Gato v. Christian

92 A. 489, 112 Me. 427, 1914 Me. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 A. 489 (Gato v. Christian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gato v. Christian, 92 A. 489, 112 Me. 427, 1914 Me. LEXIS 143 (Me. 1914).

Opinion

Cornish, J.

Katie J. Gato began divorce proceedings against her husband, the plaintiff, at the January term, 1912, of the Supreme Judicial Court for Cumberland County, at which term the plaintiff appeared by his attorney and answered to the suit. At the April term, 1912, a hearing was had and a divorce granted on April 26th, in the absence of, and without notice to or the knowledge of the husband or his attorney, the presiding Justice being in ignorance of the fact that his appearance had been entered. The decree was signed and filed on May 1st, 1912. At the time of the divorce the wife held title to certain real estate in question, which had been conveyed to her on November 7th, 1889, one-half by her husband and one-half by her husband’s brother, Francis E. Gato. Upon these premises she had, during coverture, placed several mortgages; one running to Hernán W. Ladd on November 20, 1902, for $300 in which mortgage and the note secured thereby the husband joined. This was assigned to William H. Bickford on March 18, 1903, and on October 10, 1911, Bickford began foreclosure proceedings by publication. On November 6th, 1911, she executed a second mortgage on the same property to William D. Sawyer for the sum of $100, but in this mortgage the husband did not join. On [429]*429April 26, 1912, the date on which her divorce was granted, she executed a third mortgage to John B. Kehoe, her attorney, in the sum of $100. In this the husband did not join. On May 2oth, 1912, and after the decree of divorce, Katie J. Gato executed two mortgages to the defendant Grace L. Christian, a first mortgage in the sum of $300 and a second in the sum of $400, with the net proceeds of which, the prior mortgages to Bickford, Sawyer and Kehoe Were taken up and discharged. It is admitted that the agent and attorney of Grace L. Christian examined the records in the office of. the Clerk of Courts to ascertain the facts in relation to the granting of the divorce, before these loans were made, and also that the plaintiff had no knowledge of the execution and delivery of these mortgages and received personally no part of the proceeds thereof.

On July 3, 1912, Katie J. Gato died intestate leaving five minor children, and no administration has been had on her estate. On July 18, 1912, and prior to the adjournment of the April term of Court, the plaintiff, as libellee, filed a motion for new trial in the divorce proceedings, alleging that in decreeing said divorce justice had not been done, because of fraud, accident, mistake or misfortune. After a hearing, ex parte and without notice to any one representing the libelant, a new trial was granted; and at the October term, 1912, the libel was dismissed. On December 19, 1912, Grace L. Christian began foreclosure proceedings by publication upon the four hundred dollar mortgage, and, prior to the expiration of the time of redemption, the plaintiff brought this bill in equity, asking that she be enjoined and restrained from foreclosing the same.

The first question that arises is the validity of the order of Court setting aside the decree of divorce.and granting a new trial. This was done notwithstanding the libelant, the wife, had died in the meantime. But her death did not of itself render the decree unassailable. The great weight of authority sustains this power in the Courts where property rights are involved, although the libelant has died since the decree, and this Court in a recent case has so declared. Stewart v. Leathers, 108 Maine, 96, 27 A. & E. Ann. Cas., 366, and note page 369.

Nor does the fact that the hearing on the motion for a new trial was had ex parte render the granting of the motion void. The cases cited by the learned counsel for the defendant are not applicable, because they were subsequent and independent proceedings [430]*430in the nature of a petition for annulment, and it must be remembered that in the case at bar the motion was addressed to the presiding J ustice at the same term that the divorce had been granted and before the adjournment thereof. There was no party upon whom notice could have been served, if required, because the libelant had died. And such notice in this case was not required. The Court, when convinced that the libellee had not had his day in Court and that this was due to no negligence on his part, but to some oversight or mistake on the part of the Court or of the attorney for the libelant, had the power acting upon the motion of the libellee, or even upon its own initiative to vacate the decree. It is a power inherent in the Court during the term at which the decree is entered, to correct errors and right wrongs of this nature.

‘ Tn this country all Courts have terms and vacations. The time of the commencement of every term, if there be half a dozen a year, is fixed by statute, and the end of it by the final adjournment of the Court for that term. This is the case with regard to all the Courts of the United States, and if there be exceptions in State Courts they are unimportant. It is a general rule of the law that all the judgments, decrees or other orders of the Courts, however conclusive in their character, are under the control of the Court which pronounces them during the term at which they are rendered or entered of record, and they may then be set aside, vacated, modified or annulled by that Court.” Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S., 410, 415. This legal doctrine is universally accepted, and the power is daily exercised by the Courts, for the prevention of fraud or error and the furtherance of justice. Fraley v. Feather, 46 N. J. L., 429, and see note to Furman v. Furman, (153 N. Y., 109), 60 Am. St. Rep., at page 638, and numerous cases cited. The Court exercised that power here and vacated the decree before the final adjournment of the term at which it had been entered. Such action was clearly within its province.

The next question is the legal effect of the setting aside of this decree, upon the transfer of title by mortgage given by the libelant to the defendant after the decree signed on May 1, 1912, and before it was set aside by the order of August 1, 1912. Obviously the order vacating the decree related back to the date of the decree itself, and in the eye of the law Mrs. Gato had remained a married woman, and subject to the restrictions imposed by coverture. The one-half of [431]*431the property that was conveyed to her by her husband during coverture could not be mortgaged by her without his joinder. Her conveyance by deed is prohibited by R. S., Chap. 63, Sec. 1, in these words: “Real estate directly conveyed to her by her husband cannot be conveyed by her without the joinder of her husband, except real estate conveyed to her as security or in payment of a bona fide debt actually due to her from her husband.” And a conveyance by mortgage stands in the same category as a conveyance by deed, Jewett v. Davis, 10 Allen, 68. Otherwise that could be done indirectly by mortgage and foreclosure which could not be done directly by deed, and the purpose of the restriction in the statutes be completely thwarted. As to the one-half conveyed to her by her husband’s brother, that was hers absolutely, subject to her husband’s right to one-third by inheritance in case she should predecease him as she did. This one-third was not conveyed because he did not join in the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 489, 112 Me. 427, 1914 Me. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gato-v-christian-me-1914.