Court Opinion

ID: 3249054
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:20:31.574293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:20.151226
License: Public Domain

Appellant reserved no exceptions to the register's report fixing alimony pendente lite and an allowance for attorney's fee, the report was in all things confirmed in due course by the court, and the reasonableness of the amounts so ascertained cannot now be considered on an appeal taken from decrees dealing only with the question of appellee's appropriate remedy for the collection of the amounts so awarded. Assuming, as we must in the circumstances, that proper amounts were decreed to appellee, no satisfactory reason appears why appellee should not have an execution for their collection. It is said in 14 Cyc. 796, that:
"A decree for permanent alimony is usually treated as a judgment enforceable by execution like any other judgment; but an order for the payment of temporary alimony or suit money not being final, cannot be enforced by execution, unless the statute directs otherwise."
The proceedings shown by the record before us assimilate the decree to one for permanent alimony. After appellant had failed to comply with the court's orders for the payment of the monthly sums decreed by the court, appellee formally petitioned the court praying that judgment be rendered for the amount in arrear and that execution issue *Page 520 
for the collection of the same. At the end of a proceeding inter partes the court decreed in accordance with the prayer of the petition. The statute (section 3803 of the Code) provides that "pending a suit for divorce, the court must make an allowance for the support of the wife out of the estate of the husband," etc., and this would seem sufficient to dispose of this case. In Webb v. Webb, 140 Ala. 262, 37 So. 96, 103 Am. St. Rep. 30, a case like this, the chancery court had ordered execution to issue. This court seemed to concede that the court might reach and appropriate by any of its processes any money or property of the party decreed to pay. And in Ex parte Whitehead, 179 Ala. 652, 60 So. 924, the court observed, very generally, that:
"If the defendant is contumacious or has property that may be reached, the court will compel obedience to its decree by such writs as customarily issue out of courts of chancery for the execution of justice."
Execution is such a writ, and is, in our judgment, proper in this cause. This ruling will not be found to vary from those in Murray v. Murray, 84 Ala. 363, 4 So. 239, or Brady v. Brady,144 Ala. 414, 39 So. 237. The questions considered in those cases were different from that here raised.
Appellant in response to a levy upon his land set up a claim of homestead exemption. The decree for alimony and attorney's fee was not a "debt contracted" within the meaning of the Constitution and the statutes enacted in pursuance thereof. Murray v. Murray, supra. The amounts so ordered were provided by the court, wholly without regard to the concurrence or acquiescence of the appellant, to the end that the wife might be supported pending the suit and be put in a position to litigate with the husband on something like equal terms. It would be anomalous to hold that an exemption from levy and sale at the suit of creditors — an exemption one leading idea of which is to secure wife and children in the shelter of the family rooftree — should operate to the prejudice of the wife and children in a contest with the husband and father. The claim of exemptions cannot be maintained.
What we have said leads to an affirmance of the decrees and orders assigned for error. It is hardly necessary to say that the decree for alimony will remain at all times subject to change by the court for good cause shown or that the suit for divorce should be expedited to the end that it be determined whether appellant or appellee is at fault in bringing about their present situation, and so whether the operation of the decree for temporary alimony should be continued.
Affirmed. All the Justices concur.