Cullen v. Stevens

58 N.E.2d 456, 389 Ill. 35, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 714
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1944
DocketNo. 27466. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 58 N.E.2d 456 (Cullen v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cullen v. Stevens, 58 N.E.2d 456, 389 Ill. 35, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 714 (Ill. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question involved in this case concerns the validity of a certain divorce decree entered by the city court of Calumet City. The cause arises on a complaint, filed in the circuit court of Cook county, by which appellant here seeks annullment of his marriage which he contracted with appellee Harriet Stevens, on the ground that at the time of their marriage said appellee had not been divorced from her then husband, Paul Stevens. The action was brought against both Harriet and Paul Stevens. Both appellees appeared and filed separate motions to dismiss the complaint. After hearing, the motions were sustained and the complaint was dismissed.

The ground of the alleged invalidity of the divorce decree of the city court of Calumet City was that that court did not have jurisdiction to enter it. Two reasons are assigned: (1) that it appears on the face of the complaint filed in this case and admitted by the motion to dismiss,

that Harriet Stevens was not a resident of Calumet City, and (2) that it also appears from the record in the divorce case that the cause of t action did not arise within the territorial limits of Calumet City. It is also alleged here that section 5 of the Divorce Act, giving jurisdiction to city courts in divorce cases, where the plaintiff lives in the county in which the court is located, is invalid. In McFarlin v. McFarlin, 384 Ill. 428, it was held that section 5 relates only to the question of venue and does not purport to extend the jurisdiction of city courts to cases arising beyond the limits of the city in which the court is located, and that, as so construed, section 5 of the Divorce Act, as amended in 1939, is not invalid, thus disposing of that question.

The basis of appellees’ motions to dismiss the complaint in this case, and their contention here, is that this is a collateral attack upon the divorce decree entered by the city court of Calumet City, and that that decree is not open to collateral attack. Appellant, on the other hand, urges that the city court of Calumet City did not have jurisdiction to enter the decree for divorce and that its decree is therefore open to collateral attack. The basis of this contention is that the complaint in this case alleges want of jurisdiction because the evidence in the divorce proceeding shows that Harriet Stevens, complainant in that case, was not a resident of Calumet City or Cook county, and that the cause of action did not arise in Calumet City is also shown by the testimony of Harriet Stevens in the divorce case, as that testimony appears in the certificate of evidence.

That the plaintiff shall reside in the county where the suit is filed, is a prerequisite to the filing of a complaint in a divorce proceeding. (Dean v. Dean, 381 Ill. 514.) A city court is a court of general jurisdiction within the limits of the city where, located. It has jurisdiction to hear and determine divorce cases. Its records imporverity and, in the absence of proof from its records, its decrees cannot be attacked collaterally, as its jurisdiction will be presumed. (People ex rel. Stuckart v. Culver, 281 Ill. 401; Forrest v. Fey, 218 Ill. 165.) In case of collateral attack all presumptions are in favor of the validity of the judgment or decree attacked and want of jurisdiction to enter the same must appear on the face of the record in order to furnish a basis for collateral attack. Such can not be shown aliunde. People v. Culver, 281 Ill. 401; People ex rel. McCall v. Martin, 243 Ill. 284; Thompson v. People ex rel. Hanberg, 207 Ill. 334.

The principal remaining question in this case, therefore, is, What is the “entire record”? Does it include the certificate of evidence? This court has never had occasion .to pass directly upon that point although its decisions have touched upon it. In the early case of Vail v. Iglehart, 69 Ill. 332, the question as to the meaning of the words “record of any judgment,” as they were used in the act providing for the restoration of burnt records, was discussed. It was there said: “What, then, is the meaning of the words ‘record of any judgment,’ as they are used in this act? It seems to be argued by appellee as if their meaning is, in his opinion, to be limited to the final entering of the judgment of the court by the clerk in the proper record. This, to our apprehension, is entirely too narrow a construction to accomplish the purposes of the act, nor do we understand that such is the plain and obvious import of the- words used. The record of a judgment, at common law, was known as ‘the judgment roll,’ and this included, as well, the pleadings, process, etc., as ‘signing judgment.’ ” Citing Stephen on Pleading, 24 et seq.; Freeman on Judgments, 51, sec.- 75.

This definition of a record was again approved in People ex rel. Kilduff v. Brewer, 328 Ill. 472. No case has been presented to us, and we have been unable to discover any, holding that a bill of exceptions or a certificate of evidence is a part of the record proper or complete record, as that term is used in the cases. In Sharp v. Sharp, 333 Ill. 267, cited by counsel, the decree recited certain facts regarding service. Other findings of the decree showed that the service was improper and jurisdiction of the person of certain minor parties had not been obtained. A careful perusal of the opinion in that case will show that when this court used the language “Where the record itself shows the evidence upon which the court acted in finding that it had jurisdiction no presumption of jurisdiction can be considered,” etc., the court had in mind, as the opinion shows, not what was shown by a bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence, but what was shown by the return of the sheriff, which is “part of the record proper.” While the conclusion in that case was not • concurred in by all members of the court, there can be but little doubt that the court, in referring to the whole record or the record proper, had no reference to a bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence.

The cases before this court, where the judgment was attacked collaterally, or where it was claimed that the court was without jurisdiction, all indicate that the court was considering parts of the record itself rather than the bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence. In the case of Rabbitt v. Weber & Co. 297 Ill. 491, the affidavit of attachment was found insufficient to confer jurisdiction of the person of a certain defendant in the original suit. Such an affidavit is a part of the pleadings. In Forrest v. Fey, 218 Ill. 165, an affidavit, required by the Arkansas statute to confer jurisdiction, had not been executed. This affidavit, again, was a part of' the pleadings. In Payson v. People ex rel. Parsons, 175 Ill. 267, there was a failure to give the jurisdictional notice and to execute the affidavit showing such notice. In Hemmer v. Wolfer, 124 Ill. 435, the decree was held void for want of jurisdiction on a showing that service of summons on the complainant’s stepchildren had been had by delivery of a copy of. the summons to the complainant himself. This was shown by the sheriff’s return, a part of the record. Again, in Osgood v. Blackmore, 59 Ill. 261, no testimony was considered. In Clark v. Thompson, 47 Ill. 25, it was held that the decree involved there might be collaterally, attacked because jurisdiction of minor defendants was not had. There is nothing in that case to indicate that any testimony or evidence was examined. So, in Whitney v. Porter, 23 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.E.2d 456, 389 Ill. 35, 1944 Ill. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullen-v-stevens-ill-1944.