Broch v. Broch

47 S.W.2d 84, 164 Tenn. 219, 11 Smith & H. 219, 1932 Tenn. LEXIS 4
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 84 (Broch v. Broch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broch v. Broch, 47 S.W.2d 84, 164 Tenn. 219, 11 Smith & H. 219, 1932 Tenn. LEXIS 4 (Tenn. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A decree of divorce was granted Mrs. Broch by the Circuit Judge and she was given the custody of a six-year-old girl child. The Court of Appeals has reversed the case on the facts .and dismissed the suit. By her *221 petition for certiorari, which has been granted and argument heard, the preliminary question is made that the Court of Appeals erred (1) in considering the evidence at all because no motion for a new trial was made in the trial court, and (2) in hearing the case de novo, in disregard of the material evidence rule.

It appears that in his answer, filed December 21, 1929, the defendant demanded a jury to try the cause; but that on May 15,1930, the following minute entry was made:

' “Comes the defendant by and through his attorney . . . and waives the jury heretofore demanded in this case. It is therefore ordered by the Court and the clerk of the Court is hereby directed to place this case on the non-jury calendar.”

The bill of exceptions recites that “the cause was called for trial and was tried, on the 23d day of June, 1930, before the Honorable B. L. Capell, Judge,” etc., “when and where the following proceedings were had, to-wit,” etc. Here follows a recital of the testimony.

The decree recites that, “This cause came on to be heard before the Honorable Ben L. Capell, Judge,” etc., “upon the bill of the complainant, Dorothy Love Broch, and the answer of the defendant, Augustus A. Broch, and the affidavits on file, and the oral testimony of witnesses examined in open court, viz.: The Complainant,” etc. No motion for a new trial was made. Appeal was prayed and granted to the Court of Appeals.

Touching this question of procedure that Court said:

“It is insisted that by virtue of Chapter 94 of the Acts of 1929, the appellant is precluded from being heard on this appeal, because he failed to file a motion for a new trial. Divorce cases are heard according to Chancery Procedure, and are tried de novo in this Court. We are *222 of the opinion that a motion for a new trial was not necessary. ’ ’

It is quite properly conceded for petitioner here that the general rule is that ‘‘Divorce cases are heard according to Chancery Procedure, and are tried de novo in” the Court of Appeals. And that in such cases generally no. motion for a new trial is necessary. And it is conceded, further, that this is true, whether the trial is had in the Chancery or the Circuit Court. However, it is insisted that this rule has application only where the trial is had according to the forms of Chancery Procedure, and that when the case is heard either by a jury (in whichever Court), or by the Chancellor, or the Judge, after a jury has been demanded and thereafter waived, this rule no longer applies, but that, then, as in law cases, (1) a motion must be made for a new trial, and (2) the appellate court will affirm the judgment if there is material evidence to sustain it.

In Francis v. Francis, 3 Higgins, 469, Mr. Justice Hughes, in a very clear opinion, shows that divorce proceedings are in their essential nature and to all intent and purposes chancery proceedings, whether brought in the Chancery or Circuit Court; also, that under Shannon’s Code, Sec. 4887, an appeal in a divorce proceeding-tried before the Circuit Judge without a jury is an áppeal in its technical sense, not an appeal in the nature of a writ of error, and is tried de novo in the Appellate Court. However, on page 473, the learned judge refers to Sec. 4888 of the Code and suggests that, if the case had been tried before a jury in either Court a different rule would have been applied.

Since Richmond v. Richmond, 10 Yerger, 343, opinion by Mr. Justice Green, it has been settled in this State that (1) divorce cases, whether heard by a circuit *223 judge or a chancellor, are in the nature of chancery suits, the procedure being according to the courts of chancery; and that, (2), when a divorce case is tried before a jury it is not heard on appeal de novo, but reviewed and "determined upon the same principles that are applicable to trials at law.” The question on appeal is whether or not there is material evidence to sustain the verdict. It results that in divorce cases, as in all other cases, tried before‘a jury a motion for a new trial must be made as a condition of review on appeal.

In the next place, it was settled in Toomey v. Atyoe, 95 Tenn., 373, followed by Beaty v. Shenck, 127 Tenn., 63; Choate v. Sewell, 142 Tenn., 487; Trice v. McGill, 158 Tenn., 394; and Boshears v. Foster, 154 Tenn., 494, that when a case is heard before the chancellor on oral testimony (unless by written consent under Chapter 119, Acts 1917), it is examined on appeal as though it had been tried before a jury, the material evidence rule being applied. While it does not appear distinctly whether or not in this line of cases motions for new trials were made, as remarked by Chief Justice Green, in Fonville v. Gregory, 162 Tenn., 302, "a motion for a new trial was necessary in each ease.” Also, in Choate v. Sewell, supra, it was said, and approved by Boshears v. Foster, supra, that this rule applies on appeal, when, after a jury has been demanded, the "actual presence” of the jury is waived on the hearing, and the ease is heard on oral testimony before the trial judge sitting as a jury.

It will be observed that, in each of the cases cited in the preceding paragraph, the mode of review was not controlled by the fact that a jury was first demanded and then waived, but the controlling factor was that the hearing or trial in the Chancery Court was in fact con *224 ducted irregularly, “not according to the forms of the Chancery Court,” so that the broad appeal, with hearing de novo, authorized by Section 4887 of Shannon’s Code (Code of 1932, Section 9036), was not available to the losing party. This is pointed out in Fonville v. Gregory, supra, at pages 301-302. In divorce cases, a hearing before a judge or chancellor on oral testimony is, by statute, according to the forms of the Chancery Court. See Shannon’s Code, Sections 4215 and 6272 (Code of 1932, Sections 8440 and 10564). While no reported decision appears to have dealt with a divorce suit in which a jury had been demanded and thereafter waived, in view of the distinctive nature of divorce proceedings and our statutory provisions relating thereto, which expressly provide for hearings in divorce cases on oral testimony, this class of cases must be treated as exceptions.

In the recent case of Fonville v. Gregory, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 84, 164 Tenn. 219, 11 Smith & H. 219, 1932 Tenn. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broch-v-broch-tenn-1932.