Paul v. Paul

252 N.W. 114, 217 Iowa 977
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 1934
DocketNo. 42012.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 114 (Paul v. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul v. Paul, 252 N.W. 114, 217 Iowa 977 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

*978 Donegan, J.

In November, 1926, Cecile Paul. instituted an action for divorce against Carlton H. Paul, her husband, in which she asked for the custody of their minor child, then nine years of age, and for alimony. Defendant filed a general denial, but, on the trial of the casé, no evidence was offered by the defendant, and a decree of divorce was granted to the plaintiff. Pursuant to a stipulation made by the parties, the decree provided that the plaintiff should recover from the defendant $150 per month as alimony, until such time as their minor child should attain his majority, with a provision that, if the plaintiff, Cecile Paul, should marry, such alimony should cease and the defendant should thereafter be. required to provide the necessary and reasonable clothing for the minor child, Carlton H. Paul, Jr., and furnish said child a good college or university education.

Pursuant to such decree, the defendant paid to the plaintiff the sum of $150 per month until August, 1929, when he filed an application for a modification and asked that the amount of alimony be reduced to $50 per month. No hearing was had upon this application until October, 1930, at which time the parlies again entered into a stipulation by the terms of which the defendant paid to the plaintiff the sum of $1,125 in full settlement of all alimony then due, and agreed to pay $75 per month until the child reached the age of 21 years, with the provision, however, that, if the plaintiff, Cecile Paul, should marry during said period, the said payments should be reduced to $50 per month and be paid to the person or persons keeping or taking care of said child. Said stipulation further provided that said plaintiff, Cecile Paul, should have the right to marry at any time, and that the defendant would pay the reasonable and necessary expenses incurred in sending the son, Carlton H. Paul, Jr., to some good college or university, after his graduation from high school, but that the payments provided for in the stipulation should be used for the education as far as they would go, and the defendant would pay all reasonable and necessary expenses in addition thereto. These stipulations were made a part of a decree, and the original decree was thus modified accordingly.

In June, 1932, the defendant having failed to make some of the payments as provided in the modified decree, the plaintiff caused a general execution to be issued and levied against the homestead which had been occupied by the plaintiff and defendant during their married life and which tbe defendant had continued to occupy *979 at all times after the divorce was granted. Thereupon the defendant filed an original action in equity to enjoin the sale on the ground that the property levied on was his homestead and was exempt from execution, and a temporary writ of injunction was issued as prayed. At the same time, the defendant filed, in the divorce action, a new application for a modification of the decree in which he asked that he be relieved from the payments provided in the decree as modified, and that the plaintiff be enjoined from attempting to collect any alleged judgments against the defendant based upon either the original decree or the decree as modified. Plaintiff, Cecile Paul, filed a resistance to the application for modification of the decree in the divorce action, and filed an answer in the action brought by defendant for-injunction. The two cáses were consolidated and tried together. The trial court entered a decree in the injunction case in which it found that the property levied upon was the homestead of Carlton H. Paul, that it had been occupied by him continuously since the divorce, and that it was exempt from execution, and ordered that the temporary injunction be continued in force so long as he continued to occupy same as a home for himself and family, and that said property be released from the levy of the execution. Upon the application for modification of the decree of divorce made by the defendant, Carlton H. Paul, the court entered a separate decree ordering that the defendant pay into court the sum of $50 per month, beginning November 1, 1932, for the use of the plaintiff, to be held by her solely for the support and education of the son, Carlton H. Paul, Jr., and that the obligation of the defendant to make such payments be made a lien upon the homestead of the defendant, Carlton H. Paul. Said decree further provided that, should defendant fail to make such payments, upon application to the court, order for the issuance of execution could he entered, and upon such order execution should issue and said property be sold, and that the fund realized from said sale be held and used for the purpose of providing an education for said son. Both parties appealed from the decrees entered in both cases. As Cecile Paul, plaintiff in the divorce action, has only very briefly set out the claim that the trial court should not have reduced the amount of the payments, but has devoted practically her entire argument to sustaining the decree of the court in making the payments a lien upon the homestead, we shall, in this opinion, refer to Carlton H. Paul as the appellant and to Cecile Paul as the appellee.

*980 Appellant admits that the court, in its original decree, would have had .the right to subject the homestead to the liability for alimony, but contends that because this was not done in the original decree, the court has no power to subject it to the lien of alimony thereafter. It may be conceded that, where no judgment for alimony is contained in an original decree, a court cannot thereafter decree alimony to a divorced wife except on such showing of fraud or mistake as would justify an interference with the decree in other actions. Rouse v. Rouse, 47 Iowa 422; Spain v. Spain, 177 Iowa 249, 158 N. W. 529, L. R. A. 1917D, 319, Ann. Cas. 1918E, 1225; McCoy v. McCoy, 191 Iowa 973, 183 N. W. 377. And, even where the original decree provides for alimony for a divorced wife, courts will modify such decree in favor of the divorced wife with considerable reluctance. Ostheimer v. Ostheimer, 125 Iowa 523, 101 N. W. 275; Barish v. Barish, 190 Iowa 493, 180 N. W. 724. Where, however, the original decree provides for the care, maintenance, and education of children, the courts will not hesitate to modify the same for the benefit of such children upon proper showing. Spain v. Spain, supra; Ostheimer v. Ostheimer, supra; Keyser v. Keyser, 193 Iowa 16, 186 N. W. 438; Morrison v. Morrison, 208 Iowa 1384, 227 N. W. 330.

While the original decree in this case provided that the payment of ■ $150 should be made to the appellee, Cecile Paul, it is quite apparent that such payment was not for the benefit of appellee alone, but that the decree contemplated the use of at least a portion of said money for the care, maintenance, and education of the child, Carlton H. Paul, Jr. The original decree further provided that appellant would furnish said child a college or university education. The modification of the decree made upon the application of the appellant in October, 1930, shows that the payments therein provided were to a large extent, if not altogether, for the benefit of the minor child, and likewise provided that appellant shall give him a college or university education. In the decree as finally modified upon the application of the appellant, the $50 payments are wholly for the benefit of the child.

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252 N.W. 114, 217 Iowa 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-v-paul-iowa-1934.