Lorenz v. Lorenz

26 So. 2d 54, 157 Fla. 402, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 753
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 7, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 54 (Lorenz v. Lorenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorenz v. Lorenz, 26 So. 2d 54, 157 Fla. 402, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 753 (Fla. 1946).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

From the assignment of errors and his brief it appears appellant considers that eight various orders and decrees entered by the court during the years 1942-1945 in this extensive litigation form a sort of cluster of mistakes on the part of the chancellors who rendered them. The present appeal was prosecuted from the last two of these. One decreed that the marriage ties binding the parties should be dissolved on the prayer of the cross-plaintiff, wife; adjudged $2,500 to be due her from the original plaintiff, husband, for accumulated unpaid alimony; fixed alimony of $100 a month thereafter; relieved the wife from any payments on a certain mortgage, and invalidated that instrument; declared the fee simple title to the mortgaged property to be quieted and confirmed in the wife. The other set aside a decree previously entered foreclosing the mortgage and invalidated the sale and order confirming it.

At the risk of being tedious, and believing that this will be the last occasion to deal with this dispute, we shall first give *404 a chronicle of this rather protracted controversy as we glean it from the transcript recently filed and the records lodged here when the matter was reviewed by this court on at least two other occasions, these having been made, by stipulation, a part of the record in this appeal.

Clifford A Lorenz brought suit for divorce against Lea G. Lorenz on 4 June 1938. She was immediately served with process, and on the rule day in the following month decree pro confesso was entered against her. A week later the plaintiff represented to the court that on 15 June 1938, a few days after the bill was filed but before the return day of process, the defendant had become mentally deranged, whereupon a psychiatrist had examined her and ordered her placed in Miami Retreat, where she was then “incarcerated.” The physician, so it was reported to the court, considered her “mentally hysterical,” though not absolutely insane, but he believed she was “probably . . . permanently deranged mentally.” The chancellor was petitioner to appoint a guardian ad litem for her, which he did the following day. On 6 July the defendant was adjudged insane, and on the 3rd day of August the guardian ad litem was designated also guardian of the estate of Lea G. Lorenz.

Meanwhile, the day the decree pro confesso was vacated on stipulation, the guardian ad litem filed a motion to dismiss the bill on the ground that sufficient facts were not alleged to entitle the plaintiff to relief or to establish extreme cruelty on the part of the defendant. This motion was denied the same, day, and some time thereafter the guardian ad litem answered. A month passed, and on 3 September 1938, defendant meanwhile being an inmate of Miami Retreat, the guardian ad litem and the solicitor for plaintiff appeared before the then chancellor who had signed the orders theretofore entered in the case, and testimony of the plaintiff was introduced. At this hearing no witnesses were offered In defendant’s behalf, no objection was interposed to any questions asked the plaintiff or the witnesses who appeared for him. That same day the chancellor granted the husband a divorce, reciting, as to the material resources of the parties, that they had by their combined efforts accumulated a parcel *405 of improved real estate and an automobile. In the final decree he directed the guardian to determine an equitable division of the “joint property” • and to report to the court “his findings . . . for . . . approval and ratification.”

By testimony of the guardian himself at a hearing more than three years later, to which we shall presently allude, he “did not submit to the Court any matter of disposition of the property or division of the property” as commanded in the decree. Yet such division was attempted, albeit without the sanction of the court, 12 November 1938, when Lea G. Lorenz, who had not yet been restored to the status of a sane person but who had been freed from confinement in Miami Retreat, agreed to pay her one-time husband $350 for the car, to execute ten notes of $500 each payable to him yearly with interest from maturity, and to give him a mortgage on the real property to secure them. In exchange for the notes and mortgage he presumably conveyed to her his interest in this property, which was already encumbered by a first mortgage. Six days after this agreement between the parties, to which the guardian was not a party although he was present when it was signed, Lea G. Lorenz was adjudged sane. Some time passed; then this mortgage was foreclosed and the property was evidently purchased by the mortgagee.

This concludes the first chapter of this affair, and introduces the first appearance of the case in this court. State ex rel. Lorenz et al. v. Lorenz et al., 149 Fla. 625, 6 So. (2nd) 620.

After the mortgage was foreclosed, and of course after the divorce decree had been entered, Lea G. Lorenz complained verbally to one of the chancellors about the way her defense in the divorce case was conducted, during her enforced absence while an inmate of Miami Retreat, and about the subsequent foreclosure of the mortgage which she had executed as a part of the purported property settlement. This prompted the chancellor to issue a rule nisi requiring all parties to show cause why the decrees of divorce and of foreclosure should not be set aside because of fraud on the part of the husband. We examined this proceeding and decided that the method of assault was improper, that the decrees could only be attacked *406 by a bill of complaint, not by oral' representation to the chancellor.

To proceed, in the order containing the rule nisi a new guardian had been appointed for Lea G. Lorenz, and he had immediately filed a formal petition in response to the rule seeking to have set aside the decreé of divorce and to have-stayed any further proceedings in that cause “until such time as the Defendant Lea G. Lorenz [might] be and became adjudicated sane in some proper and sufficient proceeding for the purpose,” the petitioner assuming the position that the-order adjudging her sane 18 November 1938 was defective.

After the opinion in the above case of State ex rel. Lorenz et al. v. Lorenz et al. was announced by this court the successor-guardian obtained permission of the court to amend the petition theretofore filed by him in response to the rule nisi so that it would constitute a formal attack upon the proceeding for divorce — that is, become a bill of complaint — and he asked too that his ward be joined in her individual capacity. Thus, whether the adjudication of sanity was valid or invalid, it was purposed that sufficient parties plaintiff would then be present in all events to maintain the assault on the decrees.

The present appellant filed an answer to the petition, which had now become a bill, and testimony was taken, with the result that on 23 July 1942 the chancellor set aside the decree of divorce. Five days later he allowed the appellee to file an answer and counterclaim in the divorce suit, and entered an order setting aside the decree of foreclosure. In August, 1945, another chancellor in the same circuit ordered the causes combined, and after two months had passed, the final decrees mentioned in the first paragraph of this opinion were signed.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 54, 157 Fla. 402, 1946 Fla. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorenz-v-lorenz-fla-1946.