PRESTON v. PRESTON.

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PRESTON v. PRESTON.
1931 OK 199
300 P. 620
150 Okla. 101
Case Number: 20463
Decided: 04/28/1931
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

PRESTON
v.
PRESTON.

Syllabus

¶0 Divorce--Award of Alimony Sustained.
Record examined. Judgment of court below warranted by the evidence. Cause is affirmed.

Appeal from District Court, Okmulgee County; James M. Hays, Judge.

Divorce action between A. R. Preston and Laura Preston. From the court's award of alimony, the former appeals. Affirmed.

Joe S. Eaton and Elmer L. Fulton, for plaintiff in error.
W. J. Peterson and T. Shackelford, for defendant in error.

KORNEGAY, J.

¶1 This cause comes from Okmulgee county; Honorable James M. Hays, judge. It is a proceeding in error to review the action of the court in awarding alimony to defendant in error. There is no appeal from the judgment granting the divorce. It is practically conceded by the plaintiff in error that his only ground of complaint is that the court erred in awarding to defendant, Laura Preston, alimony in a lump sum of $ 4,400 and interest at 6 per cent. per year from date of judgment, December 15, 1928. The referee recommended $ 75 per month for a period of ten years. The court modified it so that it was $ 4,400 cash. The journal entry recites:

"The court further finds from the testimony, and the report of the referee, that plaintiff wholly failed to sustain his petition against defendant for divorce upon the grounds alleged therein, and that plaintiff's petition should be denied and dismissed; that all of the material allegations of the defendant's cross-petition are true."

¶2 The case-made purports to set out all the evidence, and there is an agreement of the attorneys that it does, and there is a certificate of the trial judge to the same effect. We have accordingly examined it, in connection with the briefs. We are convinced, after hearing the oral arguments and examining the briefs and record, that the evidence warranted the referee's report, and that the evidence and the referee's report warranted the judgment of the trial court. There was short conflict in the evidence. The referee and the trial court evidently attached more credence to that in favor of the defendant in error than to that of plaintiff in error. Both were within their rights in so doing. We should not interfere.

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