Dorrance v. Dorrance

148 S.W. 94, 242 Mo. 625, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 20, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 94 (Dorrance v. Dorrance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorrance v. Dorrance, 148 S.W. 94, 242 Mo. 625, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 44 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

BROWN, C.

There are two appeals in this case. The plaintiff appeals from the final judgment of the circuit court dismissing her petition upon her refusal to plead further after a general demurrer had been sustained. The defendant afterwards appealed, during the pendency of the case in this court, from an order of the trial court entering upon its records a statement nunc pro time in said cause as follows: “Amended petition filed May 17,1907.”

The second appeal being for the purpose of enabling the court to judge of the true state of the record, it is plain that they should both be tried together, and it has been so ordered.

The case is a suit in equity to set aside a decree of divorce in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in favor of this respondent and against the appellant. It was instituted by the filing of the petition in the St. Louis Circuit Court on April 27,1907, returnable at the succeeding June term, to.which the defendant entered his appearance by stipulation, dated May 3, 1907.

The original petition contained no mention of the Constitution of the State of Missouri, or of the United States.

The nunc pro tunc entry set out above, refers to the amended petition copied in the appellant’s ab[636]*636stract, and which, the appellant claims, and the court found, was filed in the office of the clerk on the day mentioned in the order.

On the hearing of the motion asking for the entry nunc pro tunc, Mr. Alexander M. Lewis, the chief deputy clerk of the St. Louis Circuit Court, was called and asked to identify certain entries and marks on the back of the amended petition, and stated that he placed thereon the following: “254 Series A, June term, 1907, Div. 9;” that this was done on or before the Saturday which was the last day for the filing of suits for the June term, and indicated, according to his uniform method, that the cause at that time was assigned by him to division 91 of the court. He also stated that the figures 45794, the serial number of the case must, in accordance with such method, had been placed by him on the pleading as early as the week before the first day of the June term.

The following entry, about the genuineness of which no question has been suggested, also appears on the back of this pleading: “Copy received this 17th day of May, 1907.” (Signed) “Martin A. Seward, C. B. Crawley, Attorneys for defendant.” These are the same attorneys who entered defendant’s appearance, and Mr. Seward signed the demurrer, from the action of the court upon which the appeal was taken.

The amended petition states, in substance, that the plaintiff is, and was at all times mentioned in it, the wife of the defendant, who on or about May 25', 1906, and during the April term, filed in the circuit court for the city of St. Louis a suit for divorce against plaintiff, returnable to the October term, 1906, in which it was alleged, as grounds for divorce, that the plaintiff had, for the space of one year, absented herself from him without reasonable cause: that she had offered him such indignities as to render his condition intolerable; and that at the time of her marriage with him she was, and still remained, impotent.

[637]*637That on the first day of June, 1906-, and at the April term of said court, he presented to the judge of Division Nine his affidavit, wherein it was alleged that plaintiff had absconded from her usual place of abode, and that although he had diligently sought to locate her he was unable to do so, or to learn her whereabouts, and that she had concealed herself so that the ordinary process of law could not be served on her in this State, and praying an order that notice of the suit be given by publication. That each recital of said affidavit was false; that plaintiff had not absconded or concealed herself, and that her actual residence and address, which-was in the city of Kansas City, State of Missouri, was at the time well known to him; that he, for the purpose of attempting to secure a decree of divorce from her without her knowledge, so that she would not have the opportunity to appear and defend, and defeat the said suit, and for the purpose of falsely and fraudulently conferring a pretended jurisdiction on said court over her person, falsely and willingly made the said affidavit, knowing that the same was a fraud on the court, and on this plaintiff and her most sacred rights.

That the judge of court was deceived by said false affidavit, and, on the last named date, made an order directing that notice of the suit be given by publication in a newspaper published in the city of St. Louis; that a publication purporting to be the order of the court was published four times in the “Star-Chronicle,” but said publication was not a. lawful notice to plaintiff of the bringing of said suit, because it was based on said false affidavit; because said publication was preceded by a statement that the order wa,s made at the June term, whereas it was in fact made at the April term; and because it failed to set out the grounds of divorce alleged in the petition, and was therefore insufficient to confer jurisdiction on the court.

[638]*638That afterward, on the 8th day of October, 1906, and at the October term, default was entered against her, and the cause set for hearing ex parte; that she was in entire ignorance of the fact that such suit had been brought, or that such publication had been made; that on or about the 9th day of November, 1806, a final decree purporting to dissolve the marriage and restore him to all the rights of an unmarried man was entered by said court; and that she had neither lawful notice nor actual knowledge of the pendency of said divorce suit, nor of the granting of said decree of divorce, until about the 10th day of April, 1907, long after the term at which the same was rendered had elapsed.

That this defendant, the plaintiff in said suit, was not, at the time of filing said suit, nor at any other time, a bona fide resident of the city of St. Louis, but was then and ever since, a resident of Chariton county, Missouri; and the averment in his petition that he was a resident of the city of St. Louis was falsely and fraudulently made, in order to give a colorable jurisdiction to this court, which could not acquire jurisdiction of said cause as against this plaintiff, who was also not a resident of said city, but resided at the time in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri. That the alleged grounds of divorce set up in said petition are, as defendant well knows, each and every one untrue in substance and in fact, and that she has actual disproof of the same, and a just and sufficient defence to the pretended cause of action.

The petition then pleads that the notice set forth and proceedings under the same do not constitute due process of law, and that “section 2932 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri of 1899, purporting to prohibit the review or vacating of any decree of divorce after the term of court at which the same was rendered, is not applicable to a void decree rendered without jurisdiction of the cause of action and of the person of the defendant or upon an assumption of jurisdiction falsely [639]

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 94, 242 Mo. 625, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorrance-v-dorrance-mo-1912.