Clisby v. Clisby

MAYFIELD. J.

Appellant filed her petition in the chancery court of Jefferson county to compel the payment, by appellee, of a continuing allowance for alimony, in accordance with a decree theretofore rendered in that court on March 11, 1908. This decree awarded petitioner $100 per month as alimony. The petition alleged that appellee was five months in arrears in the payment of such allowance, and sought an order of the court to compel the payment by appropriate process and orders. The chancellor denied the petition, and appellant prosecutes an appeal to this court from that order, and seeks, as an alternative, an order of mandamus from this court to the chancellor directing him to proceed to compel the payments of such decree as theretofore rendered in that court.

The decree for alimony was rendered on a bill filed by appellant, for alimony only, on February 2, 1907. On February 26, 1908, the chancellor made an order allowing complainant $100 per month as alimony pendente lite to begin from November 6, 1907; and on the hearing on March 11, 1908, the chancellor made this allowance a continuing order of $100 per month, but disallowed any counsel fees to complainant. The original bill had been amended by alleging that complainant had two children, the result of the marriage, to support and care for, and set up an agreement of separation by which appellee promised to pay her $100 per month for the sup*24port of herself and children. From that decree of continuing alimony of March 23, 1908, and which disallowed counsel fees to complainant, she appealed to this court; and the decree of the chancery court was affirmed in part (in so far as it allowed $100 per month as continuing- alimony), and reversed in part, so as to require the payment of $400 as counsel fees, and to allow $100 to complainant from the time respondent had failed to pay $100 per month in accordance with the agreement. On the remandment of the cause to the chancery court, a decree in accordance with the decision of this court was by agreement entered on June 29, 1909. Since that date the respondent had paid to the complainant $1,500 as attorney’s fees' and allowance; and this petition is to enforce the payment of the balance due thereunder.

Appellee answered the petition of appellant, setting-up the fact that since the rendition of the decrees and orders in the chancery court heretofore mentioned the petitioner had filed a separate and distinct bill against the petitioner for divorce in another court, to-wit, the city court of Birmingham; that she allowed that bill to be dismissed for want of prosecution, and then filed another, in the same court, against appellee, for both divorce and alimony; that he had answered this bill, and the testimony had been taken, and on July 28, 1909, a decree was there rendered granting- complainant the relief prayed, and ordering a reference to ascertain the proper amount to be awarded complainant as alimony; that the reference had been taken, and the clerk and register of that court had reported back to the court his findings and recommended the amounts to be so allowed complainant. The respondent made copies of all these, subsequent proceedings in the city court of Birmingham exhibits to his answer to the petition. These *25exhibits show that the city court has granted an interlocutory decree for complainant, and awarded her permanent alimony in connection therewith, and that evidence for these purposes has been taken by both parties, showing the property owned by each and the financial and social condition of each. The financial condition of the parties is now made to appear to be different from that alleged by complainant in her various bills and petitions against respondent for divorce and alimony.

It may be that this change of status or condition of the parties induced the chancellor to deny appellant’s petition to compel the payment of the continuing alimony in accordance with the former orders and decrees of the chancery court in her suit for alimony alone; or it may be that the chancellor decided that complainant had abandoned or relinquished her claim for alimony by filing her subsequent bill for divorce and alimony in another court and proceeding to hearing as to both. The chancellor has prepared no opinion, and consequently we are not informed upon what ground he denied complainant’s petition. It was said by this court on the former appeal as to the bill for alimony without a divorce: “The object and purpose of such a bill as this is not to sever the ties of matrimony, but to provide for the wife during the separation. The parties still remain husband and wife, with the rights. and disabilities of husband and wife continuing, and, as said by Stone, C. J., time may bring better counsels and reunite the family, and courts must deal with the proceeding with this possibility in view. Courts in this proceeding cannot take property from one and give it to the other. The only duty which the court can enforce is maintenance, and for this purpose can only deal with the incomes of the parties, having no power *26to compel either to labor for the other, nor should the court divest either of the corpus of his estate.” — 160 Ala. 575, 49 South. 446, 135 Am. St. Rep. 110. “The allowance in a case like this ought not to be a fixed or permanent amount. It should always be left open, that it may be increased or diminished as the circumstances or necessities may change.” — 160 Ala. 576, 49 South. 447, 135 Am. St. Rep. 110. The status of the parties as it existed when the above was said no longer exists.

The complainant having filed her bill for divorce and permanent alimony in another court, and an interlocutory decree having been entered declaring her entitled to all the relief prayed, and directing a reference to ascertain the proper amount for such allowance, and the reference having been held and the findings reported to the court, nothing remains to be done but to enter up the final decree therefor. It would be inequitable to enforce the decrees of both courts for this alimony which is certainly in part for the same purpose. The first, of course, should not be continued after the second becomes operative. We are not prepared to say that the chancellor was in error in denying the petition to- compel the payment of the amounts as prayed therein. The complainant certainly should not be allowed to prosecute and enforce two suits in different courts, even in part for the same purpose. The complainant, of course, did not necessarily relinquish her claim or right for all alimony by filing her bill for divorce. She could have filed her bill for divorce without claiming, but she ought not to be allowed- to continue to enforce the decree in the chancery court for continuing alimony alone, and at the same time to obtain a divorce and a decree for permanent alimony. The two decrees are necessarily in part for the same object and purpose, *27and would therefore be a double allowance and inequitable.

The decree of the chancellor appealed from denying the petition was without prejudice to the rights of the parties; and will in no way prevent complete justice from being done both parties in the further progress of this unfortunate litigation in the chancery or city court.

The decree or order of the chancellor was proper, and the writ of mandamus prayed will be denied.

Affirmed.

Simpson, McCleelan, and Sayre, JJ., concur.