Meyer v. Meyer

77 N.E.2d 556, 333 Ill. App. 450, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 257
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 17, 1948
DocketGen. No. 44,004
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 77 N.E.2d 556 (Meyer v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyer v. Meyer, 77 N.E.2d 556, 333 Ill. App. 450, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 257 (Ill. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

December 28, 1942, the plaintiff, Hester S. Meyer, filed a complaint in the circuit court of Cook county against her husband, Arthur Meyer, for divorce on the ground of desertion, seeking the care and custody of their two minor children. Three days later defendant, without service of process, filed a formal answer, admitting substantially all the allegations of the complaint, except the charge that he had deserted her and the assertion that plaintiff had at all times conducted herself in a manner becoming a good, true and affectionate wife. At the same time he also filed a counterclaim, charging his wife with wilful desertion on November 1, 1941, and asked that a decree for divorce be entered in his favor and that he be awarded the care and custody of the minor children. Plaintiff’s answer to the counterclaim denied his allegations with respect to the desertion and asked that the counterclaim be dismissed for- want of equity. A stipulation was then entered into by counsel for the respective parties that the matter be set for immediate hearing and the cause proceeded to trial on January 11, 1943, some fourteen days after the complaint was filed. Mrs. Meyer was represented by counsel but was not present at the hearing, being then confined as a patient at the North Shore Health Resort in Winnetka, Cook county, Illinois. Defendant testified that his wife had deserted him on November 1,1941, without cause, and two other witnesses stated in corroboration of his testimony thqt the parties had been living separate and apart since that date and that in their opinion Mr. Meyer was a fit and proper person to have the care and custody of the children. At the conclusion of the hearing Judge Lynch, who heard the cause, indicated that a decree would be entered on defendant’s .counterclaim awarding custody of the children to defendant, and after the testimony was written up and submitted to him a decree for divorce was entered on January 18,1943.

Thereafter, in July 1944, plaintiff filed a petition in the circuit court collaterally attacking the decree on the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter, thus rendering the decree void, and asking that it be expunged of record. Defendant moved to dismiss the petition for the following reasons: “1. Plaintiff was competently represented by counsel fully advised of the facts and circumstances in connection therewith. 2. The decree for divorce herein was a consent decree. 3. Plaintiff has accepted the benefits of said decree. ’ ’ The court denied the motion to strike and ordered defendant to answer. He filed an answer denying the allegations touching upon the question of jurisdiction and averred that plaintiff was a resident of Cook county when the complaint was filed by her counsel. Hearing on the petition and answer by Judge Feinberg resulted in the allowance of defendant’s motion to dismiss the petition for want of equity, from which Mrs. Meyer appealed. We reversed that order and remanded the cause for a new trial with specific directions. The essential facts pertaining to the litigation and the questions involved are amply set forth in our former opinion which is fully reported in Meyer v. Meyer, 328 Ill. App. 408. We there stated explicitly that “The only question presented is whether plaintiff made out a prima facie case on the proposition that the decree of divorce was null and void for want of jurisdiction, her position being that neither of the parties was a resident of Cook County at the time the divorce proceeding was instituted, as required by statute (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, Divorce, ch. 40, par. 6 [Jones Ill. Stats. Ann. 109.173]),” but because the chancellor had not decided the question of residence but had directed the inquiry primarily to Mrs. Meyer’s mental condition and her ability to understand the nature of the proceeding, and because we thought that “an orderly hearing of plaintiff’s petition challenging the jurisdiction of the court, and defendant’s answer thereto, was never had,” we reversed the order from which plaintiff had appealed and remanded the cause for the purpose of affording the parties “an opportunity to adduce the competent evidence available and to have the controversy [the question of jurisdiction]. determined upon the issues made up by the pleadings.” Questions of law urged upon the first appeal were all fully discussed and determined, and in our opinion on rehearing we expressed ourselves as adhering “to our conception of the law relating to the question of jurisdiction and plaintiff’s right to challenge it,” as set forth in our original opinion, before rehearing.

On the first appeal defendant presented only two points in support of the order of dismissal. He first argued that “the divorce decree herein is not null and void because the court had jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter.” He posed the question presented to the court as follows: “Where a wife domiciled in Kane County, Illinois, comes to a Cook County Sanitarium to stay for an indefinite period of time to cure herself of alcoholism, will her presence within Cook County for two months prior to filing her complaint for divorce be sufficient to make her a resident within the meaning of Chapter 40, Paragraph 6 of the Illinois Revised Statutes?” We discussed plaintiff’s citations bearing upon that question and Way v. Way, 64 Ill. 406, the only case relied upon by defendant, and concluded that “it would be idle in this proceeding to argue that Mrs. Meyer had any intention of establishing a residence in Cook county within the contemplation of the statute, any more than it could be urged that she intended to become a resident of the State of Wisconsin while confined in the sanitarium at Wauwatosa for nine or ten months prior to her admission to the North Shore Health Resort.”

The only other point presented and argued by defendant on the first appeal was as follows: “assuming that the divorce decree herein is null and void, equity will not permit the plaintiff to raise the question of jurisdiction” because “A. plaintiff has accepted benefits under the divorce decree herein,” and “B. plain■tiff by filing suit and by waiting a year and a half before attacking the divorce decree has authorized and ratified said decree.” We discussed both of these propositions fully and decided them adversely to defendant.

Pursuant to remandment the case was assigned to Judge Schnackenbebg. It appears that after the entry of the original decree defendant was married to Constance Arts on May 1, 1943, and that as a result of that marriage a child, Katina, was born June 9, 1945. Constance Arts Meyer and her daughter, Katina, sought to file their intervening petition in the second hearing, but the chancellor denied their motion and the cause proceeded upon the original petition and defendant’s answer thereto. More than 700 pages of evidence were adduced upon this hearing, and presumably every item of evidence that could have any possible bearing upon the residence of plaintiff in Cook county prior to the filing of her original complaint and the resulting jurisdictional question involved, was brought into the case. Much of the evidence was objected to by plaintiff and had little if any bearing upon the sole issue for which the cause had been remanded.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E.2d 556, 333 Ill. App. 450, 1948 Ill. App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-meyer-illappct-1948.