Reynolds v. Reynolds

24 Haw. 510, 1918 Haw. LEXIS 8
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1918
DocketNo. 1133
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 Haw. 510 (Reynolds v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Reynolds, 24 Haw. 510, 1918 Haw. LEXIS 8 (haw 1918).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

KEMP, J.

This is a petition by Charles A. Reynolds for a writ of prohibition against his wife, Rose S. Reynolds, and the Hon. C. W. Ashford, circuit judge.

[511]*511Rose S. Reynolds brought a bill in equity, in her own name Avithout the intervention of a next friend, against her husband, Charles A. Reynolds, for separate maintenance. The suit Avas brought in the circuit court, first judicial circuit. Hon. C. W. Ashford being the circuit judge to whom equity matters are assigned, all proceedings in the matter Avere properly before him. Summons was issued and served and at the same time an order to shoAV cause why temporary support and suit money should not be alloAved the wife was served. The husband interposed a demurrer to the bill in which he set up and relied upon the ground that the petitioner, Rose S. Reynolds, being his wife, could not maintain the suit in her own name. The demurrer was overruled. Thereupon the husband filed his verified return to the order to show cause. The judge held that his verified return set up no facts which would excuse him from supporting his wife pendente lite. and, without further hearing, ordered that “Chas. A. Reynolds do, and he is hereby ordered to pay to the said Rose S. Reynolds the sum of sixty dollars ($60.00) per month for her support, said payments to be made thirty ($30.00) dollars on the first of each and every month and thirty ($30.00) dollars on the succeeding 15th day of said month until final order or decree is issued in this cause and that the said payment so ordered shall commence with October 1st, A. D. 1918. This order to be temporary and subject to change or modification upon proper proceedings therefor in the discretion of the judge.” The above order was made and entered October 2, 1918. On the following day, October 3, 1918, the husband filed and perfected an appeal from said order and did not make the initial payment of $30 as he Avas therein ordered to do.

On October 4, 1918, on motion of the wife, the Hon. C. W. Ashford, the judge before whom the matter was pending, issued an order to said Charles A. Reynolds to [512]*512appear before bim at Ms chambers on the 7th day of October, 1918, to show canse why he should not be punished for contempt for failure to comply with the sMd order of October 2, 1918, whereupon the said Charles A. Reynolds sued out this writ of prohibition to restrain the sMd Rose S. Reynolds and the said circuit judge from taMng any further proceedings in sMd suit in equity and from taking any further action in the contempt proceedings looking to the punishment of said Charles A. Reynolds for failing to make the payments specified in said order for temporary maintenance dated October 2, 1918, pending a final determination of hi£ appeal from said order.

The circuit judge filed a statement in which he says that he has no answer to make to the writ, and submits himself to such order or decree as this court may make in the premises.

The wife made her return and said among other things that the order of October 2, 1918, commanding her said husband to pay her certain sums of money for her temporary support is in no sense final but purely interlocutory and not appealable. This constitutes her principal defense to the issuance of the writ.

The husband admits that the suit for separate maintenance by the wife against the husband is cognizable in a chancery court but contends that she must sue by her next friend and not in her own name. This and the sufficiency of the return to the order to show cause are the principal questions involved in the appeal of the husband from the order of October 2, 1918, and while counsel have devoted considerable space in their briefs to these questions we do not consider them material to a determination of this case.

The correctness of the court’s ruling in overruling the demurrer to the bill and in holding that the return to the order to show causé did not show facts sufficient to constitute a defense are matters that will be considered upon a [513]*513hearing of the appeal from the order allowing temporary maintenance and have no place in this proceeding. If the order allowing temporary maintenance is appealable and an appeal has in fact been perfected the appeal operates as a stay of all further proceedings thereunder pending-said appeal and this writ should be perpetuated unless some other defect in the proceedings is found.

Counsel attempts to distinguish the order appealed from in this case from the order appealed from in Dole v. Gear., reported in 14 Haw. 554. His contention is that the order for temporary maintenance involved in this case, from Avhich the appeal was taken, is made interlocutory, if not already so, by the recital therein that it is “temporary and subject to change or modification upon proper proceedings therefor in the discretion of the judge” and is therefore not appealable.

We think, however, that it is clear that the judge would have had the right to change or modify the order at any time during the pendency of said cause in the absence of the recital quoted and that this recital in no way distinguishes it from the order in. the case of Dole v. Gear.

Counsel makes the further contention that as a prerequisite to the husband’s right to apply for a writ of prohibition he would have to malee a response to the order to show cause in the contempt proceedings and set up the fact that an appeal from the order in question had been taken as a defense to the contempt proceeding. In other words, he contends that the jurisdiction of the lower court to proceed must be challenged without success before the extraordinary writ of prohibition will lie. No authority has been cited in support of this proposition. We have no doubt that this contention is a correct statement of the general rule (32 Cyc. 624) but we do not think that it .applies in summary proceedings of a quasi criminal character, such as proceedings for contempt where a fine may be imposed [514]*514or the party imprisoned before tbe writ could be applied for. Dole v. Gear, supra.

Counsel has also argued that as the order of the court was that payments shall commence with October 1, 1918, and the appeal was not taken until October 8, 1918, the husband was already in contempt for failure to comply with the order before his appeal was taken and that therefore his appeal came too late. It will be observed that the order urns not entered until October 2, 1918, and while it does provide that said payments “shall commence with October 1, A. D. 1918,” we think that the intention of the order is to fix the time from which the husband should support the wife and was not intended as the date upon which the initial payment should be due. If it were otherwise the payment was ordered to be made upon an impossible date. The order fixes no date in the future when the initial payment should be made. The appeal was perfected before steps were taken to enforce its collection and within the statutory time. We find no merit in counsel’s contention.

The one other question for our determination is, is the order of October 2, 1918, for temporary maintenance, appealable? This depends upon whether it is final or interlocutory. If it is interlocutory it is appealable only with the consent of the circuit judge and he has not given his consent in this case. If it is final an appeal lies as a matter of right. The decisions as to the appealability of such an order are by no means unanimous. In the case of Dole r.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Haw. 510, 1918 Haw. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-reynolds-haw-1918.