Heinemann v. Heinemann

233 N.W. 552, 202 Wis. 639, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 328
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 233 N.W. 552 (Heinemann v. Heinemann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heinemann v. Heinemann, 233 N.W. 552, 202 Wis. 639, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 328 (Wis. 1930).

Opinion

Wickhem, J.

Plaintiff appeals upon two grounds: (1) That the statutory requirements with reference to service of the counterclaim upon the district attorney, and with reference to his appearance in open court, were not satisfied, [641]*641and that the judgment is void for want of jurisdiction; and (2) that the period of desertion, as shown by the evidence, was for less than the period required by statute.

Sec. 247.14, Stats., provides:

“In any action to affirm or annul a marriage, or for a divorce, the plaintiff and defendant shall, within ten days after making service on the opposite party of his complaint, answer, counterclaim or reply, as the case may be, serve a copy of th’e safne upon the divorce counsel of the county in which the action is begun. . . . Such counsel shall appear in the action when the defendant fails to answer or withdraws his answer before trial; also, when the defendant interposes a counterclaim and the plaintiff thereupon neither supports his complaint nor opposes the counterclaim by proof; and when the court is satisfied that the issues are not contested in good faith by either party.”

Sec. 247.15, Stats., provides:

“No decree in any action in which divorce counsel is required by section 247.14 to appear shall be granted until such counsel or the divorce counsel of the county in which the action is tried shall have appeared in open court and in behalf of the public made a fair and impartial presentation of the case to the court and fully advised the court as to the merits of the case and the rights and interests of the parties and of the public, nor until the proposed findings and judgment shall have been submitted to such divorce counsel. ...”

Sec. 247.01, Stats., provides:

“The circuit court has jurisdiction of all actions to affirm or to annul a marriage, or for a divorce from the bond of matrimony, or from bed and board, and authority to do all acts and things necessary and proper in such actions and to carry its orders and judgments into execution as. hereinafter prescribed. All such actions shall be commenced and conducted and the orders and judgments therein enforced according to the provisions of these statutes in respect to actions in courts of récord, as far as applicable, except as provided in this chapter.”

[642]*642The contention of the appellant is substantially this: that the requirements for service upon the district attorney, his appearance in open court, and his approval of the findings, are mandatory, and that a failure to comply with the requirements constitutes a jurisdictional defect in the proceedings. Appellant invokes the well-established rule that the jurisdiction in divorce actions is entirely statutory. “What the statute does not give, the court, however broad its equity powers in other matters may be, cannot assume.” Towns v. Towns, 171 Wis. 32, 176 N. W. 216.

This court had occasion to consider a somewhat similar situation in Bloomer v. Bloomer, 197 Wis. 140, 221 N. W. 734. In that case the court, with the consent of the appellant, heard some testimony of a salacious character in chambers, and excluded minors and newsgatherers while some of the same character of proof was being offered in the court room. The appellant in that case relied upon sec. 247.12, Stats., which provides:

“All hearings and trials to determine whether or not a decree shall be granted shall be had before the court, and not before a referee, or any other delegated representative, and shall in all cases be public.”

The appellant sought to avoid the effect of the well-established rule that an appellant cannot be heard to complain of any proceeding taken or proof received upon the trial at the instance of the appellant himself, by asserting that this rule does not apply to divorce actions in which the public is a party in interest. The court affirmed the judgment, and in doing so stated that the “statute was enacted to end a practice that had obtained in this state by which testimony in default divorce actions was quite generally taken before referees, who were too often stenographers in the office of the plaintiff’s attorney. It was because this practice made possible the granting of a divorce almost as a matter of form that this act was passed for the purpose [643]*643of abolishing the practice.” The purpose of the act was held to be “accomplished in this case when the presiding judge, the parties, and their counsel retired to the judge’s chambers upon request of defendant’s counsel in order that the salacious testimony should not be detailed before those who were in the court room.”

The reasoning in the Bloomer Case is applicable in the present situation. If the purpose sought to be accomplished by the statute was in this case substantially satisfied, there should not be a reversal for a failure literally to observe the statutory requirements. Secs. 247.14 and 247.15 set out in substance four requirements: first, the original pleadings shall be served upon the district attorney; second, he shall be served with the amended answer and counterclaim; third, he shall appear in open court and fully advise the court as to the merits of the case; and fourth, he shall approve the findings. Of these requirements two were satisfied. The original summons and complaint as well as the answer were served upon the district attorney, and the findings were submitted to him for approval and were approved. While it cannot be said that the proceedings were in strict conformity with the statute, we think it may be said that the purposes sought to be accomplished by these provisions were substantially satisfied in that the district attorney was given a proper opportunity to investigate the situation and was. called upon before the findings were signed to indicate his approval. What is said here should not be taken to indicate that this court approves of the practice of dispensing with the statutory requirements. It is merely held that where there has been a sufficient compliance with this statute so that its purposes may be supposed to have been satisfied, the court will riot hold the judgment void for want of jurisdiction.

Appellarit’s second contention is based upon the fact that plaintiff left the defendant less than four months before she [644]*644started her action for divorce. Sub. (4), sec. 247.07, Stats., provides, as one of the grounds for divorce:

“For the wilful desertion of one party by the other for the term of one year next preceding the commencement of the action.”

At the time of the filing of the defendant’s counterclaim, a period of eighteen months had elapsed from the time plaintiff left the defendant. Upon these facts and upon the statute, plaintiff makes two contentions: The first is that the period during which the plaintiff’s action for divorce was pending should not be considered as a part of the period of desertion. It is our conclusion that this contention is unsound in view of the circumstances of this case. It must be taken as a verity that plaintiff wilfully deserted the defendant on November 22, 1927, and under such circumstances the commencement of a groundless action for divorce should not be held to interrupt the period of wilful desertion.

In Tolzman v. Tolzman, 130 Minn. 342, 153 N. W. 745, it is said:

“In this case the desertion by plaintiff began before she started her action for a separation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 N.W. 552, 202 Wis. 639, 1930 Wisc. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinemann-v-heinemann-wis-1930.