Burden v. Burden

313 S.W.2d 566, 44 Tenn. App. 312, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 23, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 313 S.W.2d 566 (Burden v. Burden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burden v. Burden, 313 S.W.2d 566, 44 Tenn. App. 312, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

McAMIS, P. J.

The parties to this suit, now divorced, are the parents of the three minor children, aged 6, 9 and 13, whose custody is here involved. The father appeals from a decree of the Chancery Court awarding custody to the mother and enjoining Mm from prosecuting a habeas corpus proceeding, predicated on a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Lorain County, Ohio, instituted in the County Court of Cumberland County to obtain custody. We refer to the mother as complainant and the father as defendant.

Prior to 1952 or 1953 when they moved with their children to Lorain County, Ohio, to obtain employment, the parties had lived since their marriage, in 1942, in Cumberland County, Tennessee. After living in Ohio four years or more, domestic difficulties caused a separation. According to complainant’s testimony, undenied *315 by defendant, in August, 1956, he told her to “get out” and to return to her mother in Cumberland County, Tennessee. Later, he hired a truck and sent their household furniture to Tennessee where complainant rented a house for herself and the three children who had returned with her to Tennessee prior to the filing of suit for divorce by defendant in Ohio. The children were never thereafter in the State of Ohio and have since resided with their mother in Cumberland County, Tennessee.

A few days after complainant returned with the children to Tennessee, defendant instituted the above mentioned proceeding seeking a divorce on the grounds of “gross neglect of duty” and custody of the children. Complainant employed an attorney of Crossville, Cumberland County, Tennessee, who entered her appearance by filing an answer generally denying the charge of the bill.

As a result of efforts to become reconciled the parties met in Lexington, Kentucky, where they cohabited in a hotel, returning the following day to Crossville where they remained with their children for two or three days. While in Crossville, in defendant’s presence, complainant called her attorney and advised him that there had been a reconciliation and that she was returning to Ohio with defendant. Both then went to Ohio to arrange about the payment of some bills. Complainant testified she returned to Crossville after a few days, thinking the reconciliation was complete, and that defendant later visited her and the children and corresponded with them. Defendant, on the other hand, says the reconciliation was conditioned on complainant having’ no association what *316 ever with one Lawrence Johnson, a resident of Lorain County, Ohio, and upon the payment of all family bills; that he later learned that this association had continued and that he called complainant by telephone requesting her to come to Ohio to resume cohabitation but that she refused and he then told her “he was going to get a divorce”. Complainant denies there were any conditions attached to the reconciliation and testified that defendant agreed to dismiss the suit for divorce; that the first intimation she had that the divorce suit had not been dismissed was when defendant came to Cumberland County in January, 1957, with a certified copy of a decree purporting to grant him a divorce and custody of the children.

The record shows that, on December 1, 1956, defendant filed a reply to the answer filed by complainant in the divorce suit. On December 3, 1956, his Ohio counsel mailed a copy of the reply to complainant’s Tennessee counsel but, although the trial had been set for 9:30 A.M., December 7, 1956, no mention was made of that fact. However, there is testimony, unexcepted to, that complainant’s counsel later admitted receiving a notice of the hearing from the clerk. But whether it was received iii time for him to notify complainant, prepare for trial and go to Lorain County, Ohio, is not directly shown. The record does show that it requires 16 hours driving time to go from Orossville to Lorain County, Ohio.

Complainant testified that when the reply was filed, her counsel believed that she was living with defendant in Ohio and that she had no knowledge of the hearing date. Defendant’s testimony that he told her he intended to get a divorce, even if accepted, does not constitute *317 notice that the original suit which complainant seems to have believed had been dismissed would again he prosecuted. •

Whether, as complainant claims, the Ohio decree was fraudulently obtained, it is apparent that a chain of circumstances prevented notice of the hearing being brought home to complainant and, as a result, the custody of the children was determined ex parte and as a routine incident of the divorce proceeding. There was no express adjudication as to their welfare or as to the fitness of either parent.

We are of opinion the Ohio decree is not res judicata for two reasons: (1) The three children were domiciled in Tennessee when the divorce suit was instituted and when the decree for custody was rendered, (2) because of lack of notice of the hearing a constructive fraud was practiced upon complainant, the requirements of due process have not been observed and the Ohio decree in so far as it purports to adjudicate custody is not entitled to full faith and credit.

As to the first question, it was said in Clothier v. Clothier, 33 Tenn. App. 532, 232 S. W. (2d) 363, in which certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court, that in the absence of proof of a contrary intent or fault on the part of the husband in forcing the wife to withdraw from the state of his domicile, the domicile of the wife and of an infant child remained in the state of the husband’s domicile, although both the wife and child had moved to another state.

In the present case, according to undisputed evidence, the wife withdrew from the domicile of the father by his consent, with his assistance and because of his *318 fault and took the children to Tennessee where she established a new domicile for them and for herself. The suit for divorce was not based on the wife’s withdrawal and, so far as appears, the basis of her withdrawal was not in issue or adjudicated in the divorce suit. It is, therefore, an open question in this suit. The authorities are, we believe without exception, to the effect that a husband cannot force his wife to leave his domicile and, for purposes of divorce, claim that she is still in it. 17A Am. Jur. 242; Annotations 75 A. L. R. 1267; 90 A. L. R. 358; 128 A. L. R. 1422.

A corollary rule of general application in the more modern cases is that the domicile of a minor child residing with its mother who is living’ apart from the father for justifiable reasons or by agreement with him follows that of the mother. 17A Am. Jur. 246, 247, Domicil, Section 67, and see numerous cases cited in the footnotes, also Annotations 13 A. L. R. (2d) 308.

In this case, it is true, the mother entered her own personal appearance in the Ohio court. This, however, did not confer upon the Ohio court jurisdiction to control custody of her children domiciled in a foreign state. Ritchison v. Ritchison, 28 Tenn. App. 432, 191 S. W. (2d) 188; Annotation 4 A. L. R. (2d) 26, which see for editorial statement of the rule and analysis of cases.

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Bluebook (online)
313 S.W.2d 566, 44 Tenn. App. 312, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burden-v-burden-tennctapp-1957.