Yoder v. Yoder

178 P. 474, 105 Wash. 491, 3 A.L.R. 1104, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 604
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1919
DocketNo. 14993
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 178 P. 474 (Yoder v. Yoder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoder v. Yoder, 178 P. 474, 105 Wash. 491, 3 A.L.R. 1104, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 604 (Wash. 1919).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

Appellant, on August 7,1918, filed his complaint in the superior court against respondent, praying for a divorce, alleging two statutory grounds in two separate causes of action. August 27, 1918, respondent filed her answer, admitting the marriage, denying the grounds alleged for a divorce in toto and in detail, prayed for the dismissal of the action, and at the same time filed her motion, supported by affidavits, for temporary alimony, suit money and attorney’s fees, to all of which appellant replied. This motion being heard by the court on August 28, 1918, on the pleadings, affidavits and counter-affidavits, the trial court made and entered an order allowing temporary alimony in the sum of two hundred dollars per month from August 1, 1918, the first month’s installment to be paid instanter, and thereafter on the first day of each month; fifteen hundred dollars suit money to be paid to respondent’s attorneys or into the registry of the court on September 3, 1918, and to be disbursed by them in preparing her defense; and the sum of three thousand dollars attorney’s fees to be paid into the registry of the court or to respondent’s attorneys or their order on September 3, 1918. The court reserved the power to make other and further allowances for suit money and attorney’s fees, either pendente lite or at the final' hearing, as justice might require. From this order, appellant forthwith ap[493]*493pealed, and gave his appeal and supersedeas bonds in tbe sum fixed by tbe court.

Tbe cause pending here on appeal and a notice to dismiss tbe appeal, was set to be beard on December 17, 1918. On December 9, 1918, respondent made ber affidavit to tbe effect that sbe and ber husband, tbe appellant, bad voluntarily settled, compromised and adjusted all their differences, resumed their marital relations, were again living together as man and wife, and that sbe bad so notified ber attorneys, Messrs. Turner, Nuzum & Nuzum, in writing, on December 9, 1918, and dismissed them as ber attorneys and notified them not to appear further in ber behalf; that sbe “is ready, able and willing to settle with ber attorneys for all compensation due them for services rendered ber in said cause,” etc., etc. Appellant’s attorneys presented their motion to vacate, set aside and bold for naught tbe order of tbe lower court appealed from, upon tbe day of tbe bearing, and supported tbe same by the affidavit above mentioned of respondent^ and affidavit of appellant to tbe effect that tbe parties bad. voluntarily and amicably settled, adjusted and compromised all their differences involved in tbe action and resumed tbe relations of husband and wife. A written consent signed by respondent was also filed at tbe same time “consenting and stipulating that tbe motion of appellant to vacate and set aside tbe order appealed from may be granted” by this court, and counsel for appellant also suggest that tbe entire controversy is limited by tbe fact that this or tbe lower court has no jurisdiction further than to vacate and set aside tbe order complained of, although not abandoning tbe appeal on tbe merits. They also earnestly insist that tbe attorneys who represented respondent have been discharged and have no status before tbe court.

[494]*494On December 5, 1918, prior to notice of discharge, Messrs. Turner, Nuzum & Nuzum filed in the superior court where the cause was brought a written notice and claim of lien as attorneys for their fees in the proceeding, upon all funds ordered to be paid into the registry of the court under the order of August 28, “by virtue of services rendered under special agreement with defendant and whereby they were to receive as compensation from her as attorneys in the action all sums which the court should allow as attorney’s fees, either on the preliminary order or on final decree, and which they were to accept as their compensation.” No part of the attorney’s fees or suit money has been paid to the attorneys who represented respondent, or into court for them.

The situation now is that both appellant and respondent are asking’ the reversal, or the annulment, of the order appealed from, without first satisfying respondent’s attorneys of record, and respondent, in effect, asks that result through the attorneys for appellant. While she has made affidavit that she is “ready, able and willing to pay all compensation due the attorneys” who represented her, she has not done so; and she, while they duly represented her under proper authority, invoked the jurisdiction of the court having the subject-matter in its jurisdiction to compel the payment of her attorneys for their services pending the litigation, in part, and for the expense of her defense, out of the property of the plaintiff, her husband. In so proceeding and in support of her application, she made affidavit that she had no money or means, but was penniless and wholly unable to provide suit money for attorney’s fees, while her husband was possessed of property of the value of a million dollars or more.

[495]*495The allegations against respondent were very defamatory, and she made a very strong showing in support of her application that she was wholly innocent of the charges; that her husband was the dupe of business associates and of a conspiracy, of which she was being made the victim; that her defense was in.good faith; that she desired no divorce, but desired reconciliation with her husband and the resumption of the marriage relations; and that her proper defense would entail very great expense and the procuring of evidence over a vast stretch of territory in and out of this state, and that $10,000 would be a reasonable sum to allow her attorneys and for suit money, preliminarily. At the hearing on the application, there were several affidavits and counter-affidavits presented to the trial court, and upon the pleadings and the showing made we are quite convinced that there was no abuse of judicial discretion on the part of the trial court in making the preliminary order for allowances to respondent for temporary alimony, suit money and attorney’s fees. We are obliged so to decide on the merits of the appeal in determining that alone. We are now confronted with the question whether the attorneys who represented respondent can now enforce that order. We are ever ready to encourage the amicable settlement of litigation, more especially of divorce suits. We believe it to be the duty, both of trial courts and appellate courts, to lay no straw in the way of the reconciliation of estranged spouses at any stage of the proceedings. But we do not believe that by such voluntary act of the estranged parties to a divorce suit they can so summarily and without consideration dispose of counsel who, in good faith, performed very valuable services and expended money in behalf of the wife, who is peculiarly protected in such cases by our law.

[496]*496It is asserted that our decision in Hillman v. Hillman, 42 Wash. 595, 85 Pac. 61, 114 Am. St. 135, is authority for the contention that the attorneys who represented respondent have now no standing as such in this proceeding to have their attorney’s fees settled, but that such fees must be adjusted in actions brought for that purpose. The situation in that case, however, differed from the situation here, in that while an application on behalf of the wife for suit money and attorney’s fees, preliminary, was pending but no order made, the parties voluntarily composed their differences and the wife, individually, stipulated to dismiss her action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P. 474, 105 Wash. 491, 3 A.L.R. 1104, 1919 Wash. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoder-v-yoder-wash-1919.