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Smith v. Smith

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Jan 8, 1964
197 A.2d 65 (Conn. 1964)

Summary

reviewing contempt ruling for failure of defendant to pay alimony pendente lite

Summary of this case from Ahneman v. Ahneman

Opinion

The defendant husband entered a special appearance in the present action for legal separation and pleaded in abatement on the ground of defective service of process. Under the circumstances, the action was not, in any proper sense, "uncontested," nor was the husband a "nonappearing" party, within the meaning of the rule (379) concerning orders of notice of alimony awards. Consequently, the provision of the rule making an award against a nonappearing party in an uncontested action ineffective until an order of notice of the award has been complied with was inapplicable. The omission of an order of notice did not invalidate the award of alimony pendente lite to the plaintiff wife. The husband had actual knowledge of the pendency of the action and of the consequent likelihood of the entry of a pendente lite order. He also was informed of the terms of the order itself and knowingly ignored it. Under the circumstances, notice of the order would have accomplished nothing, and the failure of the court to direct notice, if notice had been required by the rule, would not have affected the validity of the award. The fundamental purpose of alimony pendente lite is to provide the wife, during the pendency of the action, with current support in accordance with her needs and her husband's ability to meet them. Ordinarily, the result can best be accomplished by an order for periodic cash payments. The payments, as they accrue, become in effect a debt. Tn a divorce action instituted by the husband against the wife in Nevada after the commencement of the present action for legal separation, the wife appeared and, on her counter-claim, was granted a divorce and permanent alimony. In the divorce action, she did not seek, nor did the Nevada judgment mention, alimony pendente lite. Held that the pendente lite alimony payments and allowance for counsel fees ordered in the action for legal separation were, to the extent that they had accrued prior to the date of the Nevada judgment, due and owing to the plaintiff. Since the alimony pendente lite payments, at least to the extent that they were past due, survived the entry of the Nevada judgment, it was proper for the Connecticut court, even after the rendition of the Nevada judgment, to allow an additional sum for counsel fees to reimburse the wife for the expenses to which she was put as a result of the defendant's strenuous opposition to her efforts to collect what was due her.

Argued December 5, 1963

Decided January 8, 1964

Appeal by the defendant from an order of the Superior Court in New Haven County, Bogdanski, J., directing the payment of a balance found to be due under an award of alimony pendente lite. No error.

William S. Ewing, Jr., for the appellant (defendant).

Frank J. Kinney, Jr., for the appellee (plaintiff).


The plaintiff wife, by writ dated February 5, 1960, instituted an action against the defendant husband, claiming a legal separation, alimony, counsel fees and custody of a minor child. Thereafter, pursuant to the plaintiff's motion filed on March 17, 1960, the court, on May 20, 1960, entered an order for alimony pendente lite of $80 a week and counsel fees of $500, payable $250 within four weeks and $250 before trial. The court did not direct the giving of any notice to the defendant of the entry of the pendente lite order, and neither he nor his counsel was present in court at the hearing on the motion. The defendant claims that the court's omission of an order of notice left the pendente lite order invalid and of no effect under what is now 379 of the 1963 Practice Book.

"[Practice Book (1963)]. Sec. 379. — NOTICE OF ORDERS FOR SUPPORT OR ALIMONY In all uncontested divorce actions, such notice as the court shall direct shall be given to nonappearing adverse parties of any orders for support or alimony. No such order shall be effective until the order of notice shall have been complied with." The procedure in actions for legal separation is the same as in actions for a divorce. General Statutes 46-29; Practice Book, 1863, 388.

The short answer is that in no proper sense was this action an "uncontested" legal separation action, nor was the defendant a "nonappearing adverse" party. On March 21, 1960, the defendant entered a special appearance and filed a plea in abatement, claiming defective service of process. Although the plea was not sustained, the jurisdictional claim was subsequently renewed in a motion to dismiss the entire action, including the pendente lite order in question. The motion to dismiss was granted February 14, 1961, but the judgment on that motion was reversed. Smith v. Smith, 150 Conn. 15, 24, 183 A.2d 848, decided on July 27, 1962.

Even if we assume that this action was "uncontested" and that the defendant was a "nonappearing adverse" party, under the peculiar facts of this case the court's failure to order notice was not fatal to the validity of the pendente lite order. Prior to the hearing on the motion for alimony pendente lite, a hearing had been held on the defendant's plea in abatement of March 21, 1960, previously mentioned. Furthermore, the defendant's counsel, on May 23, 1960, which was but three days after the pendente lite order had been entered, was informed of its terms, and the defendant admits that his attorney advised him by letter of the provisions of the order and that he made no payments under it. The quoted rule does not refer to an order pendente lite for counsel fees, and as to that part of the pendente lite order the rule has no application. Actually, the second $250 installment of counsel fees never became payable since the Connecticut action never went to trial on the merits.

The defendant not only had knowledge of the pendency of the action and the consequent likelihood of the entry therein of an order for alimony pendente lite and counsel fees but also had actual knowledge of the order itself, through his own attorney. The pendente lite order never was modified. Despite all this, the defendant knowingly ignored the order. Smith v. Smith, 150 Conn. 15, 183 A.2d 848. Under these circumstances, notice of the entry of the pendente lite order would have accomplished nothing more, and the failure of the court to direct such notice did not affect the validity of the order.

