Benton v. Budd
Benton v. Budd
Opinion of the Court
This is an original petition here for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondent from taking any further proceedings on an order made in a certain action in his court of Elizabeth Benton, plaintiff, against T. 1ST. Benton (the petitioner herein), defendant.
. In October, 1896, Elizabeth Benton commenced an action against the petitioner herein, T. N. Benton, to procure a judgment and decree for maintenance and support—the said parties being husband and wife. In December, 1896, the action came on regularly for trial, and after a hearing the court, on the sixth day of January, 1897, rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff herein, in which it was decreed that the defendant pay to plaintiff a certain sum of money for her permanent support and maintenance, and also a certain further sum for attorney’s fees, costs of suit, etc. During the trial the only attorneys for the defendant in that action were Messrs. Dudley and Buck. On the 3d of July, 1897, J. G. Swinnerton, Esq., attorney at law, filed and duly served a notice of appeal from said judgment to this court, and also filed a good and sufficient undertaking which stayed the enforcement of the judgment during the pendency of the appeal. Thereafter, and on the eighth day of July, 1897, the attorneys for the said plaintiff, Elizabeth Benton, served upon Swinnerton, attorney for the defendant therein, a notice that they would, on .July 12, 1897, move the court for an order requiring the defendant to pay the plaintiff a reasonable sum pending said appeal as a. fee for her attorneys on said appeal, and for her temporary support and maintenance during said appeal. On the said 12th of July, at 10 o’clock A. M., the motion came up for hearing, the plaintiff therein appearing by her attorneys, and the defendant Benton, petitioner herein, by his attorney, Swinnerton. The defendant, by his said attorney, moved the court for a continuance of the hearing of the motion to another day, in order that witnesses might be subpoenaed and give their testimony orally at such hearing; but the court denied the motion upon the
In the petition herein it is averred, that, unless the respondent is restrained by the order of this court, he “will proceed as such judge to enforce said order by a proceeding for contempt against this petitioner.” In his answer respondent alleges that “he never intended to proceed, and never would have proceeded, even, though not restrained by the order of this court, to enforce said order for the payment of alimony by a proceeding for contempt against said petitioner, T. H. Benton, or by any proceeding against him; and respondent alleges that he never threatened so to do.”
Upon these facts, we do not think that the respondent should be perpetually restrained, as prayed for. We cannot say that the respondent was not warranted in holding that Budd & Thompson were not attorneys for the petitioner. We do not think that the mere signing of their names at the end of an affidavit made by another person, and where the signatures of the attorneys were not required at all, constituted an actual, bona fide appearance as attorneys in the case, in the absence of any other participation by
The prayer of the petitioner is denied, and the writ dismissed.
Beatty, C. «L, did not participate in the foregoing.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- T. N. BENTON v. JOSEPH H. BUDD, Superior Judge, etc.
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Prohibition—Action foe Maintenance — Allowance Pending Appeal— Disqualification of Judge—Insufficient Appearance of Relative as Attorney—Signature to Affidavit.—In an action by a wife for maintenance, where the husband had been represented by other attorneys during the trial, and by a different attorney in taking an appeal from a decree in favor of the plaintiff, the execution of an order allowing alimony and counsel fees to the plaintiff pending the appeal, will not be restrained by prohibition on account of disqualification of the judge making the order, merely because an affidavit presented by the defendant at the hearing of the motion for the order to- which no signature of attorneys was required, was signed additionally both by the attorney who signed the notice of appeal, and also by a firm of attorneys, one of whom was a relative of the judge, there being no other appearance of either member of such firm at the hearing of the motion, or participation by either of them at any stage of the action or proceeding; and such mere signing of the names of such attorneys as copartners to such affidavit did not constitute an actual bona, -fide appearance of them as attorneys in the case; and the court was warranted in holding that they were not attorneys for the defendant.