Arndt v. Arndt

82 N.E.2d 908, 336 Ill. App. 65, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 432
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1948
DocketGen. Nos. 43,796, 43,831
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 N.E.2d 908 (Arndt v. Arndt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arndt v. Arndt, 82 N.E.2d 908, 336 Ill. App. 65, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 432 (Ill. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Niemeyer

delivered the opinion of the court.

Our judgments in the consolidated appeals of plaintiff from a decree dismissing for want of equity his complaint for the annulment of his marriage to defendant and from a subsequent order directing him to pay $150 for attorney’s fees and expense money in defending the first appeal (331 Ill. App. 85), were reversed by the Supreme Court (399 Ill. 490) with directions to consider the merits of the first appeal and to set aside the order allowing appellee suit money. Pursuant to these directions we file this opinion as to the merits of the appeal from the decree, and hereby reverse the order allowing the appellee suit money.

We state only the facts believed necessary to a consideration of the matter now before us. The plaintiff charged that the marriage ceremony of January 18, 1944, had been induced by the fraudulent representation of defendant that the plaintiff was the father of the child with which defendant was pregnant. Defendant answering, admitted the representation charged in the complaint, denied that it was false and affirmed that the plaintiff was the father of her child. The parties agree that they had illicit relations before the marriage, and that they did not live and cohabit together after the ceremony. After trial the court entered a decree reciting that he had heard the witnesses represented in support of the respective positions of the parties and finding that the marriage was a good and legal marriage and that plaintiff was the father of defendant’s child, and dismissing the complaint for want of equity. Plaintiff filed an amended petition asking that the decree be vacated and set aside in order that alleged newly discovered evidence might be introduced or, in the alternative, that a new decree be entered expressly refraining from adjudicating any question as to the paternity of defendant’s child. After hearing on this petition the court vacated the decree and, without hearing any further testimony so far as the record shows, entered a second decree identical with the first, except that in lieu of the finding that plaintiff was the father of defendant’s child there was inserted a paragraph reciting that the plaintiff contends that the child born February 27, 1944, is not his child, and that defendant contends that said child is the child of the parties to the suit, “but this court does not make any finding with respect to the paternity of said child.”

Plaintiff’s position on appeal is, as stated in his petition to vacate the decree, and not denied by defendant, “that at the first hearing of evidence in this cause the chancellor ruled that it would make no difference whether plaintiff was or was not the father of the child born to the defendant in as much as under the law of Illinois plaintiff was not entitled to an annulment even if he established that he were in fact not the father of defendant’s child”; that “the decree of dismissal contains language showing that the chancellor expressly declined to pass upon the paternity of the child, ’ ’ and that “it is this refusal by the chancellor to pass upon the issue of paternity which plaintiff claims is reversible error.” The fact that this refusal was pursuant to plaintiff’s alternative prayer for relief in his amended petition, is no longer in the case, the Supreme Court having overruled our position on that question.

The first question is: Does the record before us preserve for review the court’s alleged failure or refusal to determine the paternity of the child? In determining whether there was error in failing or refusing to pass on that question we are not concerned with the weight of the evidence as to the paternity of the child. In Goodrich v. Sprague, 376 Ill. 80, 86, where the court failed to pass upon a motion for a new trial filed with a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the court said, “ ... matters not ruled upon by the inferior court are not subject to the consideration of the Appellate Court unless the lower court’s failure to rule is made the subject of an assignment of error, in which case the propriety of such failure is the question presented to the Appellate Court and not the merits of the matter iipon which the trial court refuses to act.” (Italics ours.) It was there held that the Appellate Court was justified in reversing the judgment entered notwithstanding the verdict and that it erred in passing upon and denying the alternative motion for a new trial and entering judgment ; that it should have remanded the cause to the trial court to pass on the alternative motion for a new trial. Other cases to the same effect are Armour v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 353 Ill. 575; Ottawa, O. & F.R. Valley R. Co. v. McMath, 91 Ill. 104; Read v. Cummings, 324 Ill. App. 607, and Zwierzycki v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 316 Ill. App. 345.

The weight of the evidence not being before us, a report of proceedings containing the evidence produced on the trial is not necessary. It is only necessary that the failure of the court to pass upon the paternity of the child be shown in the record. Rulings of a court at a trial are properly shown by a report of proceedings in the form of.a complete stenographer’s report or a condensed statement, or, in lieu thereof, a written stipulation of the facts material to the controversy, either of which must be certified by the trial court to be correct. (Supreme Court Rule 36 (1) (b) (c) (d).) These rulings cannot be shown, as plaintiff insists, by undenied averments of the parties, such as the statement quoted above from plaintiff’s petition to vacate the decree. However, under sec. 74(2) of the Civil Practice Act [Ill. Rev. Stat. 1947, ch. 110, par, 198, subpar. (2); Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 104.074, sub-par. (2)] abolishing all distinction between the common-law record, bill of exceptions and a certificate of evidence for the purpose of determining what is properly before the reviewing court, the matters ruled on by the trial court may be shown in the common-law record. Warner v. Burke, 302 Ill. App. 85. It appears from the complaint and answer, and from the decree, that the paternity of the child was an issue in the case. It further appears from the decree that the court heard the witnesses presented in support of the respective positions of the parties and that the court “does not make any finding with respect to the paternity of said child. ’ ’ It therefore sufficiently appears from the common-law record that the paternity of the child was an issue in the cause; that the court heard testimony on the issue and did not ultimately make any finding thereon. This preserves plaintiff’s point for review.

The complaint charges that plaintiff, “believing defendant and relying upon her representations that he was the father of her unborn child,” married defendant. As it is silent as to any investigation by plaintiff as to the truth or falsity of her representations, we assume on this appeal that no investigation was made.

The second question presented is, whether false representations as to the paternity of the child which defendant is carrying are grounds for annulment of a marriage at the suit of the plaintiff, who had had illicit relations with defendant and accepted and believed her statement without investigation as to its truth or falsity. There are only four Illinois cases in which similar representations, made under like circumstances, were in issue before a reviewing court or discussed by it: Lyon v. Lyon, 230 Ill. 366 (1907); Hull v. Hull, 191 Ill. App. 307 (1915); Helfrick v. Helfrick, 246 Ill. App. 294 (1927); and Short v. Short, 265 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E.2d 908, 336 Ill. App. 65, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arndt-v-arndt-illappct-1948.