Clowry v. Clowry

16 Ohio C.C. 302, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 652
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. 302 (Clowry v. Clowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clowry v. Clowry, 16 Ohio C.C. 302, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 652 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This is a petition in error, by which the plaintiff in error' seeks to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas in a case brought in that court for divorce, the court of' common pleas, upon the showing made in the record, having refused to proceed with the consideration of the case.

It appears by the record that the plaintiff filed . her petition for divorce, setting out the marriage of the parties in the year 1879, and that while the plaintiff in error was conducting herself in a proper and dutiful manner, the defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty towards her; and setting out also that there were four children born of the-marriage still living, which she was compelled to maintain and support. She also alleges gross negligence on the part of the husband. Then she makes this averment:

“Said plaintiff further says that said defendant is now, and has been, since September, 1891, an inmate of the Toledo asylum for the insane, Wherefore said plaintiff asks [303]*303that a guardian ad Mem for said defendant may be appointed, and that, on the final hearing hereof, she may be adjudged to be divorced from said defendant,- and to have: the care, custody and control of said minor children.”

It appears from the record that a summons was issued, upon this petition for divorce in due form, and delivered to-the sheriff, who made return that he ‘‘received this writ on June 1st, 1895, and pursuant to its command summoned on the 5th day of June, 1895, the within named defendant Thomas Clowry.” The record of the proceedings in the case contains the following transcript from the journal off the court:

‘‘Margaret E. Clowry v. Thomas Clowry. Cn the 2d day of April, A. D., 1895, among other proceedings had by- and before said court on the 1st day of July, A. D. 1895, being the 77th day of said term, as appears by its journal of that day, were the following, viz: This day came the-plaintiff by her attorney and made application to the court for the appointment of a guardian ad liieni for the defendant,, who is insane; the court, on consideration thereof, overruled the said motion, and said petition is dismissed at plaintiff’s costs, for the reason that it shows the defendant to be now insane. To which ruling and order of the court plaintiff' excepts.”

The plaintiff filed her petition.in error, and assigned as-grounds of error:

‘‘1. Said court erred in rendering judgment dismissing-the petition of said plaintiff, because and on the ground that. the defendant was then an insane person,, and as such said-' action could not lie against him.
‘‘2. Said court erred in overruling the motion of said' plaintiff for the appointment of a guardian ad litem of said' defendant, an insane person; and for other errors apparént' of record. ”

Upon the matter so assigned, appearing u-pon the-record, the plaintiff asks 1 His court to reverse the judgment of the: . court of common pleas, and remand the. case for further, proceedings in the divorce case.

[304]*304The question presented upon this record is, first, whether or not this court has jurisdiction to consider the action of the court of common pleas in dismissing the petition for divorce, and whether by a proceeding in error this court •may review and revise the action of the court of common ■pleas; in the second place, whether or not the court of common pleas had any jurisdiction and power to proceed in a divorce proceeding against an insane person.

It might be said that the court of common pleas was perhaps a little bit hast}'- in declaring as it did in the order of dismissal that it appeared by the record in the case that the husband was insane. The court declares in its entry in dismissing the petition that it overruled the motion for the appointment of a guardian, and that the petition “is dismissed ■at plaintiff’s costs, for the reason that it shows the defendant to be now insane. ” If we1 go to the petition of the plaintiff in the case, we find the allegation to be this, and ■the only allegation upon the subject, as I now remember: “Plaintiff further says that said defendant is now, and has been since September, 1.891, an inmate.of the Toledo asylum for the insane.” Well, if we are to take it for granted, if we are to assume, that every person who is an inmate of :the Toledo asylum for the insane is insane, there might be ■cause for divorcing a good many individuals, perhaps, who might be found domiciled there. It is not an allegation ■that the defendant is insane, but nevertheless]jit was. undoubtedly meant for that. But proceeding upon the assumption that it is equivalent to an allegation that] the] defend•ant is insane, and as such is confined in an insane asylum, how stands the case.

In the first place, insanity is not a ground of divorce ■under the statutes of Ohio. Sec. 5689 provides for what causes the court of common pleas may grant a divorce, and we do not find the insanity of either party provided as one ■of the grounds for divorce — that the insanity of either the [305]*305husband or of the wife shall entitle either of the parties to the-marriage relation to divorce. And, with perhaps one exception, the only causes for which divorce may be granted, are enumerated in that statute. There is this held by the supreme court of Ohio in Waymire, guardian, v. Jetmore et al., 22 Ohio St., 271: that the court of common pleas, in the exercise of its chancery powers, may declare a pretended marriage null and void upon grounds which touch, the capacity of the parties to enter into the contract; but no such power may be exercised by the court of common pleas under its chancery or equity powers, by way of annulling a marriage or divorcing the parties who have already entered into a valid contract of marriage. The court state, here in the syllabus of this case:

”1 The marriage contract of one affected with congenital imbecility of mind to a degree rendering him incapable of consent, is void ab initio.
”2. A court of chancery, in the exercise of its ordinary powers, will entertain jurisdiction, at the suit of the imbecile’s guardian, to declare such marriage a nullity.”

Not to avoid a marriage, and divorce the parties, but to-determine and adjudge that a ceremony purported and intended -to be a marriage contract was not a marriage contract, because the parties did not possess the mental capacity to enter into such a contract. And the same doctrine was-held by the district court of Hamilton county in the case of Meyer v. Meyer, in 4 Bul., 368, where the court, passing upon a question of like character, reached the same conclusion: that it was competent for a court of equity to determine whether or not parties were competent to enter into the marriage relation, and whether what purported to be a marriage contract was in fact such a contract; and if the-parties did not possess sufficient mental capacity to enter into the marriage relation, to declare or adjudge what purported to be a marriage contract between them to be void.

[306]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Howard v. Trustees of Whetstone Township
10 Ohio St. 365 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1841)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. 302, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clowry-v-clowry-ohiocirct-1896.