Kirk v. Kirk

1951 OK 361, 238 P.2d 808, 205 Okla. 482, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 701
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1951
Docket34274
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1951 OK 361 (Kirk v. Kirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirk v. Kirk, 1951 OK 361, 238 P.2d 808, 205 Okla. 482, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 701 (Okla. 1951).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered after a hearing had on a citation issued in child support proceedings following a divorce trial. The parties will be 'designated as they appeared in the trial court.

On July 10, 1947, plaintiff was granted a decree of divorce from defendant in the district court of Oklahoma county wherein the court found that it had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter of the action and that the parties were married, as alleged in the petition; that defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty towards plaintiff and plaintiff was without fault. The bonds of matrimony were dissolved and the care, custody and education of the children “of the parties” was confided in the plaintiff and defendant was ordered to pay to plaintiff as her reasonable child support the sum of $30 payable monthly. Defendant did not contest this action.

Thereafter, on March 22, 1949, plaintiff filed her application for citation for contempt setting forth that defendant had paid only the sum of $7 since the decree.

John and Carrie Kirk were married February 4, 1935. Two children were born of that marriage and at the time of the trial the girl was eleven years old, the boy eight.

In the fall of 1938 the parties were living in Anadarko. Defendant, who was a taxicab driver, lived with his wife across the street from a cafe where plaintiff was employed as a waitress. She knew that defendant was a married man. Plaintiff and defendant began having dates together, which conduct continued up to July, 1939. Defendant and his wife, Carrie, quarreled and defendant went to Arizona and then to California. He returned in 1940 and became reconciled with his wife. They later moved to Oklahoma City.

*483 In April, 1943, defendant again met plaintiff. She was then employed in Oklahoma City. They again began having dates together. There were numerous quarrels between plaintiff and defendant and between defendant and his wife, Carrie, and upon several occasions defendant and his wife separated.

Two children were born to plaintiff out of wedlock. The first, born January 2, 1940, and its birth certificate has the surname “Harris”. She testified that Eldon Harris, named as its father, was a fictitious name. The second child was born in September, 1945. Plaintiff testified defendant was the father of both of her children. Defendant denied that he was the father of either child.

In October, 1946, defendant, who was then living in El Paso, Texas, obtained a Mexican divorce in the Civil District of Bravos, State of Chihuahua.

In December, 1946, defendant returned to Oklahoma City. On January 2, 1947, plaintiff and defendant were married at El Reno, Oklahoma. On July 10, 1947, plaintiff was granted the divorce decree in the action at bar. On May 6, 1948, plaintiff and defendant were again married. In the latter part of the same year plaintiff filed another action for divorce from defendant. That action was contested by defendant, and on February 8, 1949, a trial was had. The evidence and decree in that case was admitted in evidence here. The decree entered by the same trial judge who tried the case at bar contained the following order:

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that the purported marriage relation existing between the plaintiff and defendant herein be and the same is hereby terminated for the reason that the defendant, John A. Kirk, was and is legally married to Carrie Kirk, and the plaintiff herein at all times had full knowledge of the existence of said marriage; and it is further ordered that said marriage relation is null and void, and that this Court is without jurisdiction in this action to enter an order as to the custody of the children of the plaintiff herein.”

At the conclusion of the trial on the citation proceedings before us, the court entered judgment denying plaintiffs application for citation but ordered defendant to pay $30 per month as child support for plaintiffs minor children.

Defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled and this appeal followed.

The Mexican divorce obtained by John Kirk in 1946 was void. If that be true, then he had a lawful wife in Oklahoma on both occasions when he married the plaintiff.

The Mexican divorce was void because that court had no jurisdiction to render its decree and for the further reason that a fraud was practiced upon that court in order to obtain the decree.

Undisputed evidence in the case at bar shows that although John Kirk was corresponding with his wife, Carrie Kirk, in Oklahoma every week, and knew her address, she was never served with summons or notice of any kind of the proceedings in Mexico and she had no knowledge thereof. During all his stay in El Paso, John was contributing to the support of his wife and children.

The defendant lived in El Paso, Texas, from November, 1945, to December, 1946. He testified that he went into Mexico to get a divorce, but nowhere in the record does it appear that he ever established a residence or domicile in Mexico. Carrie Kirk, his wife, had a domicile in Oklahoma.

In the case of Kegley v. Kegley, 16 Cal. App. 2d 216, 60 P. 2d 482, it was said:

“A foreign divorce obtained through assumed residence is not in good faith, and is open to attack in the state of the true matrimonial domicile, and the parties sought to be bound by it may always impeach its validity and escape its effect by showing that the courts which rendered it had no juris *484 diction over the parties or the subject matter of the action, and its jurisdiction may be controverted by extraneous evidence.”

Many cases are cited in support of this holding. In a later case, Marshall v. Marshall, 69 Cal. App. 2d 20, 157 P. 2d 854, the California court held that no rule of comity required recognition of a divorce decree rendered in another state where the court of that state lacked jurisdiction.

In Brasier v. Brasier, 200 Okla. 689, 200 P. 2d 427, we held that actual bona fide domicile in the state where the divorce trial is held is a prerequisite to the jurisdiction of that court and this being true the factual existence of such domicile may be collaterally inquired into in this state where such decree is sought to be used. We further held that such inquiry into jurisdictional facts was not precluded by the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution.

It is not necessary that the divorce decree be declared void and set aside. It is sufficient that the proof in this record shows that defendant was never legally divorced from his wife Carrie to establish that the trial court had no jurisdiction to grant the subsequent prayer for child support, which relief, under the pleadings in this case, could be granted only as relief incidental to the dissolution of a valid marriage.

Following argument of defendant’s demurrer to the evidence and in rendering his judgment the trial court said:

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Bluebook (online)
1951 OK 361, 238 P.2d 808, 205 Okla. 482, 1951 Okla. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-v-kirk-okla-1951.