Huguley v. Huguley

51 S.E.2d 445, 204 Ga. 692
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1949
Docket16447, 16470.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 51 S.E.2d 445 (Huguley v. Huguley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huguley v. Huguley, 51 S.E.2d 445, 204 Ga. 692 (Ga. 1949).

Opinion

Duckworth, Chief Justice.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The exception to the judgment overruling the demurrer to the petition is without merit. While this court has held that an insane person can not prosecute a suit for divorce by a guardian (Phillips v. Phillips, 203 Ga. 106, 45 S. E. 2d, 621), that rule is bottomed upon the proposition that it is peculiarly a personal decision of the petitioner himself as to whether or not he will condone the acts of his spouse or sue for a divorce. That reasoning does not apply in a case where the petitioner is sane but the defendant is insane. The petitioner has 'the right to make his choice as to whether or not he shall condone or seek a divorce, and the condition of his spouse at the time of such decision can not affect this right of the petitioner any more than if it were a suit on any other contract. The argument is made on behalf of the insane defendant that the petitioner should not be allowed to sue for a divorce because the defendant, if sane, might choose either to defend or not defend the same, and that her guardian could not know her will in that respect. We can not agreed with this contention. It is not a matter of whether or not she defends the suit, but whether or not the petitioner is entitled to the relief sought. 17 Am. Jur. 265; 27 C. J. S. 597, 672, §§ 55, 90. We must also notice our Code, § 30-102 (2), which makes insanity at the time of marriage a ground for divorce. If under the law one is not allowed to prosecute a suit for divorce against an insane spouse, then the only opportunity one would have of obtaining a divorce on this ground would be when and if his spouse regained sanity; otherwise, his marriage could not be dissolved, although there existed a specific ground upon which the law declares that he might obtain a divorce. The decision in Zeigler v. Zeigler, 149 Ga. 508 (101 S. E. 183), cited and relied upon by the *695 plaintiff in error, does not require a different ruling. The actual ruling there was that, since the ground upon which the divorce was sought was three years’ continued wilful desertion, and it appeared that the defendant became insane before the three years had elapsed, a divorce upon the ground alleged was unauthorized. The further ground of demurrer, to the effect that the allegations of cruelty were insufficient, is likewise without merit.

This record presents a number of questions for decision. There are entirely too many doubts and uncertainties existing in the law as to the rights, remedies, and procedures under the new divorce act of 1946 (Ga. L. 1946, p. 90). This law vitally affects parties to divorce actions; .their children, and society as a whole. It ought to be definite and certain. The basic cause of the existing confusion lies in the fact that the new act revolutionizes the procedure that had existed for many years without foreseeing and clearly providing for eventualities and circumstances which would arise in the course of procedure under the new law. The new law authorizes a total divorce upon one verdict and at one term, which will become final within thirty days unless a proper motion is made within that time to modify or set it aside, thus avoiding the delay involved in the old law, which required two separate verdicts at different terms. The obvious purpose of the new law was to save time and avoid useless repetition, but in spite of the manifest purpose to avoid repeating in the second trial what had been done in the first, the new law provides for an application within thirty days, upon good and sufficient grounds, to modify or set aside the verdict and decree of divorce. The act makes no attempt to prescribe the form of such application or procedure to review the judgment thereon. It stops with the provision for the application and trial by jury if demanded. It is made necessary, therefore, for the courts to say what procedure shall be followed if further adjudication or review is to be had. The act neither provides nor intimates whether the original verdict and decree may be reviewed otherwise than by an application to modify or set aside. The new law does not repeal the Code, § 30-130, which declares that “New trials may be granted in divorce suits as in other cases.” Obviously, if upon the first trial a divorce is denied, the petitioner would be entitled to have that trial reviewed by a motion for new trial, without making an ap *696 plication to modify or set aside as provided in the act where a divorce has been granted. But when judgment has been rendered on an application to modify or set aside and a review is sought either by motion for new trial or by direct exception, is such a review one of the original verdict and decree, or is the review confined to the judgment on the application to modify or set aside? While there may be good grounds for doubt on this question, we believe the sounder view to be, and so hold, that the review is confined to the judgment on the application to modify or set aside. This view eliminates-the troublesome question that would arise if the review here is of the original verdict and decree as to whether or not a motion for new trial has been filed in time under the Code, § 70-301. No cause shall be carried to the Supreme Court while the same is pending in the court below unless the judgment complained of is final or would have been final as to some material party thereto if rendered as contended for by the plaintiff in error. Ga. L. '1946, pp. 726, 730; Code, Ann. Supp., § 6-701. The new divorce law did pot in any mannct change the law, as it existed at the time of its enactment, with respect to the procedure for a review in the Supreme Court. See Code, Chapter 6-8, Procedure to Secure Review, and Code, Title 70, New Trial. The new act did not amend or alter the Code, § 6-804, which provides for a review by direct bill of exceptions where a judgment has necessarily been controlled by one or more rulings, orders, decisions, or charges of the court, and it is sought to except to the judgment and assign error upon such rulings, orders, decisions, or charges of the court. It is not necessary to make a motion for new trial. The provision in the new divorce law, requiring a petition within thirty days to modify or set aside a verdict or decree of divorce, necessarily takes from such verdict or decree the quality of finality which is essential to a review in the Supreme Court, and, as held in Dugas v. Dugas, 201 Ga. 190 (39 S. E. 2d, 658), an attempt to review such a verdict and decree by a motion for new trial, without first having complied with the statute by filing a petition to modify or set aside, is premature. But once the statute has been complied with, in cases where a divorce is granted, then the judgment may be reviewed by a motion for new trial or by direct exception. Furthermore, since the new law requires nothing more in the trial court in cases *697 where a decree denying a divorce is rendered, the procedure for review of such a decree as provided by the general law is applicable immediately without the necessity of petitioning for modification or setting aside of that decree. In Gault v. Gault, 204 Ga. 205 (48 S. E.

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51 S.E.2d 445, 204 Ga. 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huguley-v-huguley-ga-1949.