Court Opinion

ID: 3554628
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:06:05.285879+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:06:45.538369
License: Public Domain

Alimony in this state is an allowance to the wife upon the termination of the marital relation by divorce. The authority of the court to make such allowance is purely statutory. Wallace v. Wallace, 74 N.H. 256; Sheafe v. Sheafe, 24 N.H. 564; Parsons v. Parsons, 9 N.H. 309. Under the construction that has been given the statute, with the exception of a small amount granted the wife under some circumstances when she is libelee, for the purpose of making her defence, no award is made except upon a decree of divorce. When the wife is libelant, her expenses are properly considered in determining the amount of alimony. But the wife as libelee is not entitled to an allowance for her support, nor as libelant to one for the purpose of prosecuting the suit pending the final determination of the cause. Rowell v. Rowell, 63 N.H. 222; Ray v. Adden, 50 N.H. 83, 84; Reporter's Note, 49 N.H. vii; Morrison v. Holt, 43 N.H. 478, 482; Morris v. Palmer,39 N.H. 123, 128.
Section 18, chapter 175, Public Statutes, authorizing the court to revise and modify any order made and to make such new orders as may be necessary, does not authorize the court in revising an earlier order to make one which could not have been made in the first place. It does not authorize an allowance to enable the wife to prosecute an application for alimony. In the present case the facts had been determined and the amount of additional alimony decided. In settling the amount, the expense incurred by the libelant was a proper subject for consideration, in which would be included the probable expenditure for conducting the suit to an end in the usual course. The defendant had the right to transfer to this court, upon exceptions duly taken, any questions of law arising in the course of the hearing upon the facts. Laws 1901, c. 78, s. 5; P.S., c. 204, ss. 11, 12. It does not appear that anything took place at the trial to sustain an inference that the defendant did not intend to exercise this right. It must therefore be concluded that the sum awarded as additional alimony included all that ought to be allowed for the expense of litigation. The court, instead of ordering judgment for the plaintiff and putting the defendant to his bill of exceptions, as might properly have been done if the exceptions had been considered frivolous, at the request of the defendant transferred the exceptions with a stipulation *Page 219 
as to the time when the record should be made up, which appears to have been complied with. In this situation, no authority is found for the order then made requiring the defendant to pay the plaintiff's counsel $250 if he insisted upon his exceptions, and vacating the order if the exceptions were abandoned. An allowance for the prosecution of the suit could not have been made at the inception of the proceedings, before it was determined whether the former judgment should be disturbed. Neither can it be made after the precise limit of modification necessary has been decided. While the court had power to regulate the exercise of the defendant's statutory right of exception, it had no power to attach a price to its exercise. An order in effect imposing a penalty upon a party excepting in a proper manner to the ruling or orders of the trial court is beyond the power of that court. Fowler v. Towle, 49 N.H. 507. The exception to the order requiring the payment of $250 to the plaintiff's counsel on or before December 10, 1908, is sustained, and the order set aside.
The remaining exceptions do not present questions of law which were not considered and decided at the former transfer, and are overruled. Whether after the decree of divorce the plaintiff released or could release the defendant from liability for further alimony through a future modification of the decree was not determined at the former transfer, because that question was not presented by the pleadings and had not been tried in the superior court. It was suggested, however, that on the pleadings and facts as they then stood, the agreement as to the amount of alimony which should be decreed could not be construed a release of alimony after the decree was made. The pleadings have not been amended. There is no new evidence or findings. It does not appear to be necessary to add anything to what has already been said.
Case discharged.
All concurred. *Page 220