Crawford v. Crawford

350 N.E.2d 103, 39 Ill. App. 3d 457, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 2590
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 9, 1976
Docket61687
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 350 N.E.2d 103 (Crawford v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Crawford, 350 N.E.2d 103, 39 Ill. App. 3d 457, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 2590 (Ill. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE BURMAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, Gloria P. Crawford, commenced an action for divorce against the defendant, Oliver Crawford, on the basis of the latter’s mental cruelty. In response to the plaintiff’s complaint for divorce, the defendant not only submitted an answer which sought a dismissal of his estranged spouse’s complaint for want of equity, but he also filed a countercomplaint for divorce. After this cause was set for trial, the parties purportedly entered into an oral agreement settling and disposing of the rights of alimony and property arising out of the matrimonial relationship. Moreover, on the date this oral settlement agreement was allegedly entered, a prove-up hearing was conducted in which subsequent to (1) counsel for the plaintiff eliciting testimony from his client concerning the terms of the agreement and (2) the defendant withdrawing his countercomplaint, the trial court granted the plaintiff a divorce.

Prior to the entry of the divorce decree, however, the plaintiff retained new counsel, who, in addition to filing a substitution of attorneys, submitted petitions to stay the proceedings and return the case to the trial call. At a hearing conducted on these petitions, the plaintiff denied that her former attorney ever consulted or advised her of the terms of the oral settlement agreement before she testified at the prove-up hearing. She further indicated that she did not comprehend the significance of this prior hearing. Upon completion of the evidence presented by both sides, the trial court concluded that the plaintiff had voluntarily entered in the oral settlement agreement and fully understood its terms. The court then incorporated, over the plaintiff’s objections, the provisions of said agreement into a consent decree dissolving the parties’ marital relationship.

On appeal, the plaintiff contends that the trial court should not have entered the divorce decree since (1) the element of consent between the parties was never present so as to make the alleged consent decree valid; (2) a settlement which must be reduced to writing before being considered final is not final until the writing is, in fact, executed; and (3) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to hear the case after it had been dismissed for want of prosecution.

A review of the record reveals that on September 18, 1971, the approximately 26-year-old marriage between the plaintiff and the defendant resulted in the institution by the former of divorce proceedings. Besides designating mental cruelty as the grounds for divorce, the plaintiff’s complaint also related that (I) the parties had a son, age 22 and a daughter, age 18; (2) the plaintiff was unemployed, without any source of income or funds with which to support herself or her children; and (3) the defendant was a physician with ample resources to support her as well as their children. Subsequent to being served with summons on June 8, 1972, the defendant filed an answer to the plaintiff’s complaint for divorce in which he maintained that said complaint failed to state a cause of action and that it should be dismissed for want of equity. He further submitted a countercomplaint for divorce on August 23, 1973, which alleged mental cruelty as the basis for the termination of the parties’ marital union.

After various continuances, this cause was set for trial on the contested trial call on July 10,1974. On that date, counsel for the plaintiff informed the trial court that the parties arrived at an oral agreement settling and disposing of the alimony and property rights stemming from the marital relationship. The defendant then withdrew his counter complaint for divorce, and a prove-up hearing ensued in which testimony was elicited from the plaintiff and the defendant. The plaintiff testified that pursuant to this oral settlement agreement, (1) the family home was to be sold and the net proceeds of the sale were to be divided equally between the parties and (2) the defendant would pay alimony in the form of *700 per month for 121 months with the further provision that if she remarried after five years from the date of the decree, any unpaid amount would abate. She further stated, in response to her own counsel’s inquiry, that she was not subjected to any coercion or duress to enter this agreement.

At the conclusion of the plaintiffs testimony, a colloquy between the trial court and the parties’ counsels arose over the payment of the plaintiff s attorney’s fees. Besides informing the court that his client had no income, counsel for the plaintiff related that the defendant had a gross earnings of *87,994 for the year ending September 30, 1973, which included a gross salary of *44,800 as well as the placement of *10,500 into an employee’s pension and profit-sharing plan. Subsequent to the defendant confirming these gross salary and pension plan figures on cross-examination, the trial court (1) awarded the plaintiffs attorney a fee of *2500 to be paid by the defendant and (2) orally granted a judgment for divorce.

After the prove-up hearing, the plaintiff discharged her attorney and retained new counsel who sought to preclude the entry of the divorce decree by filing a substitution of attorneys and separate petitions which respectively sought to stay the proceedings and return the case to the trial call. On August 21,1974, the trial court responded to the plaintiff s petition to return the case to the trial call by not only ordering the defendant to prepare and submit to the plaintiffs counsel a proposed decree in accordance with the proceedings conducted on July 10, 1974, but it also set a hearing for September 23, 1974 on both petitions submitted by the plaintiff. Moreover, on September 16,1974, an order was entered that (1) gave the plaintiff leave to file an emergency petition to stay the entry of the divorce decree and (2) postponed the hearing on the plaintiff’s petitions to October 21,1974. However, without notice to the parties at bar nor to the trial judge hearing this matter, the presiding judge of the divorce division of the circuit court of Cook County entered an order on September 25, 1974, dismissing this cause for want of prosecution.

Despite the above edict and the fact that a subsequent order vacating this dismissal was never entered, the litigious efforts between the parties continued. In fact, on November 22,1974, the same presiding judge who previously dismissed this cause accepted the plaintiff’s motion for support and set such matter for hearing on December 4, 1974. Moreover, on December 19,1974, the plaintiff submitted an emergency petition as well as memorandum of law which sought to set aside the oral property settlement agreement. After the defendant presented, on the same date, his motion to strike the plaintiff’s emergency petition and all other petitions previously filed on August 21, 1974, the trial court conducted a hearing to adjudicate the contentions raised by such petitions.

The plaintiff was first to take the stand and gave a definitive account of what transpired before, during, and after the prove-up hearing conducted on July 10, 1974. She related that prior to testifying on July 10,1974, she was neither consulted nor advised as to the nature of the oral settlement. Moreover, she told her former counsel that *700 per month for alimony was inadequate and unacceptable. However, she failed to raise an objection to this amount on the witness stand because she said she did not know that this subject would be mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
350 N.E.2d 103, 39 Ill. App. 3d 457, 1976 Ill. App. LEXIS 2590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-crawford-illappct-1976.