Moore v. Moore

240 S.E.2d 535, 218 Va. 790, 1978 Va. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1978
DocketRecord 761083
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 240 S.E.2d 535 (Moore v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Moore, 240 S.E.2d 535, 218 Va. 790, 1978 Va. LEXIS 148 (Va. 1978).

Opinion

Compton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this divorce suit, the defendant-husband appeals from a decree of the trial court which permitted the plaintiff-wife to voluntarily dismiss the proceeding over the husband’s objection.

The chronology is important. In May of 1975, appellee Nellie H. Moore, a resident of Fairfax County, filed her bill of complaint in the northern Virginia court below against appellant Thomas E. Moore, Jr., who lived in the town of Blackstone in the southern part of the Commonwealth. She alleged the parties had last cohabited in Fairfax County and that they had lived separate and apart without cohabitation and without interruption for a period of more than two years. She sought a divorce from the bonds of matrimony, but asked for no ancillary relief.

The husband was duly served with process and filed a timely answer, by counsel, admitting the allegations of the bill. He averred that, except for the merits of the divorce, there were no issues for the court to adjudicate. He asked that he not be required to pay the wife’s counsel fees or costs.

Within two weeks after the answer was filed, the chancellor referred the cause to a commissioner in chancery. The decree of reference, endorsed by both attorneys, directed the commissioner to inquire and report on the questions of jurisdiction, whether the wife was entitled to the relief prayed for, and any other subject “which may appear pertinent to this cause.”

One month later, on July 9, 1975, the plaintiff’s depositions were taken in the commissioner’s Fairfax office, upon timely notice, at which time the wife and her daughter testified. The husband and his attorney did not appear at the hearing, pursuant to a prior understanding between counsel. The *792 attorneys had also agreed that the husband would not be liable for any of the wife’s counsel fees or court costs.

Approximately three months after the hearing, the commissioner’s report was filed in the clerk’s office of the court below, after due notice was given to both counsel. The commissioner reported that jurisdiction had been established by the evidence, that the ground for the divorce had been proven, and that “[t]here appear to be no property rights and matters of support to be determined by the Court.” He recommended that the wife be granted the divorce based on the parties’ two-year separation.

The suit then remained dormant for approximately six months until April 2, 1976, when the husband’s attorney wrote the chancellor asking that a final decree be entered and asserting that during the six-month period the wife’s attorney had refused to respond to his letters and telephone calls about the suit. The attorney enclosed a draft of a decree, endorsed only by him, providing for an absolute divorce to the wife on the ground alleged in the bill.

Within a week thereafter, the wife, by counsel, filed a motion to “dismiss” the cause upon the ground “that she no longer wishfed] to pursue the matter.” A letter to the chancellor from the wife’s attorney accompanied the motion. Counsel denied that he had failed to communicate with his adversary, asserting that during the previous October he had notified the husband’s attorney that he would not seek entry of a final decree because his attorney’s fee had not been paid by the wife. In the letter, counsel for the wife also stated he had just been “instructed by Mrs. Moore to move the Court to dismiss the case.”

The husband, by counsel, then filed a motion seeking a hearing on the wife’s request for dismissal and also asked to be heard on his “application” for entry of a final divorce decree, apparently referring to the letter of April 2.

On April 23, 1976, following oral argument of counsel, the trial court entered the order appealed from which stated, in part:

“It appearing to the Court that the Complainant is desirous of dismissing her Bill of Complaint; it is therefore
“Ordered and adjudged that the Bill of Complaint be, and hereby is, dismissed.”

*793 The order was endorsed by the wife and her attorney as: “We ask for this”.

The question presented is whether the chancellor erred in permitting the plaintiff to dismiss the suit.

The husband relies on former Code § 8-220 (1957 Repl. Vol.), which was in effect at the time of the proceedings below 1 and which provided in pertinent part:

“A party shall not be allowed to suffer a nonsuit unless he do so . . . before the suit or action has been submitted to the court for decision . . . .”

The husband contends that the wife was prohibited from voluntarily dismissing her action because, prior to the filing of the wife’s motion to dismiss, the suit had been finally “submitted” to the chancellor for a ruling. Defendant says that by requesting entry of a final divorce decree, he had “already conclusively committed himself to a decision of the Court on the determinative issue.” He argues that the cause “was tantamount to being under advisement, in a sense”, thus “precluding the arbitrary taking of a non-suit.” The argument concludes with the observations that the “only jurisdiction” for the suit is in the court below, located “a 260-mile return trip distance” from defendant’s home in Blackstone; that the cause “had been in the court and counsel’s hands for 11 months”; that the commissioner had filed his report recommending the granting of a divorce; that additional “legal expense” and court costs caused by further litigation would be “oppressive” to the husband; and that dismissal is prejudicial to “defendant’s right and desire to remove from his solely-owned real estate the cloud of an estranged wife’s inchoate dower.” 2 We do not agree with the husband’s contentions.

This court has not recently considered the procedure to be followed in equity for voluntary dismissal of a pending suit. The evolution of the procedure in chancery is tied to the development of the nonsuit rule at law.

One hundred and eighty-eight years ago, the General Assembly adopted the first nonsuit statute, which applied only *794 to actions at law tried by jury. Section 10 of “An act coyiceming jeofails ayid certaiyi proceediyigs in civil cases” provided:

“Every person desirous of suffering a nonsuit on trial, shall be barred therefrom, unless he do so before the jury retire from the bar.” Acts 1789, ch. 28.

The statute remained substantially unchanged until 1932 when it was amended and reenacted to provide:

“A party shall not be allowed to suffer a non-suit, unless he do so before the jury retire from the bar. And after a non-suit no n,ew proceeding on the same cause of action shall be had in any court other than that in which the non-suit was taken, unless that court is without jurisdiction, or not a proper venue, or other good cause be shown for proceeding in another court.” Acts 1932, ch. 30.

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.E.2d 535, 218 Va. 790, 1978 Va. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moore-va-1978.