Winkel v. Winkel

15 A.2d 914, 178 Md. 489, 1940 Md. LEXIS 204
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 31, 1940
Docket[Nos. 8-13, April Term, 1940.]
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 15 A.2d 914 (Winkel v. Winkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winkel v. Winkel, 15 A.2d 914, 178 Md. 489, 1940 Md. LEXIS 204 (Md. 1940).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint was filed on March 10th, 1925, by the wife, Marian I. Winkel, against the husband, Bernard A. Winkel. Its object was to obtain separate maintenance or alimony for the wife, to require the defendant to deliver certain real and personal property which she claimed as hers, and for an injunction restraining the *493 defendant from selling and disposing of certain personal property. The bill was not for a divorce but for alimony. It did not contemplate the dissolution of the marital tie. Nor have the spouses ever been granted either a divorce a mensa et thoro or a divorce a vinculo matrimonii.

After disposing of the questions in dispute concerning the real and personal property, the court decreed “that the defendant pay to his wife pending further order oi the court the sum of twelve dollars a week” for her support and maintenance, beginning from the time she should fully comply with the requirement that she convey by deed to her husband all her title and interest in 'certain real estate. The decree is dated May 23rd, 1925, but the wife failed to convey, and the court appointed a trustee to grant the land to the husband, which was done on September 11th, 1931. The alimony consequently began to accrue from September 11th, 1931. The questions on these appeals begin with that date. Winkel v. Winkel, 176 Md. 167, 169, 170, 4 A. 2nd 128.

The husband has never paid the wife any of the alimony awarded. Her testimony is that her subsistence before September 11th, 1933, was mainly derived from the payment to her by her husband of a weekly rental of twenty-five dollars for a filling station operated by him on a property in Frederick which she owned and whereon she had her home. This source of income having stopped, the wife, on September 11th, 1983, filed a petition that the original decree awarding alimony be modified by an increase. The husband filed a motion for the dismissal of the petition on the ground of the wife’s contempt in not executing the grant to him of the property mentioned in the decree of 1925. There then ensued a protracted course of indecisive pleading and litigation, which culminated in the petition of the wife, which was filed on October 5th, 1937, and amended on March 10th, 1938. In this petition she requested that the alimony be increased to fifteen dollars a week or to such sum as she might be found entitled to, and that she *494 be awarded what she should receive by reason of the husband’s default. The husband filed a combined answer and demurrer. There was a denial of the material facts and of the wife’s right to have revised the decree of May, 1925, and to have re-opened the amount of alimony to be paid. The chancellor overruled the demurrer of the husband and, on his appeal, the chancellor’s ruling was affirmed on February 2nd, 1939, in Winkel v. Winkel, supra. The cause was remanded for further proceedings, which were had. At the time of the remand, the petition of the wife for an increase in the amount of alimony, which was filed on October 5th, 1937, was pending and awaiting determination. On April 13th, 1939, the wife filed three additional petitions. One was for an order to require the husband to pay the solicitors for the wife a counsel fee for their services in connection with the appeal of Winkel v. Winkel, supra; and the costs of the appeal in the equity court until the appeal was taken. The second was for an ordér adjudging that the sum of 87488 was due the wife from the husband for unpaid instalments of alimony, and the third was to compel the husband to pay counsel fees and costs to the solicitors of the wife incurred in connection with the proceedings mentioned. These petitions were heard together. After consideration of the testimony and the argument of counsel, the court decreed, by four separate orders:

First: On the petition of October 5th, 1937, for an increase in the amount of alimony awarded by the decree of May 23rd, 1925, the court reduced the alimony from twelve dollars a week to four dollars a week, accounting from October 5th, 1937, the date of the filing of the petition.

Second: On the petition in reference to the unpaid instalments of alimony the wife was decreed the sum of 83785.14; which was computed, at the rate of twelve dollars a week, for the period from September 11th, 1931, the date of the conveyance of the trustee, to October 5th, 1937, the date of the petition praying for a modification of the decree of May 23rd, 1925.

*495 Third: On the petition for counsel fees for the solicitors of the wife in the appeal in Winkel v. Winkel, 176 Md. 167, 4 A. 2nd 128, the court allowed a fee of $250, and the costs subsequent to October 5th, 1937, which are to be paid by the husband.

Fourth: On the petition for further counsel fees on account of services rendered since the mandate of the appellate court, a fee of fifty dollars and the costs were directed to be paid by the defendant.

After these orders were entered, the husband appealed in one order from every one of the four decrees. The wife took separate appeals from the first three orders. She then filed a petition to have the husband pay the costs of the stenographer’s transcript of the record, of the printing of the record and of her brief, and of a reasonable fee for the services of her solicitors on appeal. The court passed an order fixing the fee at $150, and requiring it and the reasonable cost of the transcript of the record and its printing, and that of her counsels’ brief, to be paid by the defendant, subject to the approval by the court of the amounts of these costs. Both parties entered separate appeals from this last order.

Accordingly, there are six appeals entered on this record. In Nos. 8, 9, 10 there are cross appeals. In No. 11 the husband appeals, and Nos. 12 and 13 are cross appeals.

As a result of the recent decision of this court on the former appeal in this cause, the questions on these appeals are narrowed to a review of the orders made, after the remand, in reference (1) to the allowance of alimony for the period between September 11th, 1931, and October 5th, 1937, at the weekly rate of twelve dollars; (2) to the allowance, after the last named date, of alimony at the reduced rate of four dollars a week; and (3) to the several allowances of fees to the wife’s solicitors. It will be convenient to consider first the question on the awards of alimony.

First: In it orders the chancery court selected the date of the filing of the petition of the wife for an in *496 crease in alimony, instead of the date of its decree, as the time for the reduction in the original award of alimony to begin. In this choice the court is within its authority. The original decree of May 23rd, 1925, for alimony or maintenance was in full effect at the institution of the proceedings which give rise to the pending appeal. The amount of twelve dollars a week for her support and maintenance was awarded “pending further order of the court,” which was a reservation of the right and power of the court to change or stop the allowance whenever the known circumstances of the parties would give occasion for such equitable redress. Wygodsky v.

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.2d 914, 178 Md. 489, 1940 Md. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winkel-v-winkel-md-1940.