Read v. Read

202 P.2d 953, 119 Colo. 278, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 31, 1949
DocketNo. 16,173.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 953 (Read v. Read) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Read v. Read, 202 P.2d 953, 119 Colo. 278, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 267 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

Beulah Ann Read instituted an action to procure ■ a divorce from Ralph Read, her husband, and, seeking therein to set aside the transfer of realty and personal property by Ralph Read to his mother and father, she joined them as parties defendant.

In the divorce action the wife’s motion for an order requiring her husband to pay certain expenses incident to the proceeding and other allowances and expenses in connection with a criminal action against her was granted, to review which ruling a writ of error was duly issued.

We will herein refer to Beulah Ann Read as plaintiff, and to Ralph Read as defendant.

In plaintiff’s motion she sought an order requiring defendant to pay: 1. $75 per month as temporary support for herself and infant daughter; 2. $50 for confinement expenses incurred at the birth of the daughter; 3. $200 as attorney fees in the divorce action; 4. $150 costs of a transcript in a trial wherein she was charged with murder of the first degree and convicted of murder of the second degree, and a new trial was granted; 5. $1,000 *280 attorney’s fee incurred in her defense in a retrial; 6. $400 for docket fee, transcript of record, and briefs in connection with a writ of error in the Supreme Court to review her conviction of murder of the second degree; 7. $1,000 as attorney’s fee in the last-named proceeding.

The above motion was filed in the divorce action July 26, 1948, and a hearing on the motion had August 10, 1948, at which both plaintiff and defendant testified. The court then entered an order requiring defendánt to pay to plaintiff the sum of $70 per month for the support, of herself and child and an áttorney’s fee of $150, payable in monthly installments of $25 each. Thereafter and on October 2.0, 1948, without further testimony being taken, the court entered “Findings” and “Order,” of which the following is a part:

“Findings.
“From the record and files in this case the following important facts ar.e weighed and considered, to wit:
“December 27, 1946 Karol Read was born to the plaintiff, Beulah Ann Read, and defendant, Ralph Read.
“March 4, 1947 the said Beulah Ann Read and the said Ralph Read were married.
“September 26, 1947 Karol Read died, and for her death the plaintiff was indicted.
“October, 1947 plaintiff'was convicted for causing the death of the said Karol Read.
“November, 1947 there was a break or disagreement between the plaintiff on the one hand, and the defendant and her attorney, Romilly Foote, on the other hand.
“November 12, 1947 John L. Schweigert entered his appearance for the-plaintiff in the criminal case, and her motion for a new trial was subsequently granted.
“December 23, 1947 the defendant Ralph Read conveyed his property, both real and personal, to his father and mother, namely James L. Read and Fannie Read.
“March 24, 1948 plaintiff filed her action for divorce, and to have the conveyance of said property to the de *281 fendants, James L. Read and Fannie Read, set aside and held for naught.
“May 11, 1948 Mary Elizabeth Read, a second child, was born to the plaintiff, Beulah Ann Read, and the defendant, Ralph Read.
“June, 1948 upon retrial of the criminal case, plaintiff was again convicted for causing the death of the said Karol Read.
• “July 26, 1948 the motion now under consideration by the Court was filed herein.
“July 30, 1948 plaintiffs motion for a new trial being denied, she was sentenced to the State Penitentiary and sixty days were allowed to tender a bill of exceptions. .
“September 30, 1948 the Court gave her an additional sixty days to tender a bill of exceptions and perfect her appeal.

“In the different hearings had before this Court, it has been repeatedly proclaimed that the defendant, Ralph Read, readily came to the rescue of his wife, the plaintiff herein, arranged for and financed her defense in the first criminal trial, employed to defend her his present attorney, Romilly Foote; that defendant, Ralph Read, apparently stood ready and willing and was able to help his wife both financially and morally in her application for a new trial and defense in the second prosecution, but for reasons unknown to the Court, there was a breach between plaintiff and her husband and her then attorney, Mr. Foote; that plaintiff insisted upon being represented by an attorney other than Mr. Foote, which defendant refused to obtain for her; that after plaintiff and her relations made arrangement with John L. Schweigert and E. U. Sandoval, her present attorneys, to represent and defend her in her second or new trial, the defendant, Ralph Read, conveyed all of his property, both real and personal, to his parents, James L. Read, and Fannie Read; that ill feeling between plaintiff and her husband, defendant Ralph Read, continued to grow and on March 4, 1948 plaintiff filed her action for divorce. *282 After her second conviction the motion for ‘suit money’ now being considered, was argued to the Court.

“The Court finds that there was an agreement or an understanding of some sort between plaintiff and relatives, who came to her assistance, and her present attorneys, Messrs. Schweigert and Sandoval, relative to representing plaintiff in the second criminal trial; that the transcript of the record of the first criminal trial and defending her in the second trial were matters that had occurred prior to the filing of the motion now under consideration; that these expenses incurred under the surrounding circumstances are not a part of the necessities of life for which this Court has power under the motion now before it to require the defendant to pay.

“The Court further finds that the separation of plaintiff and defendant (wife and husband, respectively), and the defendant’s conveyance of his property on December 23, 1947 left the plaintiff wholly destitute and that she now has no means of subsistence save and except that furnished by the husband under order of Court; that whatever interest, if any, plaintiff may have in the property so conveyed by defendant is now in litigation and cannot be determined for some time; that the plaintiff has at all times contended and still contends she is innocent of the offense charged, and apparently her contention was shared and supported by her husband, the defendant Ralph Read, until the breach between them occurred in November, 1947, when plaintiff saw fit not to accept for her defense the attorney her husband preferred.

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202 P.2d 953, 119 Colo. 278, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-read-colo-1949.