In order that the controversy between the parties may be understood, it will be necessary for the court to present the chronology of this proceeding in some detail.
On January 7, 1942, Helen Bingmer, plaintiff, appellee herein, filed a petition against the defendant, setting out a cause of action for alimony, asking that an order be made requiring the defendant to pay her a reasonable sum as temporary alimony and a further sum as expense money, and that upon the final hearing she be awarded permanent alimony.
On January 24, 1942, plaintiff filed an amended petition in which she prays for divorce from the defendant and that she be awarded permanent alimony.
On February 16, 1942, the court ordered that the defendant pay to the plaintiff as temporary alimony the sum of $75 per month, the first payment to be made as of February 14, 1942, and that such payments continue until the further order of the court. It was further ordered that the defendant pay to the plaintiff, through *Page 523 the office of attorney for plaintiff, the sum of $150 as expense money payable forthwith; and that the payment specified as temporary alimony and expense money be made a lien on all equity owned by the defendant in real estate.
On March 11, it was ordered by the court that the marriage contract existing between the parties be dissolved; that the plaintiff be given the care of the minor son; and that, by reason of the default of the defendant, the plaintiff was entitled to permanent alimony. It was also ordered that the defendant pay to the plaintiff as alimony and for the support and maintenance of her minor son the sum of $12 each week until the minor son arrives at the age of 21 years, and upon the arrival of the minor son at such age the payment of alimony be modified but not vacated.
On October 22, plaintiff filed an affidavit reciting the fact that the defendant had been ordered to pay $75 monthly and a further sum of $150 as expense money and that he had made no payment in compliance with such order.
On the same day it was adjudged by the court that the defendant be and appear before a judge of the Court of Common Pleas on the 24th day of October and there to show cause, if any he has, why he should not be punished as for contempt of court for disobedience of the former order of the court.
A bill of exceptions is presented showing the fact that the defendant deliberately disposed of his property and left the state of Ohio with the woman with whom he is charged with having lived in adultery and went to California where he spent the money that accrued from the sale of property which he owned at the time the court ordered him to pay temporary alimony. Upon his return to Ohio he was cited to appear for a hearing upon application of the plaintiff for a rule in *Page 524 contempt. The bill of exceptions recites that the defendant is guilty of contempt, to which finding the defendant excepted and filed his motion for a new trial for the following reasons:
(1) That the court erred in allowing a rule in contempt against him upon a temporary alimony order issued in February, 1942, and which was subsequently automatically voided by a divorce decree issued on March 11, 1942.
(2) Because said rule in contempt is contrary to law.
(3) Because the rule is contrary to the weight of the evidence.
(4) Because the rule is not supported by sufficient evidence.
(5) And for other errors.
The court overruled such motion and entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.
On October 24, the defendant filed an answer and prayed that the amended petition be dismissed.
We do not find in the transcript of the docket and journal entries any formal entry finding the defendant guilty of contempt, but do find the original entry which was not noted in the transcript. It was filed October 30, 1942. In this entry the court finds the defendant guilty of contempt. The transcript may be amended so as to show this entry in its proper place.
On October 31, defendant filed a motion for a rehearing on the rule in contempt for the following reasons:
(1) That the court erred in allowing a rule in contempt against him on a temporary alimony order which was issued in February, 1942, and was subsequently automatically voided by a divorce decree issued on March 11th. *Page 525
(2) Because the rule in contempt is contrary to law.
(3) Because such rule is contrary to the weight of the evidence.
(4) Because such rule is not supported by sufficient evidence.
(5) For further errors.
On November 16, 1942, defendant filed his notice of appeal to review a judgment of guilty on the charge of contempt, and the court fixed the appeal bond in the sum of $50.
The substance of this rather complicated proceeding is an appeal from the order of the court finding the defendant guilty of contempt in that he failed to pay the temporary alimony ordered by the court, in accordance with the court's order and in direct contempt thereof.
The defendant has filed a brief seeking to sustain his position, the substance of which is that after the court had ordered the plaintiff to pay temporary alimony, a subsequent decree for divorce granted on an amended petition automatically dissolved the first order made by the court for the payment of temporary alimony. This is a novel position and is not sustained by any cases in Ohio and does not commend itself in our judgment.
The court made an order requiring defendant to pay temporary alimony. The defendant has refused to pay the same. While the first petition was for alimony only, the second petition was for divorce and alimony. The filing of the second petition and the judgment thereon did not automatically void the judgment of the court ordering the defendant to pay temporary alimony. The order is still extant upon the records of the court and before the defendant could have avoided its consequences he should have taken some action by which the court could have set aside the entry. Even though the court may have been wrong in granting the order for temporary alimony, yet it is an order of the *Page 526 court entitled to be observed by the defendant. The defendant sought to avoid it by leaving the city of Columbus and going to California with his paramour, where he squandered the property that he had at the time the court ordered him to pay the temporary alimony. If it were possible that he could, by such proceeding, secure the voidance of the court order requiring him to pay alimony, then such proceeding upon his part would be a travesty upon justice.
We remark that the record in this case is most carelessly prepared and has caused the court several hours of diligent research in order to straighten out that which the defendant should have put in order before he filed an appeal in this court. Any future filings such as appear here will be dismissed.
Judgment of the court below affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
BARNES, P.J., and HORNBECK, J., concur. *Page 527