McCall v. McCall

172 S.W.2d 677, 205 Ark. 1123, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 28, 1943
Docket4-7110
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 172 S.W.2d 677 (McCall v. McCall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCall v. McCall, 172 S.W.2d 677, 205 Ark. 1123, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 289 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

ICnox, J.

This litigation was commenced as a suit for separate maintenance, but was later converted to one for divorce. By an interlocutory order, made on January 4, 1940, appellee was directed- to pay appellant $62.50 per month in semi-monthly installments for the support of the two minor daughters of the parties. By means of dilatory payments appellee met all installments to and including the one due May 15, 1940, which he discharged on June 5, 1940, and thereupon payments ceased. Responding to a citation to show cause why he should not be held in contempt for his failure to obey the orders of the court, appellee on July 1, 1940, not only escaped punishment for past defaults, but obtained an order respecting future payments, which reads in part as follows: . . the order heretofore entered requiring the defendant to make payments to the plaintiff for support of said children be suspended and the same is held in abeyance as of June 15,1940, until such time as the defendant may secure employment, and that upon securing employment the defendant is directed and ordered to report to the court the amount which he is earning, to the end that the court may be in possession of information concerning defendant’s ability to resume-payments to the plaintiff for the support of said minor children. ’ ’

Prom June through December, 1940, inclusive, appellee contributed only $15 toward the support of his children. On October 30, he reported to the court that he had found employment, and soon thereafter the court entered an order directing him to pay $17.50 on the 5th and 20th of each month commencing January 5, 1941. Appellee tardily met seven of these installments, making his last payment of $35 on May 20,1941, to cover installments which had fallen dne on March 20 and April 5.

Appellee testified that shortly thereafter he and a partner tried to work a small antimony mine in Pike county, with little or no success; that he then went to Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Fort Smith, Arkansas, on a fruitless search for employment; that for a few weeks he worked intermittently at Fort Leonard Wood as a carpenter, hut earned nothing above expenses. Between. July, 1941, and February, 1942, he was interested in the operation of a drink and food concession at a government war project near Hope, Arkansas, but appellee testified that his partner “pulled out and went west” with the money, and he obtained only experience from the venture. Appellee obtained a food and drink concession at the Ozark Ordnance ■ Plant at ■ El Dorado, Arkansas, where evidently his fortune took a decided turn for the better. Appellee opened an account with the First National Bank of that city by the deposit of the sum of $103.32, on July 11, 1942. From that date until the close of business for said bank on November 5, 1942, appellee deposited to that account in excess of $25,000, and during that time maintained therein an average daily balance of $2,086.08. Appellee admits that his gross receipts from sales during such period equalled $28,000.

On October 28, 1942, the court, on motion of appellant, entered judgment against appellee on account of past due and unpaid installments for $976.25. This sum included the full amount which would have accrued under the order of January 4, 1940, if the" suspension order of July 1 had not been made. This presents a question here. Appellant contends that the order of July 1,1940, merely stayed process for the enforcement of the payments as they accrued, but did not stop the accrual of the debt, while appellee contends that no amounts were chargeable against him while the order of July 1, 1940,'was in effect.

Immediately upon obtaining the judgment of October 28,1942, appellant caused a writ of garnishment to be issued thereon and served on the First National Bank of El Dorado, Arkansas. At the close of business on the day before the service of the writ appellee had on deposit $2,930.39. The-bank in answer to the writ of garnishment stated that it was withholding $976.25, the amount named in the writ, together with $100 to cover cost, and prayed that it be permitted to pay said sum into the registry of the court, and be discharged.

On November 10, 1942, appellee filed his motion to -vacate the judgment of October 28, and prayed that the correct amount due by him be fixed and determined. On January 5, 1943, appellant amended her complaint so as to pray for divorce, and on that day the entire controversy was submitted to the court, and it decreed: (1) A divorce to appellant; (2) that garnishee be discharged upon payment of the sum oE $1,076.36 into the registry of the court; (3) that appellant have judgment for $751.35, being balance due on accrued installments for support of children; said judgment to be paid out of funds paid in by garnishee (this sum did not include any allowance for the period during which the order of July 1 was effective); and (4) that in the future appellee be required to contribute $37.50 per month for the support of each -of his minor daughters until such daughters become of legal age, or until further order of the court.

Appellant- argues that the decree is erroneous in two particulars; (1) that the money judgment awarded her for the support of the children should have been $1,157.50 instead of $751.35; and (2) that appellee should have been required to contribute $50 per month instead of $37.50 for the support of each daughter.

• Whether the effect of the order made by the chancellor on July 1,1940, was to cancel, effective as of June 15, 1940, the original order of January 4, and all rights and liabilities under it, or merely to suspend the-enforcement thereof' is, we think, immaterial. Regardless of whether there was in force and effect a valid order of any court requiring appellee to support his two minor daughters he was under both moral and legal duty to do so. Holt v. Holt, 42 Ark. 495; Jordan v. Wright, 45 Ark. 237; Smith v. Gilbert, 80 Ark. 525, 98 S. W. 115, 8 L. R. A., N. S. 1098; McDaniel v. Brandon & Baugh, 168 Ark. 1063, 272 S. W. 670; Warren v. Moore, 162 Ark. 564, 258 S. W. 361; Johnson v. Mitchell, 164 Ark. 1, 260 S. W. 710; Alcorn v. Alcorn, 183 Ark. 342, 35 S. W. 2d 1027.

Reduced financial circumstances of the father may furnish excuse for his failure to provide support for his child, hut the obligation is not necessarily thereby discharged. Under some circumstances he is liable to another who does supply the necessities to the child. In this case the evidence is undisputed that during the months from June to December, inclusive, of 1940, appellee contributed only $15 to the support of his two minor daughters, and that appellant, the mother, was thereby required to, and, with the assistance of her father, did, in fact, supply such need. We think it unnecessary to determine whether the facts presented by this record would have supported a verdict at law against appellee based on implied contract. The fact that the record contains no itemized statement of the moneys actually expended in this regard likewise presents no difficulty. The matter arose in a court of chancery in connection with the settlement of property rights in a final decree of divorce.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W.2d 677, 205 Ark. 1123, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-mccall-ark-1943.