In re Geary

1 Va. Cir. 295, 1982 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6
CourtRockingham County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1982
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 10017
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Cir. 295 (In re Geary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Rockingham County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Geary, 1 Va. Cir. 295, 1982 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6 (Va. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

By JUDGE R. K. WOLTZ

This matter is a joint petition for divorce, the joint petitioners being Karen L. Geary and James J. Geary, husband and wife, and being filed on the former's stationery as an attorney at law was drafted presumably by her. The petition alleges the marriage, the name and age of a child thereof, domicile and residency of each petitioner in this State, age of majority and civilian status for both petitioners, due grounds for venue, a period of uninterrupted separation between them in excess of one year and a separation agreement.

The petitioners jointly pray for a divorce ¡a vinculo matrimonii pursuant to § 20-91(9), affirmation of the separation agreement pursuant to § 20-109.1 and sequestration of the papers of the "suit" pursuant to § 20-124. The petition is manually signed purportedly by each of the joint petitioners.

There is no process, original or mesne. At the taking of depositions, each petitioner in narrative form rather than in question and answer form testified as to the marriage, the jurisdictional facts, the ground for divorce and other matters set forth in the petition. There was one corroborating witness who deposed in response to questions by the female petitioner. The male petitioner was represented by counsel at the taking of the evidence, but other than being present his only part in this phase of proceed[296]*296ings was to forego opportunity to question the corroborating witness.

The question for decision is this: Can a divorce be granted on the joint petition of the parties to the marriage? The answer, which is in the negative, is found in basic principles.

Formerly jurisdiction to grant divorces was vested in the legislature, and no court had "inherent power" to grant divorces and in particular courts of equity acquired no jurisdiction over the subject matter of divorce upon equitable grounds. McCotter v. Carle, 149 Va. 584 (1927). Matters continued thus in the Commonwealth until Act of Assembly of 1847-48, when the legislature, in which jurisdiction over divorce had been vested, transferred that jurisdiction to the courts. Bailey v. Bailey, 62 Va. (21 Gratt.) 43 (1871). It follows then that the jurisdiction of courts over divorce is "entirely statutory and limited" and "purely statutory." McCotter, supra, it is then to the statutes in their grant and conferral of divorce jurisdiction on the courts and their limitation and restriction on such jurisdiction that resort must be had to resolve the question presented by this case. See also Watkins v. Watkins, 220 Va. 1051 (1980).

That act of 1847-48 by which divorce jurisdiction was transferred from the legislature to the Courts contained this provision:

Such suit shall be instituted and conducted as other suits in equity, except that the bill shall not be taken for confessed; and whether the defendant answer or not, the cause shall be heard independently of the admissions of either party in the pleadings or otherwise. (Emphasis added)

It is remarkable that through one hundred thirty-five years of legislative history this basic provision of the original divorce statute in this Commonwealth has scarcely been changed. The present Code provision, § 20-99, is precisely the same as the original except [297]*297for the added provision that no "divorce, annulment or affirmation of a marriage be granted on the uncorroborated testimony of the parties or either of them," and certain additions regarding service of original and mesne process.

This statute, without deletion from its original terms since its adoption, together with later additions, is the deeply rooted, fundamental sine qua non of divorce procedure in Virginia. Note that its terms include the words "suit," "bill" and "defendant." Note that its terms are entirely mandatory excepting a proviso not important here with regard to service of mesne process.

(The original statutory language has also survived unchanged to the extent noted despite constitutional provisions concerning divorce. For the first time legislatively conferred divorce jurisdiction on the courts was mandated by the Constitution of 1851, Article V, § 35. That provision remains nearly unchanged in the Constitution of 1971, Article IV, § 14:

The General Assembly shall confer on the courts power to grant divorces, change the names of persons, and direct the sales of estates belonging to infants and other persons under legal disabilities, [but] and shall not, by special legislation, grant relief in [such] these or other cases of which the courts or other tribunals may have jurisdiction. (1851 language is bracketed where changed by the 1971 language italicized.))

Bailey v. Bailey, supra, the first case of divorce to reach our highest Court, says at pages 49 and 50:

The whole scope and purpose of the act [of 1847-48] was to limit the jurisdiction of the courts, and to discourage suits of this [298]*298character. Having specified particularly the causes for which the courts must sever the ties which bond together husband and wife, their purpose was to prevent a divorce from being obtained by the collusion of the parties.

This case is also authority that the statute was meant to prevent grant of a divorce "merely upon the consent, or on the default of the party charged . . ." (Emphasis added) The later amendment requiring corroboration of a party or both parties was likewise to prevent divorces by collusion. Forbes v. Forbes, 182 Va. 636 (1944).

This legislative and decisional background of § 20-99 impels the conclusion that the word "suit" is used in its ordinary signification, that is, a judicial proceeding adversarial, at the very least in form, in nature whereby one or more parties plaintiff sue one or more parties defendant.

"Suit" is a generic term, of comprehensive signification, and applies to any proceeding by one person or persons against another or others in a court of justice in which the plaintiff pursues, in such court, the remedy which the law affords him for the redress of an injury or the enforcement of a right. Black’s Law Dictionary, 3d Ed.

That same authority contrastingly defines the word petition as:

An application made to a court ex parte or where there are no parties in opposition, praying for the exercise of the judicial power of the court in relation to some matter which is not the subject for suit or action or for authority to do some act which requires the sanction of the court; as for the appointment of a guardian, for leave to sell trust property, etc. (Second emphasis added)

[299]*299The other statutes in Chapter 6 of Title 20 indicate that the procedure is by suit, and that by suit an adversarial proceeding involving bills of complaints, answers, plaintiffs and defendants is contemplated.

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Related

Watkins v. Watkins
265 S.E.2d 750 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1980)
Barker v. Dayton
28 Wis. 367 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1871)
Chandler v. Chandler
112 S.E. 856 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1922)
McCotter v. Carle
140 S.E. 670 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1927)
White v. White
24 S.E.2d 448 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1943)
Forbes v. Forbes
29 S.E.2d 829 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Cir. 295, 1982 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-geary-vaccrockingham-1982.