.” 2 Rev. Sfcat. Okla. § 4838.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.W. 890, 154 Mich. 386, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-mayer-mich-1908.