Abrams v. Rosenthal
Abrams v. Rosenthal
Opinion of the Court
Defendant appeals from a judgment condemning him, pending a suit instituted against him by his wife for separation from bed and board, to pay his wife alimony in the sum of $100 per month. He complains that the amount is excessive, that the trial judge overestimated his net income
This case was tried about November 2, 1921, and the appeal was filed on December 16, 1921. Pending a hearing on the appeal, defendant filed in this court on April 24, 1922, an affidavit stating that plaintiff was employed on January 22, 1922, by the school board of the City of New Orleans at a salary of $225 per month, and on May 17, 1922, another affidavit on the part of plaintiff was also presented to this court, admitting the employment alleged in defendant’s affidavit, showing, however, that said employment was limited, and also showing that plaintiff had previously been employed during the fall of 1921 at a salary of $75 per month.
We make this observation, not with a view of controlling beforehand the learned trial judge in the exercise of the discretion vested in him by law, but for the purpose of assisting him in the performance of that re- . sponsible duty..
For these reasons, -the judgment appealed from is avoided and reversed, and- it is or
Reference
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- ABRAMS v. ROSENTHAL
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- 6 cases
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- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staf.) 1. Divorce &wkey;>l82-T-Supreme Court cannot render judgment on affidavits first offered on appeal. The Supreme Court has no original jurisdiction in a proceeding for alimony pending a suit for separation, and cannot render judgment on affidavits' tendered for the first time on appeal. 2. Divorce As a proceeding for alimony pending a suit for separation is addressed entirely to the court’s equity powers, and the amount of alimony is subject to change in accordance with varying conditions, under Civ. Code, art. 232, the case will be remanded for further, hearing, instead of relegating the husband to another action, where conflicting affidavits are presented as to the wife’s income. • 3. Frauds, statute of In a proceeding for alimony pending a suit for separation, examination of the wife as to the reality of a sale of property by her to her sister, for the purpose of ascertaining whether she really owned the income therefrom, was improperly excluded. 4. Divorce 4&wkey;2l3 — Wife cannot give away her income and demand alimony pending suit. A wife may not give away rent really belonging to her, and at the same time compel the husband to make restitution by way of alimony pending a suit for separation. 5. Divorce 209 — Statute controlling alimony pending suit for separation specified. The allowance of alimony pending a suit for separation is not controlled by Civ. Code, art. 160, providing that alimpny in suits for divorce shall not exceed one-third of the husband’s income, but by article 148, providing that, if the wife has not sufficient income for her maintenance, the judge shall allow her a sum for support proportioned to the husband’s means.