Miller v. Miller

3 P.2d 1069, 54 Nev. 44, 1931 Nev. LEXIS 48
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1931
DocketNo. 2934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 1069 (Miller v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Miller, 3 P.2d 1069, 54 Nev. 44, 1931 Nev. LEXIS 48 (Neb. 1931).

Opinions

*47 OPINION

By the Court,

Sanders, J.:

The parties to this action for divorce intermarried in the city of Chicago, county of Cook, State of Illinois, in August, 1920. In December, 1925, the wife commenced a proceeding in chancery in the superior court of said county for divorce upon the ground of “extreme and repeated cruelty.” Upon issues made by the amended bill and answer the cause was tried to the court with the assistance of a jury. The verdict of the jury was as follows: “We, the jury, find the defendant not guilty of extreme and repeated cruelty as charged in the bill of complaint.” The complainant moved to set aside the verdict and for a new trial. In November, 1926, her motions were overruled and denied. On the same day it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the bill of complaint be dismissed “for want of evidence.” No appeal was taken. Thereafter, in January, 1927, the complainant filed her bill in said superior court against her husband, in which she prayed that the defendant be decreed to provide for her separate maintenance for the same acts of cruelty and repeated cruelty pleaded in her bill of complaint for an absolute ■divorce. While the case was at issue, upon plaintiff’s own motion her action for separate maintenance was dismissed without prejudice.

i Thereafter the wife left her marital domicile in Illinois ■and came to Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, arriving *48 there on or about February 9, 1929. Having resided in Reno for the statutory period of three months, on, to wit, June 22, 1929, she filed her complaint in the court below for divorce, setting up in her complaint two causes of action, one for willful desertion and the other for extreme cruelty. As and for her first cause of action for desertion, she pleaded the same acts of cruelty and other misconduct of the defendant relied on in her bill of complaint for divorce in said superior court in and for Cook County, 111. In response to process, the defendant, a resident of Illinois, appeared and answered the complaint. He denied specifically each and all of the allegations of ill treatment and misconduct and set up exemplified copies of all of the proceedings in the Illinois court as a defense and in bar of the plaintiff’s ■right to maintain her action for divorce in Nevada for willful desertion. The plaintiff made reply to the defendant’s answer and denied, in substance, that the judgment of the Illinois court was conclusive of the issue of willful desertion present in this action and therefore was not res judicata.

Upon issues thus made and after a full hearing, the court, without the assistance of a jury, found, in substance, that the plaintiff had been forced to leave the defendant because of his cruelty and other misconduct; that the plaintiff was justified in leaving the defendant; that the defendant had willfully abandoned and deserted the plaintiff without cause or provocation on her part for more than one year immediately preceding the filing of her complaint; and that the defendant’s acts and conduct relied on in the second cause of action were such as to constitute extreme cruelty. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, from which judgment and from an order denying his motion for new trial the defendant appeals.

We shall, as far as possible, refer to the parties as the wife and the husband, respectively.

Upon appeal from the judgment we are in limine confronted with the question of whether or not the judgment of dismissal of the plaintiff’s suit in Illinois *49 for want of evidence to support the charges of cruelty and repeated cruelty is conclusive of the issue of willful desertion alleged in the plaintiff’s Nevada complaint. A review of the exemplified copies of the proceedings in the Illinois court shows that the sole and only acts of the defendant assigned by the plaintiff in the Nevada court as a cause of action for the defendant’s willful desertion were those pleaded in her action for divorce in Illinois for extreme and repeated cruelty, wherein the jury found that the charges were untrue, and the suit was dismissed for want of evidence.

It is fundamental in judicial practice that parties can litigate to judgment the same thing but once. For example, where, in an action by a wife for divorce on the ground of cruelty, the court finds the alleged charge to be untrue, and gives judgment against the wife, such judgment is res judicata, and bars her from pleading the same alleged misconduct in her subsequent action for divorce on the ground of desertion. Civille v. Civille, 22 Cal. App. 707, 136 P. 503. Whether or not such prior judgment constitutes a bar to a subsequent suit does not depend upon the difference in relief sought in the two actions, but upon the question whether the same matter put in issue in the second suit between the same parties was actually in issue in the first and adjudicated. 9 Cal. Jur. 752. In Silverman’s Case, 52 Nev. 152, 283 P. 593, it will be observed that the concurring opinion became the law of the case. It was held that a foreign divorce suit based on extreme cruelty and gross neglect of duty did not disclose a different cause of action from a suit founded on willful desertion and did not preclude the former decree from operating as res judicata. The court said that the true test of “identity of causes of action,” as that term is used in connection with the plea of former adjudication, is the identity of the facts essential to their maintenance, and when the same evidence supports both, the two causes of action are identical as regards the plea of res judicata. One cannot, by várying the form of an action, escape the operation of the *50 principle that one arid the same cause of action shall not be twice adjudicated upon the merits between the same parties or their privies. In Vickers v. Vickers, 45 Nev. 274, 199 P. 76, 202 P. 31, it was held that a question of fact, distinctly put in issue and determined by a court of competent jurisdiction as a ground of recovery or defense, is conclusively settled by the final judgment or decree therein, so that it cannot be further litigated in a subsequent suit between the same parties or their privies, where a proper plea is interposed, whether the second suit be for the same or for a different cause of action. The reasoning of the court was that it matters not the character of the proceeding in which issues are adjudicated, but whether they have in fact been adjudicated between the same parties or their privies. So, in this case, we are confronted with the direct question of whether or not the plaintiff, by reason of her Illinois proceeding, and the result thereof, is precluded from pleading the same alleged misconduct of the defendant in her action for divorce in Nevada for willful desertion.

It is well settled that where a spouse intentionally brings the cohabitation to an end by misconduct which renders the continuance of the marital relations so unbearable that the other leaves the family home, the former, and not the latter, is the deserter. 19 C. J. 61. Such misconduct is sufficient to charge the offending spouse with desertion under our statute. Sweet v. Sweet, 49 Nev. 254, 243 P. 817.

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Miller v. Miller
3 P.2d 1069 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 1069, 54 Nev. 44, 1931 Nev. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-nev-1931.