Stillman v. Stillman

7 Ill. App. 524, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 266
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ill. App. 524 (Stillman v. Stillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stillman v. Stillman, 7 Ill. App. 524, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 266 (Ill. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinions

McAllister, P. J.

The wife, complainant below, the plaintiff in error here, obtained, July 9, 1877, a regular decree by a court of competent jurisdiction, dissolving the marriage between her and her husband, the defendant, for adultery committed by him during their marriage relation. That decree fixed also the amount of alimony which such defendant was to provide for her after such separation, at sixty dollars per month for each and every month, to be payable at the end of each month, and dating from May 1,1877. This the defendantpaid down to and including the month of January, 1880. But on the fourteenth of the last named month, the plaintiff married another man. Although the defendant had himself, before that . time and since the decree, married, as the uncontradicted evidence shows, a prostitute with three children, whom he had kept and supported for some three years next before the decree, yet upon plaintiff becoming married, he set about preparing to get relieved from paying her any more alimony under said decree; and on March 30th, 1880, his application to the court in which the decree was rendered, was made upon affidavits, and by her, in like manner, opposed. The court below, without specifically finding any new fact bearing upon the question, except merely that she had married again since the decree, so amended the same as to relieve the defendant from such alimony, by providing that he should pay plaintiff as alimony one dollar per year in lieu of that of sixty dollars per month, as aforesaid. The defendant’s ability to pay tlie alimony as originally provided, except as it may have been impaired by dissolute and improvident habits, is beyond doubt. He has a large estate, which with proper management and conduct on his part, would yield him an ample income. The court below did not specially find any want of ability. His delictum is as above stated, and without a single mitigating circumstance. She is blameless, unless the fact that slie married nearly three years after the decree a man who earns his living by his own labor, and out of his earnings has to support an aged mother, shall be regarded as a fault on her part; for it affirmatively appeared by uncontradicted testimony, that such second husband’s only income is his wages as telegraph operator, at the rate of seventy-five dollars per month, out of which he has to support an aged mother, and that he is therefore unable to support plaintiff. It seems to us, therefore, that the question to be decided resolves itself simply into this: is the mere fact that plaintiff, two years and a half after the decree of divorce, married again, but to a man unable to support her, sufficient to justify a court of equity, acting upon the principles of natural justice, to thus interfere in favor of a party so culpable, and against one otherwise so entirely blameless?

Before proceeding to discuss this question, it will be well to ascertain the principles which control in the exercise of the power given by statute to subsequently make alterations in a decree respecting alimony. The statute provides that when a divorce shall be decreed, the court may make such order touching the alimony and maintenance of the wife, as from the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case shall be fit, reasonable and just; and in case the wife be complainant, to order the defendant to give reasonable security for such alimony and maintenance, and may enforce the payment of the same in any other manner consistent with the rules and practice of the court. And the court may on application, from time to time, make such alterations in the allowance of alimony and maintenance as shall appear reasonable and proper.

Under this last provision, we do not understand that the ' court, after the decree is passed and the term is closed, has any power to review such original decree as to alimony, and alter it, merely on the ground that it was not a proper one at the time it was made; but the power so given should be Construed as authorizing such alteration only when it is necessary to meet new facts, transpiring after the decree.' Perkins v. Perkins, 12 Mich. 456.

The conclusion would seem to logically follow, that in making such alterations to meet new facts, transpiring subsequently to the decree the court, should be governed by substantially the same rules and guides as in fixing the amount and manner of payment in the first instance. Now, alimony, as applied to the marital relation, has been defined by our Supreme Court to be that maintenance or support which the husband on separation is bound to provide for. the wife, and is measured by the wants of the person entitled to it, and the circumstances and ability of him who is bound to furnish it. Wheeler v. Wheeler, 18 Ill., 39; Foote v. Foote, 22 Ib., 425, in which last mentioned case it was held, that although the allowance was said to be discretionary, yet it was not an arbitrary, but a judicial discretion, and therefore subject to revision on appeal or error.

It follows from these views that the original decree must, as respects the alimony as well as the granting the divorce, be regarded as just and proper at the time of its rendition; and if the alteration was made upon new facts, but which, under the circumstances and the exercise of a sound judicial discretion were insufficient to warrant such alteration, then this court should reverse such supplemental order.

This brings us to the question involved, whether the mere fact of marriage by the plaintiff, as above stated, constituted a sufficient ground for such alteration. If it did, then no other reason for it is conceivable, but one or all of the following: (1), that equity regards the obligation of the husband to provide alimony for the wife, after separation for his delinquency, as only nominal, and a sort of unjust burden, so that the court ’ should seize upon slight circumstances, even upon a mere sup- ' posititions supply from some other source, as a sufficient reason for relieving the defendant from such burden; or (2), that even after divorce she owed him certain duties, among which was that of remaining single during the reception of support from him, so that the loss of said support should follow a breach of that duty by way of forfeiture; or (3), that equity, instead of favoring marriage, favors restraint of marriage.

Does it need argument to prove that each of the above propositions is unsound, if not the very reverse of the true spirit and doctrine of equity? When this woman, being herself blameless, obtained the divorce from defendant, for those wrongful and immoral acts on his part which drove her from her home and the comforts of domestic life, she became thereby wholly absolved from every dirty towards him, except merely those arising'from the principles of a common humanity. But not so as to him; because, as a consequence of such wrong on his part, an obligation arose which has its foundation in natural equity, is recognized by positive law, and bound him to furnish maintenance for her, to be measured by her wants and his circumstances and ability, and to continue during their joint lives, unless she acquired other means of support.

If that obligation is to be regarded as merely nominal, and equity, viewing his position with tenderness, shall hold the burden to be an unjust one, then the court may seize upon even slight circumstances, and relieve him from that burden. Such, however, is far from being the actual case.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ill. App. 524, 1880 Ill. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillman-v-stillman-illappct-1880.