Dengler v. Dengler

120 S.W.2d 340, 196 Ark. 913, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 17, 1938
Docket4-5171
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 340 (Dengler v. Dengler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dengler v. Dengler, 120 S.W.2d 340, 196 Ark. 913, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 278 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This appeal comes from a decree vacating and setting aside a divorce decree issued at a former term of the chancery court. W. P. Dengler sued Minnie Mae Dengler for a divorce on the ground of desertion. Summons was issued and served and return made thereon for more than twenty days before the case came on for trial. The defendant did not appear, and on the 29th day of January, 1937, decree was entered. There is no-question about the regularity of the decree in all respects. Thereafter, on the 29th day of September, 1937, a motion was filed, using the same style as the case above set out, by Minnie Mae Dengler, to set aside the decree rendered on January 29. She pleaded that she was served with a copy of the summons in the early part of January, 1937, and that she immediately discussed the matter with an attorney and that she wrote advising Mr. Dengler that she proposed to contest his suit and advised him as to- the name of the attorney whom she had consulted and asked him to notify her a week or ten days before the case was set for trial, so that she might arrange to be present. She p]eads further that she was ill and confined to her home for several meeks, but as soon as she was able to do so she wrote Mr. Howard Clayton, sheriff of Desha county, and asked him to check the records and advise her when the case was set for trial; that Mr. Clayton advised by return mail that decree had been granted on the 29th day of January, 1937; that she then wrote the chancery clerk asking for a copy pf the complaint and decree; that he did not grant her request. She then alleges that the decree of divorce was obtained by artifice, trick and fraudulent practice upon the court and herself at a time when she was confined to her home because of illness. She stated in her motion that she had never given the plaintiff cause for divorce, but on the contrary plaintiff had repeatedly given defendant cause for divorce. She asserted that she did not desert plaintiff on April 19, 1935; that she has not continued to absent herself from him without cause. She alleged that when she left her home in Mc-Grehee, Arkansas, (where she had lived with the plaintiff), she came to Little Rock on account of her father’s illness and death and that, though requested to do so on numerous occasions, defendant has repeatedly refused to permit her to return home; that defendant knew at the time the decree of divorce was granted that she had not been notified when the case would be submitted and that she was ill and unable to attend court; that he deliberately took advantage of these facts and obtained the decree during her absence; that he knew the allegations contained in his complaint were false and fraudulent. She further alleged that she had a good and meritorious defense to the complaiiit; that the decree should be set aside and she be granted a hearing; that in the decree no provision was made for her support, maintenance, nor with reference to her dower right to property accumulated by plaintiff and defendant during the twenty-six years of their married life. She prayed that the decree of divorce be set aside and nullified; that plaintiff be required to pay a reasonable fee for her attorney, suit money, costs and temporary maintenance.

A summons was duly issued upon this motion and served. An answer was filed to the motion and in this answer every material allegation was denied by the appellant. He denied' that she wrote him a letter advising that she proposed to contest the suit or that she gave him the name of the attorney whom she had consulted, or that she had asked him to notify her a week or teu days prior to the date when the case had been set for trial. He admitted, however, that she had written Mr. Clayton; that Mr. Clayton had answered her letter advising her about the rendition of the decree and that she then wrote the chancery clerk; denies that she was ill and confined to her home prior to the time she wrote Mr. Clayton, the sheriff of Desha county; denied the divorce was obtained through artifice, trick and fraudulent practice; denies that decree was obtained at a time when she was confined to her home because of illness; denies that she had not given him cause for divorce, and also denied that portion of her petition in which she set out her defense to the cause upon which plaintiff was granted a divorce; denied that she was not notified of the date when the case would be submitted.

He also denied that the allegations upon which he proceeded were false or fraudulent or that he took advantage of her in any manner; denied that she had a ¡valid and meritorious defense; denied that she was entitled to any dower interest., and specially pleaded that the estate accumulated by. plaintiff and defendant during their married life was in form of cash, stocks and bonds and that when they separated the petitioner carried with her all the cash, stocks and bonds to which they were the title owners, and that she retained the same in her possession. He pleaded that since they are no longer man and wife he is under no obligation to maintain her and that she has no right to sue for alimony, maintenance and attorney’s fee.

He pleaded specially that she is barred by laches to maintain the action.

He pleaded also that it was because of her inattention, carelessness, and negligence that she did not defend, plead or appear when the case was ready for trial or to advise the court of her condition and ask for a continuance. He also pleaded that the petition or motion was not sufficient in form prescribed by statute to obtain the relief sought; that is, to set aside the decree, the term having lapsed.

Upon the presentation of the evidence, the. court made an order vacating the decree of divorce, providing for temporary maintenance of the defendant, for suit money and for attorney’s fee, and from this order and decree of the court setting aside and vacating the former decree is this appeal.

We think it proper to set forth some of the material testimony offered in this case in order that we may dispose of all matters at issue between the parties.

Mrs. Dengler testified that summons was served upon her on or about January 5, 1937; that she had been ill and very much grieved on account of the death of her mother; that she had been threatened with pneumonia. She had some teeth extracted and ran a temperature for some weeks; that her mother had gotten sick the first of August and died on the 5th of November. She had eared for her mother during her illness. She had no funds with which to employ a nurse for her mother. There were other matters that made her more nervous and that was the mortgage on the home of her mother had been foreclosed and she had no funds to take care of it; that her mother’s illness caused her to be nervous and to worry; that she had no money to live on; that she had been sewing in order to make a living. When she was sick friends cared for her. A Mrs. Newman took care of her during her illness. After she was taken sick she consulted an attorney over the telephone.

Since we deem it unnecessary to give the names of the attorneys we shall-merely refer to them as attorneys, without setting forth their names.

She explained to one attorney she had no money to pay a fee. This attorney said she, the attorney, would write for a copy of the complaint. The witness says that she wrote the plaintiff with reference to it, wrote a letter about the 18th of January, but never received any reply. She made a copy of the letter.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 340, 196 Ark. 913, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dengler-v-dengler-ark-1938.