
270 S.E.2d 600 (1980)
Robert Wylie GIBSON, Jr.
v.
Nancy Jane Randall GIBSON.
No. 8028DC76.
Court of Appeals of North Carolina.
October 7, 1980.
*601 Riddle, Shackelford & Hyler by Robert E. Riddle, Asheville, for plaintiff-appellant.
Meyressa H. Schoonmaker, Winston-Salem, for defendant-appellee.
HILL, Judge.
Our Supreme Court has concluded that a decree of specific performance is appropriate in an action for the enforcement of a separation agreement not incorporated into a judicial decree of divorce. Moore v. Moore, 297 N.C. 14, 252 S.E.2d 735 (1979). We are now faced with the question of whether Moore authorizes the trial judge to grant specific performance of a separation agreement in order to preserve the status quo pending final determination of the merits at trial. We conclude that Moore applies in this situation, and that the grant of specific performance was appropriate.
Justice Brock, in Moore, citing Bell v. Smith Concrete Products, Inc., 263 N.C. 389, 139 S.E.2d 629 (1965), as authority, stated that the equitable remedy of specific enforcement of a contract is available only when the plaintiff can establish that an adequate remedy at law does not exist.
Plaintiff husband urges that an adequate remedy does exist, and that a marital separation agreement is generally subject to the same rules of law with respect to enforcement as any other contract. See Stanley v. Stanley, 226 N.C. 129, 133, 37 S.E.2d 118 (1946). Plaintiff then attempts to distinguish Moore from the present case by pointing to the defendant's offensive acts in Moore by which he attempted to circumvent his former wife's ability to collect the support payments and effectively rendered himself judgment proof.
In the case before us, plaintiff contends there is no evidence before the court which would indicate that the controversy involves more than a simple breach of contract wherein the opposing party exercises a position of rescission. Plaintiff points out that defendant wife has made no effort to enforce her rights before seeking an order to enforce specific performance.
The Court, in Moore, indicated that it considered a separation agreement more than a contract to pay money. It is rather a contract to provide maintenance for a *602 dependent spouse on a regular basis. In Moore the Court recognized that to require a servient spouse to wait until support payments come due, then enter suit on each payment, await trial, and possibly be delayed through an execution sale does not provide an adequate remedy at law.
An adequate remedy is not a partial remedy. It is a full and complete remedy and one that is accommodated to the wrong which is to be redressed by it. It is not enough that there is some remedy at law; it must be as practical and as efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration as the remedy in equity.

Moore, 297 N.C. at p. 16, 252 S.E.2d at p. 738; Sumner v. Staton, 151 N.C. 198, 201, 65 S.E. 902, 904 (1909).
This Court has held that an interlocutory injunction ordering specific performance of a contract pending final trial may be an appropriate ruling. Resources, Inc. v. Insurance Co., 15 N.C.App. 634, 190 S.E.2d 729 (1972). In a society such as ours, when bills come due on given dates, a dependent spouse must have cash in hand. Requiring successive lawsuits to recover in a piecemeal fashion the sums due can hardly be called an adequate remedy.
Finally, it should be stressed that the separation agreement does not prohibit the defendant's moving; it only gives the plaintiff the right to bring an action for custody if the defendant does move. This situation is admitted by both parties and does not require a jury determination.
We have examined the record and conclude the defendant has met the statutory requirements for a grant of injunctive relief. G.S. 1A-1; Rule 65. We are not impressed with the appellant's argument that the order of the trial judge effectively blocked a jury determination of the issue.
The judgment entered in the trial court is
Affirmed.
CLARK and HARRY C. MARTIN, JJ., concur.
