Dry v. Rice

137 S.E. 473, 147 Va. 331, 1927 Va. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 473 (Dry v. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dry v. Rice, 137 S.E. 473, 147 Va. 331, 1927 Va. LEXIS 306 (Va. 1927).

Opinion

Bubks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prank C. Rice (appellee) filed his bill against the appellant, in which he alleges that they were married on December 8, 1897; that all of his accumulations during their married life had been invested in real estate, which he had caused to be conveyed to her, and which now stands in her name; that their relations “had always been of the kindest sort;” and that while they were living thus peaceably together, she had, without cause and greatly to his surprise and discomfort, gone to Nevada, on March 1, 1922, instituted and obtained a divorce from him, and had thereafter [334]*334contracted a marriage with another man. He practically admits in the bill, and it is fully proved, that a copy of the bill for divorce was served on him in September, 1922, and that he read it, but “did not attach much importance” to it. The bill in the instant case vigorously assails the validity of the Nevada decree on the ground that she never acquired any bona fide residence in Nevada, and that “the court in Nevada could not legally grant her a divorce because her matrimonial domicile was in the State of Virginia, and if she had succeeded in getting a decree from a competent court in the State of Nevada, it was upon misrepresentation and the grossest kind of fraud.”, The bill asks “that he may be granted a divorce from, the said defendant from the bonds of matrimony; that a receiver may take charge of the property accumulated as aforesaid, and that a proper division of the same may be made, if the court should be convinced upon a final hearing of this ease that a fraud has been per-, petrated upon him.”

The defendant answered, denying every charge of misconduct of any kind on her part, or that the complainant had any interest in the property mentioned in the bill, or that the court in Nevada was without jurisdiction to grant the divorce, and filed as an exhibit with her answer a certified copy of the entire proceedings in the divorce suit, including the testimony.

At the hearing, the testimony was taken ore temis before the trial judge, who decreed as follows:

“On consideration whereof, the court being satisfied that there is no merit in the complainant’s claim of an interest in the real estate of the defendant, as described in the said bill, and that the said plaintiff is not entitled to the said real estate or to any part thereof or to anji division thereof:
[335]*335“It is, therefore, adjudged, ordered and decreed that the plaintiff’s bill, as to so much thereof as pertains to the real estate of the defendant, be, and the same hereby is dismissed.
“And the eourt being further of the opinion that the divorce obtained by the defendant in Carson City, Nevada, on the 29th day of September, 1922, was obtained upon false grounds, doth so decide and the said decree is set aside, *

From so much of the decree as sets aside the decree of divorce of the Nevada eourt, the defendant appealed.

The decree, in form at least, is manifestly erroneous. The courts of this State have no jurisdiction whatsoever over the judicial proceedings of another State, and cannot alter, amend or repeal them, however erroneous they may be. If void, the courts of this State may ignore them, and they may inquire into the jurisdiction of the foreign eourt over the parties, but they can act only on the parties before the eourt. They cannot set aside a decree of a foreign court. So far has this doctrine been carried that it has been held that where a judgment has been rendered on the law side of the court, the same court cannot, on its chancery side, grant a new trial of the action at law.

In Wynne v. Newman, 75 Va. 811, 815, it is said: “If the complainant was entitled to relief, the mode of granting it was improper. At the hearing the court-annulled the judgment, set aside the verdict of the jury and ordered a new trial in the action at law. A court of chancery, under our system of jurisprudence, is invested with no such power as this. It may act on the parties, but not directly on the judgment, nor on the eourt which rendered it. Such judgment by a court having jurisdiction to render it, can be vacated only by some direct proceeding at law, either in the court in which [336]*336the judgment was recovered or some other court having appellate jurisdiction. See 2 Story’s Eq. Jurisprudence, section 1571; Graham & Waterman on New Trials, chapter 17, pages 1482, 1483, and cases cited.

“There are cases in which the court has required the defendant in chancery to submit to a new trial in the action at law, and restrained him from enforcing the judgment complained of. But the regular course would seem to be for the chancery court to order such issue or issues as may be proper, and to base its decree on the finding of the jury at the hearing, either dissolving or perpetuating the injunction, in whole or in part, according to circumstances. Such was the course pursued by this court in Knifong v. Hendricks, 2 Gratt. [43 Va.] 213 [44 Am. Dec. 385]. In the present case, if a new trial was proper, the court should have ordered an issue, the same as in the action at law, to be tried as other issues out of chancery are tried, the verdict of the jury, if the trial was in the law court, to be certified to the chancery court, and in the meantime continue the injunction till the hearing of the cause; and if the finding was for the defendant and affirmed, dissolve the injunction; if for the plaintiff, perpetuate the injunction and decree for the complainant according to the verdict.”

The attempt to show that the Nevada court was without jurisdiction because the appellant had not resided there for six months prior to the institution of her suit is not sustained by the evidence. Mrs. Rice was in Philadelphia on February 28th, and the calculation of appellee to show that appellant had not resided in Nevada six months is based on the supposition that Mrs. Rice remained there ten days and that it took her “around five days” to make the trip to Nevada; but her statement as to her stay in Philadelphia was a mere [337]*337estimate — “I think around eight or ten days maybe,” she said — whereas she is positive in her statement that she employed counsel on the day after her arrival in Nevada, and that she resided there six months before her suit was brought, on September 12th. Her statement is also corroborated by the improbability that her counsel, residing there, would have brought the suit before the expiration of six months. At all events, her positive statement as to the length of her residence is not overcome by mere estimates based on uncertain data. The Nevada court having determined the jurisdictional fact that the appellant had resided in that State more than six months before the suit was brought, its finding will not be ignored and treated as void, except upon satisfactory evidence to the contrary.

The most serious contention of the appellee is that the appellant never acquired a bona fide residence in Nevada, and that the divorce decree was obtained “upon misrepresentation and the grossest kind of fraud.” If the evidence warrants such a conclusion, and the husband neither appeared nor was served with process, the Nevada decree is not binding on the courts of this State and may be treated as void. Corvin v. Com’th, 131 Va. 649, 108 S. E. 661, 39 A. L. R. 692.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 473, 147 Va. 331, 1927 Va. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dry-v-rice-va-1927.