Martz v. Riskamm

144 So. 2d 83
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 10, 1962
DocketD-192
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 144 So. 2d 83 (Martz v. Riskamm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martz v. Riskamm, 144 So. 2d 83 (Fla. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

144 So.2d 83 (1962)

Claire MARTZ, Alias Claire Martin, Alias Claire Waters, Alias Claire Riskamm, Alias Claire Bishop, Individually, and Claire E. Riskamm, Alias Claire E. Riskamm, Bishop, Alias Claire Martz, As Executrix of the Estate of Joseph L. Riskamm, Appellant,
v.
Mary RISKAMM, Appellee.

No. D-192.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. First District.

July 10, 1962.
Rehearing Denied September 18, 1962.

*84 Truett & Watkins, Tallahassee, for appellant.

Hall, Hartwell & Hall, Tallahassee, for appellee.

RAWLS, Justice.

This cause involves an attack on a decree of divorce entered in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County in 1945, and a prayer for allocation of dower. The Chancellor entered a final decree in favor of appellee-plaintiff, Mary Riskamm, from which appellant-defendant, Claire Martz (alias Claire Riskamm) has appealed.

The characters in this tragedy of domestic problems are Joe, Mary and Claire Riskamm who will be referred to by their first names. Joe and Mary were married in 1923. Three children born of this marriage are now living. In 1926, Joe and Mary moved to Red Bank, New Jersey and about one year later purchased a home having the address of F.R.D. 127, Red Bank, New Jersey. Sometime later and probably before the divorce proceedings hereinafter mentioned, the mailing address of this house was changed to Box 414, R.F.D. 1, Red Bank, New Jersey.

Joe, Mary and their children lived in this home until 1933 when Joe deserted his family and went to New York. Mary and the children continued to live in the same home until the children grew up and established their own homes, and Mary has continuously resided in said home until this suit was instituted.

The history of Joe's relationship with Claire began when they met in New Jersey in the year 1932, at which time Joe was steward of the Rumson Country Club. Shortly after they became acquainted Joe and Claire decided to go in business together and opened a restaurant called the Lewis House. Joe continued his employment with the country club and helped Claire in the operation of the Lewis House on a part-time basis. In 1933 the Lewis House went out of business, Joe lost his job with the Rumson Country Club, deserted Mary and went to New York. Between 1933 and 1939, Joe and Claire had numerous *85 contacts in New York during which time Claire and her parents loaned Joe money on several occasions. Claire knew that Joe was married to Mary and that Mary and the three children lived in Red Bank, New Jersey. In 1939, Mary learned of Joe's whereabouts, went to New York and importuned him to return home. Joe was noncommittal about returning home with Mary but he signed papers in connection with their home at Mary's request. Immediately after Mary's visit with Joe in New York she instituted criminal charges of desertion in the courts of New Jersey, but when the warrant reached New York, Joe had left for Florida. Joe was never apprehended on the criminal charges and they were finally dismissed sometime in the fifties. Mary did not learn of Joe's residence or whereabouts again prior to Joe's death in Apalachicola, Florida, in 1958.

In 1939, shortly after Mary's visit with Joe in New York, Joe and Claire came to Florida together and began living as husband and wife, a relationship which continued until Joe's death. They spent about two years in the greater Miami area and then secured employment at Camp Gordon Johnson in Franklin County, Florida. In 1944, they leased the Gibson Hotel in Apalachicola and moved to that city where they continued to live together until Joe's death.

On July 18, 1945, Joe filed a suit for divorce against Mary in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Florida, and in order to secure constructive service of process, made an affidavit stating that he had made diligent search and inquiry to determine the address of the defendant but that her address and residence were unknown to him. Actually Mary had continuously lived in the same house that she and Joe were occupying at the time he deserted her. Nevertheless, on the strength of Joe's affidavit, constructive service of process was had and a final decree of divorce was rendered October 3, 1945. Noticeably absent is any evidence that inquiry was made of the person most likely to know if Mary had moved from Red Bank — Joe's brother, Rudolph, who lived within a few blocks of the Joe Riskamm home continuously from a period shortly after Joe and his family moved to New Jersey until the present time.

In the divorce proceeding Claire served as Joe's only corroborating witness, using her maiden name, Claire Martin, for the occasion. Claire testified in the divorce case that she was "around Joe and Mary, right in their home" and that Mary frequently came into Joe's place of business and that she "bickered and bickered constantly". She now testifies that she saw Mary only once before the present litigation and that Joe was not present at that time. The Chancellor found that another highly impressive circumstance of fraud is the fact that Joe, long after the divorce, took extreme precautions to prevent Mary from learning of his whereabouts. Detailed by the Chancellor were many other findings of fact which taken as a whole reveal a premeditated, calculated and intentional fraud perpetrated upon the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Florida, by Joe and Claire in the procurement of Joe's divorce from Mary. On November 13, 1945, Joe and Claire were married in Dothan, Alabama.

Claire as appellant in this cause urges that the Chancellor committed an abuse of judicial discretion in setting aside the decree of divorce upon the quantum of proof submitted in support of the claim of fraud and states in her brief that the burden of proving the fraud must be established by "clear and convincing evidence".[1] We point out that no rights of third parties are involved in this litigation. It would be a travesty upon the definition of the word "equity" if the courts of this state should subscribe to the philosophy that it is permissible for a woman to "take up with a man" in one state knowing that he *86 has a lawful wife and three children dependent upon him, move with this man to another state and live with him for many years in a bigamous relationship holding herself out to the general public in the latter state as his lawful wife, then accompany him into the courts of equity and for this occasion shed herself of her "husband's name" and present herself to the court as a single woman, perjure herself as a corroborating witness to sustain her paramour's plea for divorce, then marry her paramour, and subsequently present herself back into a court of equity and claim that clear and convincing evidence has not been presented of the fraud perpetrated on the courts. Frankly, we cannot envision a factual situation which would more clearly meet the test of clear and convincing evidence in a case of this sort. That the husband likewise committed a fraud upon the court is apparent alone from the contents of his affidavit of "diligent search and inquiry". The appellant urges that the case of Grammer v. Grammer[2] is conclusive of her position. As stated by the Chancellor, the Grammer case is easily distinguishable from the instant one in the following parts:

1. The husband in the Grammer case stated in his affidavit the city and street of the wife's residence — in the case at bar neither city nor street was stated in the affidavit.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 2d 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martz-v-riskamm-fladistctapp-1962.