Darty v. Darty

232 S.W.2d 59, 33 Tenn. App. 321, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 28, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 59 (Darty v. Darty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darty v. Darty, 232 S.W.2d 59, 33 Tenn. App. 321, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

SWEPSTON, J.

Mrs. Darty obtained an absolute divorce by decree entered April 12, 1946, based upon personal service on her husband, plaintiff-in-error, who filed an answer, both parties being at the time residents of Ten *324 nessee. Although the bill prayed, among other things, for alimony and child support, no award of either was made. She was granted custody of the two minor children. The cause was “retained in Court for such other and further orders as may from time to time be necessary and expedient.”

Subsequently the husband moved to Arkansas.

On August 19,1948, the husband was served with notice in Arkansas by the Sheriff of Crittenden County, Arkansas, that on September 10, 1948 Mrs. Darty would move for an award of support for the children as a modification of the prior decree. A copy of such notice was also served on the former husband’s attorney of record in the original cause, by her attorney.

On September 10, she filed a petition pursuant to said notice in which she recited the foregoing proceedings and averred that he did not appear to defend the divorce suit, that she did not insist at that hearing on alimony and child support because he was not gainfully employed nor able to provide support for herself and children, but that he is now working and able to provide support for the children, which she now moves the Court to award her.

On the same day he appeared specially by his attorney of record and plead in abatement to the jurisdiction of his person, he being a nonresident. It is assumed by the parties to this record that he had become a nonresident and so' we treat it.

The Court disallowed the plea, heard proof and awarded petitioner $40.00 a month for child support. No alimony award was made, nor is here involved.

To all of the foregoing the plaintiff-in-error excepted and prayed an appeal which was granted and said ap *325 peal was perfected. No motion for a new trial was filed. The record contains his bill of exceptions duly authenticated, made a part of the record and seasonably filed.

The assignments of error are:

“I.
“The Court committed error in overruling the defendant’s plea in abatement to the Court’s personal jurisdiction of the defendant. This was error for the reason that the defendant in this proceedings is not before the Court by service of process.
“11.
“The Court committed error in granting an award without a showing by the petitioner that there had been a change in circumstances of the parties to warrant a modification of the decree. This was error for the reason that there is no proof in the entire record to show that the position of the parties has materially altered sufficient to warrant the modification of the divorce decree.
“III.
“The Court committed error in awarding a judgment in the amount of $40.00 per month where there was no proof in the record to show what amount of money the defendant is actually maldng. This was error for the reason that there was no basis upon which the trial court could exercise its sound discretion in mating an award. ’ ’

With regard to the first assignment, as we understand the brief of the plaintiff-in-error, his contention is that since the original bill contained no averment that the wife was entitled to support for any purpose and since the original decree was silent as to support for the children, the effort by a petition filed over two years subsequently to obtain an award of same is not a modi- *326 ¿cation of the original decree because there was nothing to be modified, but is the introduction of new matter requiring the service of regular process personally on the respondent within the geographical jurisdiction of the Court, which was not done and could not he done because he was in Arkansas; that the phraseology in the decree retaining the cause in court is in substance the same as that of Code Sections 8446 and 8454; that since the original bill, as contended by him, contained no averment that she was entitled to child support, there was no basis for evidence on the question nor for such award in the original decree, so that even had that decree contained such an award it would have been coram non-judice; hence in either event the subsequent petition presented new matter which required new. process and personal service within the forum.

The answer of defendant in error to those contentions is that the subsequent motion or petition is a continuation of the original litigation, that the respondent having been properly within the jurisdiction of the court ab initio is still subject to its action because the cause was retained in court expressly and by statute, supra, so that he may be proceeded against upon reasonable notice wherever he may be or become domiciled.

We think plaintiff in error is incorrect in assuming that the original bill contains no averment that she was entitled to support for any purpose.

The bill in addition to the prayer avers that they were living with her parents at the time of the separation in Gibson County; that after the separation she and the children moved with her parents to Carroll County because she had no money nor other place to live. Hence, there was an averment to support an award *327 of support if and when it could otherwise he properly made.

If, however, for the sake of discussion we concede that the original bill did not ask for child support, we think the situation here would not be different. It was asked for in the petition filed subsequently as was done in the case of Davenport v. Davenport, 178 Tenn. 517, 160 S. W. (2d) 406.

There the original bill apparently did not ask for child support, because in the petition subsequently filed the former wife alleged that she neither sought nor obtained an order for child support because her husband was not gainfully employed at the time. In fact there was no award made and no retention of the cause in court for change or modification. Yet, the court held that if for any reason or no reason at all no such order was made a part of the divorce decree, the failure to do so did not deprive the court of the authority to make such an award in the future; that since the enactment of Code Sections 8446 and 8454 every such cause is retained in court without express language because the statute becomes a part of such decree just as if copied therein.

We may concede also for the sake of discussion that, if neither the original bill nor any subsequent pleading contained allegations or prayer as to child support, there would have been no predicate for evidence on the point and a decree awarding it would have been coram non judice and void, under the well-known rules and rationale of equity pleading that the decree is circumscribed by the evidence, which is circumscribed by the pleadings. Gibson, Sections 140 et seq., 406, note 1; 648. note 14.

*328 But such, is not the situation in the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 59, 33 Tenn. App. 321, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darty-v-darty-tennctapp-1949.