Court Opinion

ID: 3503099
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:09:53.942779+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:05:34.282728
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff appealed from an order, entered April 23, 1929, amending a decree of divorce *Page 55 
granted October 9, 1917, in which plaintiff was awarded $5 per week as "permanent alimony," the amendment providing full discharge of defendant on payment of $500.
Plaintiff had been awarded custody of two daughters, Helen, who became 16 years of age May 16, 1929, and Evelyn, who will be 16 in December, 1930. The decree made no provision for their support. From the stipulation on file in the original cause, it is evident that the "alimony" was intended for the support of the children.
Defendant has paid considerable sums, but has not fulfilled the decree. He admitted he owed $500. Plaintiff claimed he owed about $1,400. He accounted and produced receipts for some $1,400 paid, and claimed loss of checks and post office and express receipts for $1,140. His story of the loss was not convincing; and although the court made repeated efforts to obtain definite information of the amount unpaid, the testimony of neither party was satisfactory. In March, 1923, and October, 1928, plaintiff brought attachment proceedings against defendant for nonpayment of the allowance. The latter proceeding was the occasion for his present petition.
The court may modify a decree for alimony (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 11417), on a showing of changed conditions justifying it.Quinn v. Quinn, 226 Mich. 239; Reynolds v. Reynolds, 115 Mich. 378;  Kutchai v. Kutchai, 233 Mich. 569. At the time of decree, defendant earned $20 per week and meals. At the time of modification, he earned $60 per week and meals. Plaintiff's earnings at the time of decree were not shown, but at the time of modification she worked as waitress for $40 per month and tips not exceeding $1 in any day. She had paid $300 for *Page 56 
medical services for Helen, owed $250 to a church school for the girls, and for a time had been paying $20 per month for the care of Evelyn in a special church school. She still had the burden of supporting the daughters when the order of modification was made. Because of the size of the original award, defendant's increased income, and plaintiff's extraordinary expense for the children, we do not think the showing of changed conditions justified modification.
The attachment proceeding is not before us, and we are not called upon to determine the amount of defendant's unpaid obligations. Nor have we authority to divert to plaintiff the sum defendant paid into court in compliance with the amended decree. We think the present record does not support defendant's claim of such laches by plaintiff as would constitute a bar to her enforcement of the decree. In any event, that issue is not properly in this case, as it is defensive in character, to be set up against affirmative relief sought by plaintiff, and cannot be made the sole basis of affirmative relief to defendant.
The order modifying the decree will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with permission to take such further proceedings as may be proper from time to time. Plaintiff will have costs.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, and NORTH, JJ., concurred. *Page 57