Kennedy v. Kennedy

23 S.W.2d 1089, 223 Mo. App. 1116, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 79
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 1089 (Kennedy v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Kennedy, 23 S.W.2d 1089, 223 Mo. App. 1116, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 79 (Mo. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

*1118 HAID, P. J.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing the petition of appellant. The suit was filed March 13, 1925, to set aside a judgment or decree of divorce obtained by James Kennedy against Katherine Kennedy on April 20, 1922, on the ground that such decree was void because of the want of a sufficient allegation as to plaintiff’s residence prior to the filing of his petition. The allegation attacked is that:

“Plaintiff further says that he is now and has been for a space of one whole year before filing this petition a resident of the State of Missouri, and now resides in St. Louis, Mo.”

There is no allegation in the present petition that the plaintiff in the.divorce case was not a resident of the State for one whole year next before the filing of the petition.

An answer to the petition in this case was filed which pleaded the certiorari proceeding in the Supreme Court (267 S. W. 619) and set up the laches of the plaintiff in the present proceeding.

*1119 The record discloses that the defendant'in the divorce ease was served with summons but that she failed to plead and did not appear at the trial after a default had been granted against her. On April 24, 1922, she filed a motion to set aside the decree of divorce setting out her reasons for her failure to plead and alleging she had a meritorious defense and desired to make defense and file cross-bill but did not attack the sufficiency of the allegations of the divorce petition. This motion was denied but she took no appeal from the decree.

There was testimony introduced as to when one of plaintiff’s present attorneys was employed, in 1923; that said attorney was unable to locate Mr. Kennedy to serve process on him and because of that fact he applied to this court on June 23, 1923, for a writ of certiorari, which was denied; that then he made application to the Supreme Court for a like writ, which was denied about January, 1925, and then the present proceeding- was instituted. There were other facts shown concerning Mrs. Kennedy’s efforts to have the decree of divorce set aside, but they are unnecessary to a consideration of the question before us. Many of those facts are set out in the opinion of the Supreme Court in the certiorari proceeding in that court (267 S. W. 619).

The contentions of the plaintiff (appellant) may be summed up in the statement that every petition for divorce in this State must contain the averment that the plaintiff has resided within the State one whole year next before the filing of such petition, or else that the offense or injury complained of was committed within the State or while one or both of the parties resided within this State; that in the • absence of such allegation the trial court is lacking in jurisdiction because the petition is fatally defective and will not support a judgment.

In a divorce case, we are bound to observe the provisions of Sections 1811 and 1812, Revised Statutes Missouri, 1919, that no final judgment therein shall be reversed, annulled or modified unless an appeal shall have been granted during the term at which the decree was rendered, or a writ of error shall have been issued within sixty days after the order was made or judgment rendered, and that no petition for review of any judgment for divorce shall be allowed, any law or statute to the contrary notwithstanding. An exception to the rule laid down in those sections of the statute is as to a case of the character involved in the decision of Dorrance v. Dorrance, 242 Mo. 625, 148 S. W. 94. Assuming that an action to set aside a void judgment is likewise an exception, we will proceed to determine whether the judgment.attacked here is void.

It is true that in many of the decisions in this State it is held that to support a judgment or decree of divorce a complete jurisdictional *1120 averment, substantially in compliance with the statute, must appear in the petition, but in a majority, at least, of those eases it was unnecessary to determine the question as to whether a judgment is void because of a defective averment. It will be found that they were direct proceedings by appeal or writ of error from the decree sought to be reviewed and, as it seems to us, could not have been intended to hold that simply because of an inaccurate statement of a jurisdictional averment in the petition, notwithstanding the fact that the evidence produced might have supplied the necessary facts required to be found to justify the granting of the decree, the decree rendered therein would nevertheless be void.

The appellant relies upon the following four cases: Cheatham v. Cheatham, 10 Mo. l. c. 299, in which the court stated that one or the other of the facts required.by our present Section 1804, Revised Statutes Missouri, 1919, is made essential to give jurisdiction to the court, but it did not have before it the question here involved. This court in the case of Amerland v. Amerland, 188 Mo. App. 50, 56-59, 173 S. W. 104, held that an entire absence of an allegation from an amended petition was fatal and reversed the decree of the circuit court for that reason. Bach of these cases was upon appeal taken from the decrees complained of and in neither of them was there before the court the question of whether such judgment was merely voidable or void, while the case of Collins v. Collins, 53 Mo. App. 470, held that it was not necessary that the very words of the statute should be stated in a petition for divorce but that it was sufficient that it contained an allegation to cover the intent and meaning of the statute, and the petition in that case, failing in this respect, the decree of divorce was reversed and the cause remanded. The case of Sharpe v. Sharpe, 134 Mo. App. 278, 114 S. W. 584, merely held that in an action by the wife for maintenance, the husband could not file a counterclaim for divorce and that our statute with reference to counterclaim has no application because jurisdiction of divorce cases can only be obtained by virtue of the divorce statute.

In the case of Pate v. Pate, 6 Mo. App. 49, upon appeal, the court held that “the libel itself must allege every fact the existence of which is by statute made necessary to the granting of the divorce; and when this is not done in the petition, substantially as required by statute, the bill should be dismissed” . . . That “In every case where divorce is sought, it should appear plainly on the face of the petition that the facts giving jurisdiction to the court exist.”

It is apparent, therefore, that upon a timely appeal, our courts hold that they will not sustain a decree of divorce based upon a petition which is wanting or defective in its jurisdictional averments.

But is that rule to be applied to a case such as we have here? We think not, and for the reasons indicated in the following cases:

*1121 Tile case of Werz v. Werz, 11 Mo. App. 26, was a case by the second husband for divorce from his then wife, based upon her failure to allege in her petition for divorce from her former husband, that she was a resident of St. Louis county.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 1089, 223 Mo. App. 1116, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-kennedy-moctapp-1930.