Kenyon v. Kenyon

24 P. 829, 3 Utah 431, 1861 Utah LEXIS 1
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 P. 829 (Kenyon v. Kenyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenyon v. Kenyon, 24 P. 829, 3 Utah 431, 1861 Utah LEXIS 1 (Utah 1861).

Opinion

KiNNEY, C. J.:

Susan Kenyon filed her petition in the district court for divorce, charging adultery, and praying that the bonds of matrimony between her and her said husband be totally dissolved, also for the care and custody of the children, and for a separate estate out of the property of the defendant. Kenyon answered, denying the facts charged, and alleged that the petitioner was herself guilty of the crime imputed to him.

A bill of exceptions was taken on the trial, by which it seems, among other objections made to the jurisdiction of the court and overruled, was one that the district court had no jurisdiction of the action of divorce.

The court decreed a divorce from bed and board, the care and guardianship of the children, and two thousand five hundred dollars as alimony to the plaintiff. The defendant [432]*432appeals, and contends, under the statutes of Utah, the district court has no jurisdiction whatever over cases of divorce. Other questions are raised, but this is the only one necessary to consider. Section 1, page 162, revised laws, is relied upon in support of this position. It provides that the court of probate in the county where the plaintiff resides shall have ' jurisdiction in all cases of divorce and alimony, and of guardianship and distribution of property connected therewith.”

If this statute is not in conflict with the organic act, it is supreme, and must be observed. It is not in conflict unless it either derogates from the powers exclusively conferred upon the district courts by the act, or confers unwarranted powers upon the probate courts.

Part of section 9 reads as follows: “And be it further enacted, that the judicial power of said territory shall be vested in a supreme court, district courts, probate courts, and in justices of the peace. After providing for a supreme court, it enacts that the territory shall be divided into three judicial districts, and a district court shall be held in each of said districts by one of the justices of the supreme court, at such time and place as may be prescribed by law, and the judges shall after their appointments respectively reside in the districts which shall be assigned them. The jurisdiction of the several courts herein provided for, both appellate and original, and that of the probate courts and justices of the peace, shall be as limited by law.” Then follows an inhibition upon justices of the peace; and the section further provides that the supreme and district courts respectively shall possess chancery as well as common-law jurisdiction. The judicial power of the territory is vested in four separate and distinct courts. The legislation as to one of these courts, that of justice of the peace, is restricted and confined within certain well-defined bounds, but with this exception, the jurisdiction of the several courts shall be as limited by law, except that the legislature can not curtail the chancery and common-law jurisdiction of the supreme and district courts. No law of the territory can deprive these courts of the power to exercise this jurisdiction, because it is conferred by a higher authority. The portion of the section under consideration contains [433]*433two radical provisions, two insuperable legislative barriers: 1. Against conferring jurisdiction upon justices of the peace in certain cases; 2. Against encroaching upon the common-law and chancery jurisdiction of the supreme and district courts.

Is the statute-conferring exclusive jurisdiction upon the probate courts in actions of divorce an interference with this jurisdiction of the district courts? To arrive at a proper solution of this question, we must inquire what is meant by chancery and common-law jurisdiction. Chancery jurisdiction may be defined to be a judicial power to hear and determine all cases wherein the law, for its universality, can not afford relief. Early in the history of jurisprudence the administration of justice in the ordinary courts was found to be incomplete, and hence arose the necessity of separate courts of equity, which were organized about the reign of King Edward III., for the purpose of correcting that wherein the law was defective; and matters of fraud were among the objects to which the jurisdiction of chancery was originally confined. Soon after these courts were established in England a fierce struggle arose between the law and equity courts in relation to the jurisdiction and powers of each; but as we trace the history of English jurisprudence, we find the prejudice which at first existed on the part of the common-law courts yielding to the necessity and utility of a distinctive equity jurisprudence: Arnold v. Grimes, 2 G. Greene, 77. Follow this court from the reign of Edward III., at first feeble and affording relief in only a very few cases, until it branches out with enlarged powers, and builds up a stately jurisprudence of its own both in England and America, and with its extended jurisdiction we venture the assertion that as an equity court, purely without the aid of statute, it has never entertained a case of divorce so as to render a final decree between the parties.

The application for divorce from 'bed and board is not necessarily an equity proceeding. It may be either at law or in chancery as the legislature may prescribe. In England until very recently it was confined exclusively to the ecclesiastical or spiritual courts, and in the United States the petition is filed either in the chancery or law courts according to the provis[434]*434ions of the statutes of the different states. The celebrated case of Burch v. Burch, recently tried in Illinois, appears to have been at law, and the entire case tried by a jury. In other states the chancellor hears and tries the issue — in some instances upon written evidence alone, and in others upon written and oral. We say, then, that the jurisdiction in divorce cases does not necessarily belong to chancery; and that clause of the organic act which confers upon the district courts chancery jurisdiction is not violated by the statute of Utah giving another court the right to try all cases of divorce. But the question arises, Is not the common-law jurisdiction of the court trampled upon?

Common-law jurisdiction we understand to mean the power of the court to hear and determine cases according to the rules of the common law. Statutes are frequently invoked in aid of the common law, but common-law courts as such are not dependent upon statutes unless they have become incorporated into and form part of the common law, which is often the case with old English statutes. It is no part of the powers of common-law courts to grant divorces from bed and board. Cases of this kind do not belong to their jurisdiction as common-law courts, and without the aid of statute such courts are powerless. Opposed to this view, we are referred to the case of Wightman v.Wightman, 4 Johns Ch. 343.

That was a case where the plaintiff married the defendant under a fit of insanity, had never lived with her husband, and had continued under abberation of mind with only occasional lucid intervals.

The question arose before the chancellor whether the court could take jurisdiction, as there were no statute in the state of New York for divorce a vinculo matrimonii except in case of adultery, and the cause for divorce must arise after marriage. The learned chancellor declared the contract null and void ah initio, on the ground that the plaintiff had not the capacity to contract, no more than if she had been an idiot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 P. 829, 3 Utah 431, 1861 Utah LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenyon-v-kenyon-utah-1861.