Allis v. Allis

Decision Date13 December 1965
Docket NumberNo. 4915,4915
Citation408 P.2d 916,81 Nev. 653
PartiesLouis ALLIS, Jr., Appellant, v. Lauril Mitchell ALLIS, Respondent.
CourtNevada Supreme Court

Vargas, Dillon, Bartlett & Dixon and Melvin Brunetti, Reno, for appellant.

Peter Echeverria and Earl S. Wylder, Reno, for respondent.

THOMPSON, Justice.

By this appeal we are asked to reverse an order directing a husband to pay $18,500 in fees to his wife's attorney. 1 The request rests on the proposition that the wife was not shown to be in necessitous circumstances. The financial position of wife and husband was disparate. The wife possessed $25,000 to $40,000 in liquid assets, while the husband was worth approximately three-quarters of a million dollars. In directing the husband to pay the wife's counsel fees, the lower court expressed its view that the great difference in their financial position was relevant to the issue of the wife's need. But for that difference we presume that an award would not have been made, because one having $25,000 to $40,000 in liquid assets is not, per se, in need of money to pay counsel. Thus the question is squarely presented--is the husband's greater wealth relevant to the issue of the wife's need for money to pay her counsel's fee? Our answer is 'no.' Accordingly, we reverse the order entered below.

Counsel fees for the wife in a divorce case is a problem falling within the area of the trial court's discretion. However, that discretion is abused when the order for fees patently rests upon the husband's ability to pay, rather than upon the wife's need therefor. In ruling on a wife's application for fees, the court is obliged to evaluate the evidence offered to show her need, or lack of it, and decide on that evidence alone whether an allowance should be made. In short, the judicial inquiry is directed to the wife's financial position. At this point, the husband's wealth is not a relevant consideration. Only when the court determines that the wife is in necessitous circumstances and entitled to an award for counsel fees, may it consider the husband's financial position along with other evidence in fixing the amount to be allowed for that purpose. Such, we believe, has been the law of this state for many years. Lake v. Lake, 16 Nev. 363 (1882); Effinger v. Effinger, 48 Nev. 205, 228 P. 615, 239 P. 801 (1924); Whitman v. Moran, 54 Nev. 276, 13 P.2d 1107 (1932); Cranmer v. Cranmer, 79 Nev. 128, 379 P.2d 474 (1963).

Within the legitimate area of discretion--the evaluation of evidence concerning the wife's financial position--the trial court's view is accorded great respect on review. For example, should it appear that the wife's assets are modest and not liquid, it may, in some instances, be proper to order the husband to pay her counsel's fee rather than to demand that she borrow money for that purpose. The standard of 'necessitous circumstances' carries a reasonable flexibility, consonant with the purpose of suit money--that a wife be afforded her day in court without destroying her financial position. Here, however, the award of fees was candidly made solely because of the unequal financial position, and not out of concern that the wife would be precluded from defending the case if an allowance was not made. This cannot be justified.

The lower court suggested that this case falls somewhere in between the holdings of Cranmer v. Cranmer, 79 Nev. 128, 379 P.2d 474 (1963); Effinger v. Effinger, 48 Nev. 205, 228 P. 615 (1924); Black v. Black, 47 Nev. 346, 221 P. 239 (1924); and Engebretson v. Engebretson, 75 Nev. 237, 338 P.2d 75 (1959). None of those cases may be read to support the lower court's ruling here, nor do they indicate a trend toward the establishment of a new standard for the determination of necessitous circumstances. The contrary is true. The recent decision of Cranmer, supra, held, inter alia, that a wife possessing assets worth about $147,000 was not in necessitous circumstances and, for that reason, reversed a fee allowance of $11,000 for her counsel. The rationale of Effinger, supra, squarely supports our conclusion. There the husband was worth about $300,000. The wife enjoyed an annual trust fund income of $8,000 and had about $900 in the bank. This court reversed an order directing the husband to pay a $2,500 fee to counsel for the wife, noting that the husband's ability to pay was immaterial, as the wife had not shown her need. In Black, supra, the wife's motion for fees on appeal was denied, though her financial position was quite limited; and Engebretson, supra, was not concerned with suit money at all--only temporary alimony, ...

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4 cases
  • Sargeant v. Sargeant
    • United States
    • Nevada Supreme Court
    • 7 Abril 1972
    ...checking accounts totaling $2,200. Our historical standard of measuring preliminary and final allowances was stated in Allis v. Allis, 81 Nev. 653, 408 P.2d 916 (1965), wherein we said the husband's greater wealth is not relevant to the issue of the wife's need of money to pay her counsel f......
  • Day v. Day
    • United States
    • Nevada Supreme Court
    • 9 Septiembre 1966
    ...feel a different rule applies than in an allowance for suit money provided for in NRS 125.040, 5 as recently construed in Allis v. Allis, 81 Nev. 653, 408 P.2d 916. NRS 125.180(1) has for its purpose the entry of a money judgment where arrearages under the divorce decree are accrued and ves......
  • Boyd v. McDonald
    • United States
    • Nevada Supreme Court
    • 13 Diciembre 1965
  • Walker v. Walker, 48677
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • 9 Noviembre 1976
    ...unless it appears that the wife is destitute of the means to be employed for such purposes. Appellant also cites Allis v. Allis, 81 Nev. 653, 408 P.2d 916 (1965). We note the Supreme Court of Nevada in Sargeant v. Sargeant, 88 Nev. 223, 495 P.2d 618 (1972), overruled Allis v. Allis, supra, ......

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