Prescott v. Prescott

59 Me. 146
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 59 Me. 146 (Prescott v. Prescott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prescott v. Prescott, 59 Me. 146 (Me. 1871).

Opinion

AppletoN, C. J.

This is a writ of error in which the plaintiff seeks to reverse a decree rendered against him in a libel for a divorce, in which the defendant in error was libelant.

The proceedings for a divorce, in some of the States, are by a bill in equity. In others they are by libel or petition. In England they are in the ecclesiastical courts. Error only lies where the proceedings are according to the course of the common law. It may well be questioned if error can be maintained to reverse a decree of divorce. Waiving, however, that question, we will proceed to examine the errors assigned, as they involve matters of practice-of importance and of frequent occurrence.

It appears from the record that, after service of the libel, the plaintiff in error, then libelee, entered an appearance and contested the granting of the divorce; that an issue was formed and joined, and a trial had before the jury, who were unable to agree; that at a subsequent term the cause was opened to a jury, and then, by agreement, taken from them and submitted to the presiding justice, who, after a full hearing, decreed a divorce; that, pending the libel, the court ordered the libelee to pay to the clerk, for the libelant, a certain sum of money for the prosecution of the libel, and make provision for her separate support in a specified amount, to be paid monthly, which not being complied with, the libelee was committed; that after the divorce was decreed, the causé was continued from term to term, until August term, 1868, when the court further decreed “ That in addition to the dower in the libelee’s real estate, to [150]*150which the libelant is by law entitled, and in addition to the sums heretofore ordered by the court to be paid by the said libelee, the said libelee pay to the said libelant, instead of alimony, the sum of six hundred dollars, and in default of payment of the sum with the costs in this libel, legally taxable within twenty days from the final adjournment of the court, that execution issue for the said sum of six hundred dollars and taxable costs, etc.; and also that execution issue for such of the amounts of the monthly, installments, heretofore ordered to be paid by the libelee, as have accrued since his commitment to jail.” .

1. The first error assigned is that the court ordered the libelee to pay the sum of six hundred dollars instead of alimony, “ there being no prayer, claim, or demand for alimony, or for a specific sum in lieu thereof, set forth or contained in the libelant’s said libel, or in any proper plaint, process, or proceeding upon which such decree and judgment could be founded or predicated.”

The decree of a specific sum, instead of alimony, to be paid by the husband to the wife, in case of a decree of divorce, is in accordance with R. S. 1857, c. 60, § 6, The error assigned is that the libel contained no prayer, claim, or demand for alimony, and, therefore, that the court had no authority to decree it or any sum in lieu thereof. '

The claim for alimony can only arise after a decree of divorce. Alimony is or may be an incident to a decree. Jones v. Jones, 18 Maine, 811. It is, necessarily, subsequent thereto. “It may accompany the main proceedings. It may follow them in the final judgment ; it cannot exist in judgment when the divorce, or proceedings for divorce, does not; and it is difficult to see on what principle this matter must be mentioned in the principal pleadings, any more than in a suit at common law, the costs which the party hopes to recover must be so mentioned.” 2 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, § 488. In England, the claim for alimony is never inserted in the libel. Brandt’s Law of Divorce, 197.

In the English practice, the application for alimony is by petition, called an allegation of faculties which sets forth the faculties [151]*151or means of the husband, and prays that alimony may be allowed. It has been, in our practice, usual to insert the claim for alimony in the libel, and this we think the better course; but if this be not done, the libelant, by motion or petition, may, during the pendency of the libel, set forth her claim for alimony. The language of the statute implies that the question of alimony is to be presented for adjudication after the decree of divorce. By R. S. c. 60, § 6, “ The court may also decree to her reasonable alimony out of his estate, having regard to his ability.”

The complaint is made that alimony was allowed at a term subsequent to that in which the divorce was decreed. But to that there can be no valid objection. The motion for permanent alimony is not to be made until after a decree of judicial separation. Brown’s Divorce Court Practice, 144. The proceedings were not necessarily concluded because the divorce was decreed. The cause was continued, and it is to be presumed that the continuance was rightfully ordered.

While the libel was pending, it was subject to the order of the court. The decree might be reversed and the divorce disallowed. As in a default or where a verdict has been rendered, for cause shown, the default may be taken off or a new trial be granted. No error exists, because the hearing of the parties, as to the amount of alimony, was had at a subsequent term, when judgment was finally entered up. Before that was done, the matter was subject to the order of the court.

As the libel was pending, the question of alimony might be presented to the court at any time before the final disposition of the cause. The plaintiff, in error, appeared by his counsel. Their appearance was never withdrawn. It is not to be presumed that a hearing was had as to alimony, except on motion duly made,. nor that the hearing was ex-parte.

2. If the allowance of costs was a matter of discretion, the record sliows they were allowed, and a writ of error cannot be brought to reverse a judgment purely discretionary. If the libelant was entitled to costs, as the prevailing party, no exception on this point can be taken to the judgment allowing her costs.

[152]*1523. The third error assigned is that no deduction from the libel-ant’s costs, as taxed, is made of the several sums, amounting in all to $45, paid by the libelee, under the orders of the court, to enable the libelant to defray her expenses in the prosecution of her libel. By. R. S. 1857, c. 60, § 6, the court may order a certain sum to be paid the wife for the prosecution of the libel. The aid of counsel is required to enable the wife to prosecute. The fees of counsel are not taxable in the bill of cost. Yet they must be paid. There were two trials. The amounts paid are not unreasonable as. a compensation to the counsel engaged in the prosecution. The libelee, if he claimed a reduction from the taxable bill of cost, should have moved to be heard in the taxation of costs. If he did, then the decision of the judge, without exception thereto, concludes the party. If he did not, it is his own negligence, of which he shall not be permitted to take advantage.

In Kendall v. Kendall, 1 Barb. Ch. 611, which was a bill in equity for a divorce, this question arose, and Mr. Chancellor Walworth says: “Nor was it intended that the allowance to her, for costs and expenses of the suit, should be confined to the mere, taxable costs as between party and party. In litigated cases, where the wife is necessarily subjected to extra expenses and counsel fees, in addition to the taxable costs as between party and party, the whole amount which has been advanced to her pendente

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