Rose v. Rose

139 A. 667, 49 R.I. 64, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 9, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 A. 667 (Rose v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose v. Rose, 139 A. 667, 49 R.I. 64, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 6 (R.I. 1928).

Opinion

*65 Sweetland, C. J.

The above entitled cause is a petition for divorce now pending in the Superior Court within the county of Washington. It is before us at this time upon the petitioner’s appeal from a decree entered by a justice of the Superior Court vacating a former decree of that court entered by Mr. Justice Sumner.

It appears that on February 15, 1926, said former decree was entered granting to the petitioner an allowance pendente lite of twenty-five dollars per week and also ordering the respondent to pay fifty dollars to the solicitor of the petitioner as counsel fee in the cause. The respondent did not contest the motion upon which said former interlocutory decree was entered and did not seek to obtain a modification of the same after its entry, but failed to comply with its terms. On June 15, 1926, the Superior Court in conformity with the provisions of the statute ordered an execution to issue against the respondent for the sum of $425, the amount at that time due upon said interlocutory decree. Upon September 1, 1926, the respondent was committed upon said execution to the jail in Washington county. Without seeking a modification of the decree the respondent remained in jail until February 14, 1927. On that day he filed in the Superior Court a petition praying that “said decree be vacated and annulled or amended.” In that petition the respondent erroneously set out that a decree had been entered granting to his wife Ellen F. Rose “a divorce from bed and board and alimony.” The only *66 decree which at that time had been entered in the cause was the interlocutory decree for an allowance pendente lile and for counsel fees. In some jurisdictions and by some text-writers an allowance for the support of a wife pending the determination of a divorce petition in which she is a party is termed a temporary alimony. In the cases in this jurisdiction a distinction in terms "has generally been observed by the court between an allowance pendente lite and alimony properly so-called, which is granted to a wife upon final decree in divorce or subsequent thereto. Sanford v. Sanford, 2 R. I. 64; Leckney v. Leckney, 26 R. I. 441. If the allowance under consideration here were in fact alimony proper it could not be enforced by execution under the statute but by proceedings in contempt.

The grounds set out in the respondent’s petition that the decree be vacated are that he was not informed that his wife in her petition for divorce sought to obtain alimony, and also that his wife had “falsely represented” to the court as to the amount of his property. The respondent admits that the citation issued upon his wife’s petition was read to him by the deputy sheriff charged with its service. Hence the respondent can not complain if he has failed to keep himself informed as to the travel of the cause. The respondent also admits that he knew of the proceedings before Judge Sumner through a report of the same which appeared in the public newspapers upon the following day. Furthermore, the deputy sheriff in his return on the citation sets out that he left a certified copy of the petition in the hands of the respondent, which petition contained a prayer for an allowance pendente lite and also for alimony.

If by his allegation that his wife made false representations at the hearing for an allowance the respondent intends to claim that the petitioner practiced fraud upon the court, the record before us entirely fails to support such contention. The respondent did not produce a transcript of the testimony taken upon the hearing at which the allowance was made. The petitioner testified that the evidence as *67 to the respondent’s financial ability given before Judge Sumner was based on admissions made by the respondent to the petitioner and to other persons. We must assume that Mr. Justice S.umner made his decision upon the testimony as to these statements of the respondent regarding the amount of his property. It is to be noted that the respondent at the later hearing to vacate the decree did not deny that he had made such statements to persons other than his wife.

The justice who entered the decree now before us took an erroneous view as to the-nature of the proceedings before him. In response to the statement of counsel that Judge Sumner made his order on the sworn testimony of witnesses the justice said, in effect, that his action upon the petition to vacate the decree for an allowance was entirely indeT pendent of, and in no way affected by, the decree entered by Judge Sumner. The statute provides that an allowance granted to a wife pendente lite “shall be so far regarded as a judgment for debt that suits may be brought or execution may issue thereon for amounts due and unpaid from time to time.” The statute further provides that the court “may make all necessary orders and decrees concerning the same and the same at any time may alter, amend' and annul for sufficient cause.” Under the statute the amount of the allowance due at the time the execution issued, and also the amount due at the time of the later hearing, was in the nature of a judgment for debt, not to be changed by the court unless the former decree should be vacated for fraud or some other reason which would warrant the annulling of a judgment. In cases in which fraud upon the court has not been shown we have held that the power of the Superior Court to alter, amend and annul a decree for allowance pendente lite did not extend to the alteration, amendment or annulment of a decree as the same related to amounts already due thereunder, but solely with respéct to future payments under the same. Grattage v. Superior Court, 42 R. I. 546; Hurvitz v. Hurvitz, 44 R. I. 501; Harvey v. Harvey, 45 R. I. 383.

*68 In case a husband be committed to jail upon an execution similar to the one before us here and it is made to appear that he is entirely without means to satisfy the same a question might arise as to the power of the Superior Court to provide that the execution then under consideration should not continue to run against the husband’s body. Such power might be supported under the court’s statutory authority to make all necessary orders and decrees concerning the allowance, and in accordance with the former holdings of this court that commitments under such executions partake of the nature of contempt proceedings, and also in view of the court’s general control of its processes that they may not work injustice. No question of that nature is presented here, however, for the respondent in his petition has alleged that at the time of his commitment on the execution he was possessed of less than twelve hundred dollars and at the hearing on his petition he testified that he was possessed of $800 in cash which amount was more than sufficient to satisfy the execution.

The justice presiding appears to have given credence to the claims of the respondent as to his financial condition.

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234 A.2d 358 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 A. 667, 49 R.I. 64, 1928 R.I. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-rose-ri-1928.