Janssen v. Janssen

269 Ill. App. 233, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 707
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1933
DocketGen. No. 8,687
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 Ill. App. 233 (Janssen v. Janssen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janssen v. Janssen, 269 Ill. App. 233, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 707 (Ill. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shurtleee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by H. Fred Janssen, petitioner below, from an order of the circuit court of Sangamon county refusing to modify a decree for separate maintenance in favor of the respondent, Clara L. Janssen, entered in this cause at the March term, 1925, as subsequently modified. Appellant’s claim to the relief sought is predicated solely upon a purported decree of divorce obtained by him from a Reno, Nevada, court based on substituted service upon the appellee, who at all times remained in the State of Illinois and who in no way submitted to the jurisdiction of that court.

Appellant claimed to have established a bona fide residence in the State of Nevada after the circuit court of Sangamon county, the place of his residence and of the matrimonial domicile, had twice refused him a divorce and had granted appellee the decree for separate maintenance here in question.

The material facts are as follows: The parties to this cause were married in the State of Illinois in the year 1899. In 1922 they separated and thereafter at the January term, 1924, of the circuit court of Sangamon county the appellant filed his bill for divorce from the appellee charging desertion. A trial was had upon the bill and appellee’s answer which resulted in a decree in favor of appellee.

At the September term, 1924, of the circuit court of Sangamon county the appellant again filed a bill for divorce against appellee this time charging adultery. The appellee filed her answer to the bill denying the charges and also filed a cross bill for separate maintenance.

A trial was had on the original bill and answer resulting in a decree dismissing the original bill for want of equity. Thereafter a hearing was had on the cross bill and appellant’s answer thereto. Following the hearing the court entered a decree finding the equities in favor of appellee and that she was living separate and apart from appellant without fault on her part. By the terms of this decree appellee was granted separate maintenance in the amount of $1,000 per year. It is this decree, as subsequently modified, that appellant is here seeking to avoid.

On June 28, 1931, appellant went to Reno, Nevada. Prior to that date he had learned that the law of Nevada required only six weeks’ residence to obtain a divorce. He consulted his attorney regarding the Nevada law and about three months before going to Reno he corresponded with an attorney there regarding the law and his contemplated divorce action. When he went to Reno it was with the specific intention of obtaining a divorce.

Appellant testified that he first made up his mind to reside in Reno “when he lost his cough,” and that he “lost his cough” after he had been in Reno four or five weeks. Six weeks after he arrived in Reno appellant filed his complaint for divorce and immediately thereafter returned to Springfield, where he remained until a few days before his divorce suit was set for trial. During all the time he had been in Reno appellant continued to operate his floral and seed business at Springfield. Appellant returned to Springfield, Illinois, to look after his business at the expiration of the six weeks’ residence at Reno.

Before returning to Illinois appellant filed his suit in the Nevada court, praying a divorce on two charges: that, for more than five years immediately and continuously preceding the filing of the complaint (bill for divorce), the plaintiff and defendant have lived separate and apart and have not cohabited during said time, the last time of living together and cohabitation having occurred on February 13, 1922. Second, that defendant had treated the plaintiff with extreme cruelty in the particulars alleged in the complaint and thereby rendered his life miserable, etc.

The record shows that service was secured on the defendant at her home in Evanston, Illinois, where she had resided for some years, by service of summons and copy of the complaint. She did not appear and defend in the Nevada court, either in person or by counsel. On October 20,1931, a decree was duly entered by the district court of Washoe county, Nevada, granting a divorce to the plaintiff on both grounds alleged in his complaint.

During his six weeks’ stay in Reno, Janssen’s bank account at Springfield remained unchanged and his business went on as usual. He transferred his church membership to a church in Reno and paid a poll tax in that city, but up until the time of the trial of this cause in the lower court did not avail himself of the privileges thus obtained, as practically all of his time was spent in Springfield. He opened a bank account there, which at the time of the trial showed a balance of $48.93, and purchased some lots in Reno on a time payment contract, paying $100 as the first payment, and all of the while he had extensive real estate and personal property holdings in Springfield.

^fSfeither at the hearing or at any other time did appellant disclose to the Reno court the previous adjudications of the Illinois court denying him a divorce^ The decree in this cause finding that appellee was living separate and apart from appellant without fault on her part and awarding her separate maintenance was concealed from the Reno court. In ignorance of these adjudications by the court of the marital domicile, the Reno court was induced to grant appellant the purported divorce.

On November 14, 1931, less than a month after he had obtained his Reno decree, appellant filed his petition for modification of the separate maintenance decree in .this cause. Because of the Reno decree he claimed that he should no longer be required to make the payments provided for in the separate maintenance decree. Further he claimed that the Reno decree terminated all of appellee’s rights in his Illinois property. To his petition for modification appellee filed her answer denying appellant’s right to the relief sought and alleging that the Reno decree is void: First, because appellant never established a bona fide residence in Nevada; second, because appellant fraudulently concealed the prior Illinois adjudications from the Nevada court; third, because the prior decrees of the circuit court of Sangamon county were res adjudicata on appellant’s right to divorce; and fourth, because appellant obtained his Eeno decree by fraudulently testifying falsely in support of his complaint for divorce in the Eeno court. The cause was tried below in May, 1932, and on July 1, 1932, the court entered the order appealed from, denying appellant relief.

Appellant has brought the record, by appeal, to this court for review.

Appellant contends that his Nevada decree, obtained upon substituted service and without disclosing the prior adverse proceedings in Illinois, is entitled to full faith and credit and operates to discharge appellant from all of his marital obligations, including his obligation to pay appellee separate maintenance under the terms of the prior decree in this cause.

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Bluebook (online)
269 Ill. App. 233, 1933 Ill. App. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janssen-v-janssen-illappct-1933.