Carroll v. Carroll

322 So. 2d 53
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 31, 1975
DocketY-109
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 322 So. 2d 53 (Carroll v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Carroll, 322 So. 2d 53 (Fla. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

322 So.2d 53 (1975)

Glen A. CARROLL, Appellant,
v.
Vernell CARROLL, Appellee.

No. Y-109.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

October 31, 1975.
Rehearing Denied December 2, 1975.

W. Paul Thompson, DeFuniak Springs, for appellant.

William Howard LaPort, Crestview, for appellee.

SMITH, Judge.

Mr. Carroll appeals from an interlocutory order sustaining his wife's choice of Okaloosa County as the forum for her petition for dissolution of their marriage. Appellant complains that the marriage was made in Alabama and was lived out in Holmes County where, therefore, it must have been irretrievably broken. He insists that the cause of action for dissolution did not arise in Okaloosa County, and that the proceeding is not maintainable there. Sec. 47.011, F.S. 1973.

On the strength of Ms. Carroll's affidavit, the trial judge held that the cause of action arose in Okaloosa and that venue was properly laid in that county. *54 He therefore denied appellant's "plea of privilege," which was properly treated as a motion to dismiss for improper venue or to transfer. Rule 1.140, R.C.P.; Inverness Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. McDaniel, 78 So.2d 100 (Fla. 1955). Ms. Carroll's affidavit recites that she left the unhappy marital home in Holmes County, returned to her native Okaloosa three months before filing her petition and:

"Our marriage became irretrievably broken after I returned to Crestview, Okaloosa County, Florida. I left Holmes County on the 24th day of July, 1974, which was a Wednesday. On the 28th day of July, 1974, a Sunday, my husband, Glen A. Carroll came to my house in Crestview, Okaloosa County, Florida and demanded the keys to our Plymouth Fury automobile. I was afraid to refuse and gave him the keys. He was very angry and upset and took the automobile leaving me and my child without transportation. I then knew the marriage was completely broken and there was no way to get back together. I decided to get a divorce."

Since 1829 plaintiffs have been privileged to avoid litigating in the home county of a resident defendant by filing in the county where the cause of action accrued. As amended, § 47.011, F.S. 1973.[1] Before 1971, when the legislature enacted laws for dissolution of marriages irrespective of fault (Ch. 71-241, Fla.Laws 1971; Ch. 61, F.S. 1973), the venue question was typically whether a wife who had moved to the county of the forum, leaving both estranged husband and marital home elsewhere in Florida, could there maintain the divorce action over her husband's objection. Despite judicial intimations that a wife might carry venue with her elsewhere when "of necessity" she left the marital home to escape the cruelty constituting her grounds for divorce,[2] a closely divided Supreme Court held in 1951 that the plaintiff wife's cause of action arose in the county where the asserted cruelty occurred, not in the county into which she was thereby driven. Copeland v. Copeland, 53 So.2d 637 (Fla. 1951).

Yet it did not follow from Copeland that a spouse seeking refuge or new surroundings was invariably required to litigate in the inhospitable territory where the marriage was suffered and the other party remained. It was held in Bannerman v. Bannerman, 204 So.2d 234 (Fla.App. 3rd, 1967), cert. dism. 210 So.2d 220 (Fla. 1968) that a woman who left marital home and husband in Leon County could file for divorce in Dade because at least some of the acts of extreme cruelty, asserted as grounds for divorce, occurred in Dade. The divided District Court of Appeal held that the trial court was not required to compare the acts of cruelty done in Dade with "the more substantial" acts which occurred earlier in Leon.

Although the facts in the Bannerman divorce case might have justified minimizing that decision as precedent in a dissolution proceeding,[3] the District Court of Appeal, *55 Second District, carried the Bannerman principle root and branch into marriage dissolution proceedings when deciding Arnold v. Arnold, 273 So.2d 405 (Fla.App. 2nd, 1973). That decision of first impression was that the petitioning spouse may select a forum other than that of the marital home and the respondent's residence if the events which finally and irretrievably broke the marriage took place in the county of the forum. Thus the court in Arnold sustained venue in Hillsborough County, notwithstanding that both the husband and the marital residence were in Polk, because Mr. Arnold followed his departing wife to Hillsborough and there "caused her undue embarrassment and threatened to do it again." The court stated that it was in Hillsborough, "after these visits," that the wife filed her petition. The implication plainly is that the last straw was laid on the marital back in Hillsborough, that Ms. Arnold there perceived the marriage was irretrievably broken and, consequently, that the cause of action arose there and not in Polk.

The Arnold decision supports Ms. Carroll's choice of Okaloosa County as the forum. Ms. Carroll stated on oath that she knew her marriage was finally and irretrievably broken there on July 28, 1974, when her husband came to Crestview and took away the car in a display of anger and, as it turned out, reckless prelitigation venue tactics. Appellant argues that the Fury incident was inconsequential and that giving effect to Ms. Carroll's "last straw" recital will invite charades in which, for venue purposes, each spouse attributes the breach to an event which happens to have occurred in the county of his or her choice. If Ms. Carroll may declare that Okaloosa is the forum because she perceives the marriage as broken there when she lost her Fury on July 28, why may not Mr. Carroll trump her play by announcing that the marriage was previously broken in Holmes County, where he lost his wife on July 24?

One of the admirable goals of the 1971 marriage dissolution legislation was eliminating, as far as can be, the systematic frauds and near-frauds that unhappy litigants, their counsel and the courts imposed on one another, under aegis of law, in finding fault as a prerequisite to relief. Jackson, "The No-Fault Concept, Grounds and Defenses," Florida Family Law § 21.6 (2nd ed., The Florida Bar, 1972). Fault concepts poorly served human needs in marriage and divorce, and it sometimes seemed more decent to minimize or ignore those concepts — see Mr. Justice Terrell's opinion in Chesnut v. Chesnut, 160 Fla. 83, 33 So.2d 730 (1948) — than to wrench them to fit the case. The debasing strategies that often accompanied fault-based divorce litigation[4] taught us to beware rules of law *56 whose substantial advantages are too easily invoked by casual perjury. We would therefore not gladly embrace a venue rule that encourages a spouse seeking a dissolution of marriage to plant a foot in the county of choice, take a stance and declare, This is the place — not there, nor there, but here — where I knew my marriage was irretrievably broken.

This is not to say that Ms. Carroll's cognition of the marriage breach was inconsequential. On the contrary, courts know what every marriage partner knows or intuits: that, just as marriage is both a physical arrangement and a working commitment of spirit, so an irretrievable break is not simply a final disruptive event piled upon others but also one's recognition of hopeless alienation. It was therefore altogether meaningful for Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
322 So. 2d 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-carroll-fladistctapp-1975.