Court Opinion

ID: 3672521
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:20:27.412019+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:15:25.755392
License: Public Domain

The petition was filed at Spring Term, 1853, alleging violent and abusive treatment and oppression, on the part of the husband, and a final driving of the petitioner from his house, and frequent refusals to let her return, and prays for alimony, c.
The answer of the husband was filed at the return term, and explicitly denies all violence and ill treatment, and denies expelling her from his house, but attributed their dissension to the obstinate and violent temper of the wife. The defendant also answered as to the amount of his property. *Page 529 
At Fall Term, 1853, the Court made an order, that the defendant pay twenty-five dollars into Court, to be applied towards the payment of petitioner's counsel, "and all other matters reserved without prejudice."
At the Spring Term, 1854, plaintiff's counsel moved for an allowance and alimony pendente lite, which his Honor pro forma refused to make, and thereupon the plaintiff, by permission of the Court, appealed to this Court.
In ordinary proceedings, when the party gives a prosecution bond, his suit is entertained and mesne process issues, as of course. But, in proceedings for a divorce, the party is required to exhibit the petition to a Judge, who, upon consideration of the allegations, decides whether the petition is "fit to be entertained." If he thinks it is not, he refuses the order, if he thinks it is, he orders that it may be filed, and process issue.
This preliminary adjudication in regard to the sufficiency of the petition both as to form and substance is required in all cases, and is not confined to those where the party seeks to sue in forma pauperis: it is derived from, and suggested by, the practice of the ecclesiastical Courts in England, where the same person who first passes upon the sufficiency of the petition constitutes the tribunal before which it is finally disposed of. This precaution, like that requiring an oath that the cause of complaint has existed for more than six months, is deemed proper, in consequence of the extreme delicacy of the relation of husband and wife, which ought not to be assailed hastily — ought not to be publicly assailed at all, unless the petition is first submitted to one competent to pass on its sufficiency, according to the party's own showing, because the mere fact of a public assault, although it should turn out to have been made on insufficient ground, *Page 530 
will, in most cases, cause a breach which cannot be easily repaired.
The fiat for entertaining the petition is taken, in all motions in the cause, until the final hearing, as presumptive, on prima facie evidence of the sufficiency of the petition in substance, and in form, and on this ground, the Court in England, when the petition is on the part of the wife, and there is no suggestion that she has a separate estate, make an allowance of "alimony pendente lite;" e. i. something for the wife to live on during the controversy, as a matter of course.
In WILSON v. WILSON, 2 Dev. and Bat. 377, this Court held, that the power to grant "alimony pendente lite" did not exist in the Superior Courts, upon the ground that the jurisdiction in petitions for divorce being given by statute, "the power of the Court must be collected either from the express enactments, or from the general scope of these statutes," and that no power could be derived by inference, or from any analogy furnished by a coincidence of the provisions of the statutes, with the practice of the ecclesiastical Courts in England.
By the act of 1852, ch. 53, it is provided, that where a petition for divorce shall be filed by a wife, the Court shall have power, at the termto which process shall be returned, or at any term thereafter, to decree such reasonable and sufficient alimony as, in the discretion of the Court, may be necessary for the support of herself and family pending the suit, provided that the Court shall have power, at any time during the pendencyof the suit, upon due notice and cause shown, to alter such allowance, as circumstances may require.
The proper construction of this statute, makes it the duty of the Court, at the return term, or at any time when application is made, to act upon the presumption of the sufficiency of the petition, arising from the fiat of the Judge by whom it is allowed to be filed, and to decree, as alimonypendente lite, such an amount as, in the discretion of the Judge, may be reasonable and sufficient. In doing so, the statute does not contemplate that the Court is to look into the petition. For its sufficiency *Page 531 
has already been passed on. Nor is the answer to be taken into consideration, (except in reference to the amount of the allowance,) for it may not be in at the return term. The relative weight to which the petition and answer are entitled, if each is to show for itself, will depend upon whether the wife or husband can swear hardest. Because the merits cannot be decided upon, until the hearing, so, as the same Judge, or one of the same competency, has passed on the petition, its sufficiency is to be assumed.
Accordingly, it is held, (EARP v. EARP, Jones' Eq. 120,) that the relief, as the alimony pendente lite. contemplated by the statute was animmediate one, upon the ground that, after the petition was entertained, the wife was entitled to be supported out of the husband's estate during the controversy; and that, when the Court made an allowance, there was no right of appeal, because the only question that could be brought up, would be in regard to the amount, which was a matter of discretion, and could be altered in the Court below at any time, and an appeal would defeat the purpose; e. i. immediate relief.
It was said in the argument, if there is no right of appeal, when the Court gives alimony, there can be none when the Court refuses to give it. This is a non sequitur. In the former, the Court discharges its duty, and in the exercise of a power given in express words, makes an allowance which, in its discretion, is considered reasonable and sufficient; and, for the reasons given above, this question of discretion cannot be reviewed. In the latter, the Court mistakes the proper construction of the statute, and, in consequence thereof, commits an error, not in a matter of discretion, but in a matter of law. The right to have such an error corrected comes very clearly within the provision of the statutes upon the subject of appeals. Suppose (as we take to be the fact in this case) the Judge to whom the application for alimony is made, instead of acting upon the preliminary adjudication, that the petition is sufficient, considers it to be his duty to look into the petition, as also into the answer, and conceives the law to be, according to the course of a Court of *Page 532 
Equity, upon motions to dissolve injunctions, that the answer, so far as it is responsive to the petition, is to be taken as true, and thereupon refuses to allow to the petitioner that which, under the statute, she is clearly entitled to, "of course" there is an appeal to correct such an error. This opinion will be certified.
PER CURIAM.                           Decree below reversed.