Snider v. Snider

102 N.E. 32, 179 Ind. 583, 1913 Ind. LEXIS 75
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1913
DocketNo. 21,947
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 32 (Snider v. Snider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snider v. Snider, 102 N.E. 32, 179 Ind. 583, 1913 Ind. LEXIS 75 (Ind. 1913).

Opinion

Cox, J.

Appellant sued appellee for a divorce and she appeared and asked an allowance of $200 for attorney’s fees that she might make her defense. After a hearing on this question the court ordered appellant to pay to appellee the sum named within five days. From this interlocutory order this appeal is brought.

The basis of the claim made in behalf of appellant that the order was improperly made is that it is made to appear that appellee had ample means and credit of her own to enable her to- support herself and make her defense and that therefore the allowance was an abuse of the discretion possessed by trial courts in such cases.

Appellee’s verified application for the allowance shows that the parties were married in 1880 and were separated [585]*585from bed and board for a limited time by decree of the court rendered in 1909 at which time the court allowed her $1,000, and $20 per month; that appellee at the time the allowance now appealed from was asked owned 50 acres of land in Allen County worth about $50 an acre of which only 20 acres were cleared and under cultivation; that she also had a note for $1,500 secured by mortgage on real estate-; that since the decree of separation she h’ad built a house and barn on this land at an expense of $1,800, and had also been to expense in fencing and buying stock for her farm and had so used all the money allowed her by that decree and $1,000 which she had borrowed and pledged the mortgage note for $1,500 as security; that she owed various additional sums amounting in the aggregate to something more than $150; that she had no other money or means' or sources of income than that stated and no means of support other than the cleared 20 acres which was insufficient for her support and that she cannot borrow more money on the $1,500 note. It is further shown that appellant, at the time, owned 150 acres of unencumbered, well-improved real estate in Allen County worth $100 an acre, with machinery, stock and other personal property worth between $3,000 and $4,000; and that in addition, she was informed and believed, he was worth, in money in bank and loaned on real estate, $30,000. It was further shown that she was then 64 years old and had borne appellant four children all of whom had become of age; that she had helped to clear her land and do the work on her farm but could do so no longer on account of growing infirmity, and that appellant had ceased making the payments of $20 a month under the former decree.

In a verified statement in opposition to the allowance, filed by appellant, it is shown that at the time of their marriage he owned 80 acres of land then worth $45 an acre; that when appellee’s father’s estate was- settled she received therefrom $2,400, and that appellant at that time bought 120 acres of land towards the purchase of which she gave [586]*586her inheritance and that sometime thereafter he conveyed to her 50 acres of the land so purchased and that it was then worth $100 an acre exclusive of timber on it, which timber, it was stated, appellee had sold about three years before the application for allowance for $3,000 and had also sold wood to the amount of $500; that during the time they lived together appellee had the income from the milk, poultry and garden produce amounting to about $6 a week; that in addition to this she had horses and cattle to the value of $400 or $500; that appellant paid appellee the $1,000 allowed her on the separation and the $20 a month for a period of two years; and that when she left him she took household goods of t'he value of $200. It is admitted that appellant owned at the time 150 acres of land worth $90 an acre, $400 worth of personal property and $2,000 in money. It is averred that appellant is willing to join appellee in mortgaging or selling her land to raise money to make her defense.

To this appellee responded by a verified statement, in further support of her application, in which it is averred that she possessed certain personal property at the time of her marriage with appellant; that she inherited 40 acres of land which she held for four years during which it produced $1,000 after which she sold it for $2,500 on 4 years’ time at interest; that all this money amounting to $3,500 or more, together with $50 in cash which appellee received from her mother, and $50, the value of a cow belonging to appellee which appellant had sold, was used by appellant in the purchase of the 120 acres of land referred to, which was purchased when appellee was sick in bed and appellant took the title in his own name; that this purchase was made about 20 years before and appellant had the possession and profits of all of the land until in 1904, when he deeded appellee 50 acres of it in consideration for the money so received from her, and since then had received the income of the residue of the 120 acres; that appellee used what she [587]*587received from the farm while she lived with appellant for the support of the family, including the purchase of clothing for herself, the children and appellant. It is admitted that appellee did sell timber and wood off the 50 acres deeded to her to the amount of $3,300, but, it is averred, $1,500 of it was loaned and not available, as shown in her application for the allowance, and that the residue was used in settling the two daughters of the parties when married, and in necessary expenditures for herself; that the household furniture which she took with her when the separation occurred belonged to appellee; that she owned one horse, one cow and calf and a few chickens and no other stock whatever; that she has no ready money and no available means with which to make her defense.

Thus is disclosed the most sordid bickering between two who should long since have learned the lesson of mutual forbearance and should be spending together a placid evening of life in a peaceful common home. Perhaps, if a divorce should be inevitable, conditions are also shown upon which the just hand of a court of equity should be laid in making a proper division of property between the parties. But the question before us is whether, upon the facts disclosed, the allowance can be sustained.

1. It seems to be the contention of counsel for appellant that in a divorce action a trial court has authority to grant suit money or temporary alimony to the wife only when it is shown that she has neither means nor credit with which properly to prepare her suit or defense for trial, and that when it appears that she has some means or credit an allowance is an abuse of discretion which this court will review. Such is not the law either under our statute or the common law. Our statute relating to the question before us provides: “Pending a petition for divorce, the court, or the judge thereof in vacation, may make, * * * such orders relative to the expense of such suit as will insure to the wife an efficient preparation of her case [588]*588and a fair and impartial trial thereof. ’ ’ §1080 Burns 1908, §1042 R. S. 1881.

2. 3. The right of alimony whether pendente lite or permanent is founded on the common law obligation of the husband to support his wife and was recognized in ecclesiastical law. Subject to certain conditions, the wife is, in suits for absolute divorce, whether she be plaintiff or defendant, entitled upon application to temporary alimony where no statute provides for it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 32, 179 Ind. 583, 1913 Ind. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-snider-ind-1913.