Billings v. Billings

228 P.2d 518, 170 Kan. 645, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 312
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 10, 1951
DocketNo. 38,156
StatusPublished

This text of 228 P.2d 518 (Billings v. Billings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billings v. Billings, 228 P.2d 518, 170 Kan. 645, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 312 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This appeal arises out of the disposition of property rights in a divorce action.

The primary question concerns the power of the lower court to vacate or modify its former decree in an action for separate maintenance and to make a different disposition of the property of the parties in a subsequent divorce action. The appellant wife was plaintiff in both actions and here the parties will be referred to as in the court below.

The factual background of the controversy, sufficient for our purposes, is in substance as follows:

The parties were married in 1936 and separated in 1946. On [646]*646August 30, 1946, plaintiff filed an action for separate maintenance in which she sought the care and custody of their two minor children, alimony, suit money, attorney fees, that a cafe owned by the parties and located in Kansas City, Mo., be set off to her as her separate property, and that defendant be required to render an accounting of the profits of such business. A summons, the answer date in which was September 20, 1946, was duly issued and served on defendant on the same date the action was filed. On September 17, 1946, defendant signed an entry of appearance and waiver of summons, in which he consented to an immediate trial. This was filed on September 18, 1946.

On September 19, 1946, the action came on regularly for hearing. The plaintiff appeared in person and by her counsel. The defendant did not appear either in person or by counsel. The court, after hearing the evidence, found that plaintiff was entitled to a decree of separate maintenance; that the parties had settled their property rights, and that plaintiff was entitled to the Johnson County residence of the parties, including the household furniture and equipment, an automobile, savings bonds, jewelry and other personal property owned by the parties, and the cafe located in Kansas City, Mo. Ry the decree defendant was given the right to conduct the cafe business and to receive from the income thereof $500 per month for his services as manager, with the further provision that out of such sum he was to pay $300 per month for the support of plaintiff and the two minor children, and that all profits over and above the operating expenses and said sum of $500 per month be paid to plaintiff. The decree awarded the care, custody and control of the minor children to plaintiff, and provided for payment of attorney fees by defendant.

In this connection it should be stated that the court’s decree, with reference to property rights, was based on a written stipulation entered into by the parties under date of September 10, 1946.

Following the rendition of this decree it appears that defendant made the $300 monthly payments provided therein, but did not account to plaintiff or pay her anything further from the profits of the cafe business which he continued to operate and manage.

On May 20, 1947, defendant joined with his wife in executing a warranty deed by which the residence property, which had been awarded to plaintiff by the decree, was conveyed. It appears that plaintiff retained the net proceeds of this sale.

[647]*647On August 29, 1947, plaintiff filed the instant action for divorce, seeking care and custody of the minor children and a confirmation of the separate maintenance decree previously entered on September 19, 1946.

On April 30, 1948, the defendant filed a divorce action against plaintiff in Jackson County, Missouri. To this action plaintiff filed a general denial and cross-petition, praying a decree vesting the title to the cafe in her, on the basis of the award previously entered in the separate maintenance action in Kansas, and for an accounting of the profits of the business. Defendant then dismissed his action for divorce. No further proceedings on the cross-petition were had.

On October 14, 1948, defendant husband, by leave of court, filed an answer and cross-petition in the instant action in which he prayed for a divorce and charged that the decree of separate maintenance and the stipulation of September 10, 1946, were fraudulently procured and constituted a fraud upon the court. The substance of his allegations was that on September 3, 1946, he and plaintiff had entered into a written agreement concerning their property rights, the substance of such agreement being that plaintiff should have all of the property belonging to them, with the exception of the cafe business, and that he was to pay plaintiff $300 per month for the support of herself and their minor children, but that plaintiff fraudulently induced him to enter into the written stipulation of September 10, 1946, as a “protective measure” for their minor children on account of the threat of an action for alienation of affections which plaintiff advised him was to be filed immediately by the husband of another woman with whom defendant had been keeping company. It was further alleged this so-called second stipulation of September 10, 1946, was intended by both parties to be a “temporary” measure; that it would be cancelled and of no effect as soon as the threat of the alienation of affections suit had passed; that it was not to be submitted to any court as being the agreement of the parties so as to form a basis for any disposition of their property rights, and that the submission of it to the court in the separate maintenance action without notice to defendant was a fraud on the court and defendant.

Defendant further alleged that he had no knowledge of plaintiff’s having filed this stipulation with the court and procuring the separate maintenance decree until on or about August 28, 1947, and his prayer was for a decree of divorce from plaintiff, that the decree [648]*648in the separate maintenance action be vacated and set aside by reason of the fraud on the part of plaintiff, or that in the alternative the decree be reformed and modified so as to set off the cafe to him. Copies of both stipulations were attached to his answer and cross-petition as exhibits.

On March 28, 1950, plaintiff, by leave of court, filed her reply in which she denied defendant’s charges of fraud in connection with the written stipulation of September 10, 1946, and in securing the decree in the separate maintenance action. She further alleged that defendant’s attempt to set aside such former decree was barred by the statute of limitations; that he was guilty of laches, and was estopped to attack its validity.

The cause came on for hearing on March 30, 1950, and each of the parties introduced considerable evidence with reference to the circumstances surrounding the execution of the stipulation of September 10, 1946, and subsequent conduct of the parties, all of which is immaterial for our purposes in this appeal.

The court granted a decree of divorce to plaintiff, awarded her the custody of the two minor children, but vacated and set aside the decree in the separate maintenance action rendered September 19, 1946, on the ground it was void because of the fraud of both parties. ■ It further denied plaintiff any alimony, awarded defendant as his sole and separate property the cafe heretofore referred to, made disposition of certain life insurance policies, not here important, and ordered defendant to pay $300 per month for the support and maintenance of the minor children, together with attorney fees for plaintiff’s counsel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P.2d 518, 170 Kan. 645, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billings-v-billings-kan-1951.