In Re Meier Estate

123 N.W.2d 747, 371 Mich. 320
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1963
DocketCalendar No. 84, Docket No. 49,731
StatusPublished

This text of 123 N.W.2d 747 (In Re Meier Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Meier Estate, 123 N.W.2d 747, 371 Mich. 320 (Mich. 1963).

Opinion

371 Mich. 320 (1963)
123 N.W.2d 747

In re MEIER ESTATE.
KIRBY
v.
MEIER.

Calendar No. 84, Docket No. 49,731.

Supreme Court of Michigan.

Decided October 10, 1963.
Rehearing denied November 7, 1963.

John W. Langs (Milo J. Warner and Thomas P. Dignan, of counsel), for plaintiff.

Burke, Burke, Ryan & Roberts (Robert Tait, of counsel), for defendant.

SMITH, J. (dissenting).

This case is submitted on an agreed statement of facts and issues. Involved are the questions: (1) Whether an Ohio decree of divorce is void, and (2) if so, whether it may be collaterally attacked in this State. This is an appeal from a circuit court order affirming a probate court order determining, among other things, the heirs of Elizabeth Julia Meier to be Henry W. Meier, husband, Nellie E. Kirby, a sister, and Jane White Hutchins, a niece.

Outcome of the case depends largely upon whether a 1932 Ohio divorce between Henry Meier and his *322 first wife, Jean Meier, was void for want of jurisdiction over the person of Jean Meier. If, according to Ohio law, the decree was void, then the purported marriage of Henry Meier to Elizabeth Meier in 1955 is invalid, and he is not an heir of the deceased.

In 1932, Henry Meier obtained the putative divorce from Jean Meier in Lima, Ohio. They had married in Michigan in 1911, gone to live in Ohio sometime thereafter, and separated in 1928. Jean Meier went to live in Utah. In the petition for divorce, Henry Meier alleged among other things that Jean Meier, "the defendant now resides in Salt Lake City, Utah." The petition also recited that "plaintiff prays for an order for service by publication on the defendant." These quoted portions constitute the entire reference in the petition to the whereabouts of Jean Meier and to the request for service by publication. No separate affidavit was filed. (The significance of this under Ohio law will be explained below.) However, the record shows an order by the judge in which he considered the petition as an affidavit and directed thereby service by publication, including mailing a copy of the petition and summons to Jean Meier at a given street address in Salt Lake City. There is no question about Jean Meier receiving notice of the proceeding. Jean Meier is alive, has returned to Michigan, and admits the fact of notice. She did not enter an appearance in the divorce proceedings, nor take part in any way. There is no claim of fraud or collusion by her or anyone else. The question is whether under Ohio law in effect at the time the statutory requisites were followed so as to have given the court jurisdiction over the person of Jean Meier.

The principal Ohio case cited and relied upon by appellant is In re Estate of Frankenberg, 70 Ohio App 495 (47 NE2d 239).[*] This, like the instant case, *323 was a collateral attack in probate court upon a divorce proceeding occurring some 32 years earlier. Claim was made that the decree was void because of failure to obtain jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. In the Frankenberg Case, appellant contended that the decree was void on its face by reason of the failure to file an affidavit before service by publication, and further by reason of the failure of the late-filed affidavit not setting forth "that service of summons can not be made within this State on the defendant to be served by publication," as required by Ohio statute. The statutes in effect at the time of the Frankenberg Case are substantially the same as those in effect at the time of the divorce proceeding under attack in the instant case.

The language of the Ohio court in Frankenberg is important to a resolution of this case and is, therefore, quoted at some length (pp 497, 498):

"Section 5045, Revised Statues of Ohio (now section 11292, General Code[**]), in force at the time the petition in the divorce case was filed, provided for service by publication, but before service by publication could be made a preliminary affidavit was necessary as provided by section 5046, Revised Statutes (now section 11293, General Code[**]), in force at the time and reading as follows:

"`Before service by publication can be made, an affidavit must be filed that service of a summons can not be made within this State on the defendant to be served by publication, and that the case is 1 of those mentioned in the preceding section; and when such affidavit is filed, the party may proceed to make service by publication.'

"It is said in 1 Bates, Pleading and Practice (1908 ed), 596, in commenting on the statutes in force and effect at the time of this divorce proceeding:

*324 "`The code provides for 2 kinds of affidavits in this connection; the one under section 5046, which is a necessary part of the constructive service or at least an essential preliminary foundation; the other under section 5045 (last lines of section), which is mere evidence to show due service but not part of it; and hence is not called for until before hearing.

"`The preliminary affidavit is as necessary to authorize personal service outside the State as for publishing. Publication without such affidavit is wholly void. The affidavit must be filed in advance of the publication, section 5046, and publishing before the affidavit is filed is a fatal defect.' (Emphasis supplied.)

"Numerous cases both in Ohio and throughout other jurisdictions are cited, an examination of which show that they support the text."

Relative to the petition for divorce being used as an affidavit, as appellee contends for in the instant case, again the Ohio court speaks in the Frankenberg Case (p 501):

"The petition in the divorce proceeding under consideration cannot be used in lieu of the affidavit because there is no allegation therein meeting the requirement of section 5046, Revised Statutes."

In another part of the opinion on the same page, the Ohio court held further that: "The courts have uniformly held that this allegation is necessary. A party may be a nonresident of the State of Ohio and yet it may be possible to serve him with summons." The court held further (p 500) that in view of the defects in procedure "the attempted service by publication was not authorized and the court never acquired jurisdiction of the person of the defendant in this divorce case, and publication without such affidavit is wholly void."

A review of the language in the petition in the Meier divorce proceeding requires a conclusion that *325 under Ohio law there is no affidavit as required by the statutes. And further, if the petition for divorce is said to encompass such an affidavit, then the failure to allege therein that service could not be made upon the defendant within the State was a fatal defect.

In Beachler v. Ford, 77 Ohio App 41 (60 NE2d 330), it was held that although the affidavit recited that defendant resided in another State and that by reason thereof service of summons could not be made upon him, this was not a sufficient allegation within the meaning of the statute. In that case the court held:

"The mere fact that the defendant resided in Indiana would not preclude service being made upon him in Ohio, as the statutes of Ohio permit service of summons on nonresident defendant within the State and it is a matter of common knowledge that services of summons on nonresident defendants are frequently made within the State.

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Kirby v. Meier
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123 N.W.2d 747, 371 Mich. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-meier-estate-mich-1963.