Pedersen v. Pedersen

107 F.2d 227, 71 App. D.C. 26, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2722
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 1939
Docket7318
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 107 F.2d 227 (Pedersen v. Pedersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pedersen v. Pedersen, 107 F.2d 227, 71 App. D.C. 26, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2722 (D.C. Cir. 1939).

Opinion

RUTLEDGE, Associate Justice,

This is a special appeal from an order 0f District Court denying, on Novemfoer 1938, appellant’s motion for maintenance and counsel fees pendente lite, made in her suit for a limited divorce from appellee begun October 19, 1938. The applfcat¡on was hear<i entirely upon the record, each t having filed an affidavit accor d to usual practice. On March 2, 1939, appellant also filed here her petition for majntenance pending appeal, to which answer faas been filed- The answer shows that on January 3, 1939, the court ordered appellee to pay, and he has paid, $300 for costs and expenses of this appeal and counsel fees.

As is admitted, the award of support and counsel fees pendente lite ordinarily is a matter for the trial court’s discretion in the first instance, and its judgment will not be disturbed except by a clear showing of *229 abuse of discretion. 1 Appellant contends and appellee denies that such abuse exists here.

The order does not disclose the grounds upon which it was made, stating merely that it is not a proper case for the allowance of maintenance or counsel fees pendente lite. The conclusion concerning F - r - - counsel fees has been modified by the courts subsequent action awarding fees for prosecution of this appeal, it is not contended that the bill does not state a P ^ o ny, t _ . cause of action. 2 The only arguments made in support of the order are: (1) that appellant is precluded from this relief by the fact that the parties admittedly have lived in the same dwelling since prior to the filing of the bill; (2) that appellee is furnishing adequate support to appellant, and therefore the court has discretion, which it has exercised, to deny an award, Appellant says the first contention is contrary to law, asserts she is receiving grossly inadequate support, and that the court’s refusal to award further support is an abuse of its discretion. We must assume, in the absence of other contentions, that the order was based on one or both of those presented to us. A summary of the facts will be helpful in determining the issues.

Appellee is a patent lawyer, in comfortable financial circumstances, with substantial income from his profession and from securities owned by him. 3 He has followed life-long habits of thrift, saving one-third or more of his income prior to his marriage to appellant in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1933, and apparently thereafter, at least sinc’ 193S. ^ and appellant were fiftyQne and fort ¡ ht of age, reSpecwhen ^ m was filed. The rec_ Qrd ^ n0(. state dearl whether appel- . . , £ -,-v _ * « lant was a resident of Denmark prior to marri It does not indicate that ghe hag ^ ^ count she has . £ , £ , . or little, earning capacity, ’

. Inevitable adjustments required by comparatively late marriage, coupled with and arising particularly from differences regarding money matters, apparently became serious shortly after July, 1935, when appellee purchased a home and had title placed in the parties in tenancy by the entirety. 4 The bill alleges, and it is not denied, 5 that shortly following the purchase appellee told appellant he regretted placing title jointly; threatened to allow foreclosure if she did not reconvey her interest to him, and has been attempting since her refusal to compel her to leave him; has told her repeatedly he hopes for an early separation, and that she should get °ttt of the house.

Beginning with these incidents, the contention appears to have gathered volume constantly, reaching a climax in the latter part of September, 1938, following the return of the parties from an extended *230 vacation by automobile in Canada. Appellee has kept a tight hold on the purse, handling all money except such as he has seen fit to hand over to his wife, forbidding charge accounts and insisting on cash purchases only, which recently he has made himself, and dictating many matters of household management ordinarily regarded as the province of the wife. 6 Extreme financial urgency might justify insistence upon drastic reduction of expenditures, but no showing of such a situation is made here. 7 In short, appellee has regarded all financial matters, including those of expenditure for household needs and personal expenses of living, both for himself and for appellant, as peculiarly and almost exclusively his province, going on the “hand-out” theory of marriage, by which the wife’s part is to receive, without complaint and gratefully, exactly what the husband wishes to give her and no more, having no voice in the selection or quantity, beyond the limit placed by him, of the things essential to living.

Appellant alleges that since September, 1938, the parties have “been living separate and apart without cohabitation”, though sharing the same roof, which is owned by them jointly. They occupy separate bedrooms and eat separately, each preparing the food he or she consumes,' which is selected, purchased and brought into the house by appellee. The bill alleges, without denial, that on September 15, 1938, appellee ordered appellant out of the kitchen and since that time has dedined to allow her to cook any meals for him, but insists upon cooking his own meals. 8 Such association and conversation as occur between them are hostile and acrimonious, each charging the other with constant criticism, nagging, et cetera,

in addition to the shelter .of the home and the food brought in by appellee, appellant has received-small'sums of money from him, handed out in cash a dollar or two at a time, aggregating about $3 a week from September 15 to the date of the order, and since then, as shown by the *231 petition and answer filed here, checks for $5 weekly, with occasional omissions, From these sums appellant’ has had to supply her clothing, the maid’s pay until her discharge, transportation, medical supplies and other necessaries of living in a mod-era city.

This suit is for a limited divorce and alimony, temporary and permanent, or in the alternative, as stated in the briefs, for separate maintenance of the wife under the Code. 9 The two causes of action are distinct not only in the nature of the relief sought, but also in the statutory • causes for which it may be granted. We need not decide whether they can be joined alternatively in a single bill, or whether the bill states a cause of action for separate' maintenance. The issues before us arise on an application for support, suit money and counsel fees pendente lite. Although the briefs appear to regard such an application as appropriate either in a suit for divorce or in one for separate maintenance, the statute [D.C.Code (1929) tit. 14, § 70] purports to authorize an award pendente lite only as incident to a suit for divorce or one for annulment.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F.2d 227, 71 App. D.C. 26, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pedersen-v-pedersen-cadc-1939.