
    Mahala Boggers v. J. H. Boggers.
    Divorce A “vinculo. Alimony. How allowed. In decreeing a. divorce • a vineulo, the court may award the wife all or any portion of the husband’s estate, whether in specie or otherwise, ,and without regard to its location in this or another State, as the circumstances of .the case may demand; hut it can make no order binding his future services or earnings, as in cases of divorce a mensa.
    
    Case cited: Chenault v. Chenault, 5 Sneed, 248.
    EEOM MEIGS.
    Appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court at Decatur, rendered at its March term, 1873. Hon. D. M. Key presiding.
    W. L. Habbisoe for complainant.
    Ho brief on file for defendant.
   McFarland, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill for divorce from the bonds of matrimony, which was granted, and from this part of the decree there is no appeal. The Chancellor further gave to the complainant all of the defendant’s estate in Meigs county, for the benefit of herself and two children of the marriage. This, however, was of very small value. The master further reported that the defendant, now in the State of Texas, is worth, from five to ten thousand dollars; and upon this the Chancellor gave the complainant a decree for $1,000, and a decree for $200 to pay her cause, and awarded execution.

The defendant, by his solicitor, excepted to the report of the master, and appealed from this latter part of the decree.

The principle decided in Chenault v. Chenault, 5 Sneed, is certainly correct; that is, that where the divorce is only from bed and board, the marriage relation still subsists, and the husband is still bound to maintain his wife, and this duty the court may from time to time enforce; but where the divorce is from the bonds of matrimony, the obligation of the husband to support the wife no longer subsists, and no order or decree can be made upon the husband to bind his future services or earnings. In such case the court can only give the wife a decree for part or all that the' defendant then owns, according to the circumstances. But we do not understand that the court is bound to give the. property to the wife in specie. This would defeat the wife altogether in cases where the estate of the husband is in money. Nor do we deem it essential that the property or effects of the husband should be in this state. • All that is important is that the decree shall ‘ be based upon an estimate of the defendant’s estate at the present time, and shall not go beyond this.

The proof in this case upon which the master’s report is founded, is a letter of the defendant, after the separation, in which he said he honestly believed himself to be worth from five to ten thousand dollars in American gold. We think this may be taken with some grains of allowance, but think it sufficient to authorize the decree of the Chancellor. Let it be affirmed with costs.  