The defendant's second basic claim is that the rendition of a decree of divorce in Nevada precluded the collection of any payments then due under the Connecticut pendente lite order. To understand this claim certain additional facts are required. On March 28, 1960, after the filing of the motion for alimony pendente lite, the husband instituted a divorce action against the wife in Reno, Nevada. The wife appeared, by counsel, filed a counterclaim, personally appeared at, and participated in, the Nevada trial and on October 10, 1960, was granted a divorce from her husband together with a permanent order of alimony. On October 25, 1960, the defendant returned to Connecticut, and the plaintiff, after ascertaining his whereabouts, obtained, on November 18, 1960, a citation for contempt based on the failure of the defendant to comply with the May 20, 1960 pendente lite order. The contempt citation was duly served on the defendant in Connecticut on November 19, 1960.

As previously mentioned, the court, at the behest of the defendant, dismissed the entire Connecticut action, including the contempt citation, for inadequacy of service of process, and, on July 27, 1962, the judgment of dismissal was reversed. Smith v. Smith, supra, 24.

After that decision, the contempt citation was heard, and the trial court, on October 10, 1962, held that the pendente lite order of May 20, 1960, for alimony and for the first $250 installment of counsel fees, was valid and wholly unpaid; that the arrearage of the weekly alimony pendente lite payments until the granting of the Nevada decree was $1634.26; and that counsel fees of $750, in addition to the $250 installment, together with a sheriff's fee of $10, should be allowed for the contempt proceedings in Connecticut. The total arrearage under the pendente lite order together with the additional counsel and sheriff's fees of $760 came to $2644.26 From that determination this appeal is taken.

The fundamental purpose of alimony pendente lite is to provide the wife, during the pendency of the divorce action, with current support in accordance with her needs and the husband's ability to meet them. England v. England, 138 Conn. 410, 413, 85 A.2d 483. Ordinarily, this result can best be accomplished by an order for periodic cash payments. Id., 415. Such installment payments, as they accrue, become, in effect, a debt. Harrison v. Union New Haven Trust Co., 147 Conn. 435, 437, 162 A.2d 182; Sturtevant v. Sturtevant, 146 Conn. 644, 646, 153 A.2d 828; Hiss v. Hiss, 135 Conn. 333, 336, 64 A.2d 173; German v. German, 122 Conn. 155, 164, 188 A. 429.

No basis exists for any differentiation in this respect between Connecticut orders made as incident to a final decree of divorce and those granted pendente lite, since each type of order carries out the fundamental objective of providing the wife with current support. Indeed, a Connecticut order for alimony pendente lite has been held to be the proper subject of an appeal. Hiss v. Hiss, supra.

The defendant makes much of the fact that although the final decree of divorce granted the wife in Nevada on her counterclaim allowed only permanent alimony, the wife orally admitted that she was reimbursed for her plane fare to and from Nevada and that the judge in Nevada told her husband to give her $10 or $15 a day to pay her hotel bill during the few days that she was staying in Nevada. Such informal suggestions, regarding such trivial sums, cannot be treated as adjudications for the payment of alimony pendente lite. This is especially true here, since the plaintiff did not seek alimony pendente lite in the Nevada action and the Nevada judgment did not make any mention of alimony pendente lite. There is nothing to indicate any attempt on the part of the plaintiff simultaneously to accept the benefits of orders for alimony pendente lite entered in two jurisdictions and running concurrently, as was the case, for instance, in Hamilton v. Hamilton, 113 Conn. 306, 311, 155 A. 217.

It follows that the payments ordered in the Connecticut pendente lite order continued to accrue, until at least the date of the rendition of the Nevada divorce judgment. The plaintiff concedes that no periodic payments accrued under the Connecticut pendente lite order after the entry of the final decree of divorce in Nevada, and she is not attempting to collect any such payments.

The court correctly held that the pendente lite alimony payments which had accrued prior to the date of the rendition of the Nevada decree of divorce were due and owing to the plaintiff. 27B C.J.S., Divorce, 380; 27 Am.Jur., Husband and wife, 429; notes, 1 A.L.R.2d 1423, 1-127 4, 1440, 28 A.L.R.2d 1346, 1352 5, 1354 6; see note, 154 A.L.R. 530, 531. The allowance for additional counsel fees of $750 was made expressly to cover the expenses to which the plaintiff had been subjected in overcoming the vigorous resistance of the defendant to her attempts to collect the alimony pendente lite payments in Connecticut. Since these payments, insofar at least as they were then past due, survived the entry of the Nevada divorce decree and are still unpaid, it was proper for the Connecticut court, even after the rendition of the Nevada divorce decree, to allow counsel fees to reimburse the plaintiff for the cost of their collection. General Statutes 52-256a.


Summaries of

Smith v. Smith

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Jan 8, 1964
197 A.2d 65 (Conn. 1964)

reviewing contempt ruling for failure of defendant to pay alimony pendente lite

Summary of this case from Ahneman v. Ahneman

In Smith v. Smith, 151 Conn. 292, 296, 197 A.2d 65 (1964), which predated Ahneman and is cited therein, the Supreme Court permitted an appeal to lie from an interlocutory ruling that denied a motion for contempt based on a failure to comply with orders regarding pendente lite alimony.

Summary of this case from Cunniffe v. Cunniffe

characterizing accrued alimony pendente lite as a debt

Summary of this case from Weinstein v. Weinstein
Case details for

Smith v. Smith

Case Details

Full title:ANN Z. SMITH v. HAROLD E. SMITH

Court:Supreme Court of Connecticut

Date published: Jan 8, 1964

Citations

197 A.2d 65 (Conn. 1964)
197 A.2d 65

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