Mercer v. Mercer

13 Colo. App. 237
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1899
DocketNo. 1527
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Colo. App. 237 (Mercer v. Mercer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercer v. Mercer, 13 Colo. App. 237 (Colo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.

While the merits of the controversy and the rightfulness of the judgment are questioned by both parties, by the appellee as to the sufficiency of the evidence'to support the judgment and the right of the husband to a decree of divorce, and by the appellant on the hypothesis that the wife who had been found guilty and against whom a decree had been entered is entitled to no provision out of the husband’s estate, we do not intend to determine either of those matters. The only question which we shall determine is the naked one of jurisdiction. This is the only course which we can pursue consistently with our conclusion that this court has no right to review judgments of this description. This is the first case wherein this question has been presented to the court and argued. In all the controversies between husbands and wives which have heretofore been submitted to us, neither side has questioned our right to review the judgments, nor until a recent period was the statute brought to the attention of the court. In the cases which we have heretofore decided (Hanscom v. Hanscom, 6 Colo. App. 97; Whelen v. Whelen, 8 Colo. App. 196; Dye v. Dye, 9 Colo. App. 320) it is true, except in the Whelen case, that the action was not one for divorce. Both the other cases were suits brought for separate maintenance, an action which has always been maintainable since the case of Daniels v. Daniels, 9 Colo. 133. In limine we may suggest we do not concur with counsel respecting our appellate jurisdiction in cases of that description. As we view the act creating this court wherein its jurisdiction is defined and conferred, and the passage of the statute [241]*241for divorce which is under consideration and found in the Session Laws of 1893, chapter 80, page 236, there can be no question respecting our right to review judgments entered in cases begun solely to procure judgment for alimony by way of separate maintenance. We have jurisdiction to review all cases and final jurisdiction to determine them within certain well defined and well understood limits. The act under consideration, the divorce act of 1893, relates solely to suits technically known as divorce suits. Actions for separate maintenance are in no sense actions for divorce. Judgments rendered thereon may be appealed to this court or brought here by writ of error and the legality and sufficiency of the judgments may be determined under the general appellate powers conferred by the act creating the court. There is no inconsistency between that position and the one which we take with reference to the construction of the divorce act of 1893. We are quite ready to admit that it might appear otherwise from the opinion in the Whelen case. This opinion recites it is an action for divorce followed by a judgment against the husband for alimony. It may be true, though this question we do not here directly decide, in a suit of that description, being one for divorce, even though the final decree may be preceded by a judgment for alimony, the matter is not reviewable by this court. Whether this be or be not true, we do not here directly determine because the question is not presented and the present case is not one of that description. Whether in a suit for divorce there could be an independent judgment for alimony which might be reviewed by appeal or writ of error prior to the final determination of the suit, if therein a severance of the bonds of matrimony be sought, and the alimony is but an incident to ■ the ultimate relief, we do not determine. It may be that this would under some circumstances be true. In any event we find nothing of this sort by an inspection of the record in the Whelen case though the matter was not called to our attention. There was no judgment of divorce when the appeal was brought here and prosecuted; it was simply a judgment for so much [242]*242money. On its face it was regular and the appeal was from a money judgment, and there was nothing to show that this was not the final and ultimate determination of the suit. There was no appearance by the appellee and under this record we proceeded, as manifestly we had a right, to consider the rightfulness of the judgment and affirmed it. This fully explains the situation of the Whelen case, and if we had said nothing about the fact that the prayer of the suit was for a divorce as well as for alimony, the opinion would contain nothing which could be challenged as sustaining our jurisdiction in the present suit. In any event the appeal was prosecuted by the aggrieved husband against whom the alimony was entered, and there was no appearance by the appellee and our authority to review the judgment was not doubted. If we had no right to review, the judgment of the district court which was rendered by one of competent jurisdiction would undoubtedly stand, and the parties would be bound by its decree. The question was not presented and it was left wholly unconsidered in that decision. The statute was not in our minds and not being invoked either to dismiss the appeal or affirm the judgment, it was not considered. However it may be, we must, when the question is raised or when it suggests itself to us, proceed to determine it.

The first proposition to which our attention must be directed respects the condition and character of the decree. The appellant invokes a not unfamiliar principle laid down by the text writers as well as by the adjudged cases, that wherever a judgment has been entered, the entry of a second judgment in the same suit does not operate to vacate the first one if there be nothing to show that the former was canceled or set aside. It may be a little difficult to understand that there may be two final judgments in the same suit, or that there may be one interlocutory and one final which ought of course to -embrace within its terms everything essential to a final settlement of the rights of the parties. We are not called on to speculate about the possibility of two judgments in the same suit and the entry of a second while the first [243]*243still stands, and whether we may then under such circumstances be compelled to resort to the one to interpret the other, or whether a right of appeal will lie from one while the first remains unchallenged. As we view the record no such case is presented. Recurring to the statement of facts, it will appear a final decree of divorce was entered in the county court. Therefrom an appeal was taken. The case then stood in the district court for trial de novo. By consent of parties that appeal was dismissed, the case sent back to the county court with an order to open up the decree and hear the parties on the matter of alimony which had been left undetermined by the original decree. The terms of the stipulation are broad and comprehensive, and must conclude the parties and therefrom and therefrom only must be determined the form, character and terms of the decree ultimately entered in the county court thereunder. According to the stipulation the cause was to be remanded to the county court and redocketed, the decree was to be opened up and the county court permitted to make the proper order with reference to the payment of costs, counsel fees and alimony, and if necessary enter its decree nunc pro tunc, reserving to the respective parties the right of appeal. Thereunder the case went back to the county court, was opened up a'hd the parties proceeded to a hearing on the single question of alimony. On the evidence presented the court adjudged alimony to Mrs. Mercer.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Colo. App. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercer-v-mercer-coloctapp-1899.