Wilde v. Wilde

2 Nev. 306
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2 Nev. 306 (Wilde v. Wilde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilde v. Wilde, 2 Nev. 306 (Neb. 1866).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beatty, J.,

Lewis, C. J., concurring.

In this case, a bill seeking a decree of divorce from her husband was filed by the plaintiff in the month of April. In the early part of May an answer was filed. On the thirtieth day of May the cause was set for trial on the eighth day of June.

On the fourth day of June, the plaintiff’s attorney gave notice that on the eighth (the same day the case had been set for trial) he would move the Court for an allowance to be made the plaintiff out of her husband’s estate by way of alimony pendente lite, and to enable her to prosecute the suit. This motion was called up at the meeting of Court on the morning of the eighth, and defendant objected to the motion being then heard, because he had not had five days’ notice thereof, and had not been served with a copy of the affidavit on which the motion was based.

The Court took the motion under advisement, and directed the plaintiff to serve on defendant a memorandum of amounts claimed for the prosecution of suit, for support pendente lite, etc.

In the mean time the trial proceeded, and no further steps were taken with the motion (unless it was the furnishing to defendant [307]*307the memorandum of accounts claimed, which the Court had di rected) until the trial terminated in a judgment for the defendant. The statute says an order for alimony in cases of this sort may be made on “ due notice.” We think due notice means such notice as is prescribed for all motions in the General Practice Act, that is, a written notice of five days, when both parties reside in the district where the motion is to be made, as in this case.

As only four days’ notice was given, we think the Court could not properly have heard and determined the motion at the time it was called up, on the morning of the eighth of June, unless by consent of defendant. As this consent was not given, we think the motion was properly laid over.

In the mean time the case came on for trial, and that trial having resulted in a judgment for defendant, we are of opinion that after judgment, the Court could not proceed to determine the motion.

Alimony is granted to a wife applying for a divorce pendente lite, because having made a prima facie case by her bill, she is entitled to the means of establishing that case on trial if it can be done.

Usually a case cannot be brought to trial without money. Therefore the law has provided in the case of married women, whose property is generally entirely under the control of the husband, that he shall furnish her out of the common property with sufficient means to carry on the suit and determine whether she is entitled to the relief sought in her bill. If this were'not done, there might be a total failure of justice, for a tyrannical husband might abuse his wife to any extent and protect himself from the consequences the law visits on such conduct, by denying her the means of asserting her rights m a Court of Justice. Rut if it could be known beforehand that the wife had no just cause of action, the law would not compel the husband to pay the costs of a groundless suit brought against himself. So after it has been determined by the judgment of the Court that it was a groundless action, it would not be proper to make an order for past costs and expenses of such action. Paying the costs after the suit was over and decided could not alter the judgment.

In a proper case, where there was a motion for a new trial pending, or even an appeal pending, the Court below might, in its discretion, allow alimony to enable the wife to prosecute the case to [308]*308final hearing. But when the controversy is entirely ended by a judgment for the husband, who is defendant, it is an error to make an order for past costs and expenses. (See Sections 416 and 417 of Bishop on Marriage and Divorce.)

It is urged that this Court has no jurisdiction in this case because the amount ordered to be paid is less than three hundred dollars. This Court has jurisdiction in all Chancery cases, whatever may be the amount in controversy. This comes within the jurisdiction of this Court. The order complained of was made after judgment, • and is therefore an appealable order under the statute.

The order directing the defendant Jonathan L. Wilde to pay one hundred and ninety-three dollars and seventy-five cents into Court is hereby reversed and set aside, and the Court below will make an order to that effect in its minutes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Nev. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilde-v-wilde-nev-1866.