DeWitt v. DeWitt

67 Ohio St. (N.S.) 340
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 67 Ohio St. (N.S.) 340 (DeWitt v. DeWitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeWitt v. DeWitt, 67 Ohio St. (N.S.) 340 (Ohio 1902).

Opinion

Speak, J.

The ground of complaint on the part of the plaintiff is that the conditions imposed upon her are unjust and oppressive, and that the court was without authority to require her acceptance of them as a condition to her recovery of alimony. On the other hand it is contended that the court, having the proper parties before it, and having the general power to allow alimony, had also full power to adjust all their property rights.

i It is apparent that the circuit court proceeded upon the assumption that it possessed full equity} powers, and might properly take cognizance of all the property, and interests in property, possessed by each of the parties, and make as full and final a decree and order as though the cause were strictly one in equity. v And there is some support for this assumption to be found in one of the recent text books, and in a paragraph of an opinion in this court. We refer to the [343]*343comprehensive and able treatise of Mr. Nelson, of the Nebraska bar, on the Law of Divorce and Adjustment of Property Rights. At page 858 of the second volume, the author observes: “We have seen that the decree for a permanent allowance is a final adjudication of all property rights between the parties. After such decree neither party has any claim upon the other of any kind. The parties have, in the proper tribunal, and at an appropriate time, had an opportunity to litigate their property rights, and the decree is presumed to be an adjudication of all matters which might have been tried in such action. It follows that, in ascertaining the proper amount for the wife, all her claims against the husband must be considered.” Expression of the same idea is found in other parts of the work. The decision in this court referred to is that of Petersine v. Thomas, 28 Ohio St., 596, cited by counsel, opinion by Ashburn, J. He remarks: “Under our statute, a divorce contemplates a final separation of the parties. Their paths in life henceforth diverge, and, in legal contemplation, they are to each other as strangers. When not otherwise provided, we think the statute contemplates that, at the time of decreeing the divorce, the court will adjust all the pecuniary rights of the parties in relation to each other springing out of the marital relation about to be forever annulled. To this end the court is given full discretionary authority to make such order concerning the division of the property and support of the children as to the court shall appear, under all the facts and circumstances, just, equitable, and reasonable.” Exactly what meaning should be attached to the phrase “all the pecuniary rights of the parties in relation to each other springing out of the marital relation,” is not clear. But, assuming that it is [344]*344meant to include all rights of property of every kind acquired by either or both before and during coverture, it is proper to say that the case before the court did not involve so wide a scope of inquiry. The question presented, and the judgment upon it, is clearly set out in the second paragraph of the syllabus as follows : “After a suit for divorce and alimony has been finally determined by the court granting the divorce,, and in lieu of alimony confirming an executed agreement as to the amount paid as alimony, a new action for additional alimony cannot be maintained when the reasons for such additional allowance existed or might have been provided for in such final judgment,, and when it is not sought to impeach such final judgment.” 'It is apparent that the court was dealing with the effect of an executed agreement of the parties, and that its decision did not call for an expression upon the phase of the general subject quoted from the opinion of the learned judge. Attention is. also called to the recent case of Julier v. Julier, 62 Ohio St., 90. But that case, also, deals with the effect of an agreement of the parties which the court finds to be just and reasonable, and aids but little, if any, in determining the question here presented; and we are' not cognizant of any reported case in Ohio which, in the decision upon the point at issue, gives authoritative support to the circuit court’s assumption.

We gather from a somewhat extended examination, of authorities that, in so far as we derive any common law rules respecting divorce and alimony from the-mother country, we inherited those administered in the Ecclesiastical courts, for, outside of parliament, no other tribunal had or assumed cognizance of such controversies. Such power did not, in England, belong to a court of equity. The Ecclesiastical court. [345]*345was not, and never had been, a court of equity. It was a canonical court, and never deviated from the canon law. MacQueen on Divorce, 55, note; Slielford on Marriage and Divorce, Law Library, 377, 598, 599. Bee also Adams’ Equity, 17. Mr. Henry Folsom Page, in his valuable work on Divorce, 297, states that: “It is now settled in England that' courts of equity have no general authority to decree alimony to the wife.” 'Mr. Browning, in his work on Marriage and Divorce, speaking of the jurisdiction of the courts of England at the present time, at page 1, observes: “The court for divorce and matrimonial causes owes its jurisdiction — in part original and in part derived from Ecclesiastical courts — to the act of parliament by which it was created, and the several amending acts by which that jurisdiction has been in various ways altered and amplified.”

The state of Ne law in this country on that phase of the question is probably more in doubt. Mr. Page expresses the opinion “that, in the United States, courts of chancery exercise jurisdiction to decree the allowance of alimony in cases of cruel usage or desertion, and this jurisdiction is placed on the ground that the wife has no remedy at law.” Decisions of the courts of South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky and Maryland, support the view above stated, but the author cites no Ohio case sustaining the text. Story Eq. Juris. (2), section. 1423», says the doctrine that courts of equity should have power to adjudicate claims of deserted wives to reasonable support out of the husband’s estate is on the ground that there is no adequate remedy at law, but doubts that it can be said to be an established doctrine in this country. On the other hand, Mr. Bishop, in his work on Marriage and Divorce, vol. 1, section [346]*346114, gives this as the law: “Of the several branches of the unwritten law of England, there is one, properly to be deemed common law, yet technically called ecclesiastical law; another, technically, the common law; another, the law of admiralty; and another of very great importance, is known as equity. To the branch of the common law called ecclesiastical the subject of marriage and divorce, in England, pertains.” The same author, speaking of the assumption by some of our courts of equity of jurisdiction of the subject because of the absence in this country of ecclesiastical courts, observes, section 1393: “Wisely and well our judiciary has uniformly decided, after thinking, that the mere non-existence of ecclesiastical courts with us does not empower our equity tribunals to take up and exercise their divorce jurisdiction.” The trend of the author’s entire remarks upon the subject indicates clearly that iñ his judgment, courts of equity, in this country, have not general and full equity jurisdiction in matters of alimony. In volume 2, Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 93, under the head of Alimony, article by Mr.

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67 Ohio St. (N.S.) 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewitt-v-dewitt-ohio-1902.