Henderson v. Henderson
Before: Fourt
FOURT, J. This is an appeal from the orders “with respect to the order to show cause of defendant in re modification dated March 24,1965, the order to show cause of plaintiff in re modification dated May 14, 1965, and the order to show cause of plaintiff in re contempt dated November 17, 1965, said motions have been heard by the . . . Court. ...”
Appellant and respondent were married October 14, 1942, and two children were born to the marriage. Respondent wife filed for a divorce on July 6, 1961; an interlocutory decree of divorce was granted March 16, 1962, and a final decree was entered April 12, 1963. The interlocutory decree provided, among other things, that the wife was to have custody of the children, the husband was to pay to the wife $400 per month for child support and $600 per month for alimony. The husband, on March 24, 1965, filed a proceeding to secure a modification of the alimony and support order. On April 26th, May 14th and November 17th, 1965, the wife sought orders of contempt because of the husband’s alleged failure to make ordered payments. On May 14, 1965, the wife, by a proceeding, also sought to have the alimony and support payments increased.
The three matters were consolidated for hearing and in December 1965, the court conducted a full hearing on all of the matters involved.
The court found that there had been a change of circumstances and ordered that the alimony payments be reduced to the sum of $450 instead of the $600 ordered in the interlocutory decree; in other words, a reduction of 25 percent.
Appellant now asserts that it was an abuse of discretion to make such a small reduction under the circumstances.
A résumé of some of the facts is as follows:
Appellant is the owner of all of the stock of Henderson Construction Company. That company apparently reports its income on an accrual basis. By this system, when a job is 100 percent completed the books will reflect the income therefrom —until a job is completed, and Henderson is the person who makes that determination, the books may or may not reflect the actual worth of the company. There is evidence to the effect that the husband’s income is very much larger than he would have the court believe, and, in any event, is such that he can and should pay to the former wife the sum of $450 per month as alimony. The record shows that since the divorce, the husband has made large purchases of stocks and various interests in parcels of real property, that he has sufficient [390]
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