Guerra v. Guerra

213 S.W. 360, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 833
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1919
DocketNo. 6221.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 360 (Guerra v. Guerra) 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
Guerra v. Guerra, 213 S.W. 360, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 833 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This is a suit to set aside the divorce granted to appellee against the appellant in the Thirty-Seventh district court on the 22d day of July A. D. 1914. The second amended petition was filed in the same court in which the decree was granted, on the 9th day of May, 1917. It was properly transferred to the Fifty-Seventh district court, where this trial was had.

The grounds upon which this relief is *361 sought is that appellee sued appellant for divorce by petition filed in court on July 22, 1914, and appellant filed his waiver and acceptance of service thereto on the same day, and the divorce was granted at a special term of that court on the 22d day of July, 1914, the same day the term was called for the trial and disposition of criminal cases, and not for the purpose of disposing of this or any civil business whatever. Such appearance would not have been filed in time for service had it been to a regular term, instead of special, nor was the acceptance of service on file for 10 days before that special term. The next regular term would have convened thereafter, October term, 1914.

It was alleged the said Manuel Guerra, Jr., not having grounds for divorce, and she did have, he fraudulently agreed with her, if she would secure it, he would pay her $25 per month so long as she remained single, and, relying upon said promise, she procured the divorce; that defendant failed to pay said $25; that said divorce was the result of a collusion, and in violation of article 4633 of the Revised Statutes; and petition alleged no statutory grounds.

Plaintiff averred that under article 1723, R. S., no civil suit could be brought to and maintained at a special called session of the court, and as to such called special session said suit was a new cause of action, returnable to, and only could be tried in, the succeeding regular term of court.

Plaintiff also averred that no divorce could be granted until after 30 days from date of filing of petition.

Plaintiff also averred that under article 1729 special terms of the district court may be called when in the opinion of the district judge he should do so, to dispose of pending cases in which service might have been perfected; that Manuel Guerra did not appear and answer to said special term. He pléads the decree is null and void, and entered in the court at a time when tne said trial court was wholly without’ jurisdiction to hear and determine it.

Manuel Guerra, Jr., appellant, answered, by filing a general exception, and also by special exceptions; (a) Plaintiff invoked the jurisdiction of the court; (b) if fraud was committed in procuring, appellee was a party thereto; (c) that appellee accepted benefits under the decree, and this suit was not instituted until the 24th day of September, 1915, more than a year after said decree was rendered on the 22d day of July, 1914, and plaintiff is thereby estopped. Specially excepted to the allegations that Manuel Guerra, Jr., having no grounds for divorce, fraudulently agreed and promised said plaintiff $25 per month so long as she remained single; that defendant has failed to pay same, for the reason it states no ground for setting aside the decree, for it does not appear that plaintiff had good grounds of divorce, and failure to pay was a mere breach of a civil contract. The court sustained this last above-named exception. He answered by denying all fraud and collusion; that on the 17th of June, 1914, plaintiff instituted her suit for divorce, and knew that when said cause was to be tried it would be tried at a special term to be convened during the month of July, and defendant entered his appearance on July 22, 1914, at the request of plaintiff, and on said date plaintiff in this cause testified for herself, and divorce was granted in her favor, and she thereby estopped herself; that if there was fraud, she invoked it and was a party thereto in invoking the jurisdiction of the court, and since that time and for more than a year prior thereto she accepted benefits under said decree, recognizing it as valid and binding.

The court sustained an exception to all that portion of the petition alleging Manuel Guerra, not having grounds for divorce, procured appellee to secure it fraudulently, in consideration of which he was to pay her $25 per month, etc., which he has not paid, etc., and overruled demurrers Nos. 1 and 2.

The original petition upon which divorce' was granted was filed on June 17, 1914, and alleged that Manuel Guerra, Jr., resided in Denver county, Colo. It alleges they were lawfully married on the 7th day of January,. 1900, and lived together until about five years ago, since which time they have not lived together as husband and wife; that on or “about the 4th day of July, 1908, the defendant, without any cause on the part of this plaintiff, left and abandoned her, since which time they have not lived together as husband and wife.”

Appellant sets out or groups his first, second, third, and fourth assignments of error in rotation, and thereunder asserts the proposition that a decree in a suit for divorce, rendered at a special term of the district court where such suit was. filed returnable to a regular term of court, and 30 days had not elapsed between the filing and the trial of the same, the court not having jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter, is void and not binding.

The record in this case discloses the suit was filed against a nonresident defendant whose waiver of service and appearance recites he agrees “that this cause may be taken up at any time for trial.” There is nothing in this record to show that appellant ever knew that the judgment was obtained at a special term of the court, or ever made any objection thereto, or that it made any difference to him. There is nothing to show that at the date of the trial he was not in Bexar county, because he was in court with his appearance when the decree setting aside the decree for divorce was entered, and he is now insisting upon the validity of the decree of divorce and desires it be held valid, and thereby affirms and ratifies it.

*362 Tñe record shows the divorce was granted at a special term of the court, where criminal cases alone were to be tried under the call of the court, and his appearance was filed, without laying over 10 days, but on the very day of its filing, and at the instance of plaintiff, and upon her own unsupported evidence, she obtained the decree. She cannot set it aside on the ground of her alleged fraud, for no court will permit a litigant to reap benefits from his own fraudulent acts and wrongful conduct in procuring a judgment to which he was not entitled, and afterwards, becoming dissatisfied with it, attempts to set it aside. Can appellee, having admittedly procured an alleged illegal decree of divorce at a term of court that‘she claims had no jurisdiction to hear it, and in which she- had procured her husband to participate by securing his appearance and filing same the day she got the divorce, be permitted to say that the court had no jurisdiction to determine the matter because she should not have gotten it until the 10 days had expired, or, when she did get it, it was a fraud upon the court? In the case of Pearce v. Tally, 8 Tex. 305, it is held:

“Acceptance in this case not being made 5 days before commencement of the term, no judgment by default could have been entered at that term against the defendant.”

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 360, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerra-v-guerra-texapp-1919.