Dillion v. Dillion

274 S.W. 217, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 583
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1925
DocketNo. 2499.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 217 (Dillion v. Dillion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillion v. Dillion, 274 S.W. 217, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 583 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

Appellant, Mrs. Dillion, filed this suit in the district court of Montague county against her husband, Mount Dillion, praying for a divorce, for a judgment for borrowed money, for the partition of the community estate, and also for attorney’s fees and alimony pending the suit. Defendant filed a plea in abatement, alleging that Mrs. Dillion was insane, and therefore incompetent to maintain and prosecute the suit. Upon a hearing the court found that appellant was non compos mentis, and could not, for that reason, prosecute the suit, whereupon, on motion of appellant’s counsel, the court entered an order authorizing appellant to prosecute the suit by J. B. Giles as next friend. The court thereupon announced that he would hear the case upon amended pleading at the succeeding term of the court. At the next term appellee filed an amended plea in abatement, alleging the insanity and incompetency of Mrs. Dillion to maintain ,the suit either in her own name or by next friend. The plea was sustained, and the case was dismissed. This appeal is prosecuted from that judgment.

The first contention is that, though a wife is insane, she, may, through another as next friend, institute a suit for divorce, and that it is error for the court to dismiss the action because of her insanity. On the other hand, it is contended by appellee that the right to sue for divorce is strictly personal to the plaintiff, and it being a matter volitional with the plaintiff whether such an action shall be begun and prosecuted, the suit cannot be instituted by a next friend or guardian, because a plaintiff who is non compos mentis is incapable of exercising the discretion which necessarily must be the basis of such a proceeding. V. S. O. S. Supp. 1922, art. 4632, prescribes the conditions and prerequisites upon which a suit for divorce may be maintained, and, amongst others, provides: “That this act shall not apply to any case where either the husband or wife is insane.” This proviso, with others, was added to the original act of May 27, 1873, by the act of 1913, which in turn, was again amended and is found in the acts of 1921, Thirty-Seventh Legislature, c, 82, § *218 1. The last act contains provisions not shown in the first amendment to the original act, and are not necessary to be considered in this opinion. In the case of Skeen v. Skeen (Tex. Civ. App.) 190 S. W. 1118, Chief Justice Rainey, construing the language above quoted from Y. S. O. S. 1914, held that it prohibited the granting of a divorce when either spouse- is insane, and further held that where insanity of one of the spouses exists, a next friend could not intervene during the pendency of the insane spouse’s suit for divorce and prosecute it to final judgment. The same court, again speaking through Judge Rainey, in Daugherty v. Daugherty, 198 S. W. 985, held that a wife could not maintain a suit where the facts showed that the husband was insane while the parties lived separate and apart, and was hopelessly insane at the time of the trial, and this without regard to the ground upon which the divorce was sought. This writer,' in a dissenting opinion in McNabb v. McNabb (Tex. Civ. App.) 250 S. W. 434, believing that the article of -the statute said what it meant and meant what it said, quoted with approval the holding in the Daugherty Case. Later, in Wilemon v. Wilemon, 112 Tex. 586, 250 S. W. 1010, the act above quoted was discussed at length by Hamilton, Justice, and it was there held that, “by no possible construction can article 4632 be made to deny the granting of divorce in all cases where one of the parties is insane. It denies the right to divorce in such cases only when sought on the ground that the parties ‘have lived apart without cohabitation for as long as ten years" and further held that an action for divorce could be maintained against an insane defendant, represented by a guardian ad' litem, where the acts constituting the ground for divorce were committed by the defendant prior to his becoming insane. Since this pronouncement 'by the Commission of Appeals, Baugh, Justice of the Austin Court of Civil Appeals, in Jordan v. Jordan, 257 S. W. 569, construed the holding in the Wilemon Case as overruling the Daugherty Case. In the Jordan Case it appears that the parties were married in September, 1913; that the wife permanently abandoned her husband, without fault' on his part, in April, 1915. In September, 1918, she was adjudged to be insane, and was insane when the suit was filed, when citation was issued and served, and when the cause was tried in January, 1923. The judgment of the trial court refusing the husband in that case a divorce was reversed and rendered by Judge Baugh upon the authority of the Wilemon Case, which he construes as overruling the Daugherty Case. In the Daugherty, Wilemon, and Jordan Cases, the defendants were insane. In the Skeen Case, the insane wife was the plaintiff, but we are not at liberty to. follow the holding there, because the decision is rested upon the above quoted statutory provision.' As in the Skeen Case, the plaintiff in the instant case is the insane party. Since the Wilemon Case limits the operation of the statutory provision with reference to insanity, to cases where there has been abandonment for ten years, it is clearly not authoritative in the instant case. While ⅛ is there held that in virtue of the express provision of V. S. C. S. art. 1942, the court could appoint a guardian ad litem to represent an insane defendant, that article has no application to suits where the plaintiff is insane. Y. S. C. S. art. 2167, provides that lunatics having no legally appointed guardian may sue by next friend, and the article has been construed to authorize such suits to annul the marriage of a plaintiff, contracted while non compos mentis. Schneider v. Rabb (Tex. Civ. App.) 100 S. W. 163. The holding in that case is predicated upon the ground that such a person is not mentally capable of comprehending and understanding the nature of the marriage contract, and the reciprocal duties and obligations of the relation resulting therefrom. Such a marriage is of course void ab initio, because of the mental incapacity of the party to contract it. That decision is, therefore, not authority in a suit for divorce where the marriage relation was entered into while the plaintiff was sane. It will be seen, from the foregoing discussion, that there is no case in Texas and no statute expressly authorizing the prosecution of a suit such as the one under consideration, and the question is whether Giles can maintain the action by implication, under article 2167. Consideration of articles 2168, 2169, 2170, and 2171, which compose title 37, c. 22, V. S. C. S., authorizing suits by next friend, render it doubtful whether the Legislature intended that the chapter should ever be applied to suits for divorce. We incline to the opinion that it does-not. If we are correct in this, then, in order to dispose of the issue, we must answer the inquiry, what is the common-law rule as established by the weight of authority? In 9 R. C. L. 406, §,204, it is said:

“There is authority, especially in England, for the position that a suit for a divorce may be brought or continued by the guardian or committee of an insane spouse, on his or her behalf. But under a statute so authorizing it has been held that where the complaining spouse becomes sane after a decree nisi for divorce, an absolute decree would not be entered, as of course, on the motion of the guardian, but that such motion would be held for further hearing as to the procedure dictated by public policy and the best interest of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 217, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillion-v-dillion-texapp-1925.