Corah v. Corah

75 N.W.2d 465, 246 Minn. 350, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 518
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 17, 1956
Docket36,612
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 75 N.W.2d 465 (Corah v. Corah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corah v. Corah, 75 N.W.2d 465, 246 Minn. 350, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 518 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, Justice.

Appeal by plaintiff from those parts of a judgment dismissing an action with prejudice in favor of defendant; providing that the *351 plaintiff take nothing from the defendant; and decreeing that plaintiff should not receive her costs and disbursements as against defendant. The appeal arises out of an equitable action instituted by Nellie Corah in October 1951, for an award from her former husband, William J. Corah, of alimony and a division of property. The said defendant obtained an absolute divorce by default from the plaintiff in December 1933 in the District Court of Hennepin County, Minnesota, which divorce was procured on constructive service and granted on the grounds of desertion. The plaintiff is now a resident of Colorado, and the defendant resides in Minneapolis and has been a Minnesota resident since 1929.

By way of a brief background: The parties were married in North Dakota on October 27,1920, and continued to reside on farms in that state until the defendant left for Minnesota on September 21, 1929. Three children, now adults, were the issue of this marriage. It appears from the record that on September 12, 1928, plaintiff was admitted to the State Hospital, Jamestown, North Dakota, where she remained until May 25, 1929. Shortly after her admission to the hospital plaintiff’s half sister, Margaret, came to the Corah home and kept house for defendant and the three children.. Margaret continued to reside at the Corah home after plaintiff came home from the hospital and until shortly before defendant left for Minneapolis on September 21,1929. It further appears from the record that early in September 1929, prior to the time that defendant left North Dakota, he commenced a divorce action against the plaintiff in North Dakota. She interposed an answer in that action and a cross complaint for a divorce or in the alternative a decree of separation. No final order of the court was made in that action nor does it appear that it was ever dismissed.

A few weeks prior to the commencement of the North Dakota divorce action plaintiff and the children temporarily moved to the farm of the then husband’s father, a few miles away, while defendant and Margaret continued to reside on defendant’s farm.

Before leaving North Dakota on September 21,1929, the defendant herein held a public auction sale in North Dakota at which time all *352 of Ms farm machinery, household goods, and other property were sold, except a 1929 Chevrolet car and a one-half interest in a threshing machine then located at his father’s farm. The defendant took the car with him when he went to Minneapolis. The net proceeds of the sale amounting to about $850 were left for the plaintiff. The half interest in the threshing machine also was left in North Dakota, which the divorce court’s finding indicated would produce $1,000 a year. There was testimony to the effect that in the fall of 1930 and again in 1931 the defendant returned to North Dakota and requested plaintiff to come to Minneapolis but that she refused. The record also shows that from the time the defendant left North Dakota in September 1929 until he married Margaret on December 16, 1933, he supported her and that one child was born to them on June 21, 1930, and another in September 1936.

In any event the defendant in this action commenced a divorce action against the plaintiff in District Court in Hennepin County, Minnesota, in 1933. Summons and complaint were served upon her personally on July 13 of that year in North Dakota. She immediately consulted her attorney in that state with reference to the papers and left them without giving her attorney any instructions. There is testimony that she knew a divorce would be granted if she did not appear in opposition to the Minnesota action. On December 13, 1933, defendant William was granted a divorce in the Minnesota action by default on the grounds that plaintiff had deserted him August 25, 1929. Shortly thereafter she learned that the divorce had been granted.

Since his residence in Minnesota the defendant never provided any money for the support of his former wife but sent about $500 to his children, two of whom resided with him and Margaret in Minneapolis between the summer of 1938 and the fall of 1940.

After the defendant left North Dakota in 1929 his then wife and the children continued to reside in that state during which time she earned what income she could and this was later supplemented by a mother’s pension. On December 30,1936, plaintiff was again admitted to the State Hospital in Jamestown. She was released on June 13, *353 1937, and returned to the institution again on September 11 of that year, where she remained until about May 5, 1940. She then continued to reside in North Dakota until 1942 when she moved to Denver. Since that time she appears to have sought and found various types of employment. Since 1948 her average weekly take home pay has fluctuated between $27 and $32, plus overtime.

It is conceded by both parties that plaintiff never instituted any legal action to adjudicate any alleged rights for alimony or support money against her former husband up to the time of the commencement of this action in October 1951.

The trial court found among other things that in July 1933 the defendant herein being then and there a resident of Minnesota for more than one year commenced an action for divorce against the plaintiff herein, being clerk’s file No. 342712 in the District Court of Hennepin County, Minnesota; that the summons and complaint in that divorce action were personally served upon the defendant (plaintiff in this action) in North Dakota on July 13, 1933; that on the following day she took the summons and complaint and discussed them with her attorneys in North Dakota with reference to the course of action, if any, she was to pursue in connection with said divorce action; that she was advised by her attorneys in that state that unless she employed attorneys in Minnesota to defend her that undoubtedly her husband would obtain a divorce by default; that she took no step whatsoever to contest said divorce action nor did she instruct her North Dakota attorneys to take any action in her behalf; that on December 13, 1933, the District Court of Hennepin County made findings of fact and conclusions of law granting her husband (defendant herein) an absolute divorce. Quoting from paragraph 4 of said findings in that case the court found:

“That three children have been born and are now living as the issue of said marriage, to-wit: Clarence Corah, who is now twelve years of age; Delores Corah, who is now ten years of age, and Harold Corah, who is now ten years of age. That all of said children are now in the custody of the defendant. That shortly after the defendant deserted the plaintiff as hereinafter stated, the plaintiff sold all *354 of his assets save and except a threshing machine and obtained therefrom after the payment of his debts the sum of approximately $850.00. That from said sum the plaintiff kept approximately $75.00 and left the balance for the defendant. That in addition thereto the plaintiff owned a half interest in a threshing machine approximately three years old. That said machine was in good condition and would cost when new approximately seven thousand dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.W.2d 465, 246 Minn. 350, 1956 Minn. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corah-v-corah-minn-1956